Pinckm-y. hit a tree which somehow got in between himself and the deer and th^

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1 PNCKNEY DSPATCH V«l 46 Pnckney, Lmagafcm County, Mchgan Wednesday, November 27, 1929 No. 50 OUR DOWNSTARS SHOE DEPARTMENT WLL WLL FT YOUR FOOT CORRECTLY WTH FASHONABLE AND QUALTY FOOTWEAR Have you ever shopped n our downstars shoe department lately? f you haven't you are mssng some excellent shoe values. Our Downstars shoes are qualty footwear, the latest n styles and prced rght. They wll gve long and excellent wear you wll always feel at the heght of the mode, for fashonable and qualty footwear always pays n the end. Women's brown pumps, come n many and varous patterns. Hgh and Cuban heels, kd, calf and suede - and some wth lzzard trms. Styles nclude pumps, one straps, Oxford tes and others. Also square and ponted toes. Black kd and calf footwear offer a great varety of patterns n Cuban heels, also many hgh heels are ncluded. Wth wde and narrow straps, some wth attractve buckles, some trmmed n Lzzard and many other fashonable pattern treatments. Prce $6.85. BOYS OXFORDS Boy's oxfords n black and brown. They come wth rubber or leather heels. Prce $3.85 to $5.00. BOY'S HGH TOPS Splendd wnter shoes for boys. Laced to the knees. Thev come n black or brown. Prce S5.00 to $6.00. We also carrv a full lne of Enna Jettck shoes. 36 stvles to select from. Szes 4 to 9. Wdths AAA to EEE. Prced at $5.00 to $6.00. ASK FOR DEMONSTRATON On Rados SCREEN GRD, A. C. or BATTERY SETS Electrcal Crosley or Screen Grd from $89 up Also Kellogg, Fada, R. C. A Several used battery sets for sale very cheap Westnghouse and Eureka Vacuum Cleaners J. C. Dnkel Cash Specals For Thrfty Buyers 2 tfe*. R-e 14c Corn Flakes Best Gloss Starch 12c 1 tb Santos Coffee 38c l / 2 Uncolored. Jap Tea Sc 1 Bottle Catsup 10c Palm Olve Soap, 3 for Kellogg All Bran Men's $1.25 Dress Shrts 21c 21c 98c DRY CLEANNG AND LAUNDRY GOES MONDAY, WEDNES- DAY AND FRDAY W. W. BARNARD PNCKNEY DEER HUNTERS RETURN Th* mewt of Pvckn^y's hunters returned from the north woods last week. The albea whch tbey brought back wth them greatly outnumbered the deer. Clare and Claude Swarthout arrved Thursday wth a prontfhorn buck shot by the latter. Norman Reason pulled n Frday deerless. Only one deer was shot by hs party, Harold Greve, beng the lucky one. W. H. Meyer, L. C. Hendee, W. C. H» ndee, B. F. Esc, and Orval Smth also arrved Frday. They report deer scarce and only got a few shots at them. November 8 to meet Rev. Fr. Player who was returnng fom England on November 11. t has been dscovered that Rev. Forster checked hs grps at the Wndsor staton at 7 :00 P. M. and started to walk from there to meet Rev. Player at the dock.he dsappeared between the staton and dock as completely as f) the earth had swallowed hm up. Rev. Player found no one to meet hm and proceeded t > Toronto alone. Rev. Forster s thougnt to have been murdered and hs body thrown n th > rver or otherwse,\>pos< '1 of. les'des Rev. Danel Forstcof ths place he has four other Lothe and sx >h» «. The mssng prnt formerly resded n Wllams townhsn Hay county. A *5,000 rewsml s offrvd for hs return by hs fends. n_. ST. JOSEPHS BAZAAR DEXTER A three day festval and bazaar to be gven by St. Joseph's Church, Dexter, wll open wth a gala Thanksgvng dnner on Thanksgvng day at 5 o'clock n St. Joseph's Audtorum, Dexter. The festval wll close on Saturday evenng. On Frday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, the lades of the parsh under the drecton of Mrs. A. N. Kearney wll entertan at a card party Przes wll be gven for all the events. The festval and bazaar wll be open both afternoons and evenngs on the last three days of ths week. A cordal nvtaton s extended to the publc to attend. MLK PRODUCERS MEETNG Sxty lrrnurs met at the Pnckrey ("onnunty Hall Tuesday aftern on..rd formed a local mlk produce.. \s- \.~.ocl'.;un. Those present came fruml l.'nadlla, osco, Maron, Putnam and from Dexter and Webster townshp^! n Washtenaw county. County Agent j olander opened the meetng by ntroducng Prof. A. C. Anderson of Lau>zg, feld man for the Mchgan Mlk Producers Assocaton. He talked u< the value of the organzaton aru ^ elt on the benefts ganed from the Mlk Producers Assocaton. A local organzaton was then formed wth Charles Reed of Maron, presdent.; Mchael J. Roche of Putnam, vce rj-'->den; and Russell Lvermore of! 'nudlla, sec'y.-treas. Remarks were mad.- by dflwent ones and queston- a>ked. Most of the farmers who ut?"ruled the meetng are sellng ther "The Maurce Kelly huntsn' :. bagged two deer whch were shot by Eardly Van Syckle and another rnn from Fowlervlle. However t fell to Maurce to have the most harrowng adventures of the whole kt and caboodle of them. He got a broadsde shot at a mammoth buck at a dstanc of approxmately 50 f»et. However he mlk to th. Pnckm-y. (Jorden MUk staton at ht a tree whch somehow got n between hmself and the deer and th^ PNCKNEY PLAYS THANKSGVNG MORNNG deflected bullot struck t but dd not kll t. The wdely crculated story The Hgh School football team wll that he was treed by a ferocous black play ts nnal game Thankgvng mornng at 10 o'clock at that tme eght of bear he says s wthout a shred of truth, beng m fact a base fabrcaton. the players wll be playng ther last football game for Pnckney. Dexter Norman and Clare Mller pulled n has been chosen as the opponent because of* her fne showng two weeks Sunday nght wth a ten pont buck shot by John Crope of Howell. t s ago. Dexter who has always been a and to be one of the Largest shot v. ' ur: ' rval of Pnckney, both n the lower pennsula ths year. They school and ndependant sports, says also wounded another whch escaped her team wll beat the home boys by j by jumpng n the AuSable rver. Two at U st two touchdowns. Dexter carres..,,!; of the best players that' black bear also crossed ther pach whch they were unable to ht. Pnckney has met ths year. Her Clarence Blades returned home heavy lne wll probably outplay! wth a deer. Pnckney's on defense, however/ Pnckney has a slght edgt- on off en- j PREST S THOUGHT SLAN sve strength. j Extensve search s beng made to: Ths game should prove a real Rev. Francs Forster, Superor Geeral of the Order St. Basl, statoned defunsve teams that she has ever de-1 batue. Pnckney has one of the best at Toronto for the past seven year- veloped. n. sx games played her op-j He s a brother of the Rev. Danel [:onents have faled to regster a score' Forster of St. Mary's parsh Pnckney. Rev Forster left for Montreal on or two touchdowns. w'.le the two games lost were by one J, BG BROADWAY SUCCESS AT PNCKNEY COM. HALL TONGHT The bg broadway success "Pgs" s to bo put on at the Pnckney Communty Hall under the auspces of the Pnckney lecture course com. tonght. t s sad to be full of laughs and there s not a dull moment n t. The curtan wll rse at 8:30 p. m. Reserve seats wll be on sale at the tcket offce on the nght of the hsow., -..o. REGULAR P. T. A. MEETNG The regular P. T. A. meetng wll be! < d at th ~chool house /! Monday, tver,..g, > comber 2. ANNUAL THANKSGVNG DANCE The annual Thanksgvng Dance wll take place at St. Joseph's Audtorum, Dexter on Thanksgvng nght An enjoyable tme for both old and young. O. DAVD VANHORN Davd VanHom, aged 55 years, ded at hs home n Ann Arbor Sunday. He s survved by hs wfe who was formerly Mabel Brown and one son. Also a brother, Edward, of Detrot The deceased was the son of the late John VanHom and lved on the VanHom farm east of towm many years, later movng to Ann Arbor. The funeral was held from the Swarthout funeral home Wednesday, at 2:00 P. M. (today). B. F. Esc offcatng. Bural was n the Whtcomb cemetery. a WAS A BG SUCCESS The feather party gven for the beneft of the Pnckney Communty Hall last Frday nght was a decded success. About $85.00 was added to the treasury as a result of t. TO OUR SUBSCRBERS Ths s the tme of the year when the greater part of the subscrptons to the Dspatch expre. About January 1 statcmemtg wll be maled to those who are^n arrears. Now s a good tme to fx up your subscrpton. lt Nter s comng over wth a large d ;:. Mm determned to wn the la.-t g:u\" of th. reason.let Pnckney turn : out tt,-heer the home boys and help \ them turn back the o er-'-onndent team from Dexter. ATTENTON BROTHERS The jnuj convocaton of Lvngston Lodge No. 70 F. & A. M. wll be held on Tuesday evenng, December '\. An o\>ter >upper wll be served n the dnnn.tr hull at 7:30 p. m. Ths wll be fallowed by the busne.ss meetng at whch the annual reports of the secretory and treasurer wll be read. Klectofl of offcers for the ensung year wll!> next n order. All brothers.-hould make t a pont to be present. Kenneth Reason, Sec'y. Tle church thr horn Frda\ rnencm - : A OYSTER SUPPER l'nckr' y Conjrn.'jratonal ll h<-ld an oyster supper at.. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Nash, evenng-, \'ov< mber 2!*th com- at ' ce The Sp of Good fre Servce Every JDay n the Year 'ulr tre busness s desrable to ls. We bd for t on the bass of qualty merchandse at a far prce. Then we throw n somethng extra for good measure That somethng extra s SERVCE. Our servce s ready for you whenever you need t. Just phone us we'll look after you. Our servce s mantaned for just one thng to take care of you We want t«> show you we deserve your trade. You d»«n't need to junk your old tres when you deal wth us. We'll take them n trade on a set of brand-new, top-qualty GOODYEARS, and make you a far allowance. More peoplerdeo: Goonf" TRE than on any other khu{ SNCLAR OL STATON b&b L.AV&Y PNCkNEY MCH «91 1 f WE SERVE REGULAR MEALS AT POPULAR PRCES ALSO CATER TO HUNTNG PARTES Magazne Subscrptons Receved The Pnckney flafe UAKLKS WF1ALLN, Prox>. Meals au Shot Orders, Magaznes, Candy,Tobacco SAVE MONEY ON OUR CASH SPECALS PURE LARD ARMOUR'S 2 tb 2Sc PLAN CHOCE OLVES 4 Bars ] MLK, 3 LARGE CANS SHREDDED WHEAT 12c CORN FLAKES, Large 12c MAY DAY COFFEE, tb 39c CREAMERY BUTTER 49c 1 Qt. Jar 29c RCE, 2 tbs 15d CAMAY OR LUX TOLET SOAP NAVY BEANS, 2 tbs FANCY CHOCOLATES, 1 tb 25*: 15c WHTE COFFEE HOUSE Per tb 45c FELS NAPTHA SOAP 10 Bars 51d CHPSO GRANULES FLAKES Lge. Pkg 20cl q JELLO, 3 Pkg. SALTED PEANUTS, tb LMA BEANS, No. 2 Can RED KDNEY BEANS 24cl 15cJ 10c lod Guaranteed Flour $1.05 CANNED SPAGHETT MUSTARD, Qt. Jar APPLE BUTTER, Qt. Jar Preserves, 4 lb Jar C H. KENNEDY 10c 19c 21c c %. ' ' m «K-.

2 6" WmMH WMtlWlWMWWUM WMMW! "9 WEEK OF DECEMBER 1 Hg-h west to northwest wtds wll blow away the atorm area forecast for the tal end of laat week.so that the openng days of the week of December 1st wll be mostly far and cold. About Monday or Tuesday, however, there wll be a more or less.sharp reacton to warmer wth temperatures reachng slghtly above the 50-degree mark. Wt a th* change there wll come ncreasng cloudness and some moderate precptaton. By the mddle of the week temperatures wll be fallng to readngs slghtly below the seasonal average and by Thursday the skes; wll agan be clearng. Ths wll mean that the last days of the week wll be generally far, sunshny and the temperatures qute normal. Tropcal Hurrcane n Mchgan The severe wnd storm that sunk the carferry Mlwaukee and the heavy rans ttat damaged frut trees and other crops n Mchgan durng the frst week of October 20th was correctly forecast n ths column. t was wrtten nearly two months n advance of the actual happenng. The weather bureau faled to put up storm warnngs along the Great Lakes untl late Monday. From our chart system of forecastng weather we can planly ^ee ths partcular storm appearng over the north Pacfc coast on October 17th and movng slowly eastward. There were hurrcane characterstcs n ths storm center as t was comng northwest from Georga made possble, we beleve, by the transfuson of the tropcal storm whch met the northern storm off the Florda coast. The storm center remaned n Mchgan nearly 48 hours at hurrcane barometrc ntensty, the longest perod for any one state durng ts nne days travel n the Unted States. n every object there s nexhaustble meanng; the eye sees n t what the eye brngs means of seeng. - Carlyle. CHATTY-* F CAB ~.> 0 MAN," 'HONCY OUT Jr~ BEATRCE. BURTON, AO^^^^JSS^S&mg^ pjnm«mm«nnrt»>«<n» * <* * *! * * * *»»'»W>MM«mMMMM*>MmWMl» mhm»»twlummm*m»m«mmumm»m**«chapter X (thought 'd buy some For weeks- -ever snce Dave Jordan Swss and ask mother had frst begun to take notce of her - <ress." blue dotted to make a U. W. No Now Mllons More Stop "Dosng" Colds Better Extern*] Treatment Wst New User* All (her tke World Every year snce the ntroducton of Vcks VapoRub, more and more people have gven up the old-fashoned way of "dosng" colds and turned to ths modern external method. Today, the whole trend of medcal practce s away from needless "dosng." Mothers of young chldren especally apprecate Vcks because there's nothng to swallow, and, of course, nothng to upset delcate stomachs. Just rubbed on, ts medcated vapors are released by the heat of the body and nhaled drect to the nflamed ar-passages. At the Same tme Vcks acts through the skn lke a poultce or plaster, "drawng out" tghtness and soreness. Year by year, the fame of Vcks has spread from neghbor to neghbor and from state to state, untl now t s used for the colds of adults as well as chldren n over 60 countres. The ever-growng demand for ths modern method of treatng colds s shown n the famlar Vck slogan. Hade famous when Vcks reached "17 Mllon Jars Used Yearly," later rased to "21 Mllon," these fgures are agan beng changed, as there are now "Over 26 Mllon Jars Used Yearly" n the Unted States alone. (Aatty had been glorously happy And because she had been happy, she had been all sweetness and brghtness and goodness.... For t s so ea^y to be good when you are happy! But now, as she sat at her table n the "Brown Betty" tearoom, wth her eyes fxed darkly on Dave and Agnes Herford n ther corner, all her old btterness and dscontent came back to her. t drpped nto her mnd and heart lke poson nto a fnng whte cup. "The nasty vamp!" she sad to herself, watchng Agnes lean across the lttle table where she sat wth Dave, and smle up at hm. "'ll bet she asked hm to take her to lunch! 'll bet she told hm she wanted to ask hs advce on somethng, or some suda gag as that!" A watress, pnk-cheeked and.-nu:- ng n her blue dress and whte cap and apron, came up to take her order. "No guess dorjt want any lunch after al]!" Chatty told her, pu -h" ng her char back from the table. " thought dd but 'm not hungrv. don't feel well " That was the truth. She was sck all at once actually sck wth jealousy. Her head had begun to ache, and she felt as f she would burst f she couldn't have a good long cry aj! by herself, somewhere. She went upstars and spent the re t of her lunch hour sttng dly at her typewrter, starng at the opposte wall and feelng unhappy and bad tempered. "Last nght let hm k^s me!" >he scolded herself for her weakness. "And today he gves me the go-by to take that dumb cluck of an Agnes out to lunch. What CAN he see n her?" Wrun Wnne Talcott came along on her way to the record room a few mnutes later she greeted her wth the queston : "Wn," she sad, "come here and tell me what al the men >ee n Agnes Herford. Yuu know her a Jot better than do.... What's so lamnatng about her'.''' Wnne, all black taffeta, llounce.-. and jasmne perfume and frzzled har, shrugged her pretty shoulders. " dont know. Maybe some men lke 'em that way -refned!" She pronounced t KK-rnel. "Wn '.' Who'. fallen for her now?" "Dave Jordan's taken her to lunch," sad Chatty, tryng to keep her mset-y out of her voce. But there was no use n tryng to keep anythng from Wnne Talcott! She was one of those naturally sharpeyed people who mss nothng. "Well, deare, f that's the way you feel about Davy, you'd better snap out of the dumps and work on hm a lttle yourself!" she answered smartly. "And lsten any grl can get any man she wants f she only goes about t n the rght way. f Davy lkes the Pofck l^ady type lke Agnes, be that type for hm! That's my Beatrce p'arfac answer to you '" Chatty nodded. That sounded lke pretty good advce, she thought. "'ve always hated that moon-faced Agnes from the moment frst set eyes on her!" she sad, hotly, her eyes narrowng and her lps tghtenng nto a thn, straght lne. "And last nght she saw what a fuss ]:>. made over me, so now she's tryng to get hm away from me! Well, all have to say s that v.e'd better watch her step when.-he starts anythng wth me! My mother ard Mr. Van's wfe are the greatest frends n the world. And thnk Mrs. Van would thank me for tellng her what COU1.D tell her about Mr. Van and Agnes Herford!" Her face glowed wth a whte-hot flame of anger. She was stll bodng wth fury an hour later, when the door of the fles room was pushed open, and Dave Jordan, hmself, stood n the openng. She saw hm from the corner of l"u-r eye, but she dd not look up untl Blle spoke to hm. "Hello. Davd," she *au\, n her sweet, pleasant way. "Do you want us to get vou somethng out of the fles?" "No, thanks," and he shook hs red head. " just came n to speak to to Mss Chatterton." He came nto Sunday was a day of soft sunshne CHAPTER X Dave Jordan was one of those wonderful people who know how to mnd ther own busness. And so he sad nothng at all when and blue, blue skes wth not a cloud Chatty stopped short n the mddle n them. At sx o'clock Chatty was awak.-. She lay n bed for a mnute or two, blnkng at the sunshne that came pourng n through the open wndows of the bedroom and smlng at the dark blue Swss dress, crsp and fresh on ts hanger just nsde the closet door. By eght o'clock she had fnshed packng the lunch of fred chcken and devled eggs and chocolate layer cake that she had made the nght before of what she was tellng hm about Blle Langenau's marrage. She could not even be sure that he had heard her. For he was passng a gasolne truck on the left sde of the road wth great style and speed, and he dd not even turn to look at her untl they were ahead of t Then he gave her a quck smle. ** oled and greased *The Prde of Amerca' last nght," he sad, "so you'd have a fast.smooth rde today. turned hm down because he wasn't makng enough money to sut her. "And that's why he's free to spend hs Sunday wth me," dhe told herself. "That's probably why he kusaed me the other nght because he can't kss her any more. 'm just fllng n for her " For a second btterness flooded her heart. Then she forgot t n the look that Dave gave her suddenly, wtlh a quck turn of ha handsome head. (To be contnued) o Look Out for Crams Student: "And poor Harry was klled by a revolng crane." Englshwoman: "My word! What ferce brds you have n Amerca!" o Master: "What does ths label 'Wat and see' mean?" Gardener: "Well, 1 forgot jus' wot planted there, *r." MODEL DRGBLE Mad* n Akron So lathng New! Out! Soya, get a twenty nefc-- rubber Modal at the DbfUa Loe Aaseea. Ceafly aaesmfcled a a ew mnute*. No tool* requred. Whan nflated wth g-** * r«al fler. Seat Do»tMud complet* wth full neu-uetuns for tfuetn centa <cw atatfnps) AJCRON NOVELTES. 332 SL Buchel Ave. Akron, Oho. Garage-Gas and H On Man hghway La good mn*ju Arsen*. town. E*t. 5 yearn nets $750 mo. Mod. *H«T 40xao. Wondwful openng for good m ^ chanc. For detals wrte, Central nvert- ( ment Co.. 30¾¾ W. Pco, Loa Angeles. Women and Grb Wanted Opportunty Adlet* Farm for Sale reason, poor health, have 8 r. house, cstern, good well, barn, 2 hen houses, good land, poultry, dary or general. W. F. Ahlers. Matthews, 111. Modern home Ro Grande Valley two acre*, ' some frut, paved. $5500. Ten $551)0 (adjon- ng grove yelds J4OO0 yearly). Chratmas box. 6 knda ctrus $4. "BOX" 1. San Juan, Texas. South Dakota 440 acre* raw prare tractor land, good sol, lays fne, near town, good school, $15 per acre. Owner. W. B Alfke. Rapd Cty. S. P. For Sale «4 acres, 25 acres n alfalfa, clover and tmothy hay. Equpped wth buldngs. $3,000. Terms. Leonard Bet be. Casvle, Wsconsn. Prntng Plant for aale 3 presses,portland punch. Boston sttcher, cutter,type, stock, everythng complete $2,500. part cash, balance terms, wonderful opportunty. E_ C. Lonsway, Fostora. Oho. Tung Ol Farm 13» ~A 15~mn. rde~to Gaaesvlle. 3 rm. bungalow, gas sta. Blue bus passes door. Low prce. Easy terms. M. W. Ouatn. Farbanks, Fla. For»ale or leaae, good locaton for feed, seed, produce, mplements or coal bus., wth prvate swtch on R. R. Come look t over. J._L_- Lots, Owner, Bar tes vlle. Oklahoma. For Sale Nce 6-room dwellng, store house 20x40 on same lot; shoe shop dong good busness; surrounded by mll vllage P. O. Box 9». Hogansvlle, Ga. Wonderful Value! Only $ beautful Chrstmas cards prnted wth your name. Buy early! Satsfacton guaranteed. Capta: Card Co.. 32 Olver_St.. Boston. Mass. Start Your Own Busness Send for fre*~folder descrbng 67 plans for makng $20-$100 weekly n home or offce. Raphael Co 122 W. 94th, New York. Lades Keep young; be your own beauty specalst. How- S mportant recpes wth nformaton sent on recept $1. J. D. Stovall,, 317 Produce Each. Bldg.. Kansas Cty, Mo. Everywhere, to address carda n spare tfana; experence unnecessary.. No canvassng; we- Partculars free. DepC 9, Waaonc- furnsh everythng free. 1 mperal Statonery Co., ton, C. H.. Oho. Whoopng Cough Conquered We guarantee postvely that whoopnacough wll clear up, n four to seven daya» wth Magc Rub, f drectons are followed. Buckeye Laboratores, St, Clar Ave. Sute 4 and 5. Cleveland, O. Enclose S2 0O for full supply. HERE T S Our Kreat ntroductory offer, one ounce bottle (Coty Bottle) Deluxe trple strength perfume. Amercan Beauty. Narcaae, Jockey Club, or Woodland Flowers. $3.00 value upon recept of eghty-fve (S5c) cents poetoffce money order, to cover cost and malng. Also our full lst of Xmas specal combnaton gft boxes of tolet goods. Act now. Carolna Specalty Sales Brown St. Phladelpha. Pa. J. Evans. Sales Manager* Permanent Waves are now yours n a rw mnutes n your own home, wthout heat specal applance, bother or skll Smple a* washng the head and guaranteed to be perfectly harmless. Here s your chance to have curly har and make money n spare tune as our agent. Send $1 for our specal offer and enough Setaeurl for many permanenta. Specal low wholesale prce to bona fde agents. J. R. MLLER 3254 So. Wabash Chcago, lls. PARTNER Agents, sell Xmas cards, double your money, j partculars free, or box sample cards $1, whch refunded later. Leed Sales Co., Me,- rmac. Mass. She sat there for a long tme, f* elng unhappy and bad tempered lwav n thr \c>- box m tht and tuck' ktchen. By mn'.>he was drexscd n the ntw blue dress, and ht-r har was brushed back the way Dave Jordan lked her Pn tty soon, after sell a few more bonds, 'm gong to surprse myself and buy a new car." Chatty nodded, smoothng down the dark blue folds of her dress, as they Wanted Local salesman or lady to sell hgh class lne of tolet jjooda. Wll brng b«money to worker. The Lotus Company, Buder [ Bldg.. St. LOULSJ^O. Blacksmth, wood shop for sale; electrcal equpped; dong busness. BOX S _ Qunter. Kas. j What t t worth to you to know "your outstandng character trats, talents, faults'.' Enclose dollar bll wth full page sample of handwrtng to Armand Chro, care 2<>J : Temple-Court. Denver. Colo. Prompt reply. Complete analyss.! Tobacco or snuff habt cured or no~pay! Sl.au f cured. Sent on tral! Frances Wllard. 4724½ Lemon Grove, Dept. 1. Hollywood^Calf. Men's genune heavy MoJeskdn~Pant. specal S-.69; no C. O. D. Brown or gray. Send sze wast and nude seam length. Mansfeld Merchandse Co.. 19 E. Arch_St.._Mansfeld, O. No physcs needed. ntestnal waste resdue U goaonous, remove wth harmlens Regon Postal for booklet, Regulln, Lggett Bldg., N«w York. W th captal desred for assocaton wth Amercan physcan-chemst for manufacture n U. S. or Canada two wonderful ethcal medcnes for world markets. Or form company. Dr. Secord. Chalet Calderon, Guatemala Cty. Guatemala. C. A. to wear t. Then she went nto the bllowed n the wnd. "Blle told me ^anprenaus' flat to have Blle put the that you boys who sell bonds can't af- *'fnshng: touches" to her costume. ford many cars and such luxures the For Blle had the gft of "st\ \v." frst few years you're n the busness," Sh-> could pull a dress about untl t ' she sad, glad that they had changed had just the rpht lnes. She could! the subject so easly. "She says that push n a harpn thev and tuck n j after fve years or so you know a lot a stray lock tht-v wth tle -xprrt of people who buy bonds from you hands of a born har dresses. ' and that then you make plenty of "Chat, you DO need the tnest bt money. t's just the begnnng that's of powder on your nose n all ths so hard." heut," she sad. " won't put on enough so that Davy'll see t, but just enough to make you look velvety. Come here." And she touched Chatty's chn wth the glass stopper of her perfume bottle, and fastened her own strng of lttle pearls around her smooth young Dave Jordan grnned. "All jobs are the same," he answered. "f you hustle, you're bound to make a lot of money that s, f you have any luck at all. Half of the tme we fellows down at the offce don't half hustle.... You see, most of us aren't mar-,red, and we can make plenty, of ^ ' c^tcafornu" M T ^ for Don t speculate. nvest n 9% frst mortgage farm Corporaton bonds on Eastern Carolna truck land. A. B. Morrs, Attorney. Morehead Cty. North Carolna, Wll trade my jewelry and musc stock TrTvoce about *8,0f>0.nr) for corn belt r'ear farm. Wonderful Chrstmas trade opportunty. W, J. Dck, Jeweler. Watseka 1H, Nce Whte Chnese Geese and Gander7~$3 each. JOHN J. KARPSEK Wlber.Nebr. Mother' Help Eczema Remedy, has" helped others why not you? Wll be maled prepad for $1.00. Conulne Mfg. Co. 94M Burnsde Ave,, Chcago, Opportunty for nvestment n~ntrw~pro^n JTold and slver mne. EarnnR possbltes larsre. Company qualfed under Wsconsn Securty laws. Wrte for nformaton. Secretary. SM 28 Str., Mlwaukee^Ws Expert watch reparng. Low prces, guaran'- teed work. f your watch s brokm or (rvnc trouble, send t to 35 YEARS A SPECALST Practce lmted to Skn and Cancer Consultaton Free Broadway and Market DR. NCHOLS, St. Louu, Mo. SCHOOLCHLDREN Earn q wck Chrstmas money sellng Amerca's best $1,25 box of 25 name emboasad assorted Chrstmas cards. Any choce of color embobeng you desre. Two packages of Chrstmas seals and tag* free wth each box Your entre communty are prospect!. S«nd for sample assortment. The- Corbe Press, 207o E. 100th, Cleveland.. KLLS PAN For Rheumatsm. Lumbago. Neuralga. Gout. Swollen Jont* and Muscles, Scatca and Neurts. S do8*a stop pan. Wonzer Rheumatc Compound. $1.25 a bottle WONZER HERB CO Forestvlle Ave., Chcago, PO*UK6 15c extra,. SOUTH DAKOTA The!and of opportunty and low prced lands. Farms of all szes and descrptons at from *lo up. Let us know your wants, perhaps we can satsfy. Relnqushments, gracng lands, hghly mproved farms and stock ranches. The General nvestment Co.. Rapd Cty, S. D. CAFE repars. 1 np k' ; money for ourselves wthout breakng Your Fn'r^m." T«^" rt" r~. -,-,,»,..! ',,, «our rorrune Tola Dreams ntemretow 'Now. you rf a dream! *he -le- our necks j also sweetheart and frends Hndo secrets clured. "Am f Sara would only say j Chatty nterrupted hm. Whenever that she'd po along wth us wouldn't 'she had somethng mportant to say have a worry n the world." (' she always started rght n to say t, But Sara shook her rather plan- no matter who was talkng. lorvkng h^ad wth great frmness. ] "Blle says that f well, f George "No, ndeedy!" she sad. "'m not Mayhew wanted to get marred, for ngong along a.^ the spare tre on anybody's pcnc. You all ple nto George's car. t'll be crowded a»s t s and 'll be perfectly at home wth my magazens, all day." But ttey dd not crowd nto Gorge's small closed car. For Dave Jordan came n hs own 'open-faced, snub-nosed" one that he the room and.slung one of hs long called The Prde of Amerca, and he DR. CALDWELL'S THREE RULES Dr. CaJdw»U watched the T*a\lta of eonetpston for 47 years, and beleved that DO matter how careful people are of ther health, det and exercrw, constpaton wll occur from tme to tme. Of next-mportance, then, s how to treat t wh*n t cornea. Dr. Caldwell always was n favor of /jettng as close to nature M poashle, hence hs remedy for constpatmm a a mld vegetable compound. t ean aot harm the most delaate system swd s not habt formng.. The Doctor never dd approve of drastc physcs and purges. He dd not beleve ftey were good for human bengs to put nto ther syat«n. Use Syrup Pepsn for y#ora»lf and members of the famly n vontpaten, blousness, sour and crampy gtomaeh, n*d breath, no appette, head- MhM, and to break up fevers and colds. 0«t * bottle today, at any drugstore and <*a*rve thea* th*m mles of health : Keep tfeft head eool, the faet warm, the bowels #H>- For a fm tral bottle, ju*t wrtp JJrrnp Pepsn," Dtpt. BB, MontJf^lo, legs over the corner of Chatty's desk. " wanted to take you to lunch today but 1 couldn't make t," he sad to her. n a low tone. "And 'm gong to be ted up evenngs all tho week wth one bother and another but on Sunday couldn't we go put and spend the day n the country wth George and Blle? Take our bathng suts along n case we found a place to swm? And brol steaks or somethng? Wouldn't you lke that?" Chatty shook her head. "'m not gong to be anybody's 'sde sweete'," she told hm, bluntly, gvng hm one straght look. "f you and were just frends, would. But you've made me lke you a lot better than should lke you. And 'd rather not see you at all than be wth you once or twce a week and know you were out wth other grls the rest of the tme No THANK you!" He got off the desk and stood up, lookng down at her. "'ll be back at half-past fve. 'm gong to drve you home," he sad, "and talk you out of ths! What makes you thnk spend all my spare tme runnng after grls? Where dd you get such an dea?" "Oh, that's just some more of my own busness," Chatty told hm calmly. "And there's no use n tryng to talk me nto gong wth you on Sunday, because 'm NOT gong!" But towards the mddle of the afternoon she asked Blle f sce could have a half hour to herself. " want to do some shoppng," she sad. "Dave Jordan has an dea that you and George and ought to go on had t all planned that he and Ch?tt;, should rde n t alone. "George and Blle wll have a much better tme by themselves," he sad cheerfully to Sara, who dd not lke to have Blle and George left to themselves very often. "And we can all meet out on the Old Mll road wher > the Turnpke crosses t." * * * " don't belevp they're so crazy to be just by themselves," Chatty sad to hm when they had started away from the Lpton street apartment house, and were runnng smoothly along through the sunny, clean streets towards the outskrts of the town. "Blle and George are just awfully good frends." Dave Jordan laughed. "Old George s off hs balance about (her and don't you ever let anybody tell you anythng dfferent," he sad, roundng a corner wth great speed and expertness. "Ddn't do that neatly, for a wonder? No, nobody can tell me anythng about the way Old George feels about Blle. You see, we have a flat wth two other fellows, and we room together George and. And two fellows get to know all about each other, lvng n close quarters lke that... He'd marry her tomorrow f he could! But she keeps hm at arm's length " "Well, of course, she does. But she has to, doesn't she?" asked Chatty. "When she's stll marred " She stopped abruptly, and clapped a hand over her mouth.... What on earth was she dong? Tellng the one thng that Blle had begged her never to menton to a lvng soul! And that stance, he'd have to marry a grl wth lots of money or else ths wfe would have to work to keep up ther home," she sflrj frmly. But just as frmly Dave Jordan sad: "No, that's not true." "Blle's mstaken about that," he went on, shakng hs red head that seemed redder than usual n the brllant sunshne. "George s makng plenty of money rght now to keep up a home. t wouldn't be exactly a palace, of course, any more than any 10 part book con. Novelty Adv To Sf N. 11 St., Phladelpha. Pa. 21 Opportunty to make»500 or more monthly. secret formula and workn* plan 50 c No reply unless 50c enclosed. Branch ManBg-er 21 Peppo, Caro. llnos. Besutful Necklace, whte stones. 16 n. lone postpad. Mable Rosabeads, 15 dfferwt colors. S n. 95c each, postpad. O. C. V»ads, 2526 Lnden Place._Chcago. 1)1. 21 Protect Your Home, Offce, Store, Garage wth Stops 'em Burjrlar Alarm, easly attached, automatc devce. No electrc wrng Postpad «1.00. Stops 'Em Co Hartford Buldng. Chcago. Ajrents wanted. 21 Attenton, men, women, start busness producng food product havng unlmted demand every day. $100 weekly ncome. No canvassnp. For detals, wrte Home Products. Rola, Mssour. Z0 Dr. Coaad's Pyorrhea RemTdy Sa VM teeth. Money back f no results n 30 days 90 day homo treatment Medcal Bldtr Oakland, Calf. 0 home could support just now would Standard Famly ncome AssocJaton~desres be a palace."!* representatve n every county. Also a F %?r n^r two a^tt,s ran f "" * m t* w ^. $%!: wa.s rlled wth the vson Of the home dent. Box 8. Detrot, Mchgan, P Davo Jordan would have. She could see hm. just as he would look, sttng n hs shrt sleeves,readng the eve- Mam street, town of looo on hghway n Arzona. Bstab. bus. -nets $270 mo. Ste 22x34. Seats 40. Complete modem fxtures. U>n(? lea S e, low rent. Mnt for couple-!/ 00,.,'"!!. pr,ce - Central nvestment Co W. Pco. Los Anjyele* Money for Chrstmas NUMEROLOGY s FUN and KNOWLEDGE- Sell all your frends. Send 50c your copy.. CLAUDE LAMBERT 3504 Troost, Kansas Cty, Mssour a pcnc wth hm next Sunday and she had promsed never, never to tell! rung newspaper under the warm, brght glow of a lamp. "Any grl would be glad to marry YOU, should thnk even f she had to lve n one room n a basement!" Chatty could have btten off her tongue the nstant the words were out of her mouth. She blushed deeply, and hurred to say somethng more: "What mean s that f a man s very nce, and lots of fun to be wth well, do you thnk all grls are crazy about money? Do you thnk grls ever really marry for money?" He nodded. "Sure know they do," he sad gravely. "'ve known a certan grl for a long tme, and she told me the other day that she wouldn't thnk of gettng'marred unless the man n the case was makng ten thousand dollars a year. And she meant t!'* "0 0 "Chatty's voce was very small and soft. Somethng told her that the grl who wouldn't thnk of marryng a man unless he was makng ten thousand a year was the grl she had seen wth Dave Jordan on Easter Saturday mornng gong nto Tallman's flower shop.... And evdently Dave had asked her to marry hm, and she had The Boulder Dam. Elfht years' work. Latest nformaton regardng condtons, employment, concessons, etc., sent by return mal for $1.00. Money back f dssatsfed. N. F Koxtelle Servce Bureau, Sefton Bd*. San De*o,_Calf. 19 Somethng new: "Han-D~ShJne M aunealadlev and men's shoes: carry n pocket; clean, ready for use. Prepad. 25 cent*. Hobart, 1»4 Wagar A ve., Lake wood, Oho. 19 Encyclopeda of Etquette should be n every home. t teaches tha essental laws of polte conduct and s of gteat value to anyone n any walk of lfe, fl.00 postpad. L. Bald. 2X8 at. Superor St.. Chcago Secret Servce That's what we teach by correspondence. Are you anxous to become an agent? Wrte former agent, Unted States Secret Servce, J. A. Cavanagta, nc., 77 Rver Street. Hoboken, N. J. 19 Bg war s declared on all corns, call uses and warts, wth money back guarantee. $1.00 per bottle. s test nventon, money order or C. O. D. Agents wanted. Robert Smltt W. 17th St.. Chcago GROCERY Man Str. n Arzona town of Est S years. Mo. bus. $4,800, nets $950. On t hghways, 25x54. warehouse 18x20, lot 50s 150. Property, fxtures and stock for aa!*, Acct. old aare. Real opp. for good marcll Central nvestment Co., 308«W. Pco Angeles, War Declared On All Corns Warts, Calluses and Bunons, they vansh, over-nr-ht; a new nventon just out; t's a magc Swss Ol., does wonders, corns never com«back. t's sold uoder money back guaranteed, for. 50c and $1.00 prea par bottle; great demand, mllons buy t, so rush ^our^t der - 5? b#rt A - Smtt - 1*^1 W. 17th> St., Chcago Wg* and Patent*^ Toup*«a World's ftnaat. llustrated catalogue sent free wth prce lst. Bam bns toupea plaster hoc per box po»t~ pad. Wrte or call. LOMBARD BAMBNA COMPANY S Monro* Street, Lynn, Maaa. NTRODUCTORY OFFER Beautful C*pa>Roa«PANTNG 8x10 txe n late type swvel frame $3.86 COMPLETE Send photo or select pcture, f n group, desgnate parson. For artst gude xv the> color of eyes', shad* of har and any othar parteolars you wsh the artst to car* for. We «re maklag ths offer as eomplata. aft* delvered to you to ntroduc*. oar exceptonal work. ^^ Phato guaranteed safe return. DJON ART STUDO aoo W. Madson St. 4th Floor. Chcago Sand for partculars on pctures and fnu»e» of the latest styles. LATEST & BEST A llvt, Everybody pfcyt t. Nov you ten tor rejl party- "ftanev { 00 tttf. Specal X day oftsr, 2Be deefc, pott Data. thrn: CYCLC CO., 6(514 So, 4th St, ST. L0(7«, WO. Attenton, Patch Qult Makers Large four pound bundle. Beaottfol Ootta» Prnt peces. Assorted s see and patteoa, Send no money, pey postmaster tl.00 nto* pottage. ^ DAVD aaos 411 West St. Clar, CNvekand, Oho. 21

3 [ /%% > ABOUT TEETH AJAR ANTEED PLATES Plates that Ft Mean Greater Comfort WE MAKE PLATES FOR $10.00 AND GUARANTEE PERFECT SATSFACTON s Our'plates are made n our own laboratory."hones ty, Courtesy and Quck Servcce" s our motto. Dentstry n all ts branches at very reasonable prce { Dr. Fred Waggoner j f Phone 371 Mason, Mch ^fllllllllllllulllltllllllllllllllllulhllllulllllllllllulllllllltuullll Concert and Dramatc Star Heads Cast of "Pgs" MME. MABELLE WAGNER-SHANK Mme. Mabelle Wngnor-Shank s the dtotngushed head of the "Pps" company, appearng here SHOD. She studtod n Naples and New York, was f>«years prma donna n Henry W. Savage's producton of "The Merry Wdow"; was tone test nnd record* fg artst for the Edson Phonograph Company; more lately has gone nto comedy character roles appearng Jott recently n New York n. the Law Cantor producton, "A Mexcan Rose." Mme. Wagner-Shank s also a wrter of successful vaudevlle ketches and a muscal and play producer of note. As "Grandma" n the play "Pgs," and n the varous muscal jnfrerpolatfoes n the play she s the fnshed artst. CNNY RCHARDS Mss Benny "Rchards s the charmtn$ ngenue n 'Tjrs," and ncdentalthe recent wnner of a state-wde contest. She s also an accomptangt and snger. K CROSS HONOR FLAG 3 TO NEW HAMPSHRE Tha honor flag, gven annually to tttt State whch enrolls the greatest of.ts populaton as memef tha Amercan Red Cross, went year to New Hampshre. The dewas so close between New pahra and Vermont that t hung tot ft Uttst XaaUAOat ranrea tmra m caw uoarf *n ass L'OU nectcut fourth.. A fnal tabulaton ol fgures of tb«1928 Roll Call showed a naton-wde membershp of 4,127,946. The banner vests wth New Hampshre, where t 1«ung n the State House, untl the, L*29 Roll Call held between Am* tce Daj and Thanksgvng Day s completed and new fgures avalable for the 1929 wnner. _ COFrEE CROP ADED,BY RED CROSS N SLANDS Dsaster relef gven followng the Vest ndes hurrcane whch struck t'orto Rco, the Vrgn slands and Florda, as well as other slands n the Carbbean Sea, presented one of the argest tasks yet undertaken by th«vmercan Red Cross. n Florda, where 1,810 lves were lost, the Red Jross aded 41,236 persoqb. n Porto fllco and the Vrgn slands, where the oss of lfe was not so great, but where the devastaton was almost complete, the Red Cross aded 731,712 persons. Destructon of the coffee plants wa :he gravest loss, and the Red Cross aded n rehabltatng ths ndustry by employng 67,000 natves to clear the coffee land, so that replantng would go forward mmedately, thus provdng work and wages for thou sands. LABOR HEAD URGES SUPPORT OF RED CROSS "nvarably t s tha masses of the people whch suffer most when dsasters occur," stated Wllam Green. presdent of the Amercan Federaton of Labor, recently. "Because they suffer n>ost and be ;ause of ther helplessness, the mns '.ratons of the Red Cross organzaton take on added sgnfcance and mportance. No doubt many lves amonr these partcular groups are saved through the prompt servtco whch thl? organzaton slveb. "Because the Amercan Federaton ot Labor apprecates ths fact, we have supplemented the appeal of the Amercan Red Cross at each Roll Call perod for membershps from the great mass of workng men and women and ther famles. "The contnued servce o. the Amercan Federaton of Labor n ths most humane and unselfsh work wll be most cheerfully rendered." Mr. Green s a member of the Board of ncorporators of the Amercan Red Cross. NURSES ENROLLED WTH RED CROSS FOR SERVCE Enrolled wth the Nursng Servce of the Amercan Red Cross at Washngton are 49,000 nurses, qualfed under the socety's regulatons, who may be summoned to servce n tme of dsaster or other emergency From the Red Cross enrollment were assgned 20,000 nurses n the World War. These Red Cross nurses are.he standng reserve of the Army and Vavy Nurse Corps of the Unted States, and are also called upon for servce n other governmental health servces. Lttle St Eustatus sland la the Dutch West nde gave reruge to Amercan shps durng the Revoluton The hurrcane of last September struck the sland, causng heavy lot? The Amercan Red Cross was glad tc send a small cash relef fund n re membrance of the hstorc frendshp of the sland folk for ths republc f\m MmJmey Dwp atch Wednesday, November27Jl^» REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Real estate transfers n Lvngston county durng the week endng November 16, 1929 are as follows: Floyd P. Howell to Hram R. Smth and wfle land n Cty of BoweU. Nette Warden et al to Water Border, land n secton 24 and 25, Green Oak twp. George J. Payne and wle to Clfford E. Parker and wfe, land ax the Cty of HoweU. Wllard Emmons and wfe to Geo. Jones and wfe, land ]b facton 7, Handy twp. Elzabeth Crawford t» Ved D. Collns and wfe, land n the Cty of Howell. Chandler Carter and wfe to Fredj Carter and wfe, land n secton 31, Green Oak twp. John Artnur Tllson to Harold W. Hanlon and wfe, land n Slver Lake subdvson, Green Oak twp. Edward L. Smth to State ol Mchgan, land n secton 4, 5, and 8, Maron twp. Chandler Carter to John Carter, land n secton 36, Hamburg twp. Dewtt C. Cooper and wfe to Margaret Francs, land n the Cty of Brghton. Mary A. Batcheler to Lews N. Brayton and wfe, land n secton 1, Maron twp. Lews N. Brayton and wfe to Mary A Batcheler, land n Cty of HoweJJ. Mary A. Batcheler et al to Lews N. Brayton and wfe, land n secton 1 Maron twp. Ej Mary Lemke to Elzabeth Quon et 51 al, land n Cty of Howell. - ; Wllam E. Robb and wfe to Sherman Parker and wfje, land n Cty of J Howell. Aaron M. Rounafer, Jr., and wfe to Asa Rounsfer, land n secton 30,1 Genoa twp. Mab^l B. Graboske to Guy A. Lyon and wfe, land n Walnut Snores, Tyrone twp. Charles W. Purdy and wfe to Glenn M. Vckery, land n the Cty of Howell. Charles W. Purdy and wfe to Glenn M. Vckery, land n Elmhurst subdvson, Genoa twp. WlKam. Grffn and wfe to Joseph B. Archambeault, land n secton 28, Howell twp. CAMELS why smokers graduate to The phrase "'ve Graduated to Camel*' orgnated wth a Camel smoker. t expresses the experence of mllons who through Camels have learned to know real smokng pleasure As taste n smokng develops, t naturally leads toward better qualty. New smokers may not be crtcal but when they once experence the true mldness and surpassng fragrance of the Camel blend, they realze that here s a real superorty. t s for smokers of such dscernment that Camels are made... for them the chocest tobaccos are selected... and ths qualty s mantaned for the mllons who know genune smokng pleasure. when they they flock Kaap tna Mnd Actve vod stagnaton of mnd as you would the vlest plague. f you are ^ 1T9, R. J. Reynolds ToSaeco content wth such, then you are 0>mr n> Vs n c ton-salem. N. C. through. Never forget, "H«who ceeje* to grow greater become* smaller; stagnaton la the begnnng of the STATE OF MCHGAN n Crcut Court for the County of ant Lvngston n Chancery MORTGAGE SALE Wl.am F. 1' Plantff Default havng been made n the condtons of. a certan mortgage Nelle Vt. r, whereby the power theren contaned Del'' ndaht to seu has become operatve, executed OKDF.f OF TLU'ATON by Leo A. Burn, a sngle rnan^ to Sut Sr [>en<t "nr n the Crcut Court John Humphrey, dat tod the sxteenth r for" [>vngst'on County n *<' \n 'ery, day of July 11)2'5, and recorded on the on the Ml) 'lay u' No\ e-nb. \ A. ). same day n th< offce of the Regster 192f). At th Ctv of ll()we t) am of Deeds for Lvngston County, County. Mchgan, n Lber 127 of Mortgages t sat.-!';(< on \ urn-,rnj. r '.o ths at page's 140 and 141, thereof. t beng expressly provded n sad mort endant. \ Court b. ' h. that h- De- \:!:< -.-.) >,- '. gage that should default be made n (lent of tl,«the payment ol prncpal or nterest or taxes on any^date when the same s made payable and should the same reman unpad for a perod of thrty days, then the prncpal sum mentoned n sad mortgage wth all arrearage of nterest shall at the opton of sad mortgagee become mmeadately pay-] able. And default Havng been made n ' the payment of nterest and prncpal! due July f, 11)29, and more than thrty days havng elapsed snce the 1 nterest and prncpal payment be-1 came due and payable and, the samel not havng been pad by the. mort-' gagor, the sad mortgagee by vrtue of the opton n sadwnortgage contaned, does hereby elect and declare the prncpal sum of Forty-sx Hundred Dollars ($4600) remanng unpad, and all arrearage of nterest to be due and payable mmedately. There s clamed to be due at the date of ths notce the sum of Ffty-one Hundred Ffty-nne Dollars and Seventeen Cento ($ ) (ncludng taxes), and no sut or proceedngs at law or equty havng been nsttuted to recover the debt secured by sad mortgage or any part thereof, notce s therefore hej-eby gven that on Frday the twenty* rst day of February 1930, at Jeven o'clock (Eastern Standard Tme) n the forenoon of sad day at the west front door of the Court House n the Cty of Howell, Lvngston County, Mchgan, that beng the place of holdng the Crcut Court for the County of Lvngston n whch sad mortgaged premses to be sold are located, the'sad mortgage wll be foreclosed by sale at publc aucton to the hghest bdder of the premses contaned n sad mortgage. or s,o much thereof as may be requred to satsfy the amount due on sad mortgage^nd all legal costs ncludng an attorney fee of thrty-fve Dollars ($35). That s to say all that certan pece or parcel of land stuate and beng n the Townshp of Hamburg, County of Lvngston, State of Mch'- gan, descrbed as follows, to-wt: The southwest quarter ( l A) of the northeast quarter ( 14 ) and the northwest quarter ( U ) of the southeast quarter (¼) of Secton number thrty-fve (35) n Townshp number one U) North, Range number fve (5) east, Mchgan, arvd also all of the east half (*fc ) of the southeast quarter ( 1 >4 ) of sad Secton lvng\rorthwest of the hghway nlnnng tmpough or aeroased the same contanng n all eghty-three (83) acres of land more or less. The whole thereof havng been occuped, used and enjoyed as one pece or parcel. Dated: November 27, 1929 John Humphrey Mortgagee Don W. Van Wnkle. Attorney for Mortgagee. Busness Address: Howell, Mchgan. ) sdelln Knney <v Plantff. ;: Defendant, appearance St,a. < - 'l'k'l,' Adam-..~ "nj )s M, > not a )'eshgan, and her on.moton of \ T n r'-ys for )! >! that the sa< X' l>! t > -, cause her to h>. lt n ths cause wthn thv.' nor.t,- ; *' ). date of ths Ord. r, an<! n. f»!.!, appearr ance that -hr can l 1 answer to the 1'lant! T"- '.! of Complant to be flled, and ; copy 11[. re<jf : (, h>- served upon the 1 MamTfT's attorney.-,, wthn twenty day- ; ;ft-r.-. rv(v on hm of a copy of sad '.ll, and Notc of ths Order, and that n default thereof that sad Hll he tak.-n a,- conf.-sed by sad non-resd>'nt <]<!> ndant And t s further ord- red that wth n forty day> aft. r the date hereof the -ad 'lantlf cause a notce o ths Order to h. publshed n the Pnckney D.-patch, a newspaper prnted, publshed ard crculatng n sad County of L\nag-tor. and that such publcaton be contnued once n each week for sx.-u-re. s.-ve v, ek>, or that he cause a copy of th> order to be served personally on -ad non-resdent defendant, at 1- a.-t tv.-.-nty days beforr> the tn' above pn-crbed for hs appearance:.aral t - Further Ordered that th.-.;,d 'lanttt cause a copy of ths Order to!> maled to the sad Defendant at a r last known postoffce address, by rr-g -tor.-d mal, and a return r. cpt demanded at least twenty days before ta tme h r< n prescrbed for the appearand '>f the Defendant. Knney & Adanv- Attomeys for r:.;; : Rusncss Addre.-s : Joseph H. Colln Crcut Judp- 41"> Pontae 11; : k 111; < n e; Pontac, Mr h)j;an A true ropy Jolm A. flagman County Ork ARPLANES DROP TONS OF FOOD DURNG FLOOD Army, Navy and AJabama Natonal Guard arplanes delvered twenty-fve tons of supples furnshed by tha Amercan Red Cross to flood refugees who were completely cut off from any other ad, durng the serous flood* n four southeastern States early ths sprng. The three servces made an average of ffty flghts a day, delverng medcne, food, clotlung and blankets. Most of the supples were dropped to the refugees who were lsolafed on hll tops and hgh ground, by the flood waters. ^ Naval navm avjaors avfatora made a Lotal nf 115 ^flghts durng the flood perod, embracng mles. Observaton plants also reported by rado where marooned refugees could be located, and a magnfcent program of co-operaton wth the Red Cross relef forces was carred forward by all txm avaton servces. y S learn the to dfference Camels Best Fabrcs, Lowest Prces use only the best fabrcs and materals n my work Thse fabrcs are the knd that last. f you arc n need of any upholsterng or want slp cov rs for your car let me show you my samples. "SLP COVERS MADE TO ORDER" PRCES $7.50 And up " UP-TO-DATE METHODS" Phone 23F2 J. R. KENNEDY General Servce Shop' Norman James Shrey Pnckney. Mch. Howell Rd ft M-4* MCHAGAMME GAS AND OLS Tres, Tabes and Battery Work Fre»< Crank <\'<~ S rvre TEMS OF 25 YEARS AGO From the D»p»tch of Nov. 24, 1904 Thomas Clnton ded at hs home here Nov. 17, ug<.-d 66 years. The funeral was held from St. Mary's church, Monday mornng. The pupl.-, of the Cady school gave a Thanksgvng program Wednesday. Mss Florence Andrews s the teacher. The Queens Sons and Daughters wll present "The Mller's Daughters" at the opera house Nov. 26. Pnckney Arbor A. O. (. wll meet wth Mr. and Mrs. W*. C. Hendee Saturday evenng. Marred at St Mary's church Wednesday mornng John D. Whte and Mss Mae Lavey. On Thursday mornng Mss Rebecca Bull and Ray Culnane. Rev. M. J. Comerford performed both ceremones. ev. Whte of AJpena flled the pulpt at the M. K. church last Wednesday. Charles Whte wll Sell hs personal property at a publc aucton at Anderson Nov. 26. At a largely attended meetng at the opera house Saturday evenng! Mxs Fanny SwartHont was awarded the Demorset Slver Medal by the W. C. T. U. for the best oraton. S. J. Kennedy left Monday to enter Geary Busness college at Ypslant. N. H. Cavery has sold ha hotol busness at Dundee. The entre harness stock of the late Thomas Clnton wu be sold at a aucton Saturday, Dec. 2. Norman Wlson s teachng n the Anderson dstrct. Wllam Pyper of Unadlla s servng as juror n the U. S. court at Detrot.! Pnckney, Mch. Reason REAL ESTATE HROKBR ''arwsjbrsdental Property and Lake ^rentage a Specalty 1 also baft cty property to trade Pnckney. Xctx Phone NA. 17 De W. VanWnkle Attorney at Law >fflce over FlMt State Savngs BowelL Mch. Banc Dn. H. F.& C. L SHMR PRCKNEY Ofto Hoars 1:00 to 2 M P. M. Jay P. Sweeney PReSEeUTNC ^ATTORNEY Oflet n Court Boue* Howell Mchgan PERCY ELLS AUCTONEER ARM SALES A SPECALTY rnckney Phone 10F11 WANTED! POULTRY &]EGGS Wl] nay cash... for... poolfcy ^ eejft tftltafedl.. at my punt, ancl wfl~. p*y tl tfcf affords at all "\~-\. s f v

4 The Puttkney Dspatc Wednesday, November 27,1929 HOWELL THEATRE HOWELL» MCHGAN Thursday and Frday, November THANKSGVNG DAY SPECAL Mat. 2 p. m. Come Anytme and Contnuous to 11 p. xn. t All ZEGFELD'S "Show Boat" Feat. LAURA LaPLANTE, Talkng Snkng, Dane ng. Story by Edna Ferber Talkng Comedy and News Saturday, November 30 Texas Gunan n "QUEEN OF THE NGHT CLUBS" Fnal Reckonng No. 10 Sunday, Monday, Dec. 1-2 Two Days Only Comedy and News All Talkng Outdoor Drama Wm. Boyd n "HGH VOLTAGE" Comedy, all talkng "Far Ways and Foul" Fox News and Slent Comedy Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Frday, Dec "THE COCK EYED WORLD" Fe*t. VCTOR McLOGLER and EDMUND LOWE Also Talkng Comedy "The Bees Buzz" News Come and See the Greatest Talke of the Tmes. COMNG "The Squall", Rchard Barthelmes n "Y'oung Wonder'Welma Hanky n"ths s Heaven" "Alb", All Takng", Bulldog Drummond" feat. Ronald Coleman, Janet Gaynor and Charles Ferrell n "Lucky Star", Alce Whte n "TheGrl from 'Lucky Star", Twn Beds" wth Jack Mulhall, ''Gold Dggers of Broadway.'' ^VVWWW^^W^^^fl^W^^^^^^^^^*^^^W^W^^*A^VVV^^ > 'The Secret" t sn't the money nor yet exactly personalty that attracts captalsts, bankers and busness men to hustlng youngsters. The thng that "there" s a thnkng man a man who doe-: thngsand-a young man wh.. may acheve even greater thng.:. The moment u vo-.mj; man shows energy-ntatve, tnr' and trustworthness-then older successful men are attracted to hm. They are ever lookng for younger shoulders on whch to pass ther responsbltes, young men who wll carry on. They are wllng and anxous to back hm n any worthy effort. t has always been so. The young man who s always broke spendng faster than he can earn t should heed these words. Be Thrfty, be Energetc, Study, Plan and get thngs done. Then you wll be popular and sought out. A savngs account has started many a young man on the hghway to success. The Pnckney State Bank \ 5 *Ve Pay 4 Per Cent on Savngs A 9E99E No Huntng or Trespassng CARDS FOR SALE AT THE DSPATCH OFFCE These cards are prnted on good heavy cardboard PQST YOUR FARM BY USNQ THESp CARDS ABOUT P:.A;NFE.D M&s Lotte Braley spent most of last week wth her sster m Stockbrdge, Mrs. F. L. Wrght. Mrs. E. L. Toppng spent Thursday wth her daughter, Mrs. Emerson Kensy. Mr. and Mr*. Vogel of Lansng spent the week end wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Alle Holmes. Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Roberts spent the week end wth Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dutton. Max Dyer of Mdland spent the week end wth the home folks, Mr.and Mrs. H. J. Dyer. Mrs. Gale Reasoner, Mrs. B. W. Roberts from Holt wth Mrs. H. J. Dyer spent last Wednesday wth Mr. and Mrs M. L. Wasson near Stockbrdge. Mr. Ralph Chpman of Gregory and Mrs. Bradshaw and son of Jackson called Sunday afternoon at Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wasson's. Mr. Duane Jacobs called on hs father Sunday at Mercy hosptal, Jackson, who s ganng as fast as possble He Ls expected to be moved to hs brothers soon, Mr. Wrt Jacobs n Jackson. Mrs. H. J. Dyer, Mrs. James Cornstalk and Mrs. B. W. Roberts called at Mr. and Mrs. Harry Bovver's Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Baker and He len vsted Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Baker at Owosso. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Kenyom of Flnt called Sunday afternoon on Mr. and Mrs. A.L. Dutton. UNADLLA Mr. and Mrs. Cords Lambrte of Fern dale, John Roepcke and Mrs. George Hoffman and daughter, Vvan, were Sunday dnner guests of Barney Roepcke and famly. The mssonary meetng was entertaned at Mr. amd Mrs. Ed Cranna's Wednesday for dnner. Mr. and Mrs. L. Emmett Hadley were Sunday vstors of Mr. and Mrs. Oln Marshall. Mss Nelle, Pckell of Jackson s spendng a couple of weeks here wth her mother. John Webb,aged!'0 years ded at Ann Arbor Saturday. The funeral was held from the Unadlla church Monday at 2:00 P. M. George Oln Marshall and mother attended church at Pngroe Sunday evenng. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jackson were n Jackson Sunday where they met the htters sster and husband, Mr. and Mrs. George Gregor oj Washngton who wll make a short vst here among relatves and frends. Mrs. Gregor formerly was Jean Pyper of ths place, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Teachout and hoys were Sunday vstors of Clyde Jacobs and famly. Roy Rosewcar and John Camburn of Detrot are spendng some tme at the latters brothers, Lawrences. The Presby. L. A. S. wll hold ther chck< n pe supner and far at the annex Dec. f. Jack Seaberry entertaned the Young People Sundav School class at a party n ther cottage evenne. MARON Saturday ' Chas. St, Lous and George Ruttman were n Rver Rouge Sunday. N. A. Whte vsted at the home oft Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Blatchfors n Flnt Sunday. The members of sewng class of Northwest Maron and ther husbands enjoyed a pot luck dnner at the homo of Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Reed Tuesday. Patrck Lavey and son, Lee' of Pnckney, Kathleen and Mary Ernestne Wht'' of Howell were week'end truests at home of J. D. W r hte. Harold and Maron Smth attended the football game at Ann Arbor Saturday. M*-,.and-Mrs. Wm. Ruttman called on Mrs-.' Wm. Tutmand n Howell Wednesday nght. Adolph and James Mchard of Detrot, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gehrnger, Glenn Mller and famlv of Lansng[ were recent vstors at Wm. Gaffney's. Horace- Mller, August Ruttman andj ttmles wll spend Thanksgvng at Wm. Ruttman's. j Thos. McGure, Wn. S. Rrogan and famles, Mrs. Kllen Loughln, Mss Elzabeth Drver and the Whte famles were recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Whte and helped celebrate ther 20th weddng ann- versary- Mrs. Lem Heacan was gven a surprse Frday evenng by a large number of frends and relatves. After a pleasant, evenng refreshments were served and the honored guest was presented wth a handsome tolet, set, consstng of brush, comb, and mrror as a rememberanco of her brthday annversary. Charle Gehrnger and Mrs. Dolla Fnk of Ann Argor motored to Fondu Lac, Ws., last week after the former's mother, Mrs. Leonard Gehrnger who has been takng treatment at the hosptal. Mrs, Gehrngers learn of many her mprov- frends are pleased tern ent n health GREGORY j Mss Ada ReseJschwerdt has taken Ms? Mae Worden's place n S.A. Den- ( ton's store. tyrs. Fred Bollngrer and Mrs. Carl Bollnger were n Stockbrdge Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Fred Bollnger spent Frday a**m*»n wth her sster, Mrs. L. Boyce.." Mre. Ella Chrswell and Mrs. Carlton Chmwell and chldren of Chelsea and Mrs, Dessa Paeway and John Twehouse of Jackson were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Bollnger Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs.James Lvermore wll move to Gregory some tme n the near future. James and Russel Lvermore are buldng a new barn on ther farm. W. T. Clark and wfe Algonac who have been vstng hs sster, Elvra, Vsejl, of Chelsea, were callers at the home of hs cousn, Mrs. Fanny Hll, last Thursday whle on ther way to Portage Lake. Claude Rose completed hs year's work at Russel Lvermore's last W.-dntesday. Mr. and Mrs. Cleve Poole and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Book attended the golden weddng ofl ther oncle and aufnt near Howell last week. There were over 100 guests present. pewey Brenser s nstallng a new furnace n hs garage. Dewey Brenser and famly left last Sunday to spend Thanksgvng week wth hs grandparents"" near Pttsburg, Pennsylvana. The school chldren have been enjoyng the early coastng on the school house hll the last few days. Mss Grffn, a nece of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. March, s spendng the! wnter wth them. Mr. and Mrs. Goods Lam brght of Royal Oak spent the week end wth] the Baud and Roepcke famts. Mrs. R.Chpman her daughter, Mrs. Wayn" Bradshaw of Jackson who s spendng a few weeks wth her, were n Ann Arbor Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Greaves of Ann Arbor were guests of Mr. amd Mrs. R. G. Chpman Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Howlett otf Detrot were week end guests at the home of hs parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Howlett. Mss Bernce Mller was n Lansng Sunday evenng. Mrs. Ruth Bollnger and Mss Bernce Mller were n Stockbrdge Thursday. F. A. Word en of Jackson s spendng a few weeks at hs home here. Mr.?nd Mrs. Guy Kuhn are now well settled n ther new home. GREGORY BAPTST CHURCH L. S. Sayb&ugh Pastor Fne Thanksgvng servce Sunday. There was a deacons meetng at the home of Deacon Dan Denton's Tuesday evenng. Mrs. Laura Whthead and Mrs, Grace Rockwell were apponted program commttee for Chrstmas servce. George Carr and Vrgl Peck were apponted to assst the pastor n securng subscrptons ftor "The Transt" and to be the dstrbuters. The Baptst Young People have secured ten Bbles and a wll chart wth the B. Y. P. U. pledge. The boys won the blue rbbon last Sundav and the grls the red. Next Sunday a specal offerng wll be taken for the starvng chldren of Chna. Let ths be our Thanksgvng ans everybody sharng n t. We want December to be a record breakng month. To do so, let us start n frst Sunday brngng someone wth us and so on for each Sunday of the month. ( Better come to church next Sunday, makng sure of beng on tme to Sunday school. As Thanksgvng s comng to be a dav of famles gettng together, let us "not forget the Church famly meetre n the evenng. Now the tme for the servces next Sunday are as follows: Preachng at 0 :30," followed wth Sunday school; Baptst Young Peoples Unon at 4 :30. Mrs. Grffth of Brooklyn, and Mss Maran?turgs, and her two chldren, Donald and Alce, of Ann Arbor were callers at the Baptst parsonage Sun-,, day. LAKELAND NEWS Mrs. Robert Jack and Mss VoJa Pettys of ths place and Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Can* of Pnckney snent Tuesday wth Mr. and Mrs. Ells Randal! at Farmngton. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee entertaned at dnner Saturday evenng for Mr. vnd Mrs., Cl'Tord VanHom and Steve VnnHom. Mr. and Mrs. Addson Collum of Strawberry.lake left for St. Petershe rg, Fla.. wehro they wll spent the u nter. Mrs. Wllam VanKleech spent a few days ths week wth Mrs. Frank Wrght at Howell. Bruce Kuer and Joe Tmus attend d the football game p Ann Arbor Saturday, bor Tuesday. C. H. Drownng called n An? \r M»-s. Barbara Tes?mer <'tertn ; ned at dnner Sunday fjor Mr. and Mrs Bert \Teore of Webster Mrs. P'ul Tessmor o." Ypsvlant, Mr. and Mrs Marqutt and son of Ann A,l or Roy Moore and son of Adran, and Mrs. Mary Gua.-d and son, Walte of ths place. Mr. and Mrs. George Van Horn of Howell called on frends here Thursday. "Sr. r-nd Mrs. Harry Lee rrnd son. Alger, were Sunday dnncv guc-ds of Mr. and Mrs, Roy Merrll of Weh>ter. John Potts called n hnwdl Frday. Mr. and Mrs. Wllam Brd entertnned at dnner Sunday for V,r and Mrs. Fred Stoll of Dexter. UP AND DOWN Percular How The Market Acts But We Are Under The Wre On Renown Stoves And Can Save You Money On Stoves Whle Stock Lasts. Fall s Here Thnk Ths Over CRCULATNG HEATERS Prced very low. Only a few left at ths prce. BARN PANT Ths Best qualty and Lnseed Ol at low prces Renown Crculatng Heaters Teep& Hardware Good Gong And Gong Good There's a dfference. Sometmes when the weather's fne and the roads the best w 7 hen t s good gong, our car s not gong good; Why? "Oh!" you say,'' somethng's wrong wth the thng t just doesn't work rght." What's wrong? Well, the chances are your valves need correcton; of motor troubles come from faulty valve acton. Brng your car over to our garage let us look t over let's Lest your valves. Let. us show you the KWPCW AY of scentfc valve correcton. We can set your car to gong good and that's what you want. Drve r. W. H. MEYER ftm"«hffntmtfa*»*t <* * - -, 3 ^ : vv- = When you make out your Chrstmas shoppng lst = ths year, put down Elgn for that partcular frend, ( of yours. A danty wrst watch-a smart strap watch-or «;5 fne pocket model by Elgn wll make ths Chrstmas f '! stand out above all others wll keep your Chrstmas 5 greetngs for years to come. Let us show you the newest E'gn models. Every = one s an accurate, dependable tmepece whch you can purchase wth assurance -confdent n the know- ledge that your gft wll be rght. Prces from $50 up. Hugh Culver HOWELL, MCH. =

5 Cash Specals For Thanksgvng Day Choosy Your Needs from our Assortment Fgs, Fancy Pkg 10c Sweet Potatoes, 5 lbs. 23c Pumpkn, 2 large can* Cranberres, Fancy, per tb. 19c Corn, 2 cans Peas, 2 cans Celery Hearts, per burch... 10c None Such Mncemeat, 2 pkgs. Jello, 3 pkgs. Rasns, 2 pkgs, seeded or seedless Mxed Nuts, per tb. Oysters, Fruts, Nuts, Vegetables and Meats at SPECAL PRCES on 6c Reason T++*****+*^***s*sf^^*^^^+^f^^^f*w^ff^f++^f^f+^^^**^+^ SMONZ t protects the pant from the ce and snow of wnter. Cleans away the road flm collected from the summer drvng. Keeps the slght scratches away and brngs back the lustre. Keeps the new car new and makes the old car CAR WASHNG AND The Pnckney Dspatch Wednesday, November 27, 1929 ^1 -L^..",J cswsra luttmtuuauju POLSHNG Warm Water and a Heated Garage 1H7 new. Pnckney Super-Servce Staton Man & Howell St. H. C. Vedder, Prop. 9mHrmuHHMuuM;4g Fall Festval and Bazaar ( ] Thursday, Frday, Saturday, 28, 29, 30 ( To Be Gven By St. Josephs Church, Dexter f Wll Open Wth Bg Thanksgvng Dnner at 5:00 P, M s Dnner Tckets 75 cents Chldren 50 cents CA^PARTYTR D AY AFTERNOON AT 2:30 Don't Mss ths Festval and Bazaar 3 Fun for Young and Old Among Your Frend and S Neghbors 5 1 EVERYBODY S NVTED \ S uuunnnnmhnh^ CHURCH CALENDER COM. CONC'L- CHURCH Sunday Mornng :3 Senor and Junor Church Servce ChnMh School - 1} :30 C. 6¾ Evenng Sen-ce J:30 Junor League Prayer Wed ^-<< J VWtr Servce Thurs -?:30 ST. MARY S CHURCH E«T. Fr. Danel Foster, Pastor HM A. M. 9:30 A. M. Catechsm for chldren every Sunday after zn***- BAPTST CHURCH NOTES Senor and Junor Church Sunday A. M. 10:36 Sunday School 11:40 Evenng Servce 7.30 Prayer Meetng 7:30 Thsnd&y evenng at the home of Mr. a*d Km B. F, ftc. CLASS HELD m MEETNG The Phlathea Class: was pleasantly entertaned at the home of Mrs. Fred Bowman Wednesday p.m. Nov. 13. At the close of the devotonal and busness meetng 1 the entertanment commttee com nosed of Mrs. Lee and Mrs. Jack of Lakeland put on amusng games whch the company greatly enjoyed. Mrs. Lulu Darrow and Mrs. Bert Hcks wnnng- the przes. A pot luck supper was served to thrty-three members and vstors.the Dec.'meetng wll be wth Mrs. Agnes Kettler. All members arc requested to be present as t wll be electon offcers. John Croopc od Howell was a vstor at the home of W. C. Mller Tuesday. Arthur Hasscnrhah! spent the latter part of last week wth hs brother, J, C, HawencahL near Howell. of TOWN Tbe Pnckney Dspatch Ehte.-d *t. Je Powtoffcc at Pnckney, Mch, aa.m-cond class Matter. Subscrpton,$1.25 a year n Advarce. PAUL W CUSLETT UUSHE Anonc Fuannons u;d '«uay o J ukbon were Sunday quests of hs parents., Mr. and Mrs. John Ftzsm mous. WlJ Dunbar and lamly of Jackson.^pv nt Sunday wtn reat'yes here. Mr. and Mrs. A.H. Ftzsmmons and chldren of Jackson were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs, Wll Jeffey, A, V. Wegener and wfe were n Howell Monday. Fred Dupont of Detrot s spendng a few days wth Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bowers. Russel West of Mt. Clemens was a Saturday caller at the home of James Roche. Dr. Martn Clnton and Francs Comskcy of Detrot were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clnton. Mss Katherne Hoff snent Tuesday afternoon wth Mr. and Mrs. Roy Gearhart at Base Lake. Mlo Kettler was n Brghton Monday. M>s Henretta Kelly of Detrot s vstng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kelly. Mrs. L. G. Devere-aux attended the funeral of John Markey at Ann Arbor Monday. Ear! Baughn was n Lansng on busness one day last week. Thomas Eagen of Dexter called at the home of rvn Kennedy Tuesday. Donald Smth of South Lyon was a Pnckney vstor Tuesday evenng. John Ledwdge of Dexter was n town Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr vested relatves at Shepard the Latter part of last week. Ray Kennedy and Gerald Kennedy were n Detrot over Sunday. C. W. Hooker and M ss Loretta Dllngham attended the Mchgan-low a football gurne at Ann Arbor Saturday. Mrs. Elza Gardner has returned 1 home from a two weeks vst wth her daughters at Stockbrdge and Howell Azel Carpenter and Russell Lvermore attended a Masonc banquet and thrd degree ntaton at Stockbrdge Frday nght Mr. and Mj-s. Fred Slay ton attended the funeral of hu cousn, Leroy Slayton at Eaton Rapds Saturday. He was acdently shot whle huntng deer n the upper pennsula. t was necessary to amputate both feet. Death was the result of the shock from ths. SCHOOL NOTES School wll be closed from YWdn<-sr 2 7 to Monday, lhcem- duv, N'nvf.mb< ber., At a meetng of the football team held Monday at the school Murray- Kennedy was elected captan ol the backfteld for next year and Russell Read lne captan The hgh school debatng team wll go to Fowlervlle on Thursday evenng, December ">, to meet that team n debate. Arer the Thanksgvng vacaton the school wll begn at 9:00 a. m. Basket ball practse wll start mmedately after the Thanksgvng holdays. Pnckney wll not.>tart her season untl after Chrstmas. The prospects are brght ffrr a good team ths year. All of last years team wll be back exce 4 Roy Reason who wll be too old for further hgh school competton. Last years men who wll be back are CapU Har Hall, Pete Gerycz, James Hall, Roland Shehan, Stanley Dnkel, Russell Read and Gerald Henry. Of the freshmen Murray Kennedy and Marshall Meabon are both consdered good materal. Seven CONC'L. CHURCH NOTES games have already been scheduled A very mpressve Thanksgvng whch nclude two wth South Lyon, sen-ce was enjoyed by those gathered two wth St. Mary's (Chelsea), two for worshp at the Communty Congregatonal church, Sunday mornng, and one wth St. Thomas. Pnckney wth the Ypslant Central Reserves Nov. 24. wll onen the season at Ann Arbor Thankgvng was the keynote of the where they wll help St. Thomas ded- sendee n song durng whch the chor! eate her new gymnasum. rendered two anthems, Mrs. Clfford The folowng J.S the record of the VanHorn a solo and Mrs. Bert Hcks and Mss Rta. seler a duet. Ths was Hollowed by the readng a transcrpton of the*vson of Sr LaunfaJ, gven by Mrs. Maurce Darrow. n ths readng Mrs. Darrow gave the thought expressed by Lowell, tellng how Sr Launfal spent hs lfe n search of the Holy Gral amly to fnd, after years spent n van that the Holy Gral, was just outsde hs own castle gate. Mrs. Alta Meyer contnued the thought by a short talk from the text of Sr Launfal Matt. 25:40 nasmuch as ye have done t unto one of the least of these my brethern ye have done t unto me. Mrs. Meyer contrasted the frst Thankgvng wth the present and conducted the program by exnressng the dea of showng our thanks to God by deeds of kndness to the needy near us. Surely such a servce should brng about a keener apprecaton of God's blessngs and a deeper realzaton of our duty to manknd. Let us all try to be present next Sunday to welcome out new pastor and hs famly. Don't forget the L. A. S. Annual Bazaar on Dec. 7th. Every member s requested to furnsh an aprom and 1 other artcle. Donatons from anyone wll be greasy apprecated, TOLETERES 3S9BB Tuet artcles tor the dscrmnatng the ones that convty that subtle hnt of ntmacy wth refnement, and wth elegance. 1 TOLET WATERS - PERFUMES POWDERS - CREAMS - ROUGES GFT SETS = awat your selecton here from the famous lnes of -'ft,, r.mma Ellott of Yoj»dant a the gueat ol' he Haze ssters. MENNENS - ARMANDO - COLGATE'S Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Car am son, Donald, of Detort vsted Mrs. Sar> ah Carr. Charles Ellott and Mss Hurd of PALM OLVE - NYAL Ypalant vsted the Haze ssters ast nova to Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ha^encahl of Howell at the Pnckney San Thursday. Barry's Drug Store tarum on Frday, November! a A. M. Roche and famly of Lansng were Sunday vstors at the home of -on. ' James L. Roche. "'^ * Jl- Peters of Albon s the Mrs. Frgpk Bowers and Mrs. Nelle eues o h.cr daughter, Mrs.fred read. nutttttttfttttttttttffffltttnab Gardner were n Detrot Thursday. ^u as Dorothy Wlson entertaned twenty of her classmates at the L. Mss Norne Crotty spent several 1,- -«* o M. as a week end party at the Wlson cottage a Portage Date Saturday. Roche Shehan at Ann Arbor. days last week wth Mr. and Mrs. Dean Keajson was home from Ann Mrs. Kellv of N'orthvlle, Mr. and Arbor over Sunday. Mrs. Frank Tffey of Detrot were MONUMENTS, MARKERS Monday callers at the home of Mr. Mr. am Mrs. Jom Vnes of Howell and Mrs. Geme Mclntyre. were Sunday callers at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Frank Peters of Jackson were recent guests of Mr. and Mr. ana Mrs. James Dockng. ore aorgan ana.vr. and Mrs. Mrs. Fred Read. r J ank W ashburn o \ew Hudson were Mss Man da Rogers was home BULDNG STONE aauay guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. H. from Detrot over the week ^nd. s Euler. Bert VanBlarcum vsted relatves we Msses (jadys Boyer and Pat n Flnt and Fenton the frst of the 'On ot CJyde spent the week end wqek...^11 Mss Dorothy Carr. Herbert Gllette of Howell was n town Monday. K. les. Monsgnore Doyle and Prof. Marcus Kelerman ot Detrot Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Roche had as Sunday guests, Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Wrte for Booklet ana v\ m Snenan were Monday dnner Roche and famly of Lansng, Mr. and guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leo Lavey. Mrs. Geo. Roche and son, Jm, of Mrft. bwd ownan and Mrs. C. L. Fowlervlle, Mr. and Mrs. Roche Shehan and son of Ann Arbor. Sgler were n Ann A bor Frday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lavey of Gregory Fred Read and wfe were n Detrot were Monday vstors at the Pat Lavey home. Monday. Mrs. Claude Soper and son, Read, Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. vst-d L-nsm;' relatves Sur.dav. O. Fry<: were Mrs. Harry Brown of Mrs. Frank Battle, Mrs. FvfWyl Detrot, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Teeple of and Jon L. Connors wer-- n Aw JOSEPH L ARNETT Howell. Arbor one day last wee!. Ve)Te Bushey otf Detrot was Mr. and Mrs. Orvlle Nash and son, week end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Rex 206 We^ Huron St. Ann Arbor, M Lloyd, spent the* week end wth Mr. Smth. and Mrs. Joe Stackable of Ferndale. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Carr, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lavey and famly of (n-gory were Sunday dnner Yvonne and Patrca, spent the week Mlle (.'. Ludtkr to Roy T. Spra^uc xmrs. Mlo Kettler and daughters, guests of Mr. and Ms. C. J. Clnton. RF.AL ESTATE TRANSFERS end n Mt. Pleasant. land n secton 11, Handy twp. Mrs. Mary Connors, Mrs. Frank Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. R.-al -n at'- tra.-f'< t's n Lvngston Arthur Mchel and wfe to Casper Putte and Fred Wyle attended the Lous Clnton wee Wn. Watkns and county (lurng th'- v.«-<-k *-ndng Nov mb r '!' '>. \ 'rw ur<- a.> follow:-:. Hurley and wfe, land n secton 6, funeral of Wll Markey at Ann Arbor last Wednesday. Mr.s. Gene Wnslow of Ann Arbor ('harl - luwjll to hvtry W. Kch- Wlbur H. Johnson and wfe to Mr. Ross of Detrot, OM-O twf). and Haze Bennett and wfe of Ann t-r, land M rtrhton \'< a< ubdvson, lrvllon Uvp. Howell. Maude Ladouq* ur, land n cty of Mr.s. W. H. Bowman and Mrs. Fred Arbor were Sunday callers at the Bowman attended a Brdge party at home of the Haze ssters. <>tfo \V' '. < n-f and wjf-- to Georj/c the home of Mrs. Oln Russel at Howell last Wednesday Mrs. W. H. Bowrn.'n von second honors. Mss Erma Ssson.spent the week Arthur and wf'-, ];;nd n the vllag DANEL E. QU1SH end wth Lansng frends. of Hatland. Danel h. '.Msb, ag'-d 72 years, tor Mrs. Bess Barry and Mrs. >)a s Han- Oswald ;ud w:' to ur- } *» year> a hardware merchant n Cox were n Ann Arbor Monday, 'outfh.- Addng Machrn- Co., land n )e\te,-, ded at St. Joseph's hosptal,.secton. r * Odoa twp. hgh.school football team for ths year: Pnckney.34, Dexter 7. Pnckney 38, South Lyon 0. Pnckney 0, Fowlervlle 12. Pnckney 41, South Lyon 14. Pnckney 14, Ypslant Reserve* 7. Pnckney 0, St. Thomas 6. Pnckney 0, Ann Arbor Reserves 0. Pnckney 14, Dexter 0. Pnckney 0, Byron 0. Pnckney has won fve games, lost two and ted two. They have scored 141 ponts to ther opponents 46. Murray Kennedy was the leadng scorer, beng responsble for 51 pont*, GeraW Kennedy was second wth 27 and Veto Geryrz thrd wth 15. t s nterestng to compare the above wth the records of prevous Pnckrtey teams. n 1926, the year the- local team won the class"d" champonshp they ran up 403 ponts to ther opponents 18. n 1927 they scored 149 ponts and ther opponents 67. They played an extremely heavy schedule ths year, meetng both Cnelsea and Brghton twce each. n Pmckney accumlat^d 249 ponts to ther opponent's 59. By ths t can be seen that the local boys were excelled n defensve ablty only by the team of 1926 but lacked scorng power as com pared to the tem of the past. Alexandre D. Mllcm nnd wfe to Thos. Hchnan & wfejund n sect. 1 1 Maron twp. Florence L. Crombe, f al to Albert kadrovach,.sbd v-1 H, Casper H thur Melc a, osco f u f» (len n M Underbll. ; son, Ceaoa Albert L. Skelton and feld twp. and n School Lake Park lru'luon twp. Hurley and w!'«to Arsecton md wfe, land fn Ykery to hnnu' 1' md 'l Km :ur>t -uhdv twp. Ffe)- ;!l( wfe to Herbert wfe, ];md n Handy-Max- Shore: - subdvson, Hartlaml -.^-<* <. «<.Ann Arbor, Sunday. He was born Aprl Jx, x.")7 and made hs home for many years wth the famly of the late John Dun lavey near Base Lak*;. n :s>.s. he wa.s marred to Anna Do- an, of Dexter who wth one son, Frau s, survves hm. A sc, Claude, ded f early youth. Mr. Qush held many postons of trust durng hs lfetme, hene; mayor, counclman and townshp treasurer at varous tmes. H.e was a member of the Dexter schoolboard over twenty years, The funeral «;> held from St. Joseph's church, Dexter, ths mornng. Rev. Fr. Sullvan offcatng. Bural was n St. Joseph's cemetery. Come n And Let Us Show You Why Trestonc Gum Dpped are Better for economy n prce and servce they can not be equaled. Mllons of satsfed users unte n gvng them an unqualfed endorsement. You wll always he satsfed f you rde on Frestone Tres. Slayton & Son PhoM 53F3 X'

6 EDUCATORS CHOSEN FOR YPS PARLEY A number of the speakers who tuave been nvted to address the rneftmgb of the twelfth annual Md-Year Educatonal Conference at the State Normal College here, Jan. 1? and S, hav t sgnfed ther ntenton of acceptng. Among thete are Dr. Wllam C. Bagely, of Columba Unversty, New York Cty; Mss Olga Blucher. an advertsng specalst; Mss Clara L. Deke, of the Cleveland Art nsttute; Prof. James E. Dunlap, of the Unversty of Mchgan; Dr. Maretta EchelhrrgeT, a nutrtonal expert; Dr. Eugene L. Fsh, medcal drector of the Lfe Extenson nsttute, New York Cty; M. R. Keyworth, superntendent of ectvools n Haratramck and presdent of the Mchgan State Teachers' Assocaton; Dr R. L. Lyman, of the School of Educaton. Unversty of Chcago; Prof. Benjamn D. Mertt, of the Unversty of Mchgan ; Dr. James Murphy, lecturer and wrter, of London, Eng.; Hon. Webster H. Pearce, Mchgan Superntendent of Publc nstructon; Prof. Henry W. Prescott, of the Un ; verstv of Chcago, and Mss Edth R'u-tts. of the Detrot Symphony Orch^tr::. W. S. T. C. Annual Staff8 Are Chosen Headed by Harold Ca^s of E.-canaba, edtor, and Frederc Rogers of, Kalamazoo, busness manager of the 1930 brown and gold staff of western j State Teachers college has started work on the preparaton of ts annual publcaton. ' Cass has completed the appontment of the members of hs staff ncludng: MyTtle Koegler and Ruth Casewell of Ludngton. Alce Cummngs of Harbor Sprngs wll be assstant busness manager, Tom Howsen, advertsng manager, and Leonard Bestrom of Baley, assstant advertsng manager. Cass was assocate edtor last year. The book s to be a Paul Bunyan edton and for the frst tme art work s to be done by a professonal, Olver Kemp, a Saturday Evenng Post artst. t s expected the publcaton wll cost about $7,000. o Ferrs Now Has Total of 822 Students Enrolled Bert Travs of Ferrs nsttute announces the school now has an enrollment of 822 student-. a> compared to 807 of 1928 at ths tm-. n 1H2K there were GO short course "phannc!-" that left at t)he end of November, whle ths year there arc only <> who wll leave at that tme. n the past week, whch started a n-w t-rm more than 100 new students enroll.'d. -o Urges Consoldaton Of Country Schools The rural department of OVrtml State Teachers college s prntng a nne-page letter advocatng consoldaton of rural schools. The body of the artcle has lnen ; wrtten by Prof. M. L. Smth, head of the rural department, compled from a careful perusal of every artcle on ths topc publshed n recent years. "The letter s to be maled wthn j a few days to every teachers college n the Unted States, every publc lbrary, every state offcal n Mchgan who s nterested n educaton, every county school commssoner and every school superntendent n tn state. Congregatonal Pastor At Charlevox Resgns Rev. Bernard G. Mattson, pastor of the Congregatonal church the pa.t fve years, has tendered hs resgnaton, effectve on or before Aprl 1, Poems That Lve THE GARDEN OF SHADOW Love heeds no more the sghng of the wnd Aganst the perfect flowers: thy garden's close a grown a wlderness, wh^re none shall fnd One strayed, last petal of one last yearns rose. O brght, brght har! O mouth lke -a rpe frut Can famne be so ngh to harvestt*? Love, that was songful, wth a broken lute n grass of graveyards goeth murmurng. Let the wnd blow aganst the perfect flowers, And aj thy garden change and glow wth sprng: Love k grown blnd wth no more count of hours Nor part n seed-tme nor n harvestfng. Brnest Dowson ( ) When Attc Store Room Becomes the Chef Guest Chamber By HLDA HUNT n dong over the attc room, thfrst problem s to elmate ts barrackslke roughness. The rough beamed celng, the rregular shape, and the "tucked-n" wndows are not always conductve to the most decoratve effects. Yet f artstcally handled the attc room can nvarably be made nto one of the most attractve spots n the house. Gvng over a large attc room, wth wndows, to storage, s too expensve a proposton n these days of hgh taxes and consequent hgh rent-. One must get some other use out of every part of the house and do away wth the "junk" our foremothers used to store n the attc, to get the money's worth out of an abode, whether one owns t or pays the landlord. ARTST'S COLONY FOR THE S00 The upper pennsula's frst artsts' colony wll be bult on the shores of St. Mary's rver west of Sault Ste. Mare n the sprng of The projectors are Mr. and Mrs, Jan Jan-."en formerly of Cleveland and now lvng n Sault Ste. Mare. "We have purchased 40 acres of oho re land near The Shallows," sad Mr. J;nsen, "and wll buld prmar >e 11 ly for student artsts. Seven art nstructors have been engaged and cuna pantng, ol canvas, tapestry, water color, cone pantng, polychrome, lacquer, basket weavng and other subjects wll be taught. "Numerous cottages wll house the colony and be avalable for transents. There wll be a communty dn.vg room and a campste for tenters." The ste wll be named "Eden's Have," n the Dansh language, "The' Garden of Eden." The Jansen.- have been searchng for years for an dea! locaton. They beleve they have found t n Sault Ste. Mare. The sketch shows an attc storeroom that was made over nto a guest room. ncdentally, n ths case, the whole attc floor was transformed nto a sute. A small room adjongng the guest room was tranformed nto an extra bath, and there was stll a small space left for storage, wtch was closed off. The treatment was smple, but mc-st effectve when completed. n ths case a flowered cretonne on a cream ground was used to cover the walls and celng between the rafters, whch were panted green. The cretonne was handled as one would handle wall paper, and then shellacked whch made t easy to wash and keep clean. Wall paper would have answered the same purpose, but would not have worn as well. School Wll Pay For Boy's njures Followng consderable controversy between a dstrct school board and the father of Harold Ranszewsk 14 years old, of Lenox townshp, who was accdentally shot n the foot recently at the Church school, three mles north of New Haven, t was decded Wednesday that the physcan's fees for treat- ng the lad would be pad from funds derved from a box.socal to be held \ soon. The lad was njured when a bullet \ from a 22 calbre rfle, whch was beng used n a school play struck hm n the foot and broke a toe. t was decded that no one ndvdual could be held responsble for the shootng and! the box socal plan was ht upon as a proposton agreeable to all concerned. The gun used as a dsplay, was to be loaded wth a blank cartrdge, but the school boys had been usng real bullets to shoot at a target n the school yard and neglected to remove them from the gun before brngng t nto the school room, t s understood. Pola Off for Dvorce Stoppng over n New York en route from the west to her chateau n Normany, France, there to awat a Parsan dvorce f r om Prnce Serge Mdvan, Pola Negr declares: "Dvorce s the sole clmax to a love whch s dead, so far as 'm concerned.". Pola seems unperturbed over a report that Mary McCormkk, Chcago opera star, may wed the prnce. Fola's costunte? A leopard skn coat over a black slk frock, wth hat to match. Old Colonal furnture, theretofore stored n the same room, was done over, and used for furnshng. t ftted n well wth the cretonne-covered walls, whch gave the room a Colonal feelng as a background. As there wa a naturally no clothespress n the orgnal storeroom, one was mprovsed by drapng off a generous corner alcove wth drapes of the cretonne. As a further te-up, a flounce of the cretonne was used to fnsh the bedspread. The flounce was made separately, and ted to the bedsprng wth tapes at gven ntervals, as the bed flounce should be, to m a k e J launderng easy. The spread may then be changed wthout necesstatng the removng of the frequent launderng. Hooked rugs and rag carpet rugs were us< d for floor coverngs. HOUSEHOLD HNTS Poached Egg on Toast Buttered Cabbage Jaked Bananas wth Lemon Custard Oatmeal Cookes Mlk Dced Potatoes wth Parsely Carrots and Peas Cottage Cheese wth Lettuce Plum or Prune WTp Mlk These menus are for chldren's luncheons. They are equally good for adults, however. Amounts wll serve sx. Today's Recpes Buttered Cabbage Wash and cut up two pounds of cabbage. Brng two quarts of water to a bol and add cabbage. Bol for ten mnutes; dran and season wth two tablespoons of butter and one-half teaspoon salt. Plum Whp One pound plums, one cup sugar, fve whtes of eggs. Wash and steam plums untl tender. Add sugar and mash through a seve. Cool. j Whp eggs untl stff and fold n pulp. Serve mmedately. Canned plums may, be used. Vune Whp One-half pound prunes, fve wrtes of egf^, three tablespoons sugar, two tablespoons orl ange juce, one teaspoon butter for ; pan. Beat eggs stff, add gradually prune pulp, combned wth other ngredents, fold n carefully not too thoroughly. Bake n a buttered pan n a moderate oven (350 degrees Fahrenhet) wth the bakng dsh standng n a pan of water. Oatmeal Cookes Three eggs, one cup mlk, three-eghts cup sugar, onehalf cup butter, two cups oatmeal (three mnute brand), two cups flour, one-half teaspoon soda, one*half teaspoon bakng powder, one-half pound rasns. Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs, mlk and flour, sfted wth soda and bakng powder. Add oatmeal and rasns. Drop by teaspoons two nches apart on a buttered pan. Bake m a moderate oven (375 degrees Fahrenhet). Suggestons Granulated Honey- Granulated or candd honey can De stored to ts lqud state by mmersng the contaner holdng the honey n water not much warmer than lukewarm. f one applcaton does not do the trck, repeat puttng the jar n more warm water. Grand Rapds Shows Russan Furnture Russan furnture, desgned for adaptaton to the modern Amercan home, s a feature of the pre-market showng n the Grand Rpads furnture market. t s taken from peces made by Russan peasants, reflectng the true Russan sprt. The Russan provncal peces are partcularly for the quamt, peasant type of Amercan home, beng adaptable to the small apartment and average home a* well as more spacous country homes. By GARRY C MYERS, PH. D. "My doctor told me to gve ruy baby cod lver ol once a day." "Yes, my doctor gave the same advce to me about my grl of two, but she just won't take t." And so one constantly hears smlar accounts of mothers. Row aftsurd! know of two boys, eght and ten, who quarrel over who s to get the largest spoonful of cod lver ol. My own lad of seven often smacks hs lps wth "Good" after he has had hs daly porton of tfcs precous food. Parents who begn early wth the nfant meet no dffculty, except when they or some other member of the famly offer bad suggestons. Frst we need to learn self-control so as to avod beng such a nusance. We, therefore, wll not let ourselves do these foolsh thngs. f necaosarj we shall learn to take cod lver ol wthout ado ourselves. We can learn to do almost anythng we must do for the sake of the chld otose destny s almost wholly n our hands. Although t may seem more economcal to buy cod lver ol by the gallon or the guart, to do so s not practcal. t may deterorate and grow rancd. Better get t n small bottles and keep t fresh and cool. Any ol seems to you and me more dstasteful when t s warm than when t s cool. Over-eager mothers who do not keep n close touch wth ther physcan may gve the chld much more cod lver ol at a tme than necessary, and too often. Now r suppose you have a chld of two or three or older who needs cod The World and All By CHARLES B. DRSCOLL ABOUT BURNNG WORDS Maybe am wrong, but t seems to tny was recently apponted health ate language wns greater battles than ntemperate language. Speakers and wrters w-ho go n for vtuperaton and "plan speakng," meanng by that what s usually meant by t n the press and on the rostrum, soon lose ther vogue. The speaker or wrter who opposes wld language wth mld statements, beng sure hs facts are facts, s lkely to hold the boards after the other s forgotten. remember gong to hear a debate between Jerry Smpsoh and Chester. Long when was a very small barefoot boy on a Kansas farm. Jerry Smpson was the prophet of the Kansas farmers n one of ther major revolts. The debate was part of a campagn for offce. Smpson was known as "Sockless Jerry," because there was a story that he never wore socks. He was a pcturesque character, gfted wth quanttes of self-expresson. Hs vocabulary was smple, but forceful. Jerry had that audence by the ears, e lver ol, and who serously objects to takng t. How shall you proceed? f you dsguse t ^n orange juce or other necessary food you may succeed temporarly, only to make matters worse, to teach the chld forever to dske the food n whch the cod lver ol has been dsgused. A better way may oe to the chld to take t from a offerng hm as the frst morsel a* a few drops to be ncreased ly n amount at later tmes. t to be cool and fresh for such attempts. An effectual word of prase, a star, a more substantal reward, may brng success. Frst offer t to the chld under the most favorable condtons. f your nducement does not work and he refuses, cease your efforts then. Bemove t out of sght and say nothng. At a later tme n the day have,a good assstant avalable. Pour a small porton n the spoon, out of the chld's sght; then as the assstant, gently, but frmly, sezes the chld and prevents hs struggles, put t nto hm as skllfully and quckly as possble. ncdentally, attract the chld's attenton to somethng he wll respond to, but be sure not to gve hm a lecture on the value of cod lver ol or how he should do what you want hm to do. Say nothng. Do nothng. Next tme proceed n lke manner, and contnue n ths fashon untl he volunteers to take t alone. He wll after several tmes, provded you are skllful, gong about t as calmly and as matter-of-fact as f you were fryng bacon. Soon ts takng wll be no hardshp. ndeed, t may become a pleasure. Hs sparklng salles and ntemperate volleys of denuncaton were greeted by storms of applause. He was the hero of the hour. Long ddn't make a good platform mpresson. He had a plan, unornamental way of sayng thngs. He talked about facts, and most of the audence thought hm a bt tresome. He talked lke a corporaton lawyer argung a case before the supreme court. Hs statements were conservatve. Jerry served a short term n congress. Long served a long tme. Eventually he became a senator, and when that job faled he went back to a rch law practce, whch thnk he a stll carryng on. Of course, Jerry passed on long ago. He was a nervous man, and he burned up much vtalty n hs ferce phlppcs. never lked Long. He seemed too cold and statstcal. lked Smpson because he was colorful and human, and he appealed to the magnaton. But temperate language nearly always proves an asset n the long pull. Wth the Women of Today By LLAN CAMPBELL A Nebraska woman. Dr. Olga Stastny, was recently aponted health charman of the Natonal Federaton of Busness and Professonal Women's, clubs by Mss Maron H. McClench, Ann Arbor, Mch., presdent. Dr. Stastny's task wll be to shape j a health program whch wll*answer the vared needs of 56,000 busness land professonal women. For a number of years the health commttee of j the federaton has been strvng to make the busness women more effcent by encouragng proper health habts, and a trophy has been awarded annually to the state federaton whch could boast the hghest percentage of ts members on the job every workng day durng the year. Dr. Stastny s a graduate of Omaha college, served her ntemeshp n the New England Hosptal for Women ' and Chldren n Boston, and has prac tced both medcne and surgery n Nebraska for a number of years, The most spectacular feature of her career, however, was her postwar reconstructon work, frst as anaesthetst at Luzancy, France then as a medcal socal servce worker n Czecho-Slovaka and fnally, as the drector of medcal operatons on the lttle sland of Marcronss, to whch, refugees of the Smyrnt dstaster were sent when the Grecan manland was too over crowded to receve them. For a perod of fve months Dr. Stastny had charge of 12,000 refugees, ap- Hanes Wrtes 192$ Unversty Opera Donal Hamlton Hanes, nstructor n journalsm at the Unversty of Mchgan, was announced recently as the author of the 1929 edton of the Mchgan Unon opera, enttled "Merre-Go-Round." ' Hanes has aded largely n the Wrtng of most Mchgan operas, partcularly n late years, and s credted wth havng wrtten "Mchganda," the frst opera n 1907; j "Culture," the 1908 edton, and "Come On, Dad," the 1919 opera. Couple Advertse For ndan Baby An advertsement seekng an ndan baby boy or twn boys elgble for adopton was publshed recently by portonng ther ratons, superv ^ santaton, and strugglng aganst tfe deadly typhus. Dr. Stastny was entered by tfc* state of Nebraska n the contest to choose the pre-emnent professonal woman of the Unted States, conduct- v< ed n 1927 by the Natonal Federaton of Busness and Professonal Women's clubs, and was among those who attracted the favorable attenton of the judges, losng by a narrow margn to Judge Florence Allen of the supreme court of Oho. the Allegan probate court for and Mrs. Fred Webb, of Allegan. Tkb couple adopted ndan twn baalaa several months ago. One of them ded. The advertsement specfed tfae age of one baby must be between sx and 18 months, but twns may be between the ages of four and 18 months. One-Mnute Pulpt My son, despse not the chastenng of the Lord; nether be weary of hs correcton: For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth; even as a father the son n whom he delghteth. Proverbs, 8, 12. o Man must have some hopes, fears and cares for the comng rt/btrow. Schller..

7 s. ^ LANSNG LAYNG PLANS FOR ARPORT Assertng "buck parsng" between the state and th* cty of Lusng on mprovement of the arport near Lansng haa become tresome, the Cvc Bureau of Landng taas a commttee workng on plans for a muncpally o^ned and operated arport for Lan- f the project s developed as planned and arport bonds are approved 'at the next electon, the cty wll wthdraw from the arport northwest of the cty "loaned" by the state. The arport has been mproved by nether state nor cty, each watng on the other. But a small part of the year s the feld n condton for use and Lansng's ar mal for several weeks has gone forward by ral to Chcago. j Jackson Gets Hghest * Tax Rate n Hstory] - A tentatve budget prepared by Cty Manager Walton B. Hodges, presented to the Jackson cty commsson, calls for a levy of approxmately $900,000, ^ V, whch would mean a tax rate of $10, the cty's lmt. The 1929 tax rate was $9.48. The total appropraton for the 1930 budget s $1,003,176, of whch $103,000 s to be rased from revenue sources. New expense tems nclude $32,000 for a new fre alarm 'headquarters staton, $9,428 for new street lghts n the downtown area, and $6,000 for a forestry department. Salares of Chef of Polce Charles Phelps and Fre Chef Clyde Prtchard are each ncreased $500 to $3,500. The cty commsson wll report on the completed budget before Dec. 15. Loan Shares Exempt Buldng and loan company shares are not subject to taxaton under the state nhertance tax laws, accordng to a rulng handed down by Wlber M. Brucker, attorney general. The opnon was wrtten for John S. Haggerty, secretary of state. Acdty Th«common cause of dgestve dffcultes s excess acd. Soda cannot alter ths condton, and t burns the stomach. Somethng that wll neutralze the acdty s the sensble thng to take. That \s why physcans tell the publc to use Phllps Mlk of Magnesa. One spoonful of ths delghtful preparaton can neutralze many tmes ts volume n acd. t acts nstantly; relef s quck, and very apparent. All gas s dspelled; all sourness s soon gone; the whole system s sweetened. Do try ths perfect ant-acd, and remember t s just as good for chldren, too, and pleasant for them to take. Any drugstore has the genune, pre- crptonal product. PHLLPS r. Mlk. of Magnesa An Alng CHLD Are you prepared to render frst ad and quck comfort the moment your youngster has an ypset of any sort? Could you do the rght thng mmedately though the emergency came wthout warnng perhaps tonght? Castora s a mother's standby at such tmes. There s nothng lke t n emergences, and nothng better for everyday use. For a sudden attack of colc, or the gentle relef of constpaton; to allay a feversh condton, or to soothe a fretful baby that can't sleep. Ths pure vegetable preparaton s always ready to ease an alng youngster. t s just as MALT LEVY NETS $300,000 TO STATE Collectons from the malt tax durng the frst two months t has been n force approxmates $300,000, Sdney E Schulte, deputy secretary of stat>\ announced recently. Mchgan passed a malt levy at the 19T29 sesson of ts legslature, the law becomng effectve Sept. 1. The tax s on malt syrup or extract and on the sold malt sold content n wort, and vares accordng to the sze of the contaner and weght. The tax s approxmately 5 cents per pound, so that some 6,000,000 pounds of malt were produced and taxed. Malt used by bakeres and certan other commercal purposes s exempt from the tax. The state collects ts revenue from the sale of tax stamps, whch are appled to all contaners. Vote to Dscontnue C. of C. at Albon Members of the Albon Chamb : of Commerce, organzed sx years ago, have voted to dscontnue the organzaton. Negotatons are pendng, however, to form a new cvc body oy combnng wth the Albon Busness and Professon Men's assocaton and the Albon Boosters and Knockers' club, dnner organzaton. harmless as the recpe on the wrapper reads. f you see Chaa. H. Fletcher's sgnature, t s genune Castora. t s harmless to the smallest nfant; doctors wll tell you so. You can tell from the recpe on the wrapper how mld t s, and how good for lttle systems. But contnue wth Castora untl a chld s grown. LOADED FOR BEAR! Mchgan Audtor to Lst Lands Taken By State for Taxes A ;t scrpt on of lands whch have werted to the state due to tax delnquency, s beng prepared by Audtor General O. B. Fuller at the request of the state conservaton commsson. Authorty to dspose of all lands 1 whch come <-> the state after beng ; tax delnquent for a perod of fvv years or more s clamed by the' con-! servaton commsson. n cases where lands have been j sold by the audtor general the ttle ' to such lands s clouded, Wlbur M. Brucker, attorney general, recently ruled n an nformal opnon. Members of the commsson sad that Mr. Fuller had sold lands whch the commsson later bought back to fll out a game preserve, a state forest or for use for other purposes. Although Mr. Fuller s reluctant to turn all lands over to the conservaton commsson, he sad that he would abde by the decson of tle attorney general, although he consders the law a bad one, He ponts out that thousands of acres of land have already been turned over to the commsson whch have not been set asde for any purpose. He- beleves that as much of ths land as possble should be sold, tus returnng t to the tax rolls. Many countes, he ponts out, are poor because of the large areas of non-taxable lands. The commsson recently rescnded ts acton of last month by wthdrawng from exchange state lands located n the Turtle >ake regon lyng n the countes of Montmorency, Alpena, Alcona and Oscoda. Large prvate huntng clubs own thousands of acres of land n ths regon, ncludng the Turtle Lake club wth more than 26,000 acres of huntng land. Ffty or more small peces of state land are mxed wth the prvately owner! propertes, whch the prvate land owners seek to gather n. The commsson decded that the small tracts should be held as publc huntng grounds, although t admts game wardens experence great dffculty enforcng the game laws on these lands, some of whch are entrely surrounded by prvately owned propertv. Three Deer Frst Anmals For New Greenvlle Park A frst step n the establshng of a cty park and game preserve n Greenvlle was made when three deer were brought to Greenvlle and placed n wnter quarters at the "water works plant. They wll be cared for n the wnter by employes at the water works and n the sprng a permanent park wll be located somewhere n the cty, where the deer as well as other wld anmals, whch shall be added tme to tme, may be kept. from SL Clar Would Bar Huntng on Sundays An ordnance to prevent Sunday huntng n St. Clar county s to be drawn up by Jesse P. Wolcott, prosecutng attorney, and wll be submtted to Governor Green, accordng to nstructon of the board of supervsors. f the governor vetoes the measure the board of supervsors can pass t by a two-thrds vote. STATE PRODUCTS TO EXCEED 5 BLLONS Manufactured products of Mchgan durng 1929 wll aggregate $5,000,- 000,000 n value, accordng to a Detrot board of commerce estmate. The state wll purchase raw materals and sem-fnshed products from other states to the value of $3,000,000,000. The state's ndustral pay roll s expected to exceed $810,000,000 wth Detrot workers drawng a total of $560,000,000. J Postal Workers Requred To Pay Fee Promptly Postal employes are p-qured by law to deal promptly n makng payment of premums on surety bonds, and correspondence of postmasters on such matters may be carred on n offcal penalty envelopes, accordng to a memorandum sgned by the Frst Assstant Postmaster Genera] Arch Coleman, and just made publc by the postoffce department. The memorandum n full text follows : Complants have been made \>\ bondng companes from tme to tme that dffculty has been experenced n havng clerks, carrers, assstant postmasters and other supervsory offcers, pay ther renewal premums promptly. t s alleged that n a number of nstances postmasters have gnored communcatons, clamng that they dd not see why they were compelled to spend postage for the purpose of notfyng bondng companes concernng ther lablty. t s the duty of every postmaster to see that all employes are properly bonded n accordance wth ther fnancal responsblty and that they pay ther annual premums when due. Postmasters must also answer promptly nqures addressed to them from bondng companes n regard to ther lablty. A penalty envelope sfould be used by the postmaster n wrtng an offcal letter of ths knd. Would Rename Camp n Memory of Leader Suggeston that the name of the Communty Camp assocaton, owners of the property occuped by the Boy Scout camp, be changed to honor the memory of the late Clarence L. Grelck, has been made to the assocaton by the Traverse Cty Rotary Club. The name suggested s Camp Grelck, or Grelck Wood. Mr. Grelck was one of the founders of the Traverse Cty Rotary. He was one of the frst presdents n Traverse Cty and served several terms as a drector. The Boy Scout group "was organzed largely through the efforts of Mr. Grelck, t was hd enthusasm that resulted n constructon of permanent buldngs at the camp ste, and acquston of a large tract of land for that purpose. Reforestaton of that area was carred on and drected by hm. The Rotary club has decded to erect a memoral, n the form of tablet, a monument, or a sutable marker, probably at the entrance to the park property. "Mechancal Plot" Pronounced Successful The " S. War Department ha.- pro noujctd aa successful the automatc plot fur arplane^, un ngenous devo whch provdes untrng UKOaJlc anb at the controls. Ths dt-ve* wa.s developed by Elmer Sperry of the Sperry Company, and Wllam B. Mayo, chef engneer of the Ford Mo- : lor Company. Recent tests o>f the devce were conducted n an army Ford! ' transport plane. On one flght from Dayton to Detrot, the mechancal plot when 63,370,264 torus wert carred for requred on!\ two adjustments n a season's record. n 1928 the total ore movement was 53,321,452 tona course drecton and these were made ant n 1927 the ore movement totaled necessary by dangng wnd condtons. or more to go the 1929 season wll see f>0,098,0»;* tons. Wth anotl>er month The new model actuates the three two or three mll'on more tons of ore major controls of an arplane, the rudder for drecton, the elevator for up addet ;o the year's total. Last month 11,213,495 tons of ward ard downward movement, and freght passed through the locks. Of the aleron for keepng the arplane ths 8,061,625 tons were ron ore. on an evet keel. One vertcally Freght shpments, through the locks mounted gyroscope and one horzon to November 1 total 85,188,109 tons, tally mounted gyrohcup*-, the armatures of whch are electrcally drven at 15,000 K. P. M.. are used. The power s provded by wnd drven generators. The gyroscopes mantan certan defnte postons, regardless of the moton of the arplane tself. The purpose of the automatc plot s merely to control an arplane n straght anl level flght, and to hold t on a gven course. The take-offs and landngs n the present stage of development must be by a traned plot. As changes n. the drecton of the wnd are encountered the compass course must be change^ accordngly, n order to mantan a true course between two gven ponts. Stage Workers' Unon Bans Cty Audtorum Employment of non-unon -ta^e workers at the Prudden audtorum, operated by the cty of ^msng, has aroused the re of the Lansng unt of the nternatonal Allance of Theatn- ' cal Stage Employe? and Movng Pcture Operators. Another audtorum placed n the unfar lst by the stage unon s the Eastern hgh school, whch employs hgh school students to shft ts scenery, contrary to the rules of the th<atrcal allance. No effort wll be made, t s sad, lo remove the ban at the Eastern hgh, but negotatons are under way for new contract between muncpal authortes and the stage unon whch wll erase the name of Prudden audtorum from the allance blacklst. Group from Detrot Buy Manstee Boat Company \ rt-w Detrot frm headed by John A. Hacker has purchased the Century Boat Company of Man tee. The frm s captalzed at $300,000 and of ths amount $ 100,000 already has been pad. The ( (.;l was negotated through te Manstee hoard of commerce. The name wll be retaned and the same lne of outboard motor craft wll be manufactured. Work has been started at the plant wth a force of 25 men. Ths number wll be augmented to 200 as operatons get under wav. Glder Club Formed By Ludngton Men \ 'r'up of 20 Ludngton men s organzng a rld.-r club. Charles H. H'ger ha- h - n named temporary' pre..«' nt and Ned Taggat temporary cr''tar,v. A meetng ;, to h-- held soon to perfect organzaton and make further plan.-.. An advsory commttee on fnancal matters ncludes E. C. Hardy R. E. Stearns, Jr., and J. W. Beger. C. Hollnger and K. L. Ashhacker have been named as alternates. Always ORE SHPMENTS SHOW NCREASE S:.pmert,» uf ron ore through the locks at Sault Ste. Mare reached 70,- 000,000 cons n 192», the greatest tonnage n hstory, t was announced recently by the U. S. engneerng offce The total ron ore shpments to No- \ ember l were 70,457,113 tons. The best prevous season was n 1916, as compared wth 75,273,228 for the correspondng montfc last year. The total freght last year was 86,992,997 tons. Wheat movement remaned n a slump, only 35,254,461 bushels passng the locks, as compared wth 79,- 677,338 bushels n October last vear. Watervlet Belongs To Debatng League Watervlet hgh school has become a member of the Mchgan Hgh School Debatng league and wll compete for champon the nterscholastc debate shp of the state. T-R-C*S Keep You on the Sonny Sck of lfe free from. Pan 1)w wtorest HaacV <naapp«ar utt few mlnntea and (bolt croa tnawna* yna tmodated wfth BHETTMATSM. XE7BTXS and NEURALGA yeld to T. E. Ca when taken accordta* to drecton*. Ask yoar drag-flat tor * $1.00 box, a week's treatment, or wrte Templetona, 220 W. ContTeaa. Detrot, for aampta and lterature. T. S. C'a do not contan any harmful or habt formn* drag. The Mark of Asprn 13 AYER ASPRN s lke an old *-* frend, tred and true. There can never be a satsfactory substtute for ether one. Bayer Asprn s genune. t s the accepted antdote for pan. ts relef may always be reled on, whether used for the occasonal headache, to head-off a cold, or for the more serous aches and pans from neuralga, neurts, rheumatsm or other alments. t's easy to dentfy Bayer Asprn by the Bayer Cross on every tablet, by the name Bayer on the box and the word genune prnted n red. Asprn» tb«trtda mark of Byer Mtnufaetws "f Mono4cetc*cdMter of Balcjlleacd Dependable and guaranteed to gve perfect satsfacton down to the last spoonful n the can. You save n buyng and n usng KG Bakng Powder Same Prce for over 38 years Pure and Effcent MLLONS OF POUNDS USED BY OVK GOVERNMENT

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