County, Michigan. Wednesday, December 29

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1 vv 'f---**. '"Sfc *&4 R«W Vol 43 County, Mchgan. Wednesday, Deceber 29 r# d PS-' < ^ * -#:* V* *»' EtUblahfa 1&47 smcuc&h & Ann Arbor nter Coats up to $200 Sellng Now At $59.50 ( Deep wool fabrcs. Lavsh fur trng. Spjp*lydesgned lnes. Slk lnng throughout. These/ future our fne stock of coats, unexcelled values! Evefy coat jrced fro $59.50 to $200 goes now at $59.j50! All Other Coats $^0 Every other coat n stock s arked to se^l quckly at $29.50! f you've wated untl now tq buy, you'll be ghty welt pleased wth these spprt and dress odels, *./ LOW PRCES PREVAL...Our nter Holday Event ffow n Progress. TS THE..'.«tf HOWELL MCH OLD STORY Rand a Custoer 100 C&ts for hs Dollar and He'll Apprecate t Every Te Our Busness Proves t Watches Daonds Clocks -Jewelry Slverware e ut Glass Art Glass Ubrellas Pyrex.. fountan Pena-** veraha^ Pencls Optcal Goods Everytbnj lower Weddng Annversary A SQUARE DEAL PRCE rag SAYS DOLLARS SAVED TO PNCKNEY PATRONS-We Don't Mean Maybe j*'x <«(* * ff^r S '*-*<*..! - Hfc y "* Dance fy V, -<: f**, Happy New Year old phrase wth ts rng of joy, nclude precaton of your favors to us durng the ch s now closng. W.BARNARD Tonght llfncknby Opera House / - Good Tune FrotnMd *?* J*!W»r' -¾¾ J' >»*>. *>. - * : Jrv /CHRSTMAS PRORAM M lara$ crowd whch Aled the CA; tonal church full to overenjoyed the Chrstas pro* Lgransfput on there last Frday evenfng,/all parts were well taken and thje entre progra was throughly en- *] ^ed by the audence. Mrs. Earl Vaughn and Mrs. H. A. May croft de- ;\ serve uch prase for the way n whch the progra was carred opt The followng s the progra rendered: Processonal Wohelo and Flower,Grls. Scrpture Readng -Helen Fedler Prayer Evelyn Ellott All nclusve Jance Carr Welcoe to Our Tree...Robert Rchardson We Wsh You Merry Chrstas..Margaret Curlett. 0 Lttle Town of Bethlehe, Pantone, Janet Fedler.. 1 Love Santa _....Blly Baughn Rectaton Rex Sth Gfts Vola Katuna- Song," A So Glad That Jesus Loves Me" Cradle Roll Harry Rley, a brother of the The Reason Alger Lee groo was best an and the ushers The Chrstas Mouse Helen Vanderwald. were Edward O'Connor, Charles Brown, Charles Cuns and Leonard Butts. Song Wohelo and Flower Grls A Chrstas Gft Howard Read Followng the cereony a weddng O Dc: r Lttle Brds -Jean Grav«s breakfast for 50 guests was served at Borrowed Stockngs Edsel Meyers the Tea Pot. The tables at whch the At Chrstas Te* Mldred Jack guests were seated were beautfully Whle Stars of Xsas Shne..-.Francs decorated for the occason.^ Bennett Mr. and Mrs. Rley wllptake an Song "Jesus s Born".Prary eastern trp before gong to St. Lous Why Santa Laughed.-.Evelyn Hendee to ake ther hoe where they wll A Letter To Santa Claus Herbert be after Jan. 10. Hall For travelng Mrs. Rley selected a Rectaton Wnston Baughn dress n the popular two pece stylo. Rectaton Blly Darrow The skrt was of black velvet and the Chrstas Every Day-.-sabelle Sykes bodce was ade of lavender brocaded etal cloth. A hat of lavender vel Rectaton._ Leota Reason Song "Follow the Gudng Star" vet and a gray squrrel coat copleted the brde's travelng costue School Chldren For Santa Claus Vrgna Darrow Jackson Ctzen-Patrot. Rectaton Jack Reason Epty Stockngs.'...Marjore Hendee Chrstas n the Heart Marjore Hendee Song _ Wohelo GLrls.. The Chrstas Atosphere...Madge last week, s stll a ystery although * * * ^<AAC cordng to a Howell dspatch to a Ktty's Pw&Wt...- Er**$>lJWfU( etrott d«rry4he«herff Ja*f*»4** Gvng t To H Constance clue to the dentty of the persons Darrow and Wllo Meyers who deserted t. t s a very beautful He'll Coe All Rght...Frtz Gardner chd and snce t has recovered fro Glad "When Xas Coes Nora the effects of the drug wth whch ts Gardner deserters doped t s dong nceljh f f Had Been a Shepherd Roy.-Maxne Sons offered for adopton. t s a t s not claed t wll probably) be grl. Song Wohelo and Flower Grls Gettng Ready for Santa..Maron Gardner The Xas Party Laura Burnettt Chrstas Welcoe..-.Mchael Bezzek The Star of the East...Mary Katuna Rectaton _ Leo Blades Lullaby, Lttle North Haburg Grls A Strange Xas Dre...Lve Wres Muscal Exercse Wohek) and Flower Grls Danny's Xas Gft...Dorothy Carr Pantonne North ^Haburg Grl*. Maron's Drea «Elnor Gage When Good Krs Corraes Around.-Pantonne, Prary Chldren THE BLND TE MAN Many Pnckney; people receved boxes of necktes fro Paunee Bll the Blnd Te Man, of St. Lous, Mo. a few^veeks before Chrstas. These were accopaned by the request for the recpent to please send one dollar f he kept the tes. Ths stunt was worked n nearly every town n ths secton and the followng artcle n regard to t s taken fro the Busness Farer. The polce offcals of the cty where hs busness s located, St. Lous Mssour, advse that he s not enttled to any consderaton whatever and no consderaton should be pad to hs councatons. Also t s understood that he s conductng an extensve enterprse wth the backng of busness nterests. t has even been sad that a large knttng ll s usng h as a eans of dsponng of ts output. He stated to the St. Lous Better Busness Bureau that he s not n need of charty and prosed to elnate «11 reference to hs blndness fro hs AMBURGEY-R1LEY Psals and baskets of roses arranged on the alter at St* John's Catholc Church fored a lovely settng for the weddng of Mss Anta Aburgey of ths cty and Donald F. Rley of St. Lous, Mo., whch was solenzed Tuesday ornng at 9 o'clock. Rev. John (L Wall celebrated the nuptal an. Mss Aburgey** parents are Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Jjurnjey of Pnckney and Mr ; Rley, a forer resdent of Jackson, s te son of Mrs. Frank Rley of 389 West Kddle street Howard Rley and Clarence Mc- Graw sang the responses to the ass. Mss Aburgey was a lovely brde n her weddng gown of vory colored taffeta ade wth the fashonable tght bodce and full skrt. Trng the dress at the wastlne and down one sde of the skrt were rosettes of tulle beaded n pearls. The bj deg long full tulle vel was caught tolhef coffure wth pearls and orange blossos EJA^g her ars and addng a last lovely note to her brdal attre was a shower bouquet of Ophela roses. STLL A MYSTERY The dentty of the week old baby whch was left on the front porch of Eler Chpan of Gregory one nght advertseents, a prose whch he apparently, has -not fulflled to date offce of the co^aty treasurer at the NOTCE court house. The sale wll start on The January eetng of the Lvngston County Townshp /Charan A: M. Monday ornng, January 3, at 8:00 of the Publc Health Servfc* wll be Clare Burden, County- Treas. held at the hee of Harvey Dyer at Planfeld at 2:90 P. M. on, Jan Everybody nterested s nvted to1 attend. Mrs. W. f. Mayers, Charan of Putna Townsdp V ABOUT THE FSH LAW The gae and fsh laws of ths state are a coplex proble to any people.. The publc does not know whether they have a rght to fsh or not. The state conservaton departhas sent out notce that each fsheran could use fve lnes through the ce up to January. Fsh houses are also pertted for lne fshng only, no spears beng allowed. After January frst but one lne wll be allowed. o. NEW YEAR'S EVE DANCE Next Frday evenng, January 31, a New Year's Dance wll be held at St. Joseph's Audtoru, Dexter. Good usc, Good floor and a Good te prosed. COUNTRFET FVE DOLLAR BLL A warnng has been ssued to the publc regardng counterfet fve dollar blls n crculaton n certan sectons of the state. One dollar blls have been cleverly rased to fve, but the counterfeters, wth careless dsregard for the tradton about Washngton, neglected to change the pcture to one of Lncoln, whch usually adorns $5. n other respects the counterfet blls are sad to show real artstry. The nuerala n the corners have been changed, the border altered to correspond wth the fve dollar denonaton, and the letterng jaed n a barely deetable anner.to cover another dscrepancy the large cobnaton of nuerals and letters next to the pcture were partly torn and a strp of uslaged paper glued on t as f to prevent further'tearng. NOTCE The Mchgan Autooble Lcense plates for 1W sffl be on sale at the New Tews 4 Greetng To All ts Frends and Patrons We wsh at ths te to thank you for the patronage of the past year and extend an nvtaton to call and see us whenever n need of anythng n our lne. Our Motto s "The Best For Less" Wty not Adopt tke sae for Lee Snclar Ol Staton MMfl 55(69¾ -'V Pnckney, Mch We Thank You for the Favors of the Past Year and Wsh You a - A HAPPY NEW YEAR NOTCE There wll be a eetng of the 0.. S. and F. and A. M. New Years eve, Deceber tl. Entertanent. No ::* *'C *W*s1 ; S MA ^1,-w- T 'J> *-..< >s :$

2 V THE PNCKNEY DSPATCH «AV>*V«\XX^O<<X^1CV**VWO pj r la PfaaflrPc) Anton Vaverka Qn N e w e g t ^ Tan, Brown, Red Strped Flannel Snort Outft THREE DAYCOLDS *A W, W.y.,r X f*,;lf>v Sun Story Martha Martn PLAYNG FAR NOW Wttlter was tx very stluky lttle boy. He hated to gve away Anythng. f he had soue peuules n hs packets and the other boys wee goqg to chp n together and get soe Candy or arbles Walter would go Along wth the but he would try to pretend he hadn't any oney so te jroudn't have to spend hs. Of Coarse, f he couldn't succeed n ths he'd spend a very lttle. Walter was just lke hs father always had been. Bo t was not altogether hs fault. He had been taught that the ore held onto oney the ore one Dw>'t Know You What s Your Nae?" had and he had been taught, too, that *Jk* less he spent the less would be :ted of h. ASx) he had found that ths was very But, of course, he knew nothng SJS aft ef the Joy of gvng and the Joy 4jf stalng and soe of those partcu- Joys. had been a te when hs ther ted sad to h when they were a contrbuton n church for thy cause:,tf the plate s held so t lt SSry ebarrassng f you A4 so everyone would notsjt a lttle soethng n ean keep fro gvng l»1ng partcularly nohced. "wll be that uch rcher, s*m Mate a nt-»t»hgl USU as* ee»* effete tt ths ** 3he Hotel 5twWdphcr " WANT to lve n o stable," sad the Hotel Stenographer. "They an't no ore," repled the Boose Detectve. " guess you ean garage." ' " a not qute certan know what ean, t guess want an ncoe of fve thousand a year wthout workng, fat's v hat ost people who lead the jtudo lfe talk about atosphere,.coplexes and vortexes and thngs, was at a studo party last nght where Jthey talked lke that. T ddn't know what they eant but they ddn't ether, so was perfectly happy and jtoesed n a few 'nfnte cososes' a.couple of 'soul longngs' and strutted j stuff wth the best of the. 'Ton can't properly talk of these thngs except n a studo bult out of 0 stable. There ts soethng about the atosphere of a defunct horse ffcjtt develops all that s hghest and neblest lke free wastlnes, free food and free-for-all conversaton. The people 1 et were artsts,, Wtters and uscans. The reason PM of these artsts' pctures haug n S show and none of these wrters' stotftf get publshed n agaznes and none of the uscans' playng ts resorded s that ths dvne ex-horse atosphere ts not apprecated by the eoon herd, whch has a sort of wow flavor that does not x wth the stable afflatus, f you get e." " don't know what you are talkng shout* snorted the House Detectve, "That's all rght, Kelly," assured the fr. "1 have no edge on you there. don't know, ether. n ah jongg rot say certan words at certan tes you do not know what they ean you do not care. Stable art barn and bos stall lterature are lka t s all Just words but there s MsaethJng about the lfe wth the Sswll of burnng punk rvng the of verbal bunk that has ts anl ft teperaental rsh grl W tk* MeNaorht Syadoat*. lae.) -O- r# Fott«r Gaelc Study ejlejl wll be erected and en^_ ft.wth Aercan oney n thfvt*? jg* MgkJft&ds to teeter gad ttlskm^ 1. <*ej*r lterature sad luu»as ^^, ^,, * and they don't hold t before you long. "Have your oney ready n case you have to gve, but don't gve f you can help t. They ay thnk you're gvng to other chartes and can't alford ths, too. They often have nce knd thoughts lke that." That had been the way n wden Walter had been brought up, so one can hardly blae Walter. Yet he was a very setl^f lttle boy as a result and t grew to be so that no one wanted h around. He wanted everyone to do everythng for h. He wanted to do nothng at all for anyone except hself. He had no dea of what the sprt of gvng eant. No dea at all. Now Peter (loe had heard of Walter und Peter (Jnoe felt t was a pty that a lttle boy who would otherwse be a nce lttle boy should be allowed to grow up nto a ser or very ean person. So one te, late, late at nght, Peter Gnoe pad a call on Walter. Walter was slng to hself for Walter had Just been thnkng of what luck he had had n not havng to spend anythng for ever and ever so long but n gettng everyone to do for h. And as he was slng to hself along cae Peter Gnoe. "Hello, Walter," sad Peter. " don't know you," sad Walter, 'but what s your nae?" "Peter Gnoe. 've coe to play." "Oh yes," sad Walter, "and have you soe arbles?" "No," 'sad Peter Gnoe, "but you have." Walter looked qute uncofortable. f he played wth hs arbles they ght get lost. "And 'd lke soe candy," sad Peter Gnoe. " heard you hadn't spent a penny for days and days and thought t was a good te to begn." Walter looked very serable. "And 'd lke to have a gae of ball, too, but we'll have to use your ball. ddn't brng ne." Walter looked astonshed. " don't know that can play Just now," Walter sad at last. "No," sad Peter Gnoe, "and you won't be playng very uch fro now on except all by yourself f you don't change your ways, "The way 've talked to you sn't half as dreadful as the way you've acted wth the other boys you want all ther thngs to share but you wll share nothng of your own. And you've becoe such a raser that everyone s gttlng tred of you. "Learn to share, That's playng far!" And Peter Gnoe was gone! But Walter reebered what he had sad. (Copyrght) WHEN WAS TWENTY-ONE BY JOSEPH K.AYE AT 21: Jaes D. Lacey, Leadng Luber Man, Was a Druggst. << A T ABOUT eghteen got a Job ^*> n a Grand Rapds drug store whch pad e seven dollars a week; every week got y seven dollars peeled off three and added the to soe savngs already had. When got a rase to eght dollars, peeled off four and when y pay rose to ten dollars peeled off fve. So that by the te was twenty-one got enough oney saved up to buy a half nterest n a drug store of y own. "But t was a bad te to buy. A new tarff law went nto effect soon after takng the dutes off any knds of erchandse and edately our stock becae worth only about half what we pad for t. We anaged to sell the store, though at a consderable loss, and went on the road as a salesan. Jaes D. Lacey." TODAY: Mr. Lacey s one of the ost noted luber en n ths country, wth offces n Chcago, Seattle and New York, and a trade that extends to all parts of South Aerca. A pecular phase of Mr. Lacey's career s that he got nto the luber busness after he had ade a coparatve success as a drug-store owner. At the age of thrty-one he had already saved soe $30,000 fro the profts of a drug store, when he thought of luber as a better payng proposton for h. (S) by McClur* N«wpap«r SyMteaU.) 0 SrWloaU.) *V\\\N\\\W*0$W\\\VAW* Vaverka s the noted Czechoslovaks actor, ade up as the Eperor Franz Josef, whch character he portrays n "The Weddng March." -O- CTHE WHY of SUPERSTTONS By H. 1RV1NQ KJNQ WEDDNG RNGS, STES F YOC want to cure a sty just take a weddng rng your own or a frend's wll do and holdng the rng n your fngers reach your left hand around over your head and rub the sty wth the rng. The wrter stubled upon ths superstton the other day. A doestc n the faly had a sty. A neghbor told her, "Oh, that's easy enough to cure," loaned her the necessary weddng rng and showed her how to work the char. The next day the sty was better and rapdly dsappeared, thus akng another convert to the agc folklore of the ancents. Upon nqury ths sty cure was found to be a coon superstton. The bass of the superstton s, evdently, that very old agc srbolls whch s attached to the rng nnd whch has been varously explaned by any learned wrters, hut never qute satsfactorly. Possbly soe of the explanatons gven are correct but t looks as f prtve an had soethng n the "back of hs nd" wth regard to the rng whch hss been lost to hs descendants. "For who hath known the ways of te or trodden behnd hs feet?" f That the ost sacred sort of a rng to us oderns s a weddng rng explans why n curng the sty a weddng rng should he used. There s ore thnn a hnt of sun worshp n the superstton under consderaton n that the weddng rlnr s of gold, the color of the sun nnd round lke the sun's dsc. Also the tnklnc of the rng n the left hand, and the oveent of the hand over the head fro left to rght, or sunwse the "cereonal crcut" ephaszes the sun "otf n the "cure." There s a lonely obelsk n Central park whose glded apex stll catches and reflects the ornng lght as t dd when t stood before the teple of Ra at HelU opols and sent back the beas of the rsng day across the desert sands whle wthn the fane the prests, ovng n the "cereonal crcut," adored ther god. Fro Helopols n 3900 B. C. to these Unted States! t s a "far cry"; and a long journey has the old obelsk ade* through the centures'and across the seas! Yet f that grante ass were sentent would t not thnk that the old gods were not entrely dead when beneath t walks soe nursery ad tellng her copanon how she had cur?d her sty by usng a weddng rng n the "cereonal crcut"? ( by McClure Newspaper Syndcate.) FOR THE GOOSE / YOU never ake as uch nose over savn' tec dollars as yon do over losn' one. Men lke the nce, hoelke taurants where yon get a lotta good, table-d'hote for your onev. Woen pretend to. n the house where the Vctrola needle works all day long, the darnn' needle gets rusty. FOR THE QANDER f two people shares a pece of food lack. t draws the closer. Bat not 1 as close as f they shared a danger. f you're been dgfln' pts for other people yon usn't go to sleep aeav the for fear of rollln' la. What would yon thnk of anybody that kdded yon as often as yon kt yourself? (Oeprrlstat) O Autooble reflectors coonly are plated wth four coats of etal; oee> per fro a cyande hath, copper fret* a sulphate bath, nckel 104 scver. Blendng or Contrastng Colon, Make Deep Collars and Panels. The dfference between a cloth coat ths season and a fur coat s that the cloth coat has» lttle less fur than the all-fur coat observes a fashon wrter n the Kansas Oty Stur. The long stole collar*, the deep shawl collar, cavaler cutfs. and panels of fur on the skrts all brng the quota of fur (and let t also be sad the prce) Of a fur-tred cloth cuut very close to that of the fur coat. The beauty of the cloth coat tred n fur has been brought alost to a state of perfecton by the desgners. <Jreens tred wth rch brown fur, red coats wth collars of skunk, fvx scarfs on sl wrap-around coats, black caracul on black broadcloth all testfy to the perfecton of blended turs and fabrcs or to the use of contrastng effects. The coat slhouette s by no eans confned to the wrap-around effects; the*\p-e coat s sart. So s the coat that has fullness above the wastlne and confned at snugly ftted hps. The black coat and the red dress s a sart enseble, so s that whch takes contrast nto consderaton. The green coat, green dress and green hat are perfectly blended n ths season's ode, so are the browns and the tans and other fashonable shades. Natural lynx, pastel and whte foxes, wolverne, leopard, erne, nk and sable., are accented. Evenng wraps of etallc brocades or velvet also added ther quota of fur?, soe elaborate styles beng augented by rch all-over ebroderes and borders of frnge. Fur wraps are often on dolan lnes. Long stoles of sable, wrapped several tes around the throat, are nterestng addtons to several of the costues. Frnge, often used n sectons headed by squares of ebrodery, was portant, and Jeweled pns, bowknots, or ornaents added brllance to any gowns, posed at hp, shoulder, or at the center front. Flowers, large Coat of Henna Wool Wth Nutra Collar and Cuffs. crushed roses, dotted/ the generous skrts of tulle and chffon dance dresses. Lace was used sparngly, n collars, cuffs and n slender draperes to ark skrt slashes. t also s for yokes, chffon beng another ateral to provde yoke effects, partcularly n svenlng dresses. A happy exaple of ths n pale pnk had three yokes posed one after the other n tone-ontone effect and battleent cut, beng carred out the underar la a deep square. The two-pece dea perssts, ether n actual presentatons, or n sulated effects, both blouses and short Jackets contrbutng to ths, and evdenced n one or two types as well Slender contours, occasonally releved by the ntroducton of crcular and flared skrt lnes, or uneven hee acheved by draped and ponted effects, and plats provded on anated slhouette. Blouse and bolero thees n extree oderaton represent soe of the ost nterestng odels n the collecton, always placng accent upon exceedngly youthful thees. Separate Blouse b Good n any of the new costues the separate blouse 1J the portant half. Mad* of softer ateral than the skrt t fals n graceful lnes fro shoulder, to hps. Usually t has a Moused T>acx, and ost often t boasts o( loose dolan sleeves. The ore elaborate ones ere ade of etal brocade, prnted velvet, or ebrodered etallc lace. Foworod Chffots charng dance or dnner drees la of sple basqao lnes, wth a black lace bodes and a skrt coposed of rchly coloredflowered*mffesj set on a yoke of the Strpes accentuate the beauty of ths dress. t s of tan, brown and red strped flannel cobned wth plan tan flannel, supplyng an outft that wll appeal to any woen. Late Fashon Bulletns Fro Pars and New York The new geoetrc nfluence s as* sung ncreasng portance. Many of the latest Pars creatons, not only n sport wear and dayte frocks but n evenng gowns by Vonnet, Chanel and other leadng French houses, are sharply geoetrc both n cut and desgn, accordng to advces fro the Pars bureau of Harper's Bazar. The New York shops ths season show wdely vared exaples of ths ode. Many of the agnatve beaded otfs used on the new evenng gowns are appled n geoetrc confguraton. The sport enseble s beng featured both n Pars and New York, and ay be expected to contnue. Patou, Vlonnett and Chanel are aong the Pars houses ephaszng ths ost servceable costue. n fact, the pport oveent contnues to be an portant fashon factor, affectng all phases of the dayte ode. The top-heavy slhouette, n ts any anfestatons, s ^clang an portant place n ths season's ode. Martal and Arand acheve ths shoulder accent n a sleeveless gown by eans of a short cape. Low-backed evenng gowns, ntroduced fro leadng Parts have becoe a defnte BOSS ts> ska ode, accordng to Harper's Sasar. All portant New York stetos are preparng to show tahwetoed odels through the season. Bouffant skrts for the evenng* gown are eetng occasonal favor. A wde, draped hp-grdle s beng soetes used. The sport nfluence that has so strongly donated dayte apparel s begnnng to show tself here and there n evenng wear. Several authortatve New York houses are showng evenng gowns suggestve of the two-pece sport frock. A new verson of the bolero s rapdly ganng n popularty for the cong season and s consdered extreely portant. Drecoll sponsors the long bolero whch s favored for dayte wear. Why Europeans Dress Better Than Aercans Why s the average European wonv an better dressed than the average Aercan woan? n the opnon of Baron de Meyer, world-faous fashon authorty, t s because Aercan woen dress for ther en whle European woen dress chefly for other woen. Wrtng fro Parts for Harper's Bazaar, Baron de Meyer says: "Aercan woen prncpally dress to please ther en. Aercan en, however, never analyse a woan's gown. They are not nterested n why a dress s sart f the general appearance s sart. "The ajorty of Pars woen do not dress to court asculne adraton only, but prncpally to be apprecated (shall we say enved?) by other well-dressed woen. Woen beng ore dffcult to satsfy tfcss en, the ladles of Pars are consequently lvng op to ach hgher standards. Therefore, they are ach better dressed,** Another reason gven by De Meyer for the European woen's superor elegance la that whle Aercan woen "only actvely thnk of new clothes twce a year, European woen order few dothes st s te hut replensh ther wardrobe al the year round. They are, therefore, alwsys op to the Favor StoU Collars Many of the cloth coats are provded wth collars whch gve exactly the sae appearance as a stols coposed of two fox furs, Naturally the slver fez skns are the eet cnotee for ths purpoee, hot cross foxes are torol trensodsos] to ther soft UondHas; of A cough or cold that hangs on after THREATEN LUNGS the thrd day s a threat. 'Do soethng! Don't wat untl t has run ts course fro your head to your throat, chest and bronchal tubes. When you feel a cough or cold spreadng down nto *h.«bronchal tubes t s n the "danger zone" for these tubes lead drectly nto your lungs. Quckly and unfalngly Ayer*s Cherry Pectoral goes straght to the seat of the trouble. Real edcne, reachng deep down wth ts soothng, healng power. Absorbed through and through the rrtated throat, chest and bronchal ebranes, t quckly stops the cough, breaks up the cold and brngs propt, lottng relef. Ayer's Cherry Pectoral s hosptalproved and prescrbed by physcans. Pleasant to taste. All druggsts 60e and, twce the quantty, $1.00. ktoach Sufferers WRT FOR QUtSTONNARt E and nforaton n rega-d to PRESCRPTON 302, and free tral treatent. DepLj. Provldc* Laboratonr, nc. C Provdence Bd*., MUwauke*, Ws. K unnjmunfftw Jockey Also Preacher "DANDELON BUTTER COLOR" A harless vegetable butter color used by llons for 50 years. Drug Btores and general stores sell bottles of "Dandelon" for 35 cents. Adv. One thorn of experence s worth a whole wlderness of warnng, Lowell. A an's head s lke hlo pocketbook t's not the outsde appearance, but what t contans that counts. r DODVS *, PLLS.'v v rvv( v ^ d<k Mr<h< '^ DURETC STMULANT TOTHE KDNEYS " had been troubled wth lubal for twenty yefu*. Consulted aj tors and tres' sj tu&ds of < but all to n<*_^s 8jflSSV-tjatS. yeal was told -"Mtpr the last sta use Dodd's?nt good healgb * fjmss) BSSSt.' "'T no "Preacher Jack" Jennngs of land s a professonal jockey durng the week and a preacher on Sunday. He rode recently n the Cesarewltch and other events wth success. He s a lay nster of the Church of England. fake Dodd- Sprng- «M good tue N 1118 fear, n n order %$ Jeep la tes. Mrs. *9fchlt» d's Plls and she s _._ ter. recoend te all y frends." P»ef. Aug. F. W. Schltz, Thoas, Okla. a box today, 60c, at your drus e or the Dodd's Medcne Co., 701 Man St., Buffalo, N, T. DON'T R NFLAMED LDS t l&ce tb«urtuttott. Ot MTCHELL EYB SALVK, lplt, d»- p*odtbl«, uft nn«dar. J5e at «11 dnffut. B»B M SMfcl, Urn Tt* at* Retan the Chna Of Grfceod A dear Sweet Sks Cutcura W Help You Food! Felt lke Vegr Brooklyn, N. Y. 'Mr. A. says: "No atter what seeed to turn to a add as soon as t ff was blous, belched rose n y outh. poor. took Carter's,FHts for just one w< tsnry was a fne re Treat a constpa a sensble anner, els to ove dally fret Carter's Lttle Lver every eber of the fatty. sugar coated, easy to take. Druggsts, 25 ft 75c red pa PASTOR K0ENGS NERVNE ' Eplepsy Nc voumt:v, < \t f*mwl 1 j '^ *><,!.>' **-,

3 \ 3BB 7 ^7 l **- '' * 4 <«* \» THE PNCKNEY DSPATCH K Lefors, Texaa. Ths quant town n northeast Texas has so any dstnctons they ust be enuerated n soe knd of sequence. Aong these are the followng: Lefors s the sallest county seat 1B Texas. Lefors boasts that t s the only county seat wthout a Jal. The Jal has been leased to a neghborng town. Though located on an otherwse treeless plan, the town s hard by a forest of gant cotton woods. Ths fact leads to another dstnc- ton. The town has the only saw ll n a terrtory larger than half a dozen northern' or eastern states. There are no other saw lls out on the plans because there s no wood to aw. >. The water wells are only nne feet deep n Lefors. But perhaps the ost nterestng facts are these: The cottonwood trees fetar grapes and vrtually all the rests drnk grape juce the year 1, and although ffty years old v felt town's ceetery contans only Jgtp graves. Jtttjr the town s the Valley of Let^t fored by a branch of the Red rver, whch separates Texas fro Oklahoa. Ths valley gves the presson that t s a corner of Japan or an agnary kngdo n a drea. Whle the plans ay be swept by cold wnds, and the frost ay creep down fro the north, the Valley of Lefors s war and cozy behnd ts rock wall shelter. The towerng cottonwoods do not actually bear graphs, but they support the wld grape vnes that entwne the and hang down lke vels. Here n protected dells grow fruts of all knds, and the cherry blossos enhance the Npponese pcture. Fro the wld grape vnes, a great crop of grapes s harvested every year. The juce of the grape s found la every hoe hereabouts. When a an wants a well here be procures a post hole dgger, bores down about nne feet and obtans clear, sparklng water. For a generaton Lefors has gone on drnkng ts grape Juce and sawng ts wood, and now ol s begnnng to touch t wth tnagto of lfe. The ol boo n the Panhandle s reachng nto Gray county, of whch Lefors s the exact geographcal center. The town wth ts dreay valley 1s perkng up. The cottonwoods are beng transfored nto new boraes. jf TEXAS TOWN CLAMS MANY DSTNCTONS Only County Seat Wthout Jal, U Boast. Coatt W ashln gtoa. Tfca otb washed up on the shores of Florda have been brought to the St nsttuton by Dr. J. W. Gldley. tfce result of an excavaton at Vence, fta, The skeleton, though not ooouyle** s the best yet dscovered oa the west coast of Florda. All the teeth were found, as well as the coplete feet structure, the lower jaw, a tusk and a shoulder blade and part of the vertebra. Soe of the bones were brakes aa4 n the surface of the breaks harnaclaa, whch are now fosslzed, had attached theselves. Fro these facts Doctor Gldley deduced that the bones had been washed up oe the old shore of the Gulf of Mexco, though ths 1«now four les nland froca the present coast Tbey ust hve been quckly burled n the sand tor tbey are very lttle corroded. The fofall was dscovered toy the Vence copany, a subsdary of the Brotherhood of Locootve Engneers, whch edately offered t to the Sthsonan nsttuton as a gft. The copany's co-operaton enabled Doctor Gldley to rescue as uch of the skeleton as possble. "Ths dscovery," sad Doctor Gldley, "sees to be a Coluba aoth, types of whch have been found n terrtores to the north of Florda.*' Wrte Chnese Bble Tgayo. A Chnese porter eployed toy * Msson here has just copleted te w»r* of translatng the Bble nto NttolMftt tongue on a large scroll. took h four years and Lncoln Pstol* Denark. Three plshy Abraha Lncoln to V were overlooked tjh) broke nto the Jaegers- ' tnuseu here and ade 4H of valuables. pt of 1925 Would Crcle Globe 11 Tet Washngton. The lttle postate stap yon use fro te to te s one of a huge faly. There were ore than 18, JOOO of the ade n Washngton last year, beng suflejent for supplyng each an, woan and chld n the country wth 100. Tbey represented a face value of $460,000,000 and requred 900 tons of paper and 870,000 pounds of nk n ther anufacture. Placed- endgto end, they would grdle the earth eleven tes. The cost of producng the was about 1 cent for each 128. NEW WELLAND CANAL WLL FREE ONTARO "Cnderella of Lakes" Take on New Lfe. to Toronto, Ont. Lake Ontaro, the Cnderella of nland seas, rejoces n the prospect of an early eancpaton by the openng of the new Welland canal n every port on the great lakes shppng en and others are dscussng what wll happen n the new era to be naugurated by the canal, whch n soe respects rvals Panaa. There s uch dfference of opnon, but whatever happens wll be an proveent for the ports located on Lake Ontaro. Here s one of the fnest bodes of water n the world, 200 les long by 40 wde. Surrounded on all sdes by rch country and teeng ctes, t ought to be alve wth coerce. But the ordnary vew of Lake Ontaro la as lfeless as the pcture of the "panted shp upon a panted ocean." prsoned by Fals, Rapd*. Nature played a ean trck on Lake Ontaro. t ade her the connectng lnk between two of the ost faous rvers n the world the Nagara and the St Lawrence but the falls of Nagara and the rapds of the St. Lawrence, whch llons of people have coe fro the ends of the earth to see, have solated and prsoned Ontaro. Great ocean lners coe up the SJ. Lawrence to Montreal and stop. Great lners of the nland 6eas cruse Superor, Huron, Mchgan and Ere, but they stop when they approach the outh of the Nagara rver. t s true both the Nagara and the St Lawrence have been canalzed, but the shps than can be accoodated are sall and the trps through the locks tresoe. The new Welland canal wll be revolutonary n ts capacty. nstead of a draft of 12 or 14 feet t wll provde a draft of 25 feet, whch can be deepened to 30 feet nstead of 27 locks, t wll have only 7 tocks, and 3 of these wll be double locks n nght, enablng boats to ascend and descend. nstead of 12 to 18 hours now requred to get through the canal the passage wl be ade n 8 hours or less. Shps of 12,000 tons, good-szed ocean lners, wll be able to ake the Nagara detour wth ease.. Ontaro Ports Lookng Up. A great llng ndustry has grown up at Buffalo, N. Y., and Port Colborne, Ont., 'because all the larger gran shps fro the head of the lakes were stopped by Nagara. Now all the ports.at the eastern end of Lake <ntarlo a gettng ready to capture or at least 6hare n ths trade. The large boats wll be able to get down the St Lawrence as far as Prescott, Ot, and Ogdensburg, N. Y., but as he channel through the Thousand slands s trcky the ports of Kngston, jkat* and Oswego, N. Y., are ore jtaerally favored. Kngston, one of the ost ancent ctes n Canada, s preparng for a great revval. Montreal also hopes to beneft Freght rates" for the all-canadan roufco wll, t s hoped, be lowered ((through as to ths there s soe doubt) and Montreal wll be able to copete on ore favorable ters wth the Atlantc Aercan ports. n any case, Ao.ntr.eal hopes to becoe a great llng center. Toronto, n antcpaton of the canals, has spent $20,000,000 on a harbor developent and even f the acheveent -of ocean port status s delayed t hopes by ore accessble coal and ore supples to establsh on ts harbor front large new ndustres. By the end of the present season 80 per ceat of the new Welland canal undertakng wll be copleted. By 1930 at the atest t wll be ready for traffc. The coat wll be well under $100, Ary Made 1,000 Flghts Over Arway* n Year Washngton. Durng the last fscal year ary arplanes ade approxately L000 flghts over the eastern dvson of the odel arways fro Washngton to Dayton. Coercal plots also took advantage of the facltes offered on the odel arways, recognzng the greater safety and ease of ar travel over an organzed and dentfed route. Planes utlzng ths route nubered 1,213, of whch 959 belonged to the ary, 14 to the navy, 14 to the arne corps and 68 to coercal concerns.. n addton 166 planes flew over the route but dd not stop. Sea and Strats Gettng Much Wanner Dutch Harbor, Alaska. Berng sea and strats connectng the Arctc ocean are warng up, cebergs dnshng n sze and fsh ordnarly fearful of the cold gratng farther north, declare crews of whalers just back fro the frgd regons. Seals and walrus have found the water of Berng sea too war and were scarce except n the Arctc ocean ths last season, whle whales appeared ore nuerous n the polar waters than along the Alaskan coast. Herrng, selt and salon, rarely frequentng Berng strats, have taken the old sealng grounds, say the whalers. School for Gypses Uzhorod, Chechoslovaka^ The frst school ot gypses n Europe wll soon be establshed hare, WOMAN, 92, BOASTS 308 LVNG HERS Challenges Any Grandother to Show Equal Record. Ogden, Utah- Boastng that she has tht largest posterty of any woan n the country, Mrts. Sarah Jane Taylor of Harrsvllle recently celebrated her nnety-second brthday. She has 308 lvng descendants, who nclude 8 chldren, 50 grandchldren, 1SD greatgrandchldren and 01 great-greatgrandchldren. She has challenged any woan n the country to show a larger nuber of lneal descendants and s anxous to correspond wth any such woan. Mrs. Taylor hus been arred twce, the frst te when she was only sxteen. The arrage was wth Baley Lake, a fellow Moron convert who the young grl et on her way to Utah n They settled n Ogden where four chldren were born. When the youngest was stl! a baby Brgha Young pressed Mr. ^ake nto servce and sent h to daho to spread the Moron gospel aong the ndans. Wth the other Moron elders at Fort Leh, Lake was attacked by ndans. The lttle garrson, beseged, sent Lake as a essenger for help. He was abushed and klled n the Malad ountans. A few years later hs wdow was arred to the late Pleasant Greea Taylor. Sx chldren, four of the stll lvng, were born fro ths unon. Mrs. Taylor was born n Port Gbson, Mss., Noveber 12, She has the dstncton of beng one of the few reanng Morons who crossed the plans n oxcarts n the early fftes. She was aong the relgous followers who left the northern part of the state and went south when General Johnston's ary cae to Utah to subdue Brgha Young. Eat n Darkness as Health Ad, Says Doctor London. Wth so uch stress beng lad on the vrtues of artfcal sunlght, specal nterest attaches te the announceent, ade by a pronent London doctor, that we do not suffcently consder the health value of darkness. The authorty state* that n hs opnon any of the lls that have ther orgn n dgestve troubles are traceable to the too lavsh use of lght at eals. Brllant lghtng, he asserts, s harful n dnng roos, restaurants and other places where eals are partaken. Our dgestve processes, on the perfect workng of whch huan health and happness so largely depend, art nterfered wth by the extra stulant provded by garsh lghtng. T%e deands ade on the senses by such factors as brght lghts and arrestng sounds ean that blood s drawn fro the stoach to the bran and uscles, and the asslaton of food naturally suffers. Accordng to ths authorty the best lght for <-a1 tes s that gven by shaded ennrle*. But we should all be better n health and n teper, the physcan states, f we ate oar eals n sedarfcness. Plan to Revve Whalng Off Calforna Coast San Dleco. Calf After a hatus of ore than half a century whalng operatons are to be resued on an extensve scale on the southern Calforna coast. A whalng fleet consstng of the factory steaer Lansng, wth four kllers, has establshed a base at South Bay, San Clernente sland, and has started a hunt for the faous Calforna "grays," the hupback and the sper, the only speces frequentng these waters. The whale ol. fertlzer and chcken.feed, the prncpal products derved fro the whale catch, wll be dsposed of entrely n the Calforna arkets, offcals of the whalng copany announce. Slup n Fur Washngton. Fur coats ay gan an enhanced standng as luxures f the supply of fur-bearng anals contnues to decrease as steadly aa n the last year. The Agrcultural departent sad the nuber of fur wearers was ncreasng uch faster than fur bearers. Canadan Farer Seeks $ Meteor Bured n Yard jjj * Detrot Mch. George Turn- 2 er, a farer lvng near Aherstburg, Ont., and a nuber of hs frends, are plannng to dg up what s beleved to be a porton of a eteor that burled tself n the ground outsde Turner's hoe. The ssle s 'burled abou' ten feet and the bole, whch s about twelve nches n daeter. ndcates that t ust have been whrlng at a great rate of speed when t struck. "My wfe and were readng n the front roo when y atw tentlon was attracted by what 1 t thought resebled a lar of n flae," Turner sad. *At frst 1 beleved the bouse was afre and rushed out of doors, but found nothng." Turner plans to send the ssle to the governent laboratores at Toronto for exanaton. & wsmssy >»< ****» -:-^n WAS TOO OLD FOR DREAMS By H. M. EGBERT * ra (Cuyyrlght by W U Cbauaa.) "A W. COME off, Bll! V too old for the dreas:" sad Dck Slttlngwell to hs fel low druuuuer n the tran. "No, but honest! ean t! Why, Dck, you ust be akng your cool four thousand, and f your hr went bust you could get just as good a Job anywhere. And forty-fve f you're a a day. An't you never had a grl, Dck?" Dck Slttlngwell oved n hs seat uneasly. "Cut t out, tell you," he answered ferocously. "Hello! Bourne End! Here's where get off. So long, old an! See you next week as usual." Dck Slttlngwell had had plenty of grls when he was a young an, but soehow all hs roances had coe to an untely end. And t was only wthn the last two years that a new roance, sweeter than any, and ore strange, had coe nto hs lfe. He never spoke about Mss Else Van Nugent. t had never entered hs nd that he could speak to her wthout profanng her. That was hs sanctuary, hs holy of holes. And arrage wth her was soethng of whch he had never dreaed. Ther acquantance had begun by an accdent. Dck, tollng up the hll at Bourne End on a hot suer day, wth hs saple case n hs hand, had seen the old ad standng at the gate of her garden. He looked up at the bg house n the vllage, and, takng her for the housekeeper, sad: "Mght ask you for a glass of water, a'a?" "'ll get yoa one," staered Mss Van Nugent, and ran away, or rather burred away, returnng wth a glass as clear and cold as f t had coe fro soe Olypan sprng. Dck quaffed t at a draft.! "Much oblged, a'a." he sad, and! rased hs hat and wen* away. He dd not agne what a roance that was to Else Van Nugent. Afterward, upon succeedng Jour- ' neys. t often happened that he saw Mss Else at the gate. Then he would 1 nod pleasantly and pass a reark. By degrees ther ntacy ncreased. Dck Slttlngwell would often stay as on? as fve nutes, talkng and lookng wstfully at the bg house n the coo! grounds. He learned Mss Else's nae at the hotel. She owned the place, and was the daughter of the late squre. She was an old ad ^anjs they s«md, alcously, that she was forty. Else Van Nugent had never arred because she had taken care of her father untl tls death, when «he was thrty-seven. No opportuntes cae after that. Opportuntes for arrage ' are few n New England aong woen who brth has ade superor to the rest of the county. And. besdes, Else was already growng nto a typl-cal old ad. She was becong angular snd thn, there were gray streaks n her har, and she knew qute well that whatever beauty she had ever possessed was already gone beyond recovery. Her lfe had been utterly craped Her booksh learnng had never been odfed by contact wth the world, for her father had always been a recluse, and. n hs last days, a fretful nvald. When she et the druer she thought h a typcal an of the ; world. The acquantance wns a wonderful thng to her. She felt gulty n stealng down to the garden gate when! Dck was cong that way Thursdays he always appeared n Bourne End. She nvented lttle excuses at frst to account for her presence there. Wstfully she thought how she would lke to ask h n. But she never dared. t wns not only fear of what the neghbors would say, but fear of what he would thnk of her. t was odd that the uncouth druer should exercse so strange a fascnaton over the old ad, but t was equally strange that he should fnd n her hs deal of woanhood. Two or three years passed, and ther ntacy stayed exactly where t was. Nether dared to ncrease t. or to venture to speak of the thoughts n the heart Dck was becong balder and stouter, and Else ore wthered and lean. Then cae the day when Dck was aazed to see the house closed and n bg "For Sale" sgn n front of t The town was buzzng wth the news. Mss Else's lawyer, who had had charge of her property, had absconded, takng wth h her whole avalable fortune, ten thousand dollars. Mss Else had reaned secluded tn the house snce the Monday before. Dck hestated only a oent; then he went nto the garden and knocked at the door. lt Mss Else herself opened t and stood watchng h through her tearstaned lashes. She looked less beautful than ever at that oent, wth her reddened eyelds nnd her dsordered har. "t's too bad, a'a,'* sad Dck. "Just heard the news and called to say bow sorry was." "1 suppose t's what they call lfe," answered Mss Else. "1 hope, a'a, you aren't plannng to sell the place because of that?" * certanly a. t' am that hare left now.* "Mght 1 task your prce, oqe^'asf nqured Dck. "Kght thousand dollar*," angwereo Mlstj Else lstlessly. "t ought 10 b* ore, but ttv± house s vary old, and that's what ' advsed to hold t fur." Dck thought hurredly. He knew that would ean about three thousand cash d a ortgage. Dck was worth three thousand ; he could ar about range the detals. "'ll buy t," he announced. -you!" gasped Else. "Yes, a'a. You see, 've had j eye on the place for a long te, n the hopes you ght sotue day sell.' The words struck her lke a blow be tween the eyes. So that was the secret of hs nterest. The vanty o her dreas! " suppose you can have t, then," he heard her answer vaguely. "Everythng n t as t stands, lock stock and barrel?" asked Dck. "Why, guess the furnture's no! worth uch," sad Mss Else. "You'll have to see y brother, Mr. Van Nugent, at Staples, le has charge of the atter." "But f he s wllng, you are?" perssted Dck. "Yes," she repled. Dck wthdrew. He wanted to hde the eluton n hs heart, that set t poundng frghtfully as he reflected upon hs aneuver. He clenched hs fsts as he thought of the lawyer. He had known Sharpes well; the an was a convval person at the hotel. "f ever run across h, 'll break hs head," he swore. V And Dck ran across h tne followng week n the ost aazng way. He was sent out to a western cty to cover a terrtory left vacant by the llness of a fellow druer. The busness done, Dck retred to hs roo n the hotel. A door opened softly, and Dck saw the head and shoulders of Sharpes n a nute he had leaped across tht passage and entered, before the law yer could draw the bolt. Sharpes stared at Dck n terror. "What do you want?" he snarled. "You know," sad Dck. Sharpes realzed that t was no te to ake pretenses. "t's not your busness," he swaggered, "but 'll gve you fve hundred to get out and keep your outh shut." "You'll gve e ten thousand for Mss Van Nugent," answered Dck. "t never was ten thousand." "t's gong to be." "D'you suppose 've got t about e, you fool?" Dck went to the telephone and touched the recever. The nwyer grabbed h by the ar. "'ll gve you two." he hlustpred. Dck turned and ftced h. "1 sad ten. and eant t." he returned. "And see here! presed yself the pleasure of breakng your head. However, guess T can't have everythng. Wll you hand over that ten thousad, for the last te?" The lawyer took a hll case out of hs pocket and echancally counted out the oney. Therp were twenty hlts of fve hundred apece. Dck exaned the ; they were genune enough. " guess you've plenty ore,".be sad. "t's where you won't get t." Dck' sled and slpped the blls nto hs pocket. "So, yon see, gupss T can't buy the place after all," Dck explaned to Mss Else 89 he hdnded her th* oney. She was cryng softly. " don't know what to say or how to thank you." she sobbed. "t's wonderful. t's wonderful 1" And n her happness, ore at the proof of hs nterest than at the return of the oney, tho years seeed to fall fro.mss Else, and there was alost n grlsh flush upon her face. Dck breathed heavly. " ess T sorry we can't carry out our arrangeent." he ubled. "t wasn't the place wanted, but the contents, as we agreed." "The furnture? Do you really wan* that?" "No," staered Dck. " wanted you." And wth aazng darng he tool Mss Else n hs ars and kssed her Monk Parrakeets Lve the County Lfe The onk parrakeets of southern South Aerca Jon n bands that buld n copany a structure of stcks that fors a vertable apartent house n whch each par of brds lves n a separate cavty. These counal nests are used year after year and often grow steadly n bulk. Soe are sx or eght feet n daeter and contan enough stcks and twgs to fll a wagon. n early days n the Papas these brds nested n the low trees that fored occasonal groves on the plans. Man ntroduced Eucalyptus trees, whch grow to a great heght and now the onk parrakeets buld nests n the branches of trees. > often 60 or 80 feet fro the ground. ; A speces of ducv known as the tree teal, soewhat slar to the greenwnged teal, pre-epts a chaber n ths sae counal structure, lnes t wth soft jown, and hatches ts own young ad the nosy chatter of ta neghbors. Scentfc Monthly. Rche$ Should Be Earned No agc wand can nstantly change trash nto gold. Hard labor drected by ntellgent thought only can turn natural rches nto cojd cash. Most en who wthout work becoe rteh overnght have sply robbed ther fpuow of ther sa<1ngs Grt & Chrstas Joys 6rockng* flled wth Santa's gfts. Slng faces. Merry laughter. Heaps of fun on ths day of days. Of coarse you'll not forgee the eel'de treat for those happy youngsters. Yoa know t's Monarch Every genune Monarch pacngs bea rs h«ho a Head, the oldest tradeark n the Unted State* cov tng a coplete) lne of the world** fnest food product* Coffee, Tea, Cocoa, Catsup. Pckle*, Peanut Butter, Canned Frut* and Vegetables, and other anperor table *pe- 1?') MONARCH Qualtyfor7oyeaa Monarch * the only nadoeafly QUALTY FOOD PBODOCTS *om xejostver saaa wbo own and operas ther own atone. RE1D, MURDOCH &. CO. Establshed 1853 Chcago Pttsburgh N«w ToA Boston Lot Angele* Tap* 6END 2«CENTS FOB WONDEBHFO.. tonc furula and have a nce head ot &! DR. GL'Y NORTHERN, 1816 Twelfth *Uf«S% N. W., Washngton, D. C. FOB 8ALK Choce proved «1»* proved Wheat Fars. looateo waft southwpat Kansax. Wrte for Hat and T. C. BROWN, Great Bend-, Kansas. FOB SALE-MECHANCAL FEBB-ET9 U0 rabbt-huntng. Guaranteed. Cheapa^ and better than lve ferrets. Wrte for frae (are*» lara and prces AL GRABQW, Byron. lfc NVENTON!* FOB SALE Devce to prevent doors fro slarnlttfngw Take Down Steel Square. Savfety Tre Car* rer. Lock, Bakng Pan. Yarn Baal, 1¾¾ proved Carburetor, Adjustable Snppon Bracket for Desks. Fre Alar. JSM BraJM ndcator for Ralroads, Clothes Dryer, BooM Retaner, Calculatng Devce. Curtal N Phare Support. proved Wnd Sheld, nas Snappy Flue Cleaner. Box 203', Bangor, MaV SALESMEN y;$jj Our West Vrgna Grown Nursary Stock. Fne canvassng,qutflffwlsl Cash Cosson Pad Weekly. WRTE for THE GOLD NURSERY CO. Mason Cty. W. Vsw Watered Stock l.ady Huph '. Ths per^ypt h)f water, - -^zfl SShleKnun Yes, OMtdaVng. ^f"^**" n«'\v wjter-lly fm tnxj: Watd Cutletjn prove Your Skll Oa rslaag a retrng gently seaf r U>«face wth Cutlcura Ontent* Wah off Ontent n fve ld»t««wth Cutlcura Soup jnd hot water. W s wonderful wlt Cntlonra wttt rfo> for poor coplexons, (hdruff, tchtaf and red, rongh hands. Advertseent. Substtutes are never as pood 1 $9 the orgnal. Ask the an wtav s) wooden lep. Sure Relef 6 BEUTAN*' Hot walff, Surctelfaf ELL-ANS FOR NDGESTON 25«and 75«PkfeSold Every***** TLEAR YOUR SKM \g> cf dlsfrnfbsofrfcwasjj ^ ^ tas«sv Ut» Resnol A Faly Reedy For Man and Beast To rslcvs Coogbs, Colds, Craps* Pan n Scosch and Bowsl C Also for Burns, Scalds, 8orana. Bruses, Cots, Bofls, Fekaa, FoatsaJ F«t snd QaTMsrns. To releve Pan n the FacavNsua^sv Tnfl«rww^.fy Rhsunkatstt snd TootlV ache. Sold by snd guaansead tnea 1871 by H. o" heals sore throat. cold and TSbtSt couth all &:,.--.1 %. : ; : <t «**. * - ' '* kt. 4-, V f

4 WB& *j»* <\ r '*>.. ft 4. ' # M -. *L Tar^' PNCKNEY AND TO OUR CUSTOMERS FRENDS WE WSH A HAPPY NEW YEAR LNE'S BAZAAR, Howell. Opposte Courthouse r or»«shoeng and General Reparng bo Ford Reparng F. C BRENNNGSTALL 'etteysvlle MkhfM WANTED! POULTRY & EGGS Wll pay gcatl for poultry '. and? eggafldevered ttt y poultry plant, and wll pay ^fall the arket affords at all tes. " E. FARNAM. Howell HRAM R. SMTH Lawyer Offce n Court House Mkh.» 4 B H B H H M W ^ B M H H l M e - fa.. PERCY ELL S AUCTONEER Not the Oldest n the Busness Not the Longest Lst of References JUST THE BEST ^nckney. Phone 19F11. HOWLETT & SWEENEY Attorneys at Law Offce over Deocrat Howell, Mch fcs. f.kjl SKLER PlfCXMlY Offce Heart: ;00 to 2:30 P. M. Don W. VanWnkle Attorney at L«w ^fnce over Frst State Savngs Bank, Howel, Mch, MORTGAGE SALE Default havng been ade n the (ondtons of a certan Mortgage.hereby the power theren contaned ', ) sell has becoe operatve, ade by he Keystone Realty Copany, a ' Corporaton of Detrot, Mchgan, to Carl F. Bollnger, dated October 8, J25 and recorded n the offce of the regster of Deeds for the County of. vngston, State of Mchgan, Aprl ::, 1926,n Lber 108 of Mortgages at 1 age 422 thereof, upon whch ort-! age there s claed to be due at the <.'. te of ths notce the su of Ten. undred Seventy-one Dollars and ' 'nrty-three Cents ($ ) and no,:t or proceedngs at law havng ; ecn nsttuted to recover the..d debt now reanng secured by - \kl ortgage or any part thereof,. jtce s therefore hereby gven that J Frday the eleventh day of March,.. D., 1927 at ten o'clock n the fore- ; ;on of sad day, Eastern Standard. :e, at the west front door of the t. ourt House n the Cty of Howell, < ounty of Lvngston, State of Mchan, (that beng the place of holdng t c Crcut Court n the County n - hrh the ortaged preses to 1 4 gold arfe stuated, the sad ortgage * ll be forclosed by sale at publc \ ^ndue to the hghest bdder \ J the preses contaned n sad ortgage or so uch thereof as ay ' necessary to satfsfy the aount» le wth nterest and legal costs n- > udtng an attorney fee of Thrty-fve t 035) that s to say all that certan ocs or parcel of land stuated and ' Hng n the Townshp of Putna, vngston County, Mchgan des- <. bed as follows, to-wt: Lot nuber eghty-fve (85) of ; kewoods Subdvson Nuber one ( '.) of a part of the northeast quar- *. r of the southeast quarter of Secton nuber thrty-sx (36), Town e (1) North of Range three (3) ft, Mchgan and the northwest stet of the southwest fractonal tarter (¼) of Secton nuber rty-one (31), Town one(l) North J Range four (4) east, Mchgan. Carl F. Bollnger, Mortgagee. Don W. VanWnkle, Attorney for Mortagage, Busness Address tfjk*. 12-S-26 vlle. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton were Sunday guests of Mrs. Dutton's uncle at Webbervlle. Jay Brgharn and wfe were Xas gut-stj at the hoe of Thos. Mosher n Dearborn. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Hosel entertaned Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Paulus and Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Allen of Jackson Xas Day. Mr. Thos..Rchardson of Pnckney bpent Chrstas wth Robt. Granger and faly. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dnkel and Chldren and Mr. and Mrs. Mark Alson and Marjore were Xas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alger Hall o\ Pnckney. Mr. and Mrs. Gardner spent the holdays wth hs people at Wayne. Mr. and Mrs. C. Kngsley, Vvan, Kd/a, Glenn and Clfford Bennett v:(.-re week end guests of Mr^and Mrs. Wllard Bennett n Albon. A. J. Gaffney and faly spent Xas wth ther daughter at Howell. Fred Rozek s the owner of a new rado. Jay Brgha was n Ann Arbor on busness last Thursday. Mrs. Blanch Gearhart who s attendng school at Houghton, N. Y spent Xas wth her other. ODSO Maron Esele vsted Geneve Sunday afternoon. Mller -» o- Rev. and Mrs. Stevens of Fowlervne were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. August Ruttan. Mr. and Mrs. Arche Crofoot, Mrs. E.stella Harrer and Mrs. Detta Cane were Monday guests of ther sster, Mss Maude Crofoot at the Psychopathc hosptal at Ann Arbor. Horace Mller and faly have a new rado. Percy Carson took a load of pgs to Detrot Monday for Walter Mller. W. B. Mller and faly of Maron spent Xas wth Walter Mller and faly. Floyd Munsell and faly were Xas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthurn Musell. *. Tfce Chrstas exercses at the Hansen school Frday nght were exceptonally good. Mss nez Buckley was the guest of rene Esele Saturday. Water Mller and faly attended the Xas exercses at West Maron Saturday evenng, Percy Carbon and faly were recent vstors nt the Chauncev Watters -o New Buck Sales Head E T. STRONG, Presdent and General Manager of the Buck Motor Copany, haa apponted C. W. Churchll to fll the offce of Genera] Sales Manager. Strong was recently ade Presdent of Buck, leavng a vacancy n the organsaton whch Churchll wn fll. Churchll has been assocated wth Buck for the past fve year* n the capacty of Drector of Sales, and s thoroughly falar wth the Sales Manager's offce, havng worked drectly wth Strong durng ths perod. The new Buck Sales Manager entered the autooble busness wth the Wnton Co. n 1904, and successvely held the offces of Assstant Branch Manager, Branch Manager, General Sales Manager and General Manager wth ths concern. He went wth Buck n Presdent Stroug, n akng the appontent, sad: "Mr. Churchll's appontent wll undoubtedly be ost gratfyng snce t assures Buck of the contnued pleasant relatons ths copany has enjoyed n the past, both wth tht F^sjt wthn the organlmhon." THE PfllCKNEY DSPATCH JbU Mr. and Mra. Chas. Clark and Mr. a/d Mrs. Orson Clark of Chelsea called on Mrs. Fanny Hll Sunday evenng. Mrs. Lucy Tuttle of Unadlla s vstng Mrs. Maude Bulls. Mr. and Mrs. Warner Denton of Detrot were guests of hs father, S. A. Denton, Saturday and Sunday. Mrs. Fanne Hll entertaned all of her chldren Chrstas. Mss Mnaveve Voegts of Fowlervlle s spendng her vacaton wth her parents here. The Howlett faly held ther annual re-unon Xas day at the hoe of Alex Read of Stockbrdge. There was a large attendance at the Xrru'.^ progra at the church. Mr. and Mrs. Mlton Barrett of Detrat and Howard Howlett of Ann Arbor spent Sunday wth ther parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Howlett. Vere Worden and faly and F. A. Worden of Jackson spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bollnger. Mss Lous Worden of Ann Arbor.s spendng two weeks, vacaton at her hoe here. Mrs. Alce Owens s helpng Mrs. Ruth Bollnger. Mr. and Mrs. Fay Crawford are vstng frends n Lansng. Mrs. C. F. Bollnger and daughters, Patty Lou and Kathryn, called on Stockbrdge frends Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Noran Marshall and Robert of Mason vsted hs parents Sunday evenng. Mrs. Fanne Hll and Faye and Maron Cranna attended a surprse party for Mark Hll at Shraftsburg at the hoe of A. Hll of Stockbrdge Frday evenng. M. E. Kuhn and D. S. Denton start Tuesday ornng on a trp to Florda and Cuba. They are akng the trp n Mr. Denton's new Studebaker. Jon wth us n our annual Watch Xght Servce on Frday evenng as 8:30 untl 1927 arjves. On Sunday Mornng at 10:30 the pastor wll preach on the subject/the Dynac Force of the Early Church." At 7:3( P. M. "Travelers." Early n the cong year our Su': day school should go over the ton wth 125 out. At 6:30 next Sunday Eve, he.:- Clfford Howlett present hs essag: on Joseph n The Lttle Ch ureh wth the Bg We. coe. PLANFffXD Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Braley were ; Hghland Park at the hoe of the.- son, Dr. Braley for the week end. Chrstas exercses for the Sunday schools were held Wednesday evevenng at the M. P. church. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Baker and daughter of osco attended church at Planfeld Sunday evenng. Nuerous Chrstas gatherngs were held at Planfeld. Aong those entertanng were:mr. and Mrs. S. T. Wasson, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ledgard, Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Toppng, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lllywhte, Mr. and Mrs. Frank VanSyckle. The annual eetng of the Methodst church wll be held n the annex on Monday afternoon, Jan. 3. Rev. Harry Clark s assstng Rev. Bachus n specal eetngs at Mllvlle ths week. No school ths week, Mrs. Else Wood and the Floyd Llywhte faly spent Sunday at the hole ot George Graves near Fowler- Herbert Pfau of the U of M's hoe for the Xas vacaton. Bruce Robert* and Mrs. Clara Sckle* ate Xas dnner at Sa Bennetts n Howell. sabel Sth and Pearl Bloas of Howell were guests of Ella Ruttan Thursday evenng. Mrs. C. P. Reed and chldren are spendng the week n Akron, Oho. Mervn Nle and faly, George Lavey of Jackson, Patrck Lavey of Pnckney and Harry Lavey of Detrot spent Sunday wth relatves here Gus Sth and wfe were called to Howell Sunday by the serous llness of hs aunt, Mrs. Chas. Cox who suffered a stroke. The Clark faly ate Xas dnner at the George Nchols hoe. Frank Gehrnger, W. J. Gaffney and afles were the Xas guests of Mrs. Leonard Gehrnger. C. C. St Lous entertaned relatves fro Rver Rouge and Howell Xas day. Mr. and Mrs. J. L». Whte and son, Noran spent Chrstas at the hoe of Patrck Lavey at Pnckney. H. W. Norton and wfe are spendng two weeks wth Charles Norton at Queens, New York Cty. Mrs. J. D. Whte receved word of the death of her cousn, Joseph Murphy of Grand Rapds last week. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Whte, Dan and Elzabeth Drver of Pnckney vsted at the J. D. Whte hoe last Wednesday eve. Mrs. George Nchols was serously njured about the face and head and Maretta McDowell suffered a dslocated shoulder last Tuesday evenng GREGORY CHURCH NOTES on returnng fro Lansng. Ther car was struck by another car drven Mlton W. Dreesel, Pa$tor. Week., of by Chester Horton. Mss Elzabeth Deceber 26 to Jan. 2. Nchols, drver of the McDowell car saw the Horton car approachng and Wthn the weekly progras of our to avod an accdent drove nto the church knd reader you wll fnd an drveway of the Wrght far. The earnest desre to present clearly fro Horton car struck wth such force the Bble God's Message to an. As that t was deolshed and the other we take heed thereto growth s ade car badly wrecked. n the Chrstan lfe.one of the greatest assets any church or county The Ruttan faly and Fred can have s an honest to goodness Berry and faly 5pent Xas at the Chrstan hoe where the chldren August Ruttan hoe. grow nto anhood and woanhood Howard Gentry and faly wll return under the watchful eye of an earnest ths week fro a several weeks vst Chrstan father and other. n Fayette, Alabaa. We nvte all people wthn the county to ake our church your Baley Sth Sr. spent Xas n church hoe. t s a sanctuary for Howell wth hs brother, Ed. Sth. worshp, a school for relgous nstructon, a fghtng unt for the new Mr. and Mrs, Gus Sth and faly world that s buldng. t sa socal Clay Musson and faly and Mss Este-lla center of the hghest type, snce t Muason spent Xas wth ther gathers nto relatons of utual helpfulness father, John R. Musson n Howell. people of every age and con Mrs. W. Ruttan and Bece dton. t ur the ost br6adenng and Mller were n Detrot Monday. deocratc organzaton aong en. snce ts vson s to the ends of the Aldn Pfau purchased a Studebaker earth, wr.ther the gospel s beng Sedan of Chas. Hoff last week and a carred and snce ts ctzenshp s r Crosby Console rado. Heaven as well as on earth. To ak' our church a success n ts chosen Lesle Maycock of South Rochwood MM feld a regular partcpaton n all servces spent the week end wth hs on your part s a vtal necessty. parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Maycock. rene Sth of Adran s hoe on a ten days vacaton, Mr. and Mrs. Ford Grswold of Detrot and Clara Voght spent the week end at the Chas. Hanson Hoe. The New Years dnner wll be served n the baseent of the Pngree church Jan, 1-27, Tracy Horton and faly spent Xas at the hoe of Maron Flkns. Fred Fuller and faly entertaned her sster and husband fro Flnt the week end. Mrs. Rayond Lavey and two chldren, Patrck Jr. and Lous ar^ ll wth scarlet fever. Davjd Bloss and wfe entertaned ther chldren fro Swartz Creek, Flnt, Flushng, Howell at Xas. Jok* Had Rbcund A Rockland grl was entertanng her bean, a polcean fro a neghborng town, and the ad's yonng brother thought be would lke to put on the handcuffs the caller carred n hs pocket The genal copper was wllng to oblge and the wrtstleta were fastened on the yonogster, who wat confdent he could g^t the off wthout any ad. But they were obettoste, and Anally the courtng cop was asked to unlock the. Then the offcer began to get chlls and fever. A hunt of one pocket after another faled to locate the key. As a last wort the flustered offcer of the law was oblged to bundle up lttle brother and carry h to the hoe n another town where the key had been left All that occuped qute a lot of te and that Sunday evenng was practcally wasted for the kd's slster.^broektek toterprlae. ^t la A y New Year To All Tceple Hardware Unlockng the New Years Opportuntes Money n the bank s the key that o the door to opportunty. a defnte part of your pay-day, -keep rght at wll fnd you prepared " for opport adversty. tunty and fortfed _ A dollar wll start yott, and the nterest we pay, 4 percent, wll help you along The Pnckney State Bank KMMM DOES YOUR CAR START HARD? Now that cold weather s here you ay be caused no lttle nconvenence and loss of te by the slow startng of your car whch fals to respond as quckly ast dd durng the suer onths. There ay be several reasons for ths. Here are soe of the: Your battery ay be down, Your ol too heavy for wnter. Your cols worn out or There ay be a loose connecton Brng your car n and we wll ake t start easy for you. MCHAGAMMEGAS Pnckney Servce Gar W.H. MEYERS, Prop. ZtLMa aa *»-assr.jl.veas --;. rrrtfular, pn: when thn ch... Take FOLEY K1DTEY 1 :LL;,; \ l -\ sensaton rregular, pa^f. :,*:'<>n -l-cavy tore "t-...^ ',. bladder dstress. You wm 'l.j hrr or.cre cc...c <.!: A n* ready effect quck, good results,- Con'rn re b^rr';. 1 Wjh drugs. l\;y r.;cn. HP 8R54Q>-* Kdneuj Plls BLADPER ': «*4 < -T V 1 A.

5 k *" fe ^ a s We Desre To Thank You Tf o± jur favors of 192(> and couple the wsh wth the ^>)},- hat your New Year ay be one of contnuous ha]): J ess. Reason 6c Reason The Easest Car For Her to Drve your e cnoosne a low-prced car that has to eet wth fenne approval be guded by the experk-ce of tens of thousands, and buy a Chevrolet! l.;:e no other car of ts class, Chevrolet cobnes nose features ^Yhch ake a car easy for w r oen to terate wth those qualtes that woen nstnctvely tnand n an autooble. u s easy to start, steer and stop. t s sple and safe to handle under all condtons. And, best of all, t ofx'ers the ntable sartness, elegance an,d luxury of her on all closed odels. H* n and let her see for herself how well ts her deals of fne pualty. SLAYTON & PARKER New England Atosphere Wth 1926 proveents XT one who has ever otored through the quant sleepy towns of New England has fallen n lore wth the sall houses that abound n that secton of the country neat, whte, tpreteatous and wth a touch of roserre about. 'NfcT rlool PWKJ the. Just such a house la the one pctured here. t s equally adaptable for town or country, and by erely Jhlft- >g the lvng and entrance porches around can be bult on a wde or narrow lot wthout spolng t archtecturally. The house s sturdly bult and has an exteror of wood sdng except for the unusual stucco panels that start at the level of the second door wndows. The roof s of staned shngles, pref* erably oss green, n keepng wth the wndow shutters. A house of ths copact^ style s very easy to heat, especally when the specfcatons call for nsulaton throughout wth celotex, whch prevents heat leakage, and keeps the house cool n the suer. The lvng and dnng roos are here cobned nto one large roo flooded wth lght by wndows on three sdes. The two bedroos on the second floor each have M.A»ftA*.fcu double exposure and an extra large closet olcond FlOOfcPLAM n whch a wndow ay be placed. tu.weaa? «w, C«lot*chnlc nsttute, Chcago, t f., > THE ooter DSPATCH D,^^U«-w F\*-«^.±^L( Dr. Mart Clnton and Franca Co- pnckney Dspatch were Sday guetfth of Mr. d, Bn tared * the PartoJfaeet Ppo*- otjy.mch^ a* Seeoad Claaa Matter run w. cun usa Sabacrpte*, $l.ffta fear la AO Mr. and Mrs. Mark Swarthout and Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Watkns were Xas guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Dxon of Dexter. Mrs. Ezra Pluer and aon,douglas, vsted her parents at Gregory a part of last week. Mrs. Mabel Sth, daughter, Marjore, and son, Hazen, spent Xas n Detrot Mr. and Mrs. Bert VanBlarcu entertaned Chrstas the followng guests: Mr. and Mrs. G.. Keth of Flnt, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Brown and Oxford, Mr. and Mrs. Bex Drown and daughter, Katherne, of Howell, Mss Gladys Drown of Gregory and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Moore of Fenton daughter, Onnalee, of 8 Mr. and Mrs. Ward Tupper of Detrot, Grace Tupper, Mr. and Mrs. George Brooks of Ann Arbor,Mr. and Mrs. Albert Ses and faly and Vernor Hall of Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Capbell and Azel Carpenter were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Met Chalker. Mr. and Mrs. Eler VanAntwerp of Bell Oak were Sunday guests at the hoe of R. G. Webb. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swarthout and son are guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Swarthout. Mrs. L. T. Laborne, Mss Beatrce Laborne, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Whtehead of Gregory and Frank Hnchey and faly were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Henry Xas. Mrs. Bert VanBlarcu and Mrs Rex Drown and daughter are spendng the week wth relatves n Oxford and Flnt. Mss Ola Dockng s hoe Detrot for the holdays. John Martn and faly Howell Tuesday. were fro Azel Carpenter and Percy Ells were n Dexter Monday. Mrs. To Shehan, Mrs. Edward* Spears, Mrs. rvn Kennedy and Mss Elzabeth Drver were n Jackson Mon day. Mr. and Mrs. John Hassencahl and faly, Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Murnngha and faly, George and W. Hassencahl, Mary and Ethel Gardner of Ann Arbor and Carre Gardner of Ypslant spent Chrstas at the hoe of Mrs. Bert Gardner. Mary and Ethel Gardner are hoe fro Ann Arbor for a weeks vacaton. Mr. and Mrs. Wll Shehan were n Detrot last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Hoff and Mr. Mrs. Earl Grawols of Flnt were Sunday guests of the Msses Hon*. Mss Caren Leland s hoe fro Trenton for the holadys. Mrs. Ara Johnson of Detrot was the guest of her other, Mrs. Elza Gardner the week end. Mrs, Adde Potterton of Detrot was the guest of Mss Jesse Green over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Bowan vsted relatves n Howell over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Reason and faly were the guests of Mr. and Mrs.. Garner Carpenter of Haburg on Chrstas. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr and Mrs. Mlo Kettler were Howell vstors Frday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Baughn entertaned Chrstas: Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brd of Ann Arbor, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kce of North Haburg, Mrs. Louse Wlcox and Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Mller and faly of Pnckney. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Runcan and son, Glen, of Stockbrdge were guests of Mrs. Elza Gardner Chrstas. Mr. and Mrs. Orvlle Nash and faly were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Nash of Howell Saturday. W. B. Hoff of Detrot s vstng hs ssters, the Msses Hoff. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Roche of Lansng and Mr. and Mrs. George Roche of Fowlervlle were Chrstas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Jaes Roche. Mr. and Mrs. Davd VanHorn and son, Merrt, of Ann Arbor spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. George W. Teeple. Mr. and Mrs. Gayle Johason and faly and Vctor Johnson of Detrot spent the week end wth ther parent! Mr. and Mrs, J\ D. Johnson. n Mrs. C. J. Clnton. R. J. Carr and faly were guests of Byron relatves. Xas Met Chalker underwent an operaton at the Pnckney Sanataru Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hayes and son of Ypslant "spent Chrstas wth Mrs. Eva Clark and faly. Del Hall of Detrot, Mark Allson and faly, Albert Dnkel and faly were Xas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alger HalL Mss Ethel Doyle of Jackson and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Donohue of Gregory were week end vstors at the hoe of Jaes Doyle. Wll Dockng and faly were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Allen of Howell Xas. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bortz, Mr. and Mrs. John Meyer of Ypslant were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Martn Saturday. Mrs. Bortz reaned for a weeks vst. Mr. and Mrs. Jaes Green of Lansng were week end guests of Mrs. Sarah Carr. Mr. and Mrs. rvn Kennedy and sons vsted Webster frends Sunday. Rev. Frank McQullan was n Ann Arbor Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. N. Pacey spent Xas at the hoe of Walter Glover of Fowlervlle. Mrs. Earl Mason and faly spent the week end n Detrot. Mr. and Mrs. Laverne Kennedy and son of Detrot were week end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Patrck Kenedy. Mr. H>D. Greve of Ann Arbor, Rev. and Mrs. H. A. Maycroft and daughter, Phylls, were Xas guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Crofoot. Mr. and Mrs. Hra Sth and chldren of Howell Mr. and Mrs. Fred Greve of Ann Arbor were Chrstas guests of Mr. and Mrs. Nora Reason. Mr. and Mrs. Jaes Roche and grandchldren, Mrs. Kathleen Crotty and Mss Madelne Roche spent Sonday wth Mr. and Mrs. "Russel West at Mt. Cleens. Professor and Mrs. J. P. Doyle are vstng her people at Canton. Mr. and Mrs. Met Chalker awd Jaes Fske were Chrstas guests of Mrs. Sarah Chalker. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kce were n Howell Frday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lake and Mr. Alden Carpenter were Saturday guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Appleton of Brghton. Mss Heneretta Kelly was hoe fro Detrot over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Myron. Dunnng of Detrot, Fred Teeple and faly of Howell were Chrstas vstors at the hoe of Mrs. Alce Teeple. Mrs. Sarah Reason s vstng daughter at Pontac, her Mrs. Fred Carpenter of Pontac was the guest of Mrs. Claude Reason Thursday. Mrs. and Mrs. S. E. Darwn spent the week end wth Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Darwn of Lansng. Mrs. C. G. Meyer rod Donald Sgler of Detrot were the. Chrstas guests of Dr. and Mrs. C. L. Sgler. Mss Bernadne Lynch of Kalaazoo spent the wed; end wth her parents, Mr. and Mr*. C. Lynch. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr entertaned Chrstas: Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Sth of Ypslant, Mr. and Mrs. Rob Jack and faly, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee and son, Alger of Lakeland and Mr. and Mrs. Mlo Kettler and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hetdee had for ther quests Chrstas;: Mr. and Ms. Paul Mller and faly of Howell, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle H<<jndee and chldren of Ann Arbor, Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Hendee and faly and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clark and daughter. The followng poople were dnner guests at the hoe of Patrck Lavey Chrstas: John D. Whte, wfe and son, Noran, of Howell, Harry Lavey of Detrot, M. Leo Lavey and wfe George Lavey and Mr. and Mrs. M. Nle and faly of Jackson, Jaes Harrs and faly of Ann Arbor and H. B. Lynch. Mr. and Mrs, Wates Leland, Mss Caren Leland and Mr. and Mrs.) Fred Bowan were Chelsea Vstors Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. H. A. Maycroft and daughter, Phylls, are vstng relatves at Coopersvlle. Jaes Hall of Haburg s the guest of Mr. and Mr* & E. Darwn. Mrs. Lawrjdwe ^poart was n Detrot the last ef u*> wek» t... "r*«v*r "J- S 8 8 S 8 That every an woan and chld n the county ay enjoy a full easure of health happneaa and pprosperty n \927_U_ourJcartfelt wsh. v. """ " BARRY'S 2R Y «& STORE 3= The 4 Thngs That Matter SNCLAR OPALNE MOTOE Of* fu the Degree qfwf «"**» LEE LEAVEY Pnckney Dspatch $1.25 a Year Make t A 365 Day New Year Electrcally *# w #,-.,^: TS NEVER TOO LATE to save that "Soeone" a whale of a lot of te and trouble wth an ELEC* TR1CAL SERVANT- servants httantly ready to do your ost exactng task, cheerfully. Econocal, too, as servants go. Make 1927 a New Year n an electrcal way. Shoppng U convenent Saturday afternoons our offces are open W 8 to S every week day. f LOT %. N COMPANY.> *tr ' t H 9 1 *!» #, ' There are four qualtes we look for n a otor ol:.. 1. t ust gve perfect lubrcaton. 2. t ust leave the engne n clean condton. 3. t ust be econocal to use. 4 t ust be free fro purtes that daage the engne. On these four counts we have chosen Snclar Opalne Motor Ols and recoend the to our custo- ers.,.'3. -to

6 sk.*' 3^ *W fr'.. ft-.v l\ g *- &*. & rv -- ^ $' * 1 Launchng of S. S. roquos, to be largest lner on New. York-Florda route. - Queen Mare of Jugo-Slava, who was sent hoe fro Bucharest for plottng to put her brotler, Carol, on Ruanan throne, 3 Bureau of standards' new vacuu chaber to test arplane nstruents under flght condtons. NEWS REVEW OF CURRENT EVENTS No Tax Legslaton Ths Sesson Sth Naed llnos Senator. By EDWARD W. PCKARD WTH the prospect of a surplus n the governent treasury of about $500,000,000 on July 1, 1927, the Deocrats n congress are loudly deandng that a general tax reducton bll be passed at ths sesson. But the ajorty ebers of the all-powerful ways and eans cottee of the house wll not agree even to Presdent Cooldge's suggeston that there be a teporary reducton n the ncoe tax payable next year. t has defntely decded that no tax legslaton whatever shall he ntroduced durng the short sesson, adoptng what t called the alternatve plan of the Presdent, that the surplus should be appled toward reducton of the publc debt. Ths latter plan for dsposal of the huge su of oney, the Kepubllcun leaders hold, wll nure to the beneft of all taxpayers, whereas, as Senator Soot asserted, the flat percentage cut n ncoe taxes would anly only a few large corporatons. the *4aa of the Republcans the vmdc^m dtrrlag the fscal year Ull reck} lee bsge lotal of approxately n.076*800^000. wfclel, wth the sngle excepttoa of the year followng the close of the war* artll be the greatest aount of debt retreent accoplshed r. any slar perod thus far. Senators Swanson. Harrson. Copehand and Kng all arose n the senate Wednesday to protest aganst the decson of the Republcans. Swanson ad tax legslaton was beng sdetracked wt)) the delberate vew of reducng taxes next year shortly n advance of the 1 Presdental electon. Copeland sad the adnstraton was gulty of "legalzed larceny" n collectng upward of $.'00,000,000 ore ftoney n taxes than needed, wthout provdng soe ethod of refundng the surplus to the taxpayers. Senator Harrson deanded that the Deocrats and Republcans forget partsan dfferences long enough to enact a bll reducng taxes at ths sesson. W HEN the house passed the treasury appropraton easure t scotched the plan of Ass.stant Secretary Andrews to obtan $.'00,000 for the payent of prohbton spes to be expended wthout accountng. Last week General Andrews tred to have ths provson re-nserted n the bll n the senate, but Senator Bruce rased a pont of order and was warly supported by other enent wets, and agan the schee was defeated. The eployent of spes n enforceent of the prohbton law was roundly denounced; but of course what klled the plan was that the clause n queston, perttng advances fro the enforceent fund, would volate a federal statute and also was an attept to legslate n an appropraton bll. A 4 WAS related last week, the house naval affars cottee dlsoovered that the budget bureau estates for naval constructon durng the cong year ake no provson for copleton of the 1024 cruser nulldlng progra or for the buldng of two drgbles authorzed by congress. ne cotteeen were angry. and ther re was ncreased when Secretary of the Navy Wlbur subtted hs annual report showng how the adnstraton's retrenchent polcy was crapng and crpplng the navy. Wherefore the cottee, by unanous vote, sent Charan Butler to the Whte House wth a letter whch. though secret, wa Known to appeal to the Presdent f-r hs sancton for edate acton to ould up the navy to the lt fxed by the Washngton treaty. The cotteeen ay the navy s now n thrd place fast fallng to fourth place. pproxlately 1500,000,000 to..brng t up to ts rl( gth. They want as ( loo darng the cot * >n cst tad faclty &->v. &* pert. The procedure of the uuee s wthout precedent. co- HEN the senate took up the v V rver and harbor bll, ncluded n whch s authorzaton for the developent of the lower llnos rver as part of the lakes-to-the-gulf waterway, the senators fro states thdt have been fghtng Chcago's dverson of lake water for the santary canal threatened & flbuster because they feared the easure would approve of that dverson. However, the leaders of both sdes n the controversy held an all-day conference and Wednesday nght reached a coprose whch seeed to assure the speedy passage of the bll. t was agreed that ths aendent should be nserted: "Provded that nothng n ths act shall be construed as authorzng any dverson of water fro Lake Mchgan." SREOARDNG all warnngs. D Governor Sall of llnos on Thursday apponted Frank L. Sth, senator-elect, to tll out the unexpred ter of the late Senator McKnley. t was expected that Mr. Sth would go to Washngton n a few days and attept to take the seat, and that the Deocrats and soe Republcans would undertake to exclude h because of the slush-fund scandal attached to hs prary capagn. The Republcan leaders had hoped that ths fght would not be brought on untl next sesson because f precptated now t would delay necessary legslaton. Mr. Sth had ndcated that he wshed to present hs defense to the senate at ths te, but he was warned that f possble an edate vote on the queston of adttng h would be had, so he would have no chance. Governor Sall declared that n appontng Sth he was followng the wshes of the llnos electorate as expressed at the polls n Noveber, and that not a charge of undue nfluence or corrupton at that electon has been ade. Senator Ashurst of Arzona ntroduced a resoluton desgned to prevent Sth fro takng hs seat. A LBERT KRE R. FALL, forer secrey of the nteror, and Edward a tar L, Doheny. ol agnate, are not gulty of consprng to defraud the governent n connecton wth the leases of the naval ol reserve at Elk Hlls, Calf. Such was the verdct of the jury that heard the case aganst the two en n the Supree court of the Dstrct of Coluba The celebrated case, nvolvng the leasng of the naval reserve ol lands to Doheny and the $100,000 transacton between the whle Fall was secretary of the nteror n lu'jl. had been on tral for 23 days, wth 17 lawyers dealng n a great ass of techncal evdence. The Jury delberated for any hours and brought n ts verdct of acquttal on Thursday ornng. Counsel for the governent at once took up the second of the ol lease crnal cases. n ths one Fall and Harry F. Snclar are the defend ants and t nvolves the lease of the Teapot Doe ol feld to Snclar's copany. ERATE on the agrcultural bll n D the house Wednesday served to gve the Lowden Presdental boo an arng. Representatve Dcknson of owa alluded to the llnotsan as a leadng chapon of the new McNary bll for far relef, and Mr. Howard of Nebraska asked the owan f "hs canddate" was not a lttle beyond the desrame age for a Presdent. Mr. Dcknson retorted that the two-ter lt for Presdents was of ore concern to the Aercan people than the age of a Presdent > > '! ng for confraton of ther concessons, Lus Morones, nster of ndustry and coerce, was n war controversy last week wth the Standard Ol copany over the questoa whether or not ts representatve had ade such applcaton. The Assocaton of Producers of Petroleu n Mexco, eetng n New York, stood pat on ts opposton to the Mexcan law. THE PNCKNEY DSPATCH HANCELLOR MARX and Foregn; C Mnster Streseann are not havng an easy te antanng ther ajorty n the rechstag, but Marx s defant. Last week he offered an allance to the Socalsts, prosng to gve the representaton n the cabnet, and they refused. When he told ths to the rechstag the Natonalsts abused h and left the chaber. Phlllpp Schedeann, Socalst leader, attacked the cabnet btterly, especally Mnster of Defense Gessler. H^ charged that a secret fund exsted n the budget for the anufacture and hoardng of ars and arplanes n Russa. He asserted that the alles knew all about "the rotten ltarstc condtons n Gerany" and added: "We ght as well correct these condtons ourselves as have the alles act for us." All of whch was nuts for the French opponents of Brland's polcy of conclaton. R ELATONS between taly and Ft ranee contnue rather straned and oveents of French troops to^ ward the fronter are gong on, whle by January 12, t s expected, the entre French fleet wll be n the Medterranean. Mussoln stated recently that he had 30 dvsons north of the Po rver. Of course no one predcts actual warfare, but everyone s nervous. The talan governent also has annoyed Great Brtan by falng to nvte the Brtsh fleet to vst talan ports durng ts aneuvers n the Medterranean early next year. TURKEY, wth both taly and England n nd. s tryng to arrange protectng allances. A London cor respondent says: "Wthn the last few days Turkey has offered an offensve and defensve allance to Persa on the sae lnes as the treaty t recently ade wth Afghanstan. Great Brtan s LOW subsdzng Persa through the Anglo-Persan Ol co pany to the tune of 4, ($20,- 000,000) annually, but t wll have to do even better f t wshes to keep Persa, whch s threatened by Turkey, Russa, and Afghanstan, n tne." D SPATCHES fro Barcelona say another conspracy to assassnate Kng Alfonso and Dctator de Rvera has been dscovered n Madrd and any of the plotters arrested. They had planned to shoot the pre er fro a closed otor car n front of hs offce and then to kll the kng wth grenades when he was attendng Gen. de Rvera's funeral. FFCAL announceent s ad^ O n Warsaw that the Polsh ary now has solders and 179,000 offcers, and that the navy has 2,124 salors and 236 offcers. These forces. whch do not nclude the ltarzed polce, wll cost about $76,500,000 n Wth the polce and the specal guards on the Russan and Lthuanan fronters. Poland has nearly 400,000 en under ars. t s thus the greatest ltary power n central Europe, wth an ary four tes as bg as Gerany's and really uch stronger than Russa's. ENMARK has a new cabnet fored of ebers of the Farers' party wth Madson Mygdal ff preer. The foregn nster s Dr W ARNTNG to Chrstan cvlzaton that "ts foundatons are be sh delegaton trt the League of Na Phl Moltenaeh. eber of the Dan ng agan attacked and underned" tons and presdent of the Dansh n by relgous restrctons n Mexco \» terparllaentary group. contaned n a long pastoral letter ssued by the Catholc epscopate of the RESDENT ADOLFO DTAZ of Ncaragua has agan asked for help Unted States. t sets forth fully the P church sde of the controversy wth fro the Unted States, ths te re Presdent Calles' governent, whose questng that t c.eate a naval neutral aganst the church t says zone along the entre east coast of cated for capagn Ncaragua. Ths, he says, s "the only clare the eans of preventng the Mexcan-supported rebels fro advancng toward Bjltleal the captal and overthrowng y adnstraton." Only a few days ago»«*<b.*#ufc* runnng vessel landed at an. sland wth ars, 4.000,000 rounds LnnttoB and troops..,w.»-> -*> D Brdge to Lnk N.'Y. and Jersey Greatest Structure of Knd Ever Conceved to Coat $60,000,000. New York. Tne proposed Hudson rver brdge between: upper Manhattan and Fort Lee, N. J. the greatest structure of ts knd ever conceved oved defntely nto the real of actualty when the port authorty copleted detals of the $60,000,000 fnancng progra nvolved n ts constructon. Before actual work la begun, t wll be necessary to obtan the approval of the secretary of war, and tenders for the bonds are beng accepted wth a provso to ths effect. Applcaton, t s sad by offcals of the port authorty, has already been tled, askng such authorzaton. Work to Start Early n The copleton of the fnancal detals for the Hudson span and the ssuance of bond proposals eans, t s beleved, that the actual constructon work wll get under way early n ts effect s to place at the dsposal of the port authorty suffcent funds to coplete half of the project or to carry the work along untl 1929 or n addton to the $20,000,000 to be rased by the ntal publc offerng of bonds there wll be avalable $10,- 000,000 n advance by the two states. New York and New Jersey, by legslatve act, have agreed to furnsh $5,- 000,000 apece at the rate of $1,000,000 a year for fve years. These advances wll be repad after the copleton of the structure out of ts surplus toll revenues. The entre cost of the project s placed fnally n the latest resoluton of the port authorty at $50,000,000, a fgure whch, that body fnds, wll provde for the brdge, ts ternals, and fro four to sx lanes of approach. The authorzaton of $60,000,000 n bonds s ade wth the dea of ncreasng the capacty of the approaches and enlargng the structure to ts ultate lts at a later date f deeed advsable. Under the agreeent entered nto wth the port authorty, t s revealed n the resoluton Just adopted, the states agree not to authorze any crossngs for vehcular traffc that wll coe nto copetton wth the new brdge. They agree, further, to provde for aple toll rates to antan and operate the sprn and to provde servce on ts bonded ndebtedness. The states' advances wll be pad back out of surplus at the rate of at least 2 per cent on the prncpal f such surplus s earned, otherwse on a pro rata bass, wth defcts beng ade up fro year to year. Greatest Span n World. The brdge wll be far and away the ost ggantc span ever undertaken by an, t wll be two and one-half tes the sze of the Brooklyn brdge and twce the sze of the recently opened Phladelpha-Caden brdge over the Delaware. ts unsupported secton wll easure 3,586 feet approxately two-thrds of a le and ts tower wll rse alobt to tbe heght of the Woolworth buldng 660 feet. The clearance for vessels wll be 206 feet, whch U ore than 70 feet ore than the regulaton requreents. The New York end wll be n the neghborhood of One Hundred Seventy-nnth street There wll be three stages of constructlon of the structure, accordng to Robert A- Lasher, traffc engneer of the port authorty. The frst of these wll be the openng of traffc lanes on each sde of the brdge, whch wll accoodate two lnes of vehcles both easterly and westerly. After that the center lanes for four addtonal lnes wll be opened up.»****< * - Would Bar Chldren to All Degenerates New York. The entally and physcally unft should be dened chldren aa the only eans of preventng the degeneraton of anknd, Dr. Adolf Lorens, noted Venna surgeon, sad. "Our sense of huanty la-destroyng huanty," he asserted. "n savng the weak of nd fro the hazards of a hard and selfsh world, by prolongng the Uvea of the consttutonally weak persons wth heredtary tendences toward physcal and ental dsease, we are allowng ore and ore of the poorer huan stock to survve and reproduce." M The only way n whch to check the tendency toward degeneraton and turn the tde the other way s to prevent the poorest stock fro reproducng. a afrad that we are stll a long, long way fro dong that.'* \ ********** X X» MM «M HHHHHHfra 1 Prncess Meets Roance n U. S. w- leana of Ruana Twce Met Her Prnce Charng, West Pont Adons New York. leana, prncess of Ruana, et a Prnce Charng on the frst days of her arrval on the shores of ths deocratc land. t s a odern fary tale wth all ts whscal, roantc settngs, only n ths case the tale s true. The story begns soon after the arrval of leana wth her other, Queen Mare of Ruana, and her brother, Prnce Nkolas. t wll be reebered that one of the frst of the seres of socal receptons was a dance at West Pont. Here la where the frst chapter.begns and ends, to be followed by two ore. Two Cadet Escorts Selected. Brg. Gen. M. B. Stewart, superntendent of West Pont, looked about for proper escorts for the prncess. He selected two cadets, both honor en n the class. One was Cadet Leutenant Wlll.'a J. Glasgow of Washngton, the other Cadet Captan Henry G. Douglas of Bel Ar, Md. Glasgow s the anager of the ary soccer tea, whle Douglas s the regental supply offcer, Both are handsoe. Glasgow s consdered the Adons of the acadey. t was evdent t dd not take the prncess long to ake her choce. And the frst one to notce t was Douglas. He danced wth her once or twce tactfully, then retred gracefully to the background, leavng hs classate and frend a clear feld. After several dances wth Cadet Glasgow, the prncess herself suggested a retreat for fresh ar and a vew of the oon and the great palsades. The evenng, as n all fary tales, cae to an end all too soon, but when the prncess sho^k hands warly n farewell t dd not ean good-by. Through all the e cross country tour leana dd not forget Two days before salng she suffcently overcae her tdty to ask Paul D. Cravath, who represented the queen n soe threatened lawsut for alleged breach of contract, to arrange for young Glasgow to coe to New York to take luncheon wth her. A Prnce** Thwarted Alost. Mr. Cravath at once got n touch wth General Stewart. Probably for the frst te leana's wsh was thwarted. The coandant sad "No!** but true to fary-tale fashon, leana found a way. Could she coe to West Pont and have Mr. Glasgow take luncheon wth her there? "Yes," sad General Stewart, for even cadets favored by prncesses ust be allowed to ea' soe te. And so the etaphorcal "onn tan" went to Mohaed. Tn ordl nary prose, the eetng took place at the Thayer hotel. West Pont. Then were others present to satsfy conven ton, so young Dc also, but they «ground to to* \ ng epsodt tf prncess. ska to Job Londoh--t>avd Lews has been farhand on one Brtsh estate for 6 years and has been awarded the Ban bury Agrcultural assocaton's long servce edal. Knowloon, Chna, s to have a seven-story apartent house wth an ^levator, the apartents to be U three-roo sutes. Togo's Flagshp s Preserved as a Monuent Japanese battleshp Mkasa, flagshp of Adral Togo durng the Russo-Japanese war, whda dened to be scrapped, accordng to the ters of the Washngton dsaraent conference. 0{hM 7 pertted Japan to preserve ths craft aa a naval onuent t baa been placed on a con ton and recently was dedcated..^ $ $125,000,000 SPENT YEARLY BY FRANCE ON BOBBED HAR - lf Aount Wa Pad n Taxes to Governent the Econoc Proble Would Be Solved. p ftr 8( _f all the husbands of France were to pay n taxes to ther governent what t costs the annually to keep the heads of ther better halves bobbed, shngled or clpped, then soon the expresson, "governental econoes' 1 would be banshed fro the poltcal vocabulary of French nsters. Ths happy predcton s ade possble by bobbed har statstcs recently copled n Pars to the effect that the annual ncoe derved fro bobbed hared adaes n France by French hardressers s lttle short of four blmon frtocr (roughly speakng 1125,000,000). Ths CDoanl lessened by allowng SB sversgs sober of 24 harcuts and HP* peranent har waves a year to ^J_L a person, whch s puttng t ldly. Besdes bobbng, feale har requres wavng, and ths estate s based upon two peranent har waves per annu, each wave beng supposed to last fro fve to sx onths and costng fro 150 to 600 franca, af whch the average cost ultpled by two one of each perod of sx onths s 650 francs per annu. These two # bllls, one ech for bobbng and wavng, whch do not nclude accessores such as shapoos, har aaaagea, or an occasonal and dscreet applcaton of peroxde, when added together ake tbe total cost of each bolj reach 1,422 franca (about HO) per year per person. f only 3,000,000 woen pteked fro the 'total French populaton of 40,0r0,000 souls whch s, ndeed, s conservatve estate each ask of and receve fro ther husbands the 1322 franca or $40 ansa! ncoe deanded by ther respectrve* then France's annual the altar of beauty s 000,000 francs, or at 3aY dollar, $124,562,0001 *# Aercan "Scrub** Beng Used By Washngton, C. The scraggly black scrub oak, or bear' of barren lands n northeastern Unted States s beng ade use of n Franc* wth consderable success to provde brush cover for slar lands need ss gae preserves on lerg» enntrr *ntates, accordng to Dr. Davd O. Far* chld of the Unted States Departent of Agrculture, who has recently returned fro a botancal exploraton that took h arovd the world. The speces s a drer* tak,, hardly to be dgnfed by the nae o tree, for ts usual heght s seldo ore than nne.feet, though specally favored ay reach eghteen or But t grows rapdly sud to do better on stony ground n France than say of the natve «hn»b or sall-tree spades, d V /1 ;-r

7 T^ ^^^^P ffw THE PNCKNEY DSPATCH ( Jnk-* 6 *- Chapons World Faces Crss n Prevalng Dsntegraton of Faly Lfe By REV. DR. S. EDWARD YOUNG, Chcago. EVERYBODY'S prayers should be offered for the confused young people of today who have all the atronal nclnatons ortals ever had and fnd theselves dscussng proscuously and n ordnary conversaton tral arrage and every phase of se probles, as unblushngly as we used to dscuss the weather. Novel and stage and oton pcture and dvorce sut and so-called edcal books have left nothng forbdden, no zone of shae to be atod- «d, when youth n ther teens talk couple by couple or n groups. Our yoen workng out and dnng out, faly arrangeents have ade the ^d te fresde a yth to ost cty and town Aercans. The faly eype that gave us the strong en and woen of other days s leas and -**ss here to functon, and n ts stead s cong a rege as far fro Purtanc as deocracy s fro despots. Redeclarng church laws a clever decsons that get around cburcjl';[ Uws nfluence the stuaton about as uch as New York state statutes af 4 f*jct Reno or Pars. Our only hope s healthful publc opnon. t s th ; *.g task of churches and all who have a heart to help n the ost vtal crss the Anglo-Saxon Chrstan household has thus far faced. There s no need of despar. The revoluton n faly lfe can be et by the personal relgous contacts of preachers and teachers and wholeoe books and a re-establshent of the household father as a knd of prest and the other as a knd of prestess. Despte Use of Slang, Modern Youth Has Able Coand of Language By W. WLBUR HATFELD, Chcago Educator. V!'* ; M t? A!' S*s By ELMO SCOTT WATSON T WAS Mr. W. E. Henley he of the "nvlcus" verse who once wrote soethng to the effect that "nto the nffht go one and all." That was a great any years ago, but he ght have been talkng about Aercan sport chapons and For the past vear has 9en ore crowns Jarred off athletc brows een the case n any a year det hltherto-lnvlnchles went «*ad the dawn of the new fleck of new chae. And at the sae te they're castng sfrprehepsve glances over ther shoulders to see vnttt fordable contenders for ther honors are totlwh» up the slope to push the fro helr posltoeav of slaohoe durng the next twelve onths. Look over the record presented la wn and you wll see that n nearer of sport, the ttle changed hands once aoe cases ore han once. d la Baseball s proverbally the natonal gae and t saw a new chapon acclaed n one of the ost thrllng World Seres ever played n ths country. The Pttsburgh Prates of the Natonal league, 1925 chapons, lost out n the flag race to the St. Lous Cardnals who had never before won frst honors. The Washngton Senators of the Aercan league, 1924 chapons and contestants n 1925, lost out to the New York Yankees, who have been league chapons three tes and who held the ttle of world chapons as lately as For that reason they went nto the seven-gae seres wth the Cardnals favortes. But Manager Rogers Hornsby and hs en won a thrllng eleventh-hour vctory whch gave St. Lous her frst chaponshp n any years and a chance to stage a celebraton by her ctzens whch was strongly renscent of the scenes of wld joy whch prevaled all over the country on Noveber 11, Even though Rogers Hornsby dd lead hs Cards to a tea chaponshp he lost an ndvdual ttle. He has been battng chapon n the Natonal league for any v years, but n 1926, he had to band ove«* hs cpe)wa to Bubbles Hargrave of the Cncnnat Mfc the Aercan league a slar change- Harry Helan of the Detrot TM* of battng chap n that clsdrt he had the satsfacton st tlwmlfe' Detrot for* he was de» Jhjr Mftffe Manush, a tea ate More than n any other sport was g of thrones and the fallng of crowns Fro early sprng untl late n the rng saw a steady processon of old Steppng down and new ones steppng when Harry Greh, the ddleweght beaten by Tger Flowers* doatch, got t and wth t an- n the welterweght class Mckey f*efd the ttle for three years, Dave >lred to the ttle but Mckey dsposed '-Then along cae Pete Latzo, who ttf beaten once. When ther second 'the welter crown was on Pete's bead Mckey's, [ansas held the lghtweght chapon- Kenny Leonard had vacated the year tat before Rocky could enjoy t long, Say Wendell took t away fro h. The sae thteg happened n the lght heavyweght dvson when Jack Delaney outponted Paul Berlenbach, At the featherweght class, 1925 saw the abdcaton of Kd Kaplan, the chapon, because he We* growng too heavy to ake the requred weght and Charley (Phl) Rosenberg loaf hs bantaweght crown when he was suspended fro fghtng n the state of New York and hs ttle declared vacant n llnos after a dspute wth the boxng authortes. 8o aj 1928 cae to a dose there was only tn«basng ttle held andlsputed by a chapon «rf That waa n tbe heavyweght dvson where Jack Depeey trll regned supree, partly so those not especally frendly to h eatd -because le was any about gong nto th*j rng wth a contender. Bat flaau* the JtngW ef To* 3obby Jon&s Jftt*rrr* frot«/ >%/ 1 1 M U U r HERE'S THE 1926 CASUALTY LST '.'. noxnu Jack Depaey, wurld's heavyweght chana- plon, beaten by dene Tunney. "' \\ Paul Berlenbach, world's lght heavyweght \\ \\ chapon, beaten by Jack Uuaney... Harry (eb. world's ddleweght chan-.. <» plun, jc-hen by Tger Flowers. Aekey Walker, world's welterweght ' * afcanpot, beaten by Steve Latao. \\ \ t Kocky Kansas, worlds lghtweght cha- \,,, plon, beaten by Say Mandell... <> Kd Kaplan, world's featherweght cha- «plon, resgned ttlo. " "' Charley (Ph J) Rosenberg, world's banta- ] \\ weght chapon ttle declared vacated.., GOLF Robert T. Jones, natonal aateur cha- " '* plon, beaten by George Von K. ]) [', WllUe MacParlane, natonal open cha- ",.. plon, beaten by Robert T. Jones. J Barnes, Brtsh open chapon, beaten " by ooert T. Jones. *' \' t R. Harrs, Brtsh aateur chapon, beat- *,, en by Jess Sweetser.,, Glenna Collett, natonal woen's cha- * plon, beaten by Vrgna Wlson. " (Chaponshp won by Mrs. G. Henry St«t- "!! son.) ")., TENNS Wlla T. Tllden, 11., natonal aateur chapon, beaten by Henr Cochet (Cha- ** "" plonshp won by Ktne La Coste.) '* ], t Suxanne Lenglen, world's aateur woan,, chapon, turned professonal... Helen Wlls, woen's aateur natonal " " chapon, defaulted. (Chaponshp won by *" " Mrs, Molla Malory.) \\ BASEBALL «Pttsburgh Prates, Natonal league cha- " pons, and 1925 world seres chapons, lost "* " to St. Lous Cardnals. "* \\ Rogers Hornsby, Natonal league battng.. chapon, lost to Bubbles Hargrave. Cn- cnnat Reds- ' Harry Helan, Aercan league battng "* jj chapon, lost to.elne Manush, Detrot [[ 11 Aercana,. WRESTLNG «Wayne Munn, world's heavyweght cha- "' '' plon, beaten by Stangler Lews, ] Strangler Lews. world's heavyweght ','.,, chapon, beaten by Joe Stecher. «van Podubno, European chapon, beaten *' "' by Joe Stecher. ' BLLARDS 11 Wlle Hoppe, world's chapon U.l balk-,',. > lne, beaten by Jake Schaefer...» Jake Schaefer, world's chapon 18.t balk- " " lne, beaten by Erc Hagenlacher. ' Franc t S. Appleby, natonal aateur S.! \', balklne, beaten by J. A. Clnton, Jr.,, «Bob Cannefax. threapf ushlon chapon,»» suspended fro copetooa. ** Frank Teborskl, pocket chapon, ttle ' * 11 declared vacated. 11 TRACK» Paavo Nur. world'e dstance runnng *' ' * chapon, beaten by varous runners several \ 11 tes. ',', «, Douglas Lowe, world's ddle dstance run- nng chapon, beaten by Doctor Pelser.» SWMMNG ', \ Johnny Wetauller, record holder n varl-!\. ous dstances, records brdken by Arne Borg and Bre Radeacher. *' Helen Walnwrght, woen's natonal cha plon, turned professonal. MscBLLAjneors 1 ' Paul Costello, natonal rowng chapon.! \ \ hasten by Walter Hoover.,, Claa Thunbars, world's aateur skatng '» <» chapon, beaten several tes. '' Aercan Flat, chapon runnng horse, ' won no portant races. ) Popey, chapon two-year-old runnng. horse, won no portant races. > Baby Bootlegger, otor boat speed cha- ' '' plon, beaten; by Greenwch Folly ll 111 t 1111 H Rchard*! dollars Drought h nto acton aganst Gene Tunneyj the ex-arne, and on Septeber 2ft Gene won ths decson over the slsnt Canar and the ttle of all ttles n boxng. ( Depsey's defeat was probably the blppest sportr upset of the year, but jrolf and tenlfc) furnshed twn others and saw the dethronng of two chapons alost as unversally known as Jack Depsey. They were Hl«Bll Tllden and Bobby Jones. n golf Bobby Jones, the At lunta (da.) youngster, bad won a dstncton never before attaned by an exponent of the gae. He held three chaponshps, the Brtsh Open, the Aercan Open and the Aercan Aateur. To wn the frst he had dethroned Long J Barnes, to tuke the second he bad beaten Wlle MacFarlane and when he cae to defend hs ttle n the thrd, everythng seeed favorable for hs contnung to enjoy the unque dstncton of trple.chankpaop. But on the feld at Baltusrol George Von K of Los Angeles played superor tfolf and, when he fnshed '2 up and 1 to play, Bobby'* regn was over. Just as Bobby Jones, the outstandng flk'tra aong en golfers, went down n defeat, so dd Glenna Collert. the preer woan golfer, bow to another. Mss Collett had been aateur natonal woen's chapon twce and had f.eld all sorts of sectonal chaponshp*. Then nlonjj cae Mss Vrgna Wlson, a twetuyyear-olr grl fro Chcago, to "bup off" (Henna n the th*d round of the natonal play 3 up and 2 to play, And then Mrs. G, Henry Stetson defeated Mss Wlson and won the ttle. n tenns tbe full of Bg Bll Tllden was rvlost as draatc as that of Bobby Jones or Jack Depsey. Up untl ths year he seertfed supree n hs feld. But the 1926 Jnx for chapons got n ts work on h early. He lout the ndoor natonal chaponshp to Bene Ln(>)ste, a Frenchan. Then Vncent Rchards be t h n prelnary tournaents and n the Davs ("up atches a Coste was agan vctor over Tlden. Then cae the supree test the natonal aateur atches and n fve hard-fought sets Bg Bll was forced to bow to another Frenchan. Henr Cochet. When D"-" opened Suzanne.tflen was unoffcal tenns chapon of the world and she retaned the ttle by defeatng Helen Wlls at Cannes early n tht? year. She contnued her vctorous arch through the Wbledon notches (for appendcts had prevented "Lttlf Poker Face" ro another attept to wre*t' 'be tfje fro Suzanne) and then voluntarly nbdlcnted her aateur ttle hy turnng professonal when C. C. Pyle, who frst sprang n the sport lelght by coercalzng the grdron prowess of Red Grange, "th*j Gallopng Ghost." persuaded her that any Aercan dollars awated her appearance n ths country. n wrestlng the ajor ttle changed hands wth consderable rapld'v. As the New Year of 1925 dawned Wayne Munn, he bg Xebraskan, wore the crown because he had tossed Strangler Lews ont of the rng and defeated h. Then the Strangler staged a coe-back wth hs celebrated headlock and beat Munn. But before he could get the crown frly adjusted. Joe Stecher of owa cae along and lfted t fro hs head and hurred to a rror to take a look at hself n hs new chapesu. van Podubno, the European chapon, cae to our shores anj ade an attept to adjust the sae llnery to hs head. But Joe wasn't ready to gve t up yet and he stll wears t. n 1926 Paavo Nur, the "Flyng Fnn,- was the sensaton of the runnng track and was haled as the world's greatest dstance runner. But 1928 brought an end to hs vctores. He was beaten by another Fnn, F. Llevendahl and Edva Wde, a Geran, has threatened hs general supreacy. Doctor Pelser, snot her Geran, not only beat Nur n the 1..VK)»ter run n record te hot he also took another ttle when he b*»at Douglas Lowe, an Englshan, to the tsoe snd Lowe had beaten the best of the Aercan ddle dstance runners. n otor boat racng, n horse racng, n skatng, old chapons gave way to new. But f these new kngs nod queens at sport look back o'er the athletc tral of 1926 and are ndful of ts eaeone, they probably wll not face 1927 wth aswsh aaanrunce that the new year wll be any legs) a f9x than the old one was for a chaav plon n aporta, For, as f r. Beeley reasafcsl. "to to the nght go one and all"! Despte the accusatons of ther elders that chldren use too teh alang, the average youth of eghteen today uses uch better language than dd the youth of ffteen or even fve years ago. The courses n foral rhetorc once so popular the better schools, have been dsplaced by tranng n coposton, oral as well as wrtten. Bej use of changed as and ethods of tranng the average youth of eghteen today uses uch better language than dd the youth of eghteen, ^fteen or even fve years ago. The next step forward s to be the replaceent of the present artfcal, would-be lterary thees, ore than half of whch are narratvea of nsgnfcant personal experences, wth practce n genune counca ton n such stuatons as occur outsde the school. Already progressve teachers n any places are experentng wth these nnovatons and fndng that they are qute practcable. The school graduates ten years hence ay be confdently expected to show both ora language power and ore ablty to adapt theselves to the socal stuatons of busness and ordnary ntercourse. Relgon the Sole Foundaton of Moral Standards and Conventons By BSHOP WLLAM T. MANNNG, Epscopal, New York. Stronger oral convctons and standards to enhance the are necessary n upholdng the naton's laws and nsttatosbs. We see so any people today who are oraly adrft^ clear standards or convctons. They tell u tha ^l«ttdbaf aw nothng but conventons; that there s DO nwrtjaflr wfcfch we are bound to obey. That vew of lfe eans run fpj^he ntfvdnal and for socety. t eans that they have lost ther hold on relgon and on God. t s relgon alone that gves us ore standards and conventons, and t s the only foundaton of character, personal responsblty and ctzenshp and huan lfe t s fath whch akes huan lfe great, and that akes t worth whle. Doubt and uncertanty gve no power to our lves. t s the an who beleves great thngs who accoplshes great thngs. Fath lves n every huan heart and the Chrstan relgon lfts the fath that s n as up to ts hghest and noblest expresson. All hstory shows that relgon, and orals stand together or fall together. ncreased Duraton of Lfe Great Factor Progress Made by World By PROF. T. WNGATE TODD, Western Reserve Unversty. Longevty should be regarded as a socal beneft as well as ncreased opportunty for lvng. The treendous petus of dscovery and nventon durng the past century has undoubtedly been due n a large taa-v ure to the ncreased duraton of lfe acheved by edcal scence. Consder the agnfcent work of Edson, Burbank, and Max durng the rpe years of lfe dened to earler generatons. Once the old en of socety, those of prceless wsdo and experence, ded n the pre of ther aturty. Today we have aged fathers and uncles fro who we absorb knowledge acqured through the slow years. And the quckenng conscence of the world n regard to huan relatons s undoubtedly nfluenced by the fact that we have so any old others stll alve, bloong lke evenng prroses n the evenng of lfe. The average death age has been ncreased to ffty-sx yean, wth an attendant advance n the old age "peak'' fro forty-two to seventy-two years. Fundaental Essentals of Hoe lfe More Than Food, Clothng and Shelter By ALCE M. LOOMS, llnos Educaton Specalst. No greater stake can be ade than the belef that food, clothng and shelter are the fundaental essentals of hoe lfe. They are essentals, but s that all there s to lvng, to cvlsaton or to racal developent? s that all theft s to enjoyng lfe? What we are strvng for s to ake the hoe a place for the enta, physcal, oral and sprtual developent of ts ebers, and alts) a puoa fro frhch each can prepare hself to do hs fall paft to tnev eex larger unt of socety. Ths expandng of socal nterest bat no lt, wthl the needs of the race, bat t hat a very natural ttartaag poart n the hoe. The convcton grows that true hoe educaton n the nlwl sjj faly crcle t t ntver-e toward the advancng goal plannng. n / V' < ' * & /. % &.M *,¾¾.."''rfvs«. ' * s «**(

8 ^,1.1,,..pWFBJlU.jP S.. b '< '*H N*>~* >** Lrfr'-. [/? t<::: * r *' ft** WW Y8U SBOED USE GARGOYLE OL Because'Gargoyle Moblol represents the hghest Saaltv lubrcatng ol. t s ade fro crude ol selected'for ts hgh lubrcatng value t s rovavaaured by processes that produce the fnest lubrcatng ol Because there s a grade of Gargoyle Moblol whch s exactly correct for your autooble engne, lns grade has been deterned after a thorough expenent and sludy and after careful analyss by the Vacuu Ol Copany's Board of Autootve Engneers consstng of forty-two en. C. A. WEDDGE TAXDERMY All knds of annals and brds ounted and stuffed &ke a specalty of Deerheads. WM. HAYN&S TaxfQerst 124 Adas St. Ann Arbor, Mch M* * #= Announceent have opened a Shoe Shop n the Darrow buldng and respectfully solct your patronage. Wll guarantee a good job. wll also repar autooble sde curtans. ;.%«*»**. v» B. D. AMBURGBY RDERS SHOULD BE PLAUB DAY BEFORE DELV ERY S WANTED. # WEDNESDAY SPECAL --RASN BREAD COFFEE CAKES EVERY SATURDAY All Knd* of Bread, Pe*, Cakes, Cookes, Rolls, etc. SALT RSENG BREAD TUESDAY and FRAY Place Your Order Ahead. COME N AND LOOK OVER OUR STOCK THE LARSON BAKERY N. R. LARSON, Prop. 1,750,000th Buck Bult of ^J9u$dk t**epbt»»»de.t.8trcof. ft/o»d k t*bw PretMoat «ad evo o'clock the one avtten, r*k drven oftttfn drlfaa.-.«*, l *tr"m COMMUNTY COHCAEGATONAt CHURCH R*» H. E. Majsroft, Mornng worshp 10(80. Sunday School 11x80. ChrUtan Endeavor 6*80. Evenng Servce Tt80. ST. 'b" ' ' " MARY'S CHURCH RM. F. J. MaQnflUn, Poaftor. ^! * Maue* 8-30 a 10(30 A. M. Last ass fallowed by Beaedtctoa of the Blessed Sacraent Catecha for chldren every Sanday edately after an. Also on Saturday at 1:30 P. M. %*T NOTCE wll be at the Pnckney State Bank every Frday durng bankng hours to receve taxes, begnnng Dec. 3. Wll receve taxes at hoe any nght after 6.00 P. M. Checks only accepted. W. E. MURPHY, Treasurer of Putna Townshp. Dpthera ant-toxn seru s beng adnstered to the school chldren to-day at the school house under the drecton of the county nurse, Mss Clock. Henry Kelser fell fro a ladder at the Gaylord far near Stockbrdge one day last week breakng hs left wrst and rght knee. He was taken to a Jackson hosptal. ANNUAL MEETNG The Fowlervlle Agrculture Socety et last week and elected the fol The Annual Meetng of the Lvngston County Mutual Fre nsurance lowng offcers: Presdent, Boss Robb, Copany for the electon of offcers Sec'y., J. B. Munsell, Treas., C. F. and for the transton of such other Curts, Drectors, R. T. Sprague, John busness as ay legally coe before Daan, Harry Calkns, Burr Allen t, wll be held at the Court House, n and W. H. Peek. The treasurer's report shows a balance of $ Tue the C&y of Howell n sad County, on *&* Ja nuar y 4th A ' Mrs. Eleanor Jarvs of Brghton ^ ^ at 1:00, P. *M. aged 92 years, ded at her hoe there W. J. Larkn, Sec'y- Pec. 17. She cae to Aerca fro Dated Howell, Mchgan, Deceberf reland at the age of 16 and was 20, arred to Wlla Jarvs of Pnckney -three years later. Burt Hooker, Percy Ells and Azel Carpenter attended a Masonc banquet at Dexter Monday evenng. Frank Tplady and E. L. Shehan of Detrot were Lansng vstors Sunday. Mss Mare Monks of Jackson s a guest at the hoe of W. E. Murphy; Mr. and Mrs'. W. C, Mlter and M "fand Mrs. Earl Baugfn attended funeral of a cousn at St. Johns Wednesday. Mr and Mrs. B. D. Aburgey attended the weddng of hs sster at Jackson Tuesday. TRAVELERS' GUDE G. T. R. R. West Et 12:10 A, M. 5:15 P. M. AUTO BUSSES To Jackson To Howell Central Standard Te 8:30P. M. 8:15 A. M. Eastern Te To Lapsng To Ann Arbor 8:40 A. M. 9:50 A.M. :40 P. M. 3:50 P. M. 6:40 P. M. 6:5C P. M l of the et thattke la*«rwf!p6n^tr9 v/aa proceed wthn twehrf n«th», ww^ t^^bo* ears tolwld tb«jf»t quafmr'oqn. Of ' brpesuorto^fflpa oj buflt and a half kav«bba 4 «p<h*tjel»» < Lo^bt ConvenbJa rhs>wh.lt s the" V A Poultry Show v wu be held at Howell Jan The Detrot Edson pp. s buldng a new lne to Clyde an<l Rose Center by way of Hartland and Davaburg. C. J. Nott who. has been v a peace offcer ot soe knd or other 1» Stockbrdge for the paat forty years has resgned. He says tt has been a thankless job but that he has the ss$*facton of knowng that he has been the eans of keepng soe people out,of trouble. Burglars vsted Brghton last week enterng the P. M. depot and the Hyne elevator. However ther loot was only $33. The P. M. depot and Boyle's elevator at Mlford was robbed the next nght and about $75. n oney taken. t s thought the sae gang pulled both jobs. Dr. Hardng, the South Lyon dentst, has sold hs practce to Dr. Knetz of Lapeer. A cvl servce exanaton for al clerk n Chelsea wll be held soe te n January. We see by the Dexter Leader that Mrs. Cash Valentne and Mrs. Clare Leen both-passed away last week. Messrs Valentne and Leen are bg sheep and cattle dealers, and are weed known to the farers of ths secton. AJjte-Lcy Harrs entertaned-for Chrstas: Mr. and Mrs. Lous Monks and faly of Jackson and W. E. Murphy and faly. Mr. and Mrs. Wll Jeffrey of Jack- "son spent the week end wth Mr. and Mrs. John Jeffrey: Mr. and Mrs. Wll Fsk were Ann Arbor vstors Sunday. Mrs. Jaes Dockng vsted her sster, Mrs. H. W. Downs of Pontac Chrstas. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Allen and son, of Lansng and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Darrow and son of Detrot vsts ed ther other, Mrs. Flora Darrow Saturday and Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Byer ate Chrstas dnner wth Mr. and Mrs, Glenn VanBuren of Detrot. Mr. and Mrs. Heran Vedder and, /a&uy of Detrot were Xas guests o kr. and Mrs.-P. H. Swarthout. XXB,}L M. Wllston who has been vstng at the hoe of Claude Wh' ' at U»wel returned hoe Sunday. : A and Mrs, George Engle andw Mr.^p^^Ht^FrWk Aburgey andt WaJMr-Frott of Detrot were over ove? guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. Ay Fro*fc : * E. E. Jfrost was the guest of hadauate Mrs. Clare Sknner of Dethe %*V~the woe*. *r.l*r'a who has been ttr? Sgler far for the past has %e<t : to Toledo. L«n4 swfe were Howell ~ ds %;; /.-,-,¾ M** :J^% Hew :<;-.<ok- t.¾^^ *G\. &- :>?. f *,:, W$k :*%. ^¾¾ *V2.*",< v \*&2 " s*> *>* P THB^SBflBROl n the councatons of \$pendaton we receve the sncere apprecaton of those we have served ours s a Servce of Sncerty. FUNERAL HQM& PNCKN CttU WANTS, FOR SALE, ETC LOST Soewhere between Pnckney and Dexter a black and whte fox hound wth one brown eye and one whte eye. Wll pay reward for ts return. R. J. Gauss,Dexter,Mch. FOR SALE Good Oak Davenport. Can be used for a bed. Prced rght for quck sale. Mrs. Ross T. Read FOR SALE Poland Cllna Boar Robt. Kelly FOR SALE $15 Cash buys a large Renown Heater. Burns wood,hard or soft coal. Used only three years. Clfford VanHorn FOR SALE 0¾ RENT 40 ft. corner wth brck buldng. Good bargan. H. W. Crofoot FOR SALE Hay and corn shock. W. H. Sth. n the Mr. and Mrs. Francs Martn and son of Howell, Edgar Martn, wfe a»d daughter and Vrgl Martn of Lansng and Mss May Martn of Detrot were guests of ther parents, Mr t and Mrs. Jaes Martn Chrsta*;'' FOR SALE Two Jersey Cowd, two pga, a nuber of Leghorn pullets* and heaver breeds, all layng, also a quantty of alfatfa hay. Chas. Spencer, Lakeland road ;» FOR SERVCE Poland Chna Boar. - JLyn*He»d«e- FOR SALE Heatng stove. Bus wood or soft coal. Also has a detachable agazne for hard eoal. W. Darrow LOST An overcoat n or neat the Pnckney School. f left at the school a lberal reward wll he pad and no questons asked. Bernard McClusky NO HUNTNG Postvely no huntng or trespassng on ray far. John Spears. FOR SALE 7 roo house, garage, %. acre of ground n vllage of Greg* ory. nqure of Bank of Gregory. FOR SALE Peerles Pop Corn pop* per nearly new. Lee Lavey. tz ; FOR SALE Pop-orn a year old. A. W. Nelson on Noran Reason frr. FOR SALE No Huntng and No Trespassng Sgns. 5c each at Dspatch offce. '<*/.- FOR- fwfceb Two heatng stoves, squash, beets, carrots, potatoes, buggy and 2 fnewool Black Top Ras. Lawrence Spears. Tf- ' """" "" WAKTJBO Wsabng and Jcont&gB... ;,. ^ '". :' v. Mra ^Sg-erV POU SALE Art La«ato#e 4n goos condton. : JMspetch ««ce. < FOR SALE Dry. "0 fl^j ~>: -: r^loe a#»«a»y oar> XXz. free. Tort ^ ^ afflc fte n the Ur. * >-*4f.*> *;. *.\~n / >,H 9 «*- **«.<-<- r -w^'*^»- tne,-.tv'ohm STATE OF MCHGAN Prodate Court for the Cottnty of Lvnfaton. ^ - ^ At a ses&ftf of the aahl at the Probate OnVe tfce C Howell n sad County, on the day of Deceber Jk^X Present: Hon. Wffs L^Lyona, of Probate. * ^ * n the atter of the estate of Mar/ E. Capbell, deceased, Fred C. Capbell hrng fled v sad Court hs petton prayng tfca* the te for presentaton of clas aganst sad estate be lned and t$et a te and place be apponted to receve, exane and adjust all clas and deands aganst sad deceased by and before sad Court t s Ordered, tha four onths fro ths date be allowed for credtors to present clas aganst sad 'estate. t s further ordered; that the 18th day of Aprl, 1927, at ten O'clock. n the forenoon, at sad Probate Offce, be and s hereby apponted for the exanaton and adjustent of all clas and deands aganst sad deceased.» Wlls l. Lyons, Judge of Probate Atrue copy Celesta Parshall, Regster of Probate MORTGAGE SALE ^# 3^ '. «* NOW THEREFOS^- notce s. hereby gven that by vrtue of aajd power of sale and n, pursurance of the statute n auch case ade and." provded, the 4,yfco»f«*«*^ ;v, foreclosed by.a theren descrl to -the hgaeh _.. front door of^the _ Cty'bf Howell, Jfel day ofvmarch H92T. the forenoon of'ad The pt *'" ' ortgage n th. Tb' of Lvgaton scrbed as tl (¼) of Secton East» p 1 -"^-*^ Dated J.*. Wflto, v>< * entry otce «f^5u n «on PTOf to etgbttah decrtbed, ll>t).«; ^ake),carson gan.r. D. JantL^t- - Mkl»JlC, f^* #' ^Mf ~ *&** year Klllo*. MkV u^y/jp* ^anl (Pertage rfrett,ofypa>.. 9t tedfrok, A Arbor, ^- Wttant w?» \ p-fj & ->.. -v.* Default havng been ade the. condtons of a certan ortgage* dated February 21, 1921, executed*} George R. Lews and Nelle Gl Lews, hs wfe, of the cty of St Lous, Ms* sour.ortgags ' *"' -^-^ dy ojf Fow 'ler Mchgan. ortgage regster County, page 8^^^^^ W^H^^^Vthe full aount of the ^a^b^^sv^ nterest havng been due a n^knng unpad snce Fejbruary flfhee, and WHEREAS, the aount due at the date hereof s the su of four thousand one hundred sxty-three dollar and eghty-sx centa ($ ) prncpal and nterest, ana' the su of ffty ($50.00) dollars aran attorney fee stpulated n sad ortgage, a*4 no sut or proceedng havng been-n- sttuted at law or n equty to x safd debt, or any part thereof,.whereas,-by rea**^ sa( default the power of sale -eo«tadned n sad ortgage has be*o o^orav % 'Wf: ;;B

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