fikbey high sdwol fake bwmess broker improving...
TRANSCRIPT
fiKbey High Sdwol Fake Bwmess Broker l i f e Foetkll Season1 Is Given Freedom
Improving
*-
ft <L
Wtoa tUm C a m * From Brighton 7. Jack Diltoway F a * .
t«r«« « n Both Offensive and DofensiT««
is «•
Pinckney High School football t eam won from Brighton in their Ana) game of the y e a r Monday by a score o f 1 2 to 7. This gives them
/ l a record of 6 victories and 3 losses. The game was the closest ever played by the high school on the local
E. B. Hanroy PUadt CuUty. Makot lUttitut^ou and is Sot at Liber
ty Just Before Washtenaw and Monroe Officer* Ask
HU Arrest
fc
E. B. Harvey, 55, of Kansas City who was arrested in Jackson county and later released when he paid a Brooklyn business man back $50 which he had received as commission
fleM and they escaped defeat in t h e ' f o r sel l ing his business is once more last quarter, one might 3ay, by an at l iberty. On his release from the eyelash. J a c k s o n jail he was turned over to
T h e game w a s playe-d on a a f i e ld Livingston county officers o n 6 inches d e e p in mud and / a s t work charges made by James Shirey of was difficult The Brighton team was Pinckney and William Brogan of fa s t er than Pinckney, gained more Howell that they had been defraud-Mround and had a good forward ed of money by him on fake sale |pflBing attack but w e r e prone to schemes. According to the state £l|Bjftlt * n d Pinckney got possession police he had also worked the
fcaU four time on fumbles. | scheme on Peck, Gregory garage 'HBftloway featured f o r man and a Stocksridge business
Pineteotf 'Jn both the offensive and man. defenshw departments of the game. In the second quarter he made a
Legislature to Pass OB the Liquor Bill
Currenf Comment
t
50 yard run down the side linps be ing downed in the 3 yard lino. Here John Wylie went over for a touchdown on the third attempt. T h e attempt to forward pass for the extra point failed. Pinckney'a second touchdown came in the third quarter John Wylie intercepted a Brighton (
pass and ran it back 4 0 yards to the ten yard line. Here Drown went oyer for a touchdown on the third
try. ! Brighton also scored in t h u
Af ter being held at the Howell jail since Saturday he plead guilty last Wednesday and was released when he paid back the money which he obtained from Livingston county business men. Mr. Shirey received | 2 5 , William Brogan $15 , and $16 is still being held by Livingston county officers for Mr. Peck. Martin J. Lavan of Brighton acted as Mr. Harvey's attorney. Soon after Har vey's release Washtenaw and
The Deer Hunters Are Returning
Some Deer Are Being Brought Back By Them But More Alibies.
The Doep Snow Made Deer'' Hunting Real Work This
Year
The Weekly Church Program CATHOLIC CHURCH SERVICE
Sunday Masses at 8:30 and 10:30. Confessions Saturday evening at
You would think that in .• t imes like the present that no money would be left lying around tux-
For claimed in the b a n k s y Y e t such is the case. About six,; weeks ago the
; Pinckney State Bank paid a ten ! percent dividend. A t the t ime depos-1 itors were asked to call for their
money and otner checks were mailed out. Yet there is still $ 3 0 0 in dividends laying in the bank which has not b.-en called for. There is another sum of money in the bank amount-
| ing to over ?500. This belongs to ' persons who have movvd away and | whose present address is not known. i All banks have similar sums and it j amounts to considerable. « \ law is
Passage of a $30 ,000 ,000 bond <n the book.* which provides that all act to finance the state public works • M i c h unclaimed sums shall be turned program under the XKA. , over to the state of Michigan. A
Amendment to the banking law. notice wa< published in every county to allow state banks to v.dl pro/erred to that effect recently b u t as ye t stuck to the RFC or another loaning the money haK not been taken over a ^ ' n c v - i by the state. Many of the fundj in
An enabling act to permit .-= tat" the Pinckney bank go back to the banks to com.' under the advantages o l ( 1 Tceple Exchange Bank of some
Gov. Com stock I u u e s Call Special Station to Convene On
Nov. 22 . Amend Pension Act?
The state legislature will meet in special session at noon Nov. 22, in accordance with a call issued this w i - k by Gov. Win. A. C'omstock. The salons will be limited to th" consideration of the following subjects, stipulatid by the governor in the call:
Control of manufacture, 'distribution and sale of hard liquors.
i ' :30. Rev. Lewis M. Dion
Pastor
BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. I?. P. Ksic__Pastor
Services each Sunday The Pinckney deer hunters heiran to straggle in last Friday and Satur-1 Morning Worship 10:30
M o n - ' d a y laden wi th some deer but morv .Spec ia l and seperate services for the
the the
pen-
pub'ic stat"
insurance
roe county officers asked that he be! alibies. The snow which was waist ! little folks.
quarter. Pinckney after yielding a , • * w a ^ wanted for working
couple of first downs t o them got _ £ _ • _ _ _ v _ . : i „ _ i : _ the ball on the 25 yard line. Wilson
turned over to them when Livingston had finished with him as he
a similar scheme on Ypsilanti and Monroe
B. Y. P
School Classes for all
U
11 :15
:00
A. , i u i *u«' business men . punt ing from a mud hole on the fourth down had his punt blocked] The companies which and Hyne carried it to the ten yard c laims_to represent evade line. Here he went through the! in that aJT the misrepresentation
Harvey the law
Pinckney line on the third trial.Bob done by the salesman by word Clark also crashed the Pinckney line mouth. The agreement which
T o r the extra pqihfc" T h i s s c o r e put vict ims sign merely agrees to ad
deep in the deer country m a l e hunt- Sunday ing real work and many ramrod had enough o f it in a week's time.
Two deer were brought back Sat- jEv<-'*"»* Worship 8:00 urday. Eugene Mclntyre who hunted j T h u r s - <-'™n™K P™yer sen-ice - 8:00 wi th William Dil loway near Prud-1 • denville got a six point buck and CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
^1 W. H. MeyeFlT -sTnait--oi*e^-W«—u«~| E. J. Be iquut Minister Q£ derstand that L. J. and Claude
the Swarthout who are at Lovells alio
of federal deposit insurance. Modification of the old age
sion law. Appropriations for
trust commission and board of chiropractors.
Amendment-; to th code to clarify certain tax sections.
The stato legislative council informed Gov. Comstoi'k previous to hi.; issuauce of the call, that th'y would have completed consideration of the liquor control bill by the time the legislature meets, and that a unanimous report on the highly controversial question woul 1 b »• ready. It is expected that discussions of the. bill will engross the legislature for some weeks, and it is considered doubtful if a control bill can pass the .upper and lower houses in time to permit the togal -*ak—«£-
old years ago long since
and the depositor.* dead or forgotten.
are
got a deer each.
n e w life into Brighton and Finckney j vertise the businesses for sale for aj Bidy Martin are had her hands full the last period. I certain length of time. It does n o t . t n c < m -
ed the ball t o - t h e - 3 5 ~ y a ^ ! « a y where.One such company auver- Maurice Kel ly returned from forward w u s Then made^t lses them in an o b s c u r e — O k l ^ ^ m a ^ r p p e T p e n i n s u l a with tftarTes~Gu
Mi.s Etty I . l e r _ O r g a n i s t | h a r d l i ( l u o r i n Michigan by Dec Mrs. Earl B a u g h n _ D i r e c t . of M u s i c ( u t * ' h i c n t i m o t h t > " ^ u a l . r e p e a l
t ' o gun
ecpty handed. Maurice missed c a r c j J shots and the third t ime his
from' J a m m e < l a n d missed fire. Co. of Stanley Dinkel returned Saturday I r V t ; n i n ^
^ * _* i.:.. . 1 . . . . i *• _ __ i Prayer at
l ine on a forward pass t w o first downs reaching the three paper. yard line. Here the Pinckney line i Another batch of postal held and Brighton only gained a yd.; came to Pinckney last week in t w o attempts. On the third d o w n ' the Associated Brokerage Hyne s tarted-an end run but Jack 1 Omaha. Neb. The printing and prop- w'ltn most ot nis 'ieer nunting on Dttloway broke through and threw osition were almost identical with; thusiasm gone. He waded in thv him for a ten yard loss. This paved . that recently sent out from Wichita,! deep snow four days and saw only i h a game as Wilson at once punted ; Kansas. The postal laws e v i d e n t l y or\o bear, which he missed and a doc.
of danger. A touchdown at this | will have to be amended beior.'l Messrs. Dinkel, Dilloway and Me-for Brighton would have meant these gentry are curbed. In tyre visited Patrick Dillon and
£ 1 8 to 12 victory for them. I family who are encamped about two! home Pinckney Brighton ! D l M r „ N r v i K m c p r w n c w - r c ! miles from Pruddenville. They a r e ' o f
Rex "Harris and I "Percy Swarthout—-Supt. of $. S. also hunting with Morning Worship 10:80 a.m.
Junior Church . 10:30 a.m. t n e Sunday School 11:30 a.m.
idot' Christian "Endeavor :Tr77TTT:JHrp? Orchestra Practise
Tuesday Evening at the Church Senior Choir rehersal Wednesday
of J the ISth amendment is expected to
be an accomplished fact. A second special session called
for January is said to have been -lt-cided upon by (iov. Comstock."
Next in important'*1 to the control bill, and the measure
•iy< 7:130.
meeting Thursday evening
o A L L I S O N — M U S S O N
I The -lays of the frontier woman ! are evidently not yet gone judging . frum the exploits of Mrs. Lee Davis-i on of Manchester. Her husband is
a deputy sheriff. One day last week a telephone call came to Mr. Davison notifying him that Roscoe Howard, 24, wanted in Kentucky for three murders, was headed t o w a r j Manchester on the Clinton road in a car with a Kentucky license. Deputy Davison was out of town. Delay was impossible. Mrs. Davison buckled on a r e v o h c r and accompanied by a neighbor set out on the Clinton road. The car with the Kentucky license came along and was crowdc 1 to the curb by the plucky woman
and the wanted man captured without a shot being fired.
A v« ry on Wi
liquor that is
calculated to produce the most fireworks, will be that authorizing a $30 ,000 ,000 bond Usue to finance the state building program. The federal public works commissioner has refused to okay any plan other
1 than a bond issue if government
came week your
signed
:u>
tf
Adesh Wilson, Capt. Gardner Y o u n g Spears G. Lamb Batt le Read Drown Dillowv y Wyl ie
Touchdowns
L. If. L. T. L. G.
C. R. G. U. T. R. K.
Q. It. L. H. R. H. F. F.
— W y l i o ,
Todt P I N C K N E Y I N D E P E N D E N T S
B E A T A N N ARBOR 20-7
pre hos-
nicely located and had shot Brogan
Pitkin Kingsbury
Weeks Carter
Case Shaw j . Clarkj 7h,0 pinckney independent foot-
Avis ]jaji team defeated the Broadway Hyne Merchants of Ann Arbor here last
D r o w n , Sunday for the second t ime this
Beat Broadway Merchants for Second Tirr.'S This Year on a Snow
Covered Field. Pjay Dexter Here Sunday
imple wedding took pl^«' participation to the extent of lnesday, November 15, at the | p t . n . ( > n t i s t 0 n(, authorized,
of Mr. and Mrs. Mark Allison | m o m . y obtained would be u>ed ( Pinckn.-y, when their daughter, I m a r i | y t o ^ 1 ( 1 l o p r c M . n t .state
one MM-JOHC Marie, was united in m a r - l p j ^ i facilities. deer. ' i iage to Robert Clayton Mu..son of j
The hunters found it rather cold • Howi II. I JUSTICE COURT N E W S sleeping in the tents la>t week a n l | J u t ,-,, l1y y,.u.^ . ^ t l h . v n . y j T m , t I . m i a p , s u i t 0 f j t o y \\t-M[
some of them sat up all night feed- j , ,m i ( > ( j ; l v . l | ] (1 h o u r t h c brides who live., on the VanMarieum farm ing the lire. father and mother were niari'iiii. . versus George Lot'g w<is tried
Orville Smith and Wirt 11 > I n 1 •. • > i ., ., . OA ,, ' K.. f«»r,, invti,-,. Aih. it Via t -ii th ' J rotn[)l]y at 1:30 tile youngi neioi e J i i s iue / M I X I I I io.-i .i' m
Another bunch of postcards heiv through the mails last asking if you desired to sell business. This time it was th k Associate, I I5rokerage Cojnpany~ of Ornaha, Nebraska. There is a> heavy penalty for using the mails to defraud but evidently by some technicality these gentry get around this law. We doubt it' ihi* firm gets
! any r p ins from Pinckney this time.
j It will .«(11)1) be tax time a;.raiu and I IIID-L of the people will be agreeably j surprised to find that their property | J,ax is lessened by the 15 mill tax ' amendment p;issed last year. Of pour. -e the government will obtain
en1 usual amount of tax money from you by way of the sales tax and beef t;t\ but it i< not so noticeable.
returned with two
Wirt from Gaylord
G point bucks. _ _ 0 ^
I I ' ) 1 •! . 'uesdav
Anyway, the property g e t t i n g a break.
owners are
Hyne. Extra point—Clark. Substi-1 y e u r D y a
score of 20 to 7. Thc field tutions Pinckney, Shehan f ° r | w a s snowy and slippery and fast
SHORT C H A N G E ARTISTS HIT TOWN
A coup^1 of. women short change artists visited Pinckney last Friday
Spear.*, Clinton for Wyl ie , Hinchey^ w o r i - w a s impossible. Pinckney made afternoon but failed to work their for Gardner, Gerycz for Lamb.) s o m o b ig 'ga ins the first quarter and £»™e- They entered the Tueple Brighton.Greenwood for Avis, Kras- r e a c h e d the ten yard line where they |, Hardware store and purchased a 15c ney for Weeks. First d o w n s — ' w t . r c h c ] t i t o down,s. Kennedy scored P ^ tin of Petf-r Conway, clerk. This Pinckney 8, Brighton 10. Penalties t h e first touchdown in the second they paid for with a ten do ar bil
inckney 4, Brighton 3. Referee q u a r t ( . r after a series of gain?' When Peter had made the chanp _ R a n c o u r , Western State. Head ( t h r o u g h the Ann Arbor line and * h e y discovered they had the l inesman—Dir iM, Pruddenville. around end. Gerycz kicked g o d
' — ' "• j Gerycz made a touchdown in the L A K E L A N D C'RCLE OF third period but missed the try for
KING'S D A U G H T E R S ! g o a ] . shehan made the last touch-' Thc Lakeland Circle o£ King's d o w n i n t m , finat q u a r t e r a f t 0 r a
Daughters was most pleasantly e H number of Pinckney gains on line" tert&ined by Mrs. Minnie Cooper at p l a y s G c r y c 2 k i ckc l goal. I her home at Silver Lake Tuesday
Ann Arhor scored i n t h e a Colorado license which was waiting for them with a male • irivt r.
: couple accompanied by the groom'.. | M.-tor, Knistine, and brother, Max, j took their places before a bank of
fern.s and vine-.
Rev. perquist of Pinckney formed the ceremony.
' The bride wore faille with ' sage of gold and bronze mums. Miss Musson wore crepe with a corsage of hlu<
! peas and yellow mum«, the bride of forty years ago wore brown crepe |
]TJC and her corsage Mas orchid sweet | change which they offered him a'id;p<'as with yellow mums, a gift from
asked for their $10 bill back aga in . 'her grandchildren.
be f o n town hall Saturday morning. Several weeks ago George Long, who own-- a large number of sheep, killed a dog j belonging to Ilea 1 which he claimed had been killing hi.-, sheep. This dog was «hot in the yard in front of th" Head home. Head denied that his dog was a sheep killer and sued for damages. Neither party had a
*"'*( lawyer but each acted a< hi.* own s W 0 ( ? t i attorney. Mrs. H e a l and Mr. and
I Mrs. 11. VanSyckel wer-for Head. Long had no Justice Frost gave Head of $2'> and costs. Mr.
per-
i cor-bebb;
grey-
However several Pinckney merchants were gyp<*d by similar aKi.-ts a year or so ago and Peter was wise so the scheme backfired. They left town hurriedly in a car with
A Was se!*ved th(
by Mrs. Lewis Klmer Langley
W i t l l e «. i •
witne.- -">. a verdict Long ;in-
d that th" case would be ap- i delicious three course dinner]
immediate relatives Wagner assited and Gerald Dinkel'
nounccu | pealed. ; Friday moniiung is the date
° y i s u i t of William Thompson of How •11!
La.-t. spring a 5c and 10c auct ion wa> hehl ir. Huron county where a
j mortgage fon closure of farm stock I took place. Th" entire list of stock
and tools :-o!d for les.s than $ 1 0 . Numerous arrests were made including that of a Had Axe business man, ami a fo imer sherhT. The business man was tried firsthand the jury disagived. now the six other defendant- ha \e all been released. These mock auctions were undoubtedly high-handed but drastic action was need, d to prevent the people from lo ing all of their goodj , chattels and farms. The mortgage foreclosure moratorium w a s the direct result of this.
versus Louis Stackable is
, , , . , Ann Arbor scored i n t h e afternoon. Despite the cold unplew-< ^ q u a r t e r w h e n B u d D i l l o w a y ant weather, nineteen were in ut>] tendance. The president, Mra.
had a punt blocked o n t h e lenaance . n « v ^ ^ ^ " ' | Pinckney 30 yard line. Mutt S i b d t Clifford V a n H o m . presided at the b b e ( J i t a n d p a n u n m o l e a t j t f c , , meet ing which was opened with & t o u c h d o w n ^ ^ ^ w c n l
singing, "Oh, Love, I Cannot Le t , ^ h ^ P i n c k n e y l i n e f o r the Go," and devot«onals by *u*iextn p o i n t > A n n Arbor did not
ipfe Pettys . Report of the last. h a v e m u q h l u c k c ^ b a U
Ing was read by the secretary,; b u t ]vted 7 f o n v , a r < i ^ ^ Tele^phore Bourbonna.s , a n ^ h f t { 1 t h p e e . l n t e t e d b y
ittee reports snven Garments a n d -mi ^ t h , o c
n^dae for the Umvers . ty H o t p i t r i | were brought in. Bed jackets to be* made as Christmas g i f t s for patients
rntfc the hospital were distributed. i*or entertainment, Mrs. Cooper (acted a clothes-pin contest , the
prUe -winner be ing Mrs. Henry il and consolation, Mrs. E .
Hinckley. Mrs. Cooper serv e d cake and coffee. An invitation from Mrs. Barbara Teasmer to hold
: ?Wthe next meet ing, Tuesday afternoon V v D e c « n b e r 12, a t her home at Lake-
land was accepted. The meet ing . cloaed with the song and prayer of
Francis Battle replaced Mick Sibert for" Ann Arbor at the half when the former hurt his ankle. He was a tower of strength for them
NOTICE The C^ E. i s .g iv ing a pre-Thank-
g iv ing program Sunday night, November 27, at tbe Congregational church, The program will start at 7:30 P. M. Visitors from different organizations will be present. Everybody we lcome! Take heed of thii welcome and come.
O BOARD OF COMMERCE
MEETING The regular meet ing of t h e
Pinckney Board of Commerce will be held at their rooms over the bank
" t fo r
acting as waiters. They wore white, j trial before Justice Frost. This is The young couple left for Cleve- the outgrowth of an auto wreck at
land amid a shower of rice and old1
shoes and on their return will reside on the Howell and Pinckney road.
BIG
September in
o GOLD STAR POSTMASTER
Push Clark, postmaster at past 4X years
DIES
Chubbs Corners hist which Thompson's car and one longing to Bete Pros. driven Stackable were wrecked.
•Q"
ton for th(
Rush-1 H O W E L L PHYSICIAN DIES dierij WHILE H U N T I N G DEER
i there Friday morning of cancer. H.-:] D r - ^«m { ,- s K- H r o w n » r,(5' f o 1
! lived practically his entire life at y^^ " practising physician in How-Rushton wher- he ronducted a gen-
F E A T H E R P A R T Y AT H O W E L L T H E A T R E
The Howell Theatre will hold us be-1 annual feather party on Saturday by j night, November 25. Loads of poul
try wil l be given away free to the holders of the lucky numbers. Choice turkeys, geese, ducks and chickens will be distributed to the
35 ( l u c k y ones. It may be you.
Come and a good Zane' Grey
eral store ami mill. When the Grand Trunk railroad went through the place was named Rushton in hia
ell died suddenly of a heart attack while hunting deer in Alpena county about two miles from the camp at Lincoln last Thursday. He was a
honor. He is"credited with being the member of the state sanitarium
blocking two Pinckney punts and aj o n M o n d a y evening, Nov. 27. Com goal after touchdown. | . _ F r e d Slayton, P. H. Swarthout,
N e x t Sunday, Nov. 26, Pinckney R. J. Carr. All members arc urged wi l l p lay Dexter here. This t e a m ' t o attend. Sec has not lost a game all the year.} Q T h e y have a previous decision over! NOTICE Pinckney having won from them ? | I am giving piano lessons for to 6. This wil l be a game worth beginners or to anyone interested. see ing and a large attendance i s ' Y o u may »ec me at my home, expected. Doa/t miss this contest. ' Eloy^a Uerquut .
father of the rural delivery t in t h h state as at his own
h" started delivering mail
system expense to the
j farmers near his office. For pioneering in this field his office was made a gold star one and^ he held office continuously for 48 years despite changing administrations.
With his passing the office wil probably be discontinued and the
I patrons served from South Lyon or 1 Hamburg.
1 board, a former mayor of and prominent in Masonic
Howell circles.
Surviving are his widow, a d a u g h t v Ernestine, who teaches at St. Clair Shores, and a son, Browning, who was also hunting in the north but from a different camp. The funeral and burial were at Howell Sunday.
Mr. and MM, Edward Singer and son, .Richard, Mr, and Mrs. Roland, Ted Singer and Vif* «pent ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ , Mkhifin '<£^!%£" days last week ia Fwtoria. Ohio, f * ^ n c y va «n«m«i V W M T . * ^
story', "The Lost Trail", with George O'Brien and win your Thanksgiving dinner free. Drawing at 8:45 P. M. Bring your friends.
~*t» — C A L E N D A R OF
COMING E V E N T S "Monday fv.-t Nov. 2 7 , B o a r i ^ ^ r
Commerce meeting in rooms over the bank.
Sunday, Nov. 2C>, footbal l game, Pinek^ev vs Dexter.
Tuesday, Nov. 2 8 , feather party, at Community Hall, g iven h y St. Mary's parish.
Thursday, Nov. 8 0 , footbalL^jjame
S&
r*
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tfk_ mtim^m t^im^mtmmm^mt
r-sv*-^
The Pipckncy Pbpatch, Wednesday, July 19, 1933
Indians Find Gold in Labrador $*•
Possibilities of Region Are Little Known.
Washington.—Itich gold ore was recently reported to have been brought oat of tabrador by Indiana.
It Is one of many such reports that have been made through the centuries, but still the tmith as to l^abrador's possibilities as a source of precious metals Is unknown, says a bulletin from the National Geographic society. It la for otherN^sources that the country Is best known, the bulletin points out
"I .a bra dor spreads like a rough triangle from Hudson strait to Blanc Sablon, on the Strait of Belle Isle, and from the Atlantic coast Inland to the Height of Land." continues the bulletin. "With an area of at least 110.000 square miles. It is almost three times the size of Newfoundland. Its boundaries embrace a fringe of coastal settlements, fur trading posts, atid~Oren~ fell and Morarlan mission stations; romantic fjords and naked cliffs like those of.Norway; rocky islands and narrow 'tickles' (channels); ancient mountains, valleys, and falls; ,H0 mile lakes and rushing rivers swarming
! rat—rank next in importance to cod. The part white, part Eskimo trappers do little cod Ashing, for the furring grounds' lie miles a way from the coast, and the winter hunt, when pelts are prime, keeps the men away from home for weeks nt a time.
"ititles bang good by as canoes pull out Into midstream to begin the long trip up-river to the fur paths.' or hunting grounds. When a trap|>er ihiHises a certain area, he blu7.es trails, sets out perhaps 30U traps, and builds 'tilts' (log huts) at intervals of a day's walk apart. Thereafter, this land is his alone to bunt over, and no other trapper thinks of poaching on it.
"The trapper's day Is long, work at the traps hard. Storms may overtake bln», and 20-below-r.ero cold. Yet he stope only once or twice to prepare a mug of tea and to take a bite of bread. For supper, cooked on the tilt's tin stove, he stews a partridge with rtceand salt pork; or perhaps some beaver or porcupine, whose meat is good eating. If he has time, he bakes 'rose bread' (yeust-raised), or If not, soggy bannock. Then he skins his pelts and stretches them to dry on the fur btinrds. Frequently he finds
that mice have ruined the pelt by chewing away patches of Lair.
"Furring over, he piles the pelts on a sled, and starts homeward over river ice and snow. At the end of his trail, perhaps 200 miles away, is home and family, a wood fire roaring in the stove, potatoes bubbling in the pot an-' sleep—sleep—and more sleep."
How I Broke Into • The Movies f
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Sheila Is the Air Race Mascot
Birthplace of Christ Boasts Deep Sea Port
Haifa, Palestine.—The Holy Land, birthplace of Jesus Christ, has been Increased in size by 90 acres.
This Is due to reclamation* in connection with the building of Haifa's new harbor, now nearly complete. Some of the reclaimed land will be used for harbor and customs purposes. The remainder Is intended for a modern townplannlng scheme.
The new harbor, which is expected to be opened In October, has cost $6\250,000. The construction was begun In October, 192a The main breakwater is approximately one und a half miles long and consists of 7^,000 square meters of stone. The lee breakwater Is, roughly, half a mile long.
Orneriest Rodeo Horse Expires in Shame at 24
Billings, Mont.—Old Butterfly, "the orneriest, pitchingest horse that ever came out of a chute," is dead.
For 15 years Old Butterfly scattered riders over rodeo fields. He was nine years old when he discovered that it was easier to throw a rider from the saddle than to work, and for seven years he was never ridden.
Last fall he made his farewell appearance. Twenty-four years old, he squealed with rage as cowboys easily stuck to the saddle. His owner, Leo Cretner, attributed his death to brooding over this shame.
applying directly to the various states and cities.
For Inclusion In the Atlantic seaboard tabulation, according to Doctor Holland, only buildings at least one hundred years old will be considered. No structure huilt later than 1850 Is to be Included In the survey for any part of the country.
"In foreign nations, where architec-
By W1LUAM HAINES
TRUTHFULLY.. I broke Into th< moviea with a boil on my nose-
but more of that later. Let's start at the beginning.
If you ever hope to stay out of pictures never have your photograph taken. It gets to be a habit, like dope, and once you've started it you cant •top.
I was In New York, "just a young man trying to get along" by selling bonds. I -read all the books on salesmanship and attended all the meetings and hoped some day to be president of the firm. Then, 1 had my photograph taken.
The trouble with that Is you don't have Just one picture, you have an-
' other and another. I had so many 1 that 1 decided that I should, to save
my conscience, make this terrible habit pay, so { began posing for what the well-dressed man will wear.
I posed in suits and hats and overcoats, when I wasn't selling bonds— and that was most of the time, because I was a rotten salesman.
It was during the time when Gold-wyn Picture corporation was scouting the country for new faces. 1 heard •bout this search and as I had all the photographs taken that could possibly be taken, I felt that the moving picture field was the place to unload them.
I called at the office and as>my face despite my years, stilt seemed very new, I was given a test the next day. I gave up the bond business at once and waited to hear the outcome of the test. I waited three and a half weeks
LIFE'S LITTLE JESTS
The amateur band' |M held, hut something had foot wrong la the piece which had Jest been triad. Somebody had spotted the effect,
Tht conductor of the band glared f+*t the cornet player. "Why oo earth,"
ho yelled, "did you leave off playing Just as we got to the chorus?*
-Well" said the cornet player (a raw recruit), "on my music It said, •Refrain'—so 1 dldr
Grandpa's Static Grandpa was having his after
noon sleep tn the armchair and emitting sounds that might easily have come from a cross-cut saw. as father entered the room he saw little J scale twisting one or grandpas waistcoat buttons
"What are you doingT he whispered, "you mustn't disturb grandpa,"
T B not. daddy," said Jackie, 1 was Just trying to tune blm In on something different"
Slit'ilit
mascot at ^TselTmU-
Mrown, cliai Los AngeleH. hundred hours In the air, two transcontinental air flights, one forced
impion baby avlutrix, was appointed national air race She Is only three and one-half, but her amazing record
In the landing ami other aerial adventures qualified her as the official mascot of the air meet in July. Sheila is shown perched on the Bendlx trophy.
with trout and salmon; forests and barrens where fur-bearing animals roam. Eskimos and whites live along the coast, Indians In the Interior.
Pulp wood and Lumber. "Besides minerals, other wealth
lurks In Newfoundland's mainland domain. There are pulpwood and lumber In the southern forests of black spruce and white spruce, birch, cedar, poplur, and balsam fir; and 'white gold' lies latent In cataracts like Musk-rat falls. (Jrand falls, twice as high as Nlngnra. could be harnessed, it is estimnted, to produce more lhan 1,()00,-()00 horse power for a part of each year.
"Hut the sea, not the land, te Labrador's chief source of wealth today. So It has been since Cabot, letting down baskets into the sea, scooped them up full of codfish. Cod Is still king on this const, to the transient summer tist&erman from Newfoundland, and the 'llveyere,' who 'lives here' in Labrador all year round.
"Neither 'liveyere' nor Newfoundlander speaks of cod by that name Salmon Is salmon and trout Is trout; but cod Is always 'fish.'
"The 'liveyere,' like many Newfoundlanders, depends chiefly on the cod fishery for money to buy tea, flour, salt, pork, and molasses for the winter. When the cod 'sets In shore,* he leaves his home and-'potato patch at the head of the Inlet or fjord, and moves down to a shack on the outer coast for the summer. When the cod is running, fie works 20 hours at a stretch.
"Back home after winter sets In, he hunts and traps for fur, shoots ducks, and goes on a 'cruise* (visit) to neighbors, traveling from 40 to 400 miles over snow and Ice in a dog-drawn komatik, or sled.
Furs Source of Wealth. "Sometimes a mission holds a fair,
and dog teams gallop in from miles •round with sled-loads of families. The men hold a shooting natch, with a barrel of flour ns the prize. The girls fill supper habits, and the young men bid for them -and the supper partner who goes with them.
"Rich furs—fox and ermine, mink and otter, beaver and bear and musk-
Movement Is on Foot to Save Historic Buildings
New York.—A movement to preserve this country's historically and architecturally Important buildings has been started by the American Institute of Architects with the opening of a national survey of these structures.
The institute's' committee on the preservation of historic building, headed by Leicester H. Holland, chairman, Is compiling a list of such buildings. This list will be subdivided Into lists
ture Is of national importance, historic monuments are listed and cared for by the state,*' said Doctor Holland. "Here, where democracy leaves cultural affairs largely to public whim, it Is proper for architects organized In a national body to assume the leadership of popular lntpre_sj_tnpr«»sf>rv. ing Important monuments of ourpal
Not Guilty, Says Drunk, Actions Lead to Jail
Houston, Texas.—Arrested on charges of drunkenness, two men were haled before Police Judge Turner here.
"Guilty or not guilty?" the Judge inquired.
"Not guilty," replied Defendant No. 1.
"Not guilty," echoed Defendunt No. 2—but as he spoke he suddenly mistook the corner of the judge's desk for a lamp post and hugged it in the conventional manner of the inebriate.
Without further testimony both men were remanded to Jail.
Eaceptioa A little boy came borne from school
*ery»mucb annoyed with bis teacher. Little Boy—1 hate her! His Mother—Oh, you mustn't say
that The Bible tells us to love everybody.
Little Boy—1 know, but she wasn't alive when the Bible was written.— Chelsea Record.
FOLLOWING "COPY*9
' • s *^
Flmd- e Symeeyw "Jack Newlyricb seems to hafw
quite a lot of commoa sense." "Dont let his mother hear yoo say
that; she hates anything common." —London Tit-Bits
TRACING HIM
Not to Be Used Little Jsne had been asked to show
the week-end guest to her room. Pausing on the way. she pointed out the bathroom, and touching one of the pretty embroidered towels, said: "Of course you know that these are not to be used."—Indianapolis News.
JUSTIFIED
White Friars Bach in England <»t-
Were Ousted 400 Years Ago by King Henry VIII.
New Guinea Tribe _. BcargJ)nlyTwins
, Brisbane, Australia.—Doctor Fortune, of Columbia university, arraying here from New Oninen. tells of an amazing discovery.
The Monduguma tribe develops the trait of twin-bearing almost to the exclusion of single births.
The*doctor maintains It Is due to s system of Intermarriage between cousins.
The women of the tribe do all the work. *
London.—After an absence of nearly 400 years the Carmelite mouks, known as White Friars, return to an established place among monastic orders In Great Britain.
The White Friars, so called because of a white mantle worn over the brown habit, held wide Iniluence and power in Great Britain until 1538, when Henry 'VIII ordered their headquarters In London to-be razed to the ground. Their chapel and buildings stood between Fleet street and the Thames, adjolnijog tpe temple, which was founded by the Templars.
Whltefrlars street still bears the name of the order, and a newspaper office In the district is called Carmelite house. But the monks have been gone for nearly four centuries, and were without a home in Kngland until the Catholic bishop of Southwark assigned his churches in Slttingbourne and Fa-versham to their care.
The White Friars wore their mantles as a sign that the order was founded tn ,Palestlne. It was established on Mount Carroel In 1212 by a Crusader named Berthold. White Friars are not common, however, the two at Slttingbourne and Faversham. being the only ones In England.
When their London monastery was founded during the Crusades the order Immediately attracted royal support, and Edward II gave the White Friars great latitude. Their priory and church were rebuilt In 13.T0, when It was said that several hundred monks lived there, enjoying wide popularity both as preachers and confessors.
An example of their power Is found in the fact that almost from the first the order had the rlsrht of sanctuary. Any fugitive from justice could take refuge* there for forty days unless accused of treason or sacrilege. The right was retained until 1607, long after the monastery and church had disappeared After the suppression of
the monastery the place became a no* torlous haunt of outcasts.
The White Friars are altogether distinct from the other order of Carmelites founded by St. Teresa in 1562. Members of this group are known as DIscalced Carmelites, because they wear sandals Instead of shoes and stockings.
TO DESIGN PLANES
Will iam Haine*.
and was, at the end of that time, seriously contemplating going hack into the bond business, wheft I had a call to come to the office at once.
Shall I ever forget going into that office and being told that I was to start for California at once to mak« pictures! A girl had been chosen to be given a contract, too. She was in the office signing up and getting her Instructions.
I remember that she wore a Cur coat and a little fur hat and pretty flat-heeled slippers. Her hair was light— what I could see of it under her hat— and her eyes were a blue-gray. This other new discovery was Eleanor Boardman.
I arrived at the studio in a big way, with the boil on my uose. But It passed away with time and I began getting the habit of motion pictures. •That's how I broke Into the movies."
Perhaps those who rejoiced most at my entrance Into the cinema world were my former employers in the bond house and those New York photographers, who really started me on my downward path.
WN'U Service
"Why did they expel Mr. Crow from the Country club?"
"Oh. for caws.'
"Where Is Jonesr "Cruising around somewhere in the
business section.** *Td like to see him. Are you ac
quainted with any of his coaling stations r .
Too Much Competition "Excuse me, sir, but have you flsv
Ished your soup?" "Yes. Why do you s s k r "Now we can begin the concert."
—Olten VVoche tm Blld.
A Problem "So you like your. two lorera
equally?" "Yes. dad 1 simply don't know
which to marry flrsL"—Venice Qas-settlno lllustrato.
Followed Infractions "Did you do as I told you. Mary,
and ask whether the chicken wss young or old before you bought It?"
"Yes. ma'am; It Is old."— Dublin Opinion.
Rare Meat XAndlady—Do you like your beef
this rare, MlssPhTnrr
Mitunderstanding "Were you never tempted to be
come a llnqulst?H
"What's the use?" rejoined Senator Sorghum. "Even the people who speak the~~saTne language are—no-longer able to come to an understandings—Washington Star,
Boarder—Since you ask me; It Is too rare—1 would like It a little oftener.
Determined "It Is not the time to ask me for
a Job. My goods are being seised tomorrow."
"Do you know If they want any body to help seize them?"—Lausanne L'lllustre.
New Models Dick's father Is an automobile sales
man. Recently his sister came home displaying pennies she had earfTed. The lad looked them over and said:
"I'd sure like to have them, they are the new models."
No Tips Old Gentleman—There's been no
change here for ages—has there? Walter—Not under the p l a t e s -
London Humorist.
No Duckt "Mamma, there's a man here at the
door to see you." "Does he have a bill?" "No, mamma. Just a plain nose!"
Singing Wife (at bathroom door)—Dinner's
on the table, John. Hurry and flntse - *
Husband—Coming, dear! Just one stanza and I'm through.
UNIQUE
ulllltifcm •MM
l*7T W» If
. / y
"They say opportunity knocks but once."
"Yes, it's the only knocker that stops there."
H o l l y w o o d M a k e u p A r t i s t s Supply New Faces for Old
The makeup men of Hollywood, who have done wonders for both male and female players from time to time, making beauties occasionally out of rather plain-faced folk, seem to be headed for fresh triumphs. At any rate, they have now solved the problem of furnishing completely new faces for old, to be worn temporarily. '
"The beauty of It," says Percy West-more, who Is..'Chief of the makeup department of the Warner studios, "Is the absolute plasticity of the whole thing. We are now able to create a completely new face, using the actor's own features as a foundation, which Is completely In contact with, his own facial muscles at every point and which he can vivify at will, more easily than the fingers of your hand can move Inside a silk glove."
HIS ERROR
Young Klchurd Dupont, twenty-two-year-old heir to the fabulous Dupont fortune, has h4a own Weas^f the career he wishes to follow. Instead of becoming an elite sportsman, learning his father's business, or merely drifting In the best social circles, Richard plan's to learn the trade of airplane designing and aeronautical engineering. He started In as "grease monkey" at the Curtlss-Wrlght School of Aeronautical Engineering at the Grand Central airport, Los Angeles, getting In his hours et-the controls of student planes,
»» J a c k H o l t L a u n c h e d H i s
S c r e e n C a r e e r " S t u n t i n g Jack Holt launched his screen ca
reer several years ago as a "stunt" man and shortly became a western star. As such he rose to unprecedented heights; When the popularity of ••cowboy*1 films began to wane, Holt on the verge of retirement was signed by Columbia for a series of pictures. Since then he has appeared In such outstanding productions as: "Flight," ••Submarine." "Father "and Son." •Hell's Island," "The Last Parade," "Dirigible," "Subway Express," "Fifty Fathoms Deep," "A Dangerous Affair," "War Correspondent," "This Sporting Age*' and "Man Against Woman."
"Jones Is a self-made man." "I know. He surely made a mis
take in not consulting an expert."
Forbidden "My wife has been forbidden, to
cook." "Is she 111?" "No, 1 am."—Madrid Buen Humor
X A Little Premature First Little Girl—What's your last
name, Marie? Second Little Girl—I don't know
ret; f s lnt married!
Saving Dad Trouble Irate Parent—When that young
cub who's paying you attention cornea again i i i sit on him.
Daughter—Oh. let me do It, fa~* t'ner.
Rare Sight ? Blinks—The papers say there are
a lot of counterfeit twenty-dollar bills In circulation.
Jinks—Huh! There are so few genuine ones (n circulation, any ty-dollar bill I got would convince; It was counterfeit.
1» I V W
•-} f 1&_
His Humbla Opinion Motorist (Inquiring his way)—
Boy, am I all right for the coo? Bright Lad—As far as I know yoe
afe, Mister, but I'm not running the too.—Montreal Gazette,
Soda) Question Mrs. Newrlch—What Is that? Mr. Newrlch—Just a common
squirrel. "Should I notice It?"—London Tit-
Bits,
Weekly Reminder Friend—You will soon forget
and be happy again. Jilted Suitor—Ob, no, | shSntt
TTS bought too much for her on the/"* installment system I — London swers.
^ ^ ^
^
SWEETENS THI BRIATH
r-yi.il Jiwpw. ^ • * '
** 1»
.^•(Mw*. -.'V
Pinckney Diipatch Wednesday, November 22, 1933
S T A T E OF MICHIGAN
Th« Circuit Court for tbe County of Livingston in Chancery
Bert Thomas, Plaintiff -vs.
Maude Harr is Swarthout, Harry Catteil and Faye Caitell, his wife, LUlie Parsons, Wm. CattelL and Margaret Catteil, his wi le ; James Catteil, Carl Hame, • William R. Catteil, Albert Catteil, John A. P. Catteil, Sidney L. Catteil, Thos. H. Catteil Garden K. Catteil, and their wivets, whose first names are
M. Anns', f unknown, Emma Barker, Dora vings Bank , Smith, Carrie J . Morton, Sarah
a Michi-, E. Thompson, Lillie A. Windsor, *Mty and Mary K. Munson, and Sylvia V . n C o u n t y Burch and Paris B. Giltner and n Septe ii-j Kula Giltner, and the unknown _,.-
of Mort-! heirs, devisees, legatees or assigiii ch tlid of any of said defendants who assigned t may be deceased,
Defendants. SUIT PENDING IN THE CIRCUIT' COURT FOR THE COUNTi Or LIVINGSTON; I N CHANCERY,
NEIGHBOR"
ank to wn and
segre-s of the
»e«t A T HOWELL, MICHIGAN, THIS
r i
I
and appurtenances longing or in anywise appertaining, and If the said :ptemjses he improved with a building designed for occupancy as an apartment house, family hotel, or for commercial or business purposes, also together with all disappearing bed*, ice-boxes, equipment for heating, lighting, cooking, mirrors, door and window shades, screens and awnings, and such other goods, chattels, and personal property as are ever furnished, by a landlord in letting or operating in unfurnished x building^ similar to the bUihltngs upon the mortgaged premises and now or hereafter installed therein by the Mortgagor* or their assigns, which shall—b ;' deemed j — - i Q o f Plea between the parties h*veto v>awd,'•• ,division, >? ail parties claiming by, through or under them, an IV.M ssion_ to the freehold and a par t of the realty and encumbered by this
ston Oihc-o page
ere is urn of
forty C*JUtS
e date ney fee J l>y the
suit or proceedings l a w ' o r in equity • kaving bevii
instituted to recover the debt 'Skcured by said mortgage or any part thereof. NOW THEREFORE, by- virtue of the power of sale contained in said mortgage and in pur-
casc here
by, given tha t on Monday, the lo th day of January, 1933, at ten o'clock 3n the forenoon, Eastern Standard Time, said mortgage will be foreclosed by ,sa le at public vendue to the highes^ bidder at the southerly entrance to the Court House in the, Ciy, of Howell, Livingston County,
ruancc o,f the statute in such made and provided, notice is
6TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1113« P R E S E N T : HON. JOSEPH H. COLLINS, CIRCUIT JUDGE
In this cause it appearing from the" affidavit of p l a i n e r on til- and other proofs satisfactory to the court now here, that Win. Catteil and Margaret Catteil, his wife; James' Catteil, Carl Hame, William R. Catteil, Albert Catteil, John
, A. P Cattell,Sidney L. .Catteil, Thos. H. Catteil Gordon E. CattelL, and their wives, whose first names an. unknown; Emma Uarker.Dom Smith Carrie J . Morton, Sarah E. Thompson, Lillie A.Windsor, Mary E.Mus-son and Sylvia V.Burch, an; not residents of the state of Michigan, but are residents and reside in the- Province ofy Ontar io ; .and tha t it cannot be ascertained in what state or count ry the defendants, Paris B. Giltner and Eu ia Giltner, reside, and tha t it cannot be ascertained in what .^-tat" or country the unknown heirs, devisees, legatees or assigns of ^aid
erected r*n<*igan, of the premises described I defendants may reside; in said mortgage which premises I On Motion of Shields & Smith, are 'descr ibed as f o l l o w : (a t to rneys for plaintiff, it is ordered
•'•-. y' j that th*e appearance of the defefld-1 0¾ nine ,and tire west half of l o t i an t s n a m e d ' i n the proceeding pa.-a-
lea^ahl Luke Hilts Sub-\grapTTtre entered ill this cause with-
21 »
1 * .
Hills being on
Indenture.
Dated i Oc tober ; - 7tn71 ' ) 3 3 -
Glenn C. YelLmd Circuit C&drt Commissioner Livingston County, Michigan
Stevenson, f iu tzc l , Eamen & Lpng, 2288 First National Bank BWg. Detroit, Michigan.
'Attorneys for Plaintiffs. 0
MORTGAGE SALE i iEPAULT having been made for
more ttl»n thirty days in tho conditions of a certain mortgage made by Wal ter Isaac Reason and Mae Reason, his wife, to Joseph-L. Arnet dated the thirteenth day of October A, D- 1032, and recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds the County of Livingston and Stat' of Michigan, on the thirteenth da of Octobdr A. D. 1032, in Libc 135 of Mortgages, on pagos 570-thorcof; on which mortgage there i claimed to be due and unpaid a the date of this notice, for principu and interest, the sum of Thru Hundred Seventy-two and forty-si hundredths Dollars, ($372,4(4), un no suit or proceeding at law or i uquity having been had or institut to recover the debt secured by .mil mortgage, or any par t theeof;
Now, therefore, by virtue of t power of sale contained in sai mortgage, and pursuant to t statute in such case made and pr v i d e d , NOTICE IS HEREB GIVEN, that on Friday; the seco day of February, A. D. 1!>34, ten o'clock in the forenoon, East? Standard Time, said mortgage w be foreclosed by a sale at publ vendue to the highest bidder at t
^Westerly entrance to the Cou House in the City of Howell, Livin ston County, Michigan, ( that bein the place where the Circuit for the County of Livingston held) , of the premises described l gaid mortgage, or so much thereo MM w a y be necessary to pay th
" S L w u n t due in said mortgage a J f c c s a i d , with 6 percent inter-tkereon and all legal costs, charge? aTld expenses, including the attorney fees allowed by law and any sum or sums which may be paid by undersigned mortgagee a t^or before
^ajd sale, necessary to P r o t e < * , interest in the premises, ^Whkh
- premises arc described as followi: Land in the Township of Unadffla,
\ County of IJvingston and State Michigan, more particularly described as follows to-wit: Tho
* west seventy (70) acre? of the , east half of the southeast quar ter ^9l #wttoo Bombtr thirteen LW,
Annex, being on 'he . j n three months from the date her.-Bout^-eastf quar ter of t h - south- 0f, a n d tha t ! within forty days* ej*St. quar ter of section fifteen, plaintiff cause this order to b>* town one north, range five east, j published in the I tnckney Dispatch, and.southwest one quar te r of the 0 f Pinckney, Michigan, said publica-!
^southwest one quar ter of section t i o n . t 0 ^ continued once in each! Tourteen7~town_ one north,
the
County Clerk John' H a g m a i will handle the auto license plates l*t the coming year.
26* ^nembers of the music class of Fowlerville high school broadcast over station WJR last Tuesday morning a t 1):15 A. M .
John Lewis and Duane Phelphs of Stockbridge shot two wild geese hu t week weighing 8 lbs. each.
James Crumbaugh, formerly of Lakeland and Hamburg is now proprietor of the Stockbridge hotel.
Lloyd Beeman of Stockbridge and Katherine Rice of Detroit were recently married.
A ton .of welfare pork will be shipped to Ann Arbor for the Livingston county welfare department .
An independent basket b a l l league will be organized at Howell by the Student Union.
Putnam township's tax for 1034 will be $604K.*rt). $5^) .20 is state tax, $31222.(10, county and .$S5G.5H pooi- and insany.
The Chdsea Standard report*--thut :$4 citizens of that , place are north deer hunting.
The re-organization plans of the First State Bank of Brighton have be -n approved by the state banking board and that hank will resume business on Jan. 2, U>34.
At u meeting held at the Triangle west of Howell, the Livingston I county automobilt.' dealers org;inized with the following officers: Pros., C. L. Hughes, Brighton; vice pres.,Fred j Slayton. Pinckney; sec.-treas., Chas. Stevens, Howell.
A meeting was held at the Howell high school last Thur^lay night futile purpose of organizing a city La ket ball l eagw
E. C Reid of Fenton, has been appointed receiver of the Linden State Bank.
* » ELECTRIC RANGE
IF you to f ii:
ion >vant :d out
w h e t h e r o r n o t y o u l i k u e l e c t r i c cook* inp , v e arc b i l l i n g t o make a dcniouctration vitl iout «(»•1 to )tiu. ^'o will iti»«tail an c 1 e c t r i c r a n g e iii yoIiFlTt< I:<• 11 without initial cliur;;v, ui-il J< L jtm \ibc it fur t i \ ironthK, irn.if -ii'K it without ihaij-c it' \<n <l , n<»t like it. We want \<m to '\"]i\ electric ciMikinp in \ o e r n\s r. }<<i\---before making an in\cMmci;l.
During the trial juritxi, M>U JUS for the K*r\icc as rc}ri^lc•le^l I , Jitur meter, ]>lii(» u numtlil) cliu;; • 4»f $1 for the Waldorf elcctr'f rar^u (KIIUWII beIo\s) ur ? 1.11,1 for t'.c
y.'ectrcK-hef. If you decide to keep ihe range, your nn)iithly paNtntu:.-> v i l l - l»c applied tovtuid i\.v pur-<ha»c price. If you decide thai )ou
ITEMS OF 25 YEARS AGO
•Dispatch of November 2<i, 1D08 Last Saturday morning a bad
wreck occured' on the '_ Ann Arbor railroad at 3:00 A. M. when two freight—trains -c-anie tugrtj^q-. Three
the re-Hamburg
County,
five east. According to corded plat thereof; Township, Livingston Michigan.
Dated: Pontiac Michigan October 5, 1933,
ROBERT WARDEN, DAN BROWN & IDA LUK-SCHE, Trustees for Segregated and S u b s t i t u t e
' Assets of the ings Bank, Mortgagee.
in -am suci
State Sav-Asiignce of
Kinney &'Adams, Attys. for assignor* of 415 Pontiac Bank Bldg. Pontiac, Michigan,
train men wen.- killed and one injured, also an unknown hobo died of his injuries.
On account of the "non-arrivid of supplies Mgr. Glenn -Gardner has be<-n unable to get hU electric lij^ht plant .'tailed.—4+e HS—st41V—,vrTTTrrg'
mortgagee
Cou
pursuant to the statute case made and provided.
Joseph H. Collins, Circuit Judge
John A. Hagman, County Clerk. ' ' ' n
This suit involves and is brought to quiet title to land located in tlN' Township of Unadilla, Liviiigston County, Michigan, Klesjr-ribed a.s follows. • , . \\>^
"Commencing on thx: section line between Sections 34 and 3-r», 24 rods South of tlfc F^ast (p.iar-tet post and in the center of highway | (called Ingham S t . ) ; . runnr.ng| thence West (i rcyls; then<-e South j 56 rods ; thom-e ?kist <1 reeds to section l ine; thrnce South along j section line, to high water mark j of the 'Mill Pond ' ; thence Northeasterly- along shore of said pond to land now owm*l by Ralph Teachout ; thence in a Noi'l h< ::st-erly direction along said |Teacli-out 's West -line IS rods and ;"> feet ; t henw Northwest aloit,^ tlv West .<Ula of the Pre.»b>llerian Chuix-h property to ceiiti r of highway (Jngha,|-n S t r e e t ) ; l l v n c c >a!ong said highway Nortliv\e>t-erly to the place of beginaing, being about IK acres of lairdt on Sections 34 aud lio, Townsliif 1 North, Range 3 East , Michi .rati."
Shield-; & Smith. ' Attorneys for Plaintiff, Howell, Michigan.
ONE 35F24
RANK PLASKO OCAL AND LONG D I S T A N C E
UCKING. U V E STOCK. F l * l -1TURE, NO J O B TOO BIG, N O
J O B TOO SMALL Mak« R»g«Ur Trips to D a t r ^ t
Ev t ry W««k PINCKNEY* MICH.
GUS RISSMAN Licensed Master PIuv tber
Plumbing smd Hea t i ng e D« Plumbing and Heat-tag of All
W e Handle EJeeti-ic Purap*, Tanks and Wate i i Freaesjrc
Tanks I am prepared to serr iee encr repair] 6 0 4 Washington Ho woU. Mich.
•11 makes of radk>.-^lso c a n y a full, P h o n # 6 1 0 R ^ a i r W o r k c f A U xind* line of Ever-Ready tubes. Whtn i i ; need of radio service give rno a call, j — — ^ - — — ^ - ^ - —~ Phone No. 72 PincVney !
Marvin Shirey Pinckney Dispatch $^.25 yr.
10 SERVICE
houses. Saturday a Hock of o00 ?>hcep
went through town on the way from Lenawee county to the farm of J, ]». Tazman of Oak (Jrove.
This issue contains a letter from (.'. L. (Irimes who is teaching school at Dillei, Neb.
..The Pinckney football team plays Stockbridge at Stockbridge today.
M»f> was cleared at the experience social lie Id. at t lv home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sigler last Wednesday evening.
Living-ton Lodge No. 7K an.I the O. I-]. S. Chapter met at the home of C. V. V'anWnikle last Tuesday evening to give Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Van Winkle a farewell party. They mo\e to Lansing Dec. 1 where-Mr. VanWinkle will engage in business with <-'. I). Pennett .
Kev. K. II. Crane, foi- many years a Pinckney minister, died' at Hart-larul Nov. ]\K The funeral- and burial were there.
Miss Mary Ann (Mark her home here Nov, liO years she iia.> been an accuunt of a fall many The funeral acd burial Sutulay.
Mr. and Mr.-. Kn-d Ki on the Prown farm east of town.
u_ . . NOTES OF 50 YEARfi AGO
Dispatch of November 22, IKX.'l John Can- is teaching school in
the. Lyman P.eneh district, Marion. Charles Crinn - has been engaged
as principal of the Eaton Rapids school.
Maj. Anderson arrived yesterday and is now engaged in taking up deeds for the railroad right of way.
Will Thompson and John Mc-Intyre left for the Ogemaw region to hunt, Tuesday.
Charles Ellis and Dell Carr have taken the contract to set five miles of fence posts for the Crand Trunk west of Pinckney.
The Washtenaw poor house reports that there are now HO inmates there.
Uncli* John Love, 74, of Marion
do not want k, the range will be rcinoscd at our expense.
V< itlt an electric rangr, you <<M 1 .ike perfect mimrwrat pirn like 11.e onr above. Famous chefs for K-rtluricK ha\c > ied in baking the", f!aW>, lifjbt crut-l and f|)i«y, >ui<y ••IMKIIM^S of the filling. And you, with an automatic cleclric o»ea n: (\ it*» fjenllc r.lretric beat, can l-ak<s the SAME KIM) <>K I'lK i;i •,our kitchen. An rleitrie range, \* ill) itr* accurate i^eu < u«itrol,endA p i c ^ u o r k iu bakiup. You ran 11: ml ui e uniformly li ne results time a! tor time. You simply set tbc dial fur the correct temperature, anil
the electric o \ en does the rest.
bend in yonr application for a trial range tod a--.
Jamitir* utimg «n *irrtrte range thotrtd m t*mking
eottmf
by Hard tear** Store*, ctrirat Drulrig and
THE DETROIT EDjSON co if
who use dt to age beer. Married !at Dextfr Nov. 12, CLn -
imctTtfwyt'nU'r to Mi.,,> Emma (iafrh gan of Northfield.
(ieorge Weston of De\ te r i landlonl at the I'nadilla hou-e w h11-mint' host, A. (i. Weston, i., nott'i iiunting.
Will Uirnie has hired out to Robert Marshall, for this whiles.
Two bears were found in Mi' r-wood's woods last w e k about j 1 ; miles northwest of Fowlerville.
<;:{, died at For many invalid on years ago. were held
h are living
STATE OF MICHIGAN The Probate Court for the County
of Livingston At a session of said court, held at
the Probate Office in the City of Howell in said County, on the 17th day of November A. D. ID.'j.'i.
Present : Hon. Willis L. Lyons, Judge* of Probate.
In the Matter of the Estate of Joseph Vallar, Deceased.
Natalie Savage having filed in said court her petition, praying that fi ceitain instrument in writing purport ing to be th.- last will and testament of said deceased, now on file in said court, be admitted to probate and that the administration of *;ii<l estate be g t a n t ' d to i11• r•:- 1 **, if the executor refuses to accept the trust, or to some other suitable person.'
IT IS OUDERKD, That th
puinti d .^o -neceive,examine and adjust all • el amis and demanls again.st f ii<l rteTT7I>eTr~Dy and befoi-t* "^aTT court :
IT IS ORDERED, That creditors of ^aivl deceiised are required to present their claims to said court at said I'robate Office on or before tin D'fch day .'of March, A. I). 1H34, a t t e n o'clock . in- the forenoon, said lime and place being hereby appointed for the ' examination and adjustment of all claims a n d demands against said deceased.
I T IS ECKTHER ORDERED, That public notice thereof be given by publication of a copy of this oi-der for three ..successive weeks previous to said>day of hearing, in the Pinckney'Dispatch, a newspaper .printed and circulated in said county.
Willis L. Lyons, Judge of Probate,
copy: r.irshall, .""
A t r ue
Cele.- i ia Regi.-ter of Probate
TI »e
STATE OF MICHIGAN Probate Court for the C«an«^
of Livingston At a session of «aid court, hH.I
at the Probat" Office in the City «f Howell in said County, on the <ith day of November, A. P. 1H.W.
I Presen t : Hon. Willis L. Lyons, I sth , Judge of Probate. >,
day of December A. I). l!i:;:t at ten o'clock in the forenoon at said probate off>e, he and is hereby appoint-ed for hearing said petition.
In the Matter of the Estate of Erastus C. Hinchey, DnVasrd.
It appear ing to the 'cour t that the* time for presentation » of claims
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ! against said estate should be limited, That public notice thereof be given and t h a t a time and place bo by publication of a copy of. this, appointed to receive, examine and order, for three successive weeks j adjust all claim.- and demand* previous to said day of hearing, in ! against said deceased by and before the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspaper I said c o u r t : .
and circulated prnited county. '.
Willis Judg»
A true copy. Cclostia Par.shall, Register of Probat<
O.
in
L. Lyons, of Probate
a i d IT IS ORDERED, That creditors of said deceased are required to present their claims to said court at said Probate Office on o r ' before the 12th day of March A. D. 1!>34, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, said time and place being hereby appointed for the examination and adjustment of all claims and
County demands against said deceased. IT PS F U R T H E R ORDERED,
•died of a heart attack Monday. H« was burning off his marsh when t h e ' t h e I 'robate Om.cc in tlv fire got beyond control and desJ-Howulr in. thti xaid C troyed several hay stacks. yHL.-il.13th day of NovembefT efforts to ftffht the fire a re tWbughtj Present, Hon. Willi-to have caused Mr. Love's death. • Judge of Probate
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Jackson are In tfce Matter * O b e visiting relatives in Ontario county, ' Jul ia Monroe, Deceased, New York.
The Northwestern
STATE OF MICHIGAN The Probate Court for the
of Livingston I At a session of said court Wld at That public notyjfc JJiereof be jrven
Cji&s* of by publication of a copy of thi ,-*- - - - v - - - copy ?th<', ^ruVr, for- t r f rw ^TJccFSsl^e
L 1033. {previous to sard day of hearing, in
Lyons, the Pinckney Dispatch, a newspajker printed and circ-ulatcd in said coun-
Et te te of lv.
| Willis L. Lyons, / ' j It appear ing to the court thiU, the i Judge of Proba te . *'
Lutnberman time, for presentation of claims A true copy. •""""" * asserts that immense quanti t ies of against ."aid estate should b-u limited,' C--lestin Pnrshnll,
heinlocJ> bar^ ar« »oW ta brew«n aivi that u tituc and ulacc bu ap. Register of Probata *" TZT"'" 1
•f-
* ^ L - ^ ,
'*kt t J b#h •Meflfatt
MI%IJPJR! I".
ftAMBURG
The Playhouse of Livingston County W«d., Tkur., Fri., No* 2 2 - 2 3 - 24
Sweetheart of Them All
JANET GAYNOR « WARNER BAXTER IN •PADDY, THE NEXT BEST THING"
Harry Langdon in "Marriage Humor" Fox.J^ewj MICKEY MOUSE in "Ye Olden Days"
Don't Miss This One
Fable
Sat , NOT. 25
ZANE QREY'S STORY 'THE LAST TRAIL"
With Gefr O'Brien Mickey McGuire in "Mickey's Touchdown"
"Tarzan the Fearlcsj" No. 1» Mat. 2 P. M. 10c and 20c
— BIG FEATHER PARTY — Loads of Poultry FREE at 8;30
Sun., Mon., Nov. 26 - 27
Lillian Harvey & Lew Ayres in "MY-WEAKNESS"
Comedy "Dora's Dunkey D'&ighnuts" Novelty and Radio reel C Mat. San. 2 P. M. to 11 P. M. Con. t Tuw. Nov~~28 —
• "LADIES MUST LOVE" With Wfcil Hahiilton
Comedy—"Mer>-:y Yours" \ •*• • . Novelty—"Silent Enemy" Wod., Thur.. Fri.. Sat., Nov.',29 - 30 - D«<. 1 • 2
Mat. Thanksgiving Day 2 P. M. Co.V 4 MARX BROS.
* IN "DUCK SOUP" i
r Their (ireate.it Laugh
*+*m
zh\ i plenty this wimer MOTOR IN THE
SHELTER OF H a D e e s Hot Water Heat
\ Wort has been received here o the death of Jule Galloway Royce who died at hu late home in Loe Angeles, Cal., Friday, November 10 after a long illness from apoplexy. Funeral services were held, Monday, November 13. Mr. Royce was about 66 yean of age and is survived by the widow, one daughter, Mrs. Pat Warner and three grandsons of Los Angeles; one brother, Paul Royce
j of QjKQsao and five nieces and one nephew. Two brothers, Charles and Aubrey Royce are deceased.
Mr. Royce was the son of Burton Royce and Mrs. Ida Grisson Royce and was born at Hamburg where he lived many years* His maternal grandfather, Ferdinand Grisson, was one of four brother.* to come here from Hamburg, Germany, in 1884. At a meeting held in Marchl 1835 for the purpose of naming the town he and two of his brothers were given that privilege. They npjned it Hamburg after their native town in Germany. In April 1887 Hamburg village was plotted, Ferdinand Grisson and four others being the proprietors. Mr. Grisson and brother, John F. Grisson built the first store in Hamburg village, he also built the grist mill and bote1
and was postmaster at Hamburg fo 20 years. His father, Burton Royce and Grandfather, George H. Royce were in the general merchantile business in Hamburg for many years.
Hamburg Hoy Scout* held their regular meeting at their log cabin Frliay evening in charge of Scout-f master Dan J. Noeker. Little
Saturday evening. A good crowd attended t a t
chicken pie'supper last Wedne night. The proceeds were $30.'
IOSCO
Mr. and Mrs John Gilbnore o Tecumseh were recent visitors of I their daughter, Mrs Swen Jensen and Mr. Jensen.
Miss Genevieve Birney of Ann Arbor 3pent the past week with Mrs. Walter Miller.
George VanGorder is working fdrj Maude Crofoot this winter.
Mrs. Swen Jensen and daughter. 'S Patricia, had their tonsils remove*! at Lanitng last Thursday. r4
Mrs* Anna Christian of Nebraska' is visiting at the John Ruttman home.
Mrs Eli Jensen of Jackson is visiting Mrs. John Ruttman and Mrs. Swen Jensen. ' •
Mrs. Hannah Foster is visiting 8 Mrs John Armstrong.
Miss Neva Hoard-of Gregory called on Mrs. Walter Miller Monday.
Little Dorothy Jean the adopted daughter of "Mr ard Mrs. Walter Miller was taken seriously ill Sunday but is some better at this writing
UNADILLA
The farm home of Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Hadley burned to the ground Sunday. The community extends sympathy.
Barney D. Roepcke was a Howell and Ann Arbor visitor Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sweet are W a s ' spending some time at the latters
done except regular business and home. playing of Scout games. It wa? Born to Mr. and Mrs. Paul Char-voted to hold another card party at l i c o f Highland; Nov. 16, a baby
r .-a
Press a button, and presto!—* your car is as cozily comfortable as your home. Heat—loads of it—surges through the HaDees Hot Water Car Heater and is fan-blown to all parts of your c?.r. Little room required—the HaDees fits up under the cowl within easy reach of you* hand.
the cabin, Saturday evening, Decern ber 2. Two new members have been added to the troop: Joe Savage, a second class Scout, who was a member in California, and Jamej Hamlin a tenderfoot.
Manly W. Bennett, Lee Bennett, Clifford Broegman, James Hamlin. Joe Savage, Robert Smith and Wayne Williams, Boy Scouts, accompanied by James W. Featherly and Arthur C. Smith attended the Michigan-Minnesota football—__gam e
Ann
boy. Mrs. Charlie will be remember ed as Margaret McRobbie. Congratulations.
The George Meabon family of Pinckney were Saturday visitors at Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Marshall's
Mr. and Mrs. James Caskey and family attended the chkken supper and fair in Plainfield Wednesday night.
Mr. L. K. Hadley is confined to bi-s home since a fall last week. We wish for his speedy recovery.
Mr, and Mrs. Robert Sweet spent
Teeple Hardware! iiiiiiiiiHiiaiiniiuiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiMUitiiiiiiiii!iiii!iimitii&
Positive control of direction and volume of heat always—an original and perfected HaDees feature** Have a HaDees installed today and motor in coogr fort all winter.
Only in a "HaDees" will you f:id the patented aero-dynamic {•r\ that gives you more volume oit \c$% current.
"pttmi f i r * wU*n itV Crtd—
at the Wolverine stadium in Arbor Saturday afternoon, the £*>y; Sunday at the C. E. Sweet home Scouts acting as ushers. M u Ed Cranna is better at this
Word has been received here of w r;ting. the death of Frank Denson at hi?j M r a n d M n , G A Pyper and late home in Davenport, Wash., s o n delightfully entertained mem-October 23. Mr. Denson was b o r n i b e r s o f t h e Unadilla Band and their .at Hamburg^J^oyember 2, 1858,} f a m i H ^ a t a pot luck supper and whrrc he lived a good many years. | y o c i a j e v e n j n g a t "their home Friday He was united in marriage with' Miss Mary A. Smith, 1884, who passed away October
llG, 1:)23. He had lived at Devenport the past 30 yeor*. He is survived by
i | w o daughters, Mrs. Gladys Mansfield of Davenport and Mrs. Rcna
evening. February 201 R c V i a n d Mrs Rheingans wer;
Also a model for rear scita,
11«1 Does «£,'.. CAR HEATER
W. Braut of Olympia, Wajh., and stockbridge.
Chelsea callers Monday. Jack Donahue and Glenn Caskey
were Sunday callers at Jas. Caskcy's-George Olin Marshall spent thi
week end with Clyde Robeson of
two sons, Fred of Davenport and Verne of Rcardon, Wash., and six grandchildren. He was a cousin of Edward J. Sheridan of Hamb village. *'
Mrs. Mary E. Royce is visiting i her daughter, Mrs. Harry J.. Mur-
Harry Cooper was an Ann Arbot visitor Saturday.
MARION
Slayton & Son CHEVROLET SALES & SERVICE OLDS
phy and family at Kalamazoo Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam E.
attended a dancing party
Mrs. Margaret Clark returned tc her home in Detroit last week aftei
Pilgrim spending four weeks here with rela-at the tives
M I C H I G A N BELL TELEPHONE CO.
home of Mr. an 1 Mrs. Glen Hovn^ in Ann Arbor Saturday night.
Miss Grace Beebe spent the week end with her parent-?, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Becbe at Howell.
PLAINFIELD
Mr. J. W. Taylor of Mason was a Saturday
Mrs. Harry Coley entertai friend from Detroit over Su
Mr:<. Leslie Maycock, St, and Mrs. J. D. White visite Russel West at the State San Wednesday afternoon;
Miss Helen Hurd teacher i iliac schools attended the Minn, football game in Ann
Shirley Poirier Depicts Spirit Of Junior Red Cross in Movie
'•'f
guest Wednesday of Mr. C. 0. Dut ton.
Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Duttpn spent Friday afternoon with Mr. and Mr-. B. W. RobcrU
Mr. C. E. Donohue i> suffering | with erysipelas and under the doc-j
tor's care. Mn. Dan Lantis and Miss June
Tittus of Stockbridge were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Gau*\
I Mr. L. C. Gardner called Sunday 1 on Mr C. E. Donohue.
Aunt Maggie Grieve* moved in for the winter with Mr. and Mr*, j E. L. Topping this last week. !
Mr. H. J. Dyer and two sons, Milton and John, came home Sun-, day with a deer each from Montmorency county.
Mr. and Mrs. Gale Reasoner and two sons from Holt were Saturday guests at Mrs. H. J. Dyer's.
Mrs. B. W. Robert* and son. Mrs. Milton Dyer and son called Sunday at Mrs. H. J. Dyer's.
I Mrs. Ed Hoiscl an'l d Rosanne were guests of Mis Lavey in Pinckney Thursday
Mrs. Gus B. Smith attend funeral services Sunday for E. Browne in Howell.
Fred Howlett, steward State Sanitarium i> having hauled this winter with the teams and wagons. The past truclcs have been hind to hau coal which has been very exp beside leaving the teams idle teamsters out of work.
Earl Meyer and Gerald Wt returned Saturday from Hou Lake with an X point deei Mr. Meyer shot Wednesday mo •ibout 8 o'clock.
Alfred Pfau has taken up new duties, as Sales Tax Ad trator for Livingston a:id Shia counties. He succeeds Ray T Brighton who has charge of counties in southern Michigan
MAKE TELEPHONE SERVICE YOUR FAMILY GIFT
Telephone service in an ideal gift for the entire family, in countlew ways.
comfort and convenience for call friend*, shop, and "run"
the house.
1c business aid. He can call the employer, customers or business im at home when necessary.
reached easily by telephone and friends' good times.
hone gives assurance that in rase aid can be summoned instantly.
8 gift of telephone service totlay. be nituleatany lime yoi*g/>ecify. e Telephone Business Office.
PLAINFIELD CHURCH .MEWf S. S. at 10:30. Preaching by Rev
|-Ed S w d t t n g a t 1 1 :
i ; CHUBBS CORNER
C. E. leeting in evenjng at 7:30. sSRiat have Topic, Nov. 26:
to thank God for? The No. 2 Bibh cla^s met
f be Pwckney Dispatch $1.25 per yr
Friday with Mr. and MVs. M. M. Tsham.
The Christian Hustler S. S. class
win me with Jjus Mildred. Burt
I Mr."~and Mrs. J. M. B [ ."pent Sunday at the home of Mr.
wo and Mrs. McGlennon of WoW Stake. Wayne Wagner entertained the
last young people of the community at
1"
once for them a long and happy married life.
a dance Saturday evening. ) Mrs. C. Kingsley, :son, Glenn, Mr. j fc
and Mrs. Lloyd Bennett and Gloria} MrTTnd MrsT Ayrnottf spent
tnem a long and happy married life. I
I UOCELANDNEW5 jl * W. _ . .* W — ~ » _ - J I
Mrs, Robert Jack attended a bridge party at the home of Mr<. R. Rex at Detroit Wednesday and was a guest the rest of the week of Mr. and Mrs. William Lindsay
Mr. and Miv. Addison Collum of Strawberry Lake are spending some time with Mrs. Collum's brother, Frank Roach at Toledo, Ohio.
Mrs. Carl Brown of Durand was a guest Monday of^ her husband Mr. Brown, here. /
Mrs. Harry Lee an4 son. A£er , of this place and M r / Lee's moSer, Mrs. S. H. C a r ^ W Pinckney shopped in Jackson/Saturday.
C. H. Downing and grandson, Robert Downing, of Strawberry Lake are- -spendirtg some tljpwfTfe northern Michigan hunting
Mrs. T. L. Bourbonnais * J called to Detroit Tue3day""by the « serious illn~- • * •
serioha illn< daughter, J
Sunday tvnoon t Klwk spent Wednesday w Howell, Iflonfrj, William J. Van-
j*enous illness of her daughter-in-serioha iUnes ^of "her daughtcr-in-
| daughter, Michall Joan, was bom
Mrs. Bourbonnais on
*-\
>
r
Dispatch Wednesday, November 22, 1933
THE is™ STORES
7
t:ASH SPECIALS F O R FRIDAY AND SATURDAY, NOV. 24 AND 25
ALL PRICES IN THIS AD INCLUDE I MICHIGAN SALES TAX S>
Ik.Pinckney Dispatch E n t e r e d a t khe Post«ffice 'tt P i n c k n e y , Mich ju Secctid C law M a t t e r .
Subscr ip t ion $1 .25 a in Advance .
tiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiini^iiiniuiHiiuiuiiuiiunniuii
I Mr. Farmer and Mr, Poultry man I We have just added the
?A\JL C U R L E T T PUBLISI:ER = DR. LEGEAR
* H k T
CHEESE, A VERY FINE QUALITY MADE IN MICHIGAN 1 lb. 15c
MACARONI, in bulk, 2 lb 15c MACKERAL, Fresh Pack, can .... 10c
PINK SALMON, lge. can 13c RED SALMON 20c»
SUGAR, CANE SUGAR FINE GRANULATED 5 lbs. 25«;
*JXATES^ lb. pkg. 25c
• RAISINS, seeded, 4 - 1 lb. pkg 29c
I i MOLASSES. Isbest, I qt.
JELLO, all favor, per pkg.
PRUNES, lge. 40-50 size, lb 12c ^ _ APRICOTS.quality extra gobajBTl 8c
RAISINS,' Seedless, 4 lbs" . 1 ° . 29c | HONEY, Pure & Clean, card 10c
13c i
k 25c J 10c J lQci
23c!
Miss Drue ilia Mi'abon was h o m e , 5 from Howell the week end. S
Mr. ami Mrs. Oscar Beck of De- ' 5 tro i t a r c vis i t ing re la t ives he re . I E vv
Mr. ani Mrs M. i. Graves ami § W e c a n *uppiy yoar needs in any of the folk>#ingi family were J a c k s o n v is i tor i F r idey . 5
Mis.s Alice Metev ie r of Ypj i lan t i j | S T O C K P O W D E R S was a week end gues t of Robe r t S tackab le .
Mr. and Mrs. I. J . Kennedy of [Howel l were in Pinckney on busi-I ness last T h u r s d a y . j Mr. a n d Mrs. E d w a r d Clark of ; Ann A r b o r spen t Sunday wi th
P inckney re la i tves .
j Willh-ni {.'oilier has purchased \ the p rope r ty of the late Mrs. J u l i a i Monroe in th i j vi l lage.
j . . M i i S u r a h Byer, Mrs. Will Ken-j nedy and Mrs. Oscar Beck were in \ Howell last Wednesday .
; M \ and Mrs. Louis Coy If a t t end
e d tlii- f u r e ra l of J a m e s McMann a t
I .South Lyon last Wednesday ,
i M.-. ami Mrs. Lee Lavey and s o n , |
Line of Veterinary Medicines
1 COW PRESCRIPTIONS |
I HOG PRESCRIPTIONS POULTRY POWDERS |
| LICE POWDER POULTRY WORM POWDER | i -S Call at our store and we will be glad to give you a § 5 complete booklet entitled "Live Stock Manual" or i § "pmplete Poultry Guide". M I Either of These Books FREE. """ §
I FLOYD W^E&S-' I Prescript ion Druggist MmiiniiiiimiHiiMiuniiiiiiiniminminiHiiniiiiniiimiiii "MUMtimwmm-
< . \ , O l ) e
Mr
COFFEE, MILLARS, 1 lb. pkg. 19c GREEN & WHITE 3 lb 50c MAXWELL HOUSE, 1 lb. can 29c
CRACKERS. 2 lbs. LUNCH COOKIES, 1 lb 16c OATMEAL COOKIES, 1 lb 19c
rL, .-pent S u n d a y with Mr. a n d M' H a r r y Lavey in Detroit . T
Lyle I Jul r is spending some t ime | with his sister, Mrs. B. B. Cooden , I and Mr. Coodcn a t Fai rhope , Ala. \
Loui.- C o y l ' and w i t " were d i n n e r I •^m s.s last Wodne-day of Mr. and *•• Mrs. Micha-1 Ryan in South Lyon. ' ?
Cecil UetMlee of Mich. S t a t e ' I colh g- <[>• nt Sunday with his p a r - , '
• k i i t - . Mi-, and Mrs. \V. C. H e n , h e . J
G E L A T I N E D E S E R T , Def iance , .. 5c j j Mr. ami Mr,-, H. A. cehring.-r <,;,t'
" >i
PEANUT BUTTER, 2 lb. jar, NO. 2 CAN PEAS NO. 2 CAN CORN
KREMEL, 2 for
\ SOAP, 10 Bars v 9 I MILK, 3 tall cans 19c J CAMPBELL'S SOUPS, pre can 9c
B I G F O U R WHITE NAPHTHA
9C I !A.!.-i:
23c! gues t s
•
I
IVORY SOAP, Medium IVORY SOAP, Large
BUTTER, FRESH CHURNED IN 1 LB. CARTONS
5c * lOcJ
25c
tn wci-e S r v l a y <linnei
j of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Stackable _
I Mr. and M i s John Mart in and J / on, Leiiiui 1, were in Ann A r b o r : 2
I S a t u r d a y .
| Met Cnelker is again the o w n e r ( E •of th. dance lial) and store a t P a t - ' J W t
k v - ^ m ^ ' WKUh |U" Sald tU J01 ' • U * h t & H e a y y Hauling of All Kinds. Moving 'H Weekly Trips Made to Detroit
if. MEYER *
MIRACLE WHIP SALAD DRESSING
V2 PT. SIZET PT. SIZE
J Mr. and Mrs. Orville Nash and -on, Lloyd, spent the week end with |
t O c • j M. I'. aTuI MTT T. Davenpor t Tn^"
QT. SIZE
C. H. KENNEDY PHONE 23FT
t Foot Bail Game
At Pinckney
Sunday, Nov. 26th at 3:00 P. M.
i
Pinckney Independents
vs
!
ami .Mrs. J
18c I 'ToK-1«,. 3 0 c • 1 ^11-- ar'' ^Ir>- A- lf- ^Iu|,p'hy
p i son, Di .k , spent Sunday with her 4 fi-t' ']-. Mrs. He rman , and Mr. Her-• I'man in Detroi t . ? • M i ' s . K . 11. W i l e e l , - ! ' (,1- D e x t e r
W E D E L I V E R j [ t o w n s h i p l^ll ^O^hruk^^luu—^ ^. I one day last week. She is now at
j the P inckney S a n i t a r i u m . j Mrs. F rank ie Leland and daugh-
Ann ' tei-, Ca rmen , M i •;. ( iene Dinkel, Mr. j and Mrs. C J. Clinton a t tended the
j M j (|uilt .-how in Detroi t Sunday.
W a l t e r Collins who ha.- been staying with Mel Cha lke r for a couple of W'-ek- has accept ' d a position on a large dai rv farm south of Ann Arbor . (
(ieorg'- Civim r ha I a horse <••> badly ^'ored by a y o u n g heifer hist \ /eek tha t it dii d. 'I'hy liorse was ' tied in a -lail and unable to defend its. If. |
Miss Dnrotiv a Kinn»y of W h i t - ' ni'n'e and Lar ry S t a c k a b k of Lan-1 .-iiig w< <•'• Sunday \-i>itor- a t t)i-• home of Mr. and Mr-. J o s - p h S t ack - ' ;.!;'.: Sr.
Sun-lay gu -t • of Met Chalk r . •\- r Mr. and Mi s. Kav Miller and
a m i ! *
* Oi-\il:> Aml)urgey A r b o r Monday.
Louis Clinton and wife were Detroi t S a t u r d a y .
Mis.- Dorothy Wil.-en was h.om-fiom Chelsea thi week end.
Mr. Ella McCluskey and .-on. Franc i s , we re in Howell Mo:;d:iy.
Kd Steptoe of Dex te r wa a San-day vis i tor of Mrs. Mame Sliehan.
Mrs . Paul Cui-lett and Mrs. El izabe th Cur le t t wei-e in Howell
Mi - . Ross Read spent sov ral days last week with relati\ ' i s in Det ro i t .
Miss Nellie Ful l r was hone ' from the Deti 'oit scliool of co.-ue tology Sunday .
Mrs. (Jlenn CaidiU'i- of St-mioa
Nation-Wide Store cials for Thnfr-fri Jsat N<-Y ?4,?5
SOAP, FelsNaptha, 10 bar. 4 5 c P. & G. SOAP, large size, 5 bars BIG 4 SOAP CHIPS, 2 pkgs. SUPER SUDS, large pkg OXYDOL, large pkg
19c 25c 17c 21c
*«
SUGAR, 10 lbs 49 c MILK, Nation-Wide, 3 tall cans 19c PEAS, Early June, 2 cans ll«c CORN, Golden Bantam, cans 19c CORN FLAKES, Kelloggs, Post's, lge 10c
CRACKERS, 2 lbs I ALSO MEAT SPECIALS
or AU Stars
visited Mrs. Eli/.a C a r d n e r one <b\y | t ; 1 ) V ( . ,(,,1,1,-,.n ; i l u | y\,-. ; i,,,i Mi- . Z
last week. j AM'ed 1'fau arnl son of Marion and 1»
Mrs. Lola Rogers went to D--t r o r j .V r. ;.nd Mrs. H e n r y Collin- a n - l ! p S u n d a y V> spend tli«• win te r with j naugh t ' r of ^"p -i];ir^ti• h e r d a u g h t e r , Mary lda . | M r . r ,n , i M , . . . w i l l Euler , their
Mr. and Mrs. Roche Sin ban at: : daugh te r , X.-lii -, and l i v i n g Rich-children of Ann A r b q r wen- Sur-day | ard.-oa w< rt: g m s t a t a d inne r cal lers of Mrs. Jiuiu-s Roche. j par ly yiven by Mr. and Mr-. Oral
Mr. and Mrs. Wil D a n o w ai.d ! -Morgan at Brighton Sun.lay in
HAMBURGER 3 lbs. 2 5 c ROUND STEAK, lb. SLICED BACON, lb BEEF POT ROAST, lb. OLEO, Nucca, 3 lbs.
17c 19c
9V2c 25c
Come out and help the home team and see the old Pinckney High School Stars in action
Admission lCc and 25c 0
Sale Bilk PRINTED
price*
W« are fixed for turtuno o # work of this land in double-quick time.
Mr. and Mrs. G e o r g e Bland w e r e in Howell Monday.
Roy Reason and B e r n a r d Dil loway were in Howell T u e s d a y even ing
O. S. Thompson of D e x t e r was a cal ler a t tho Dispatch office T u e s day .
The br idge c lub was e n t e r t a i n e d : t the honm of Mrs. Sadie Read T u e . -d a y evening1. ..Iknry Shircy and Leonard Devc;--
eaux called on Howell f r iends la.-t T h u r s d a y evening
T h e Misses He t ty and Helen Dev-r e a u x spent t h e week end w i t h
Maur ice Dar row and wif • w< :-e in Aim A r b o r Sun<lay aftei-noon.
Mr. and Mrs. I rv in Kennedy a i d son, Anibros'.- of Howell sperit Sund a y with Mr. and Mrs. Pa t r i ck K n-ntyiy.
Sunday gues t - of Mr. and Mr-. S. K. Swar thou t were Mi . an 1 M ^ . W a r d S w a r t h o u t and d a u g h t e r ,
j Kai-bara of Jackson .
Brock Cole an i Mr. n i l o e r ef Det ro i t spent S u n d a y a t Mrs. Anna
Kennedy ' s . Max Clark and family of Pont iac
honor of Mr. and Mr-. Kulej-'s 2<ith
Ask for Tickets with Every 25c Purchase
REASON Se S O N S Phone 38
If
I w - M i n g a ' in iver . -ary . , . U 1 ~J%J _ _ - r
Iv/ra P l u m m e r u-.d familv have > ' W f t D e l i v e r £ v I o th , w h o u e John V W » V W W W ^ W W / . V / , V ^ A W W W W A S W W
Rat!iboii< has built on hi- ( s t a t e at, ZSmmSSSSSSSHSHSSm l ."'il\es Dak • an I will work for h im. ' ' M i k e H a r n a c ha.- n:ovi-d from ill" ; ][• x Smith I K J U - ' to the Culhane
• i-'iu.-'- vacated by Plumni.-r. j
j Sur-.day di';n<-r gin-sts of Mr-. J,- tU • Ror-h" were Mr. and Mr. . A. M. Roche. t l v i r daughter. ; , Pa t t y
• and Marv Don, and sons, Ronal-1 and i
i Ray, of Dan.-her, Russell W< -t ai.d I < hif.-l.--n ' of Mt. Clement - , Mr;.-
ODD That SIGLERS DENTISTRY
were Sunrlay gues ts of Mr. and Mrs . , . , , jr „ I ka lhb-en ( ro t tv IITUI d a u g h t e r , '
O. Haines . I , * , . , . , Mrs. Wel tha Vail and Mis . J ^ s h - ! S. )utnw,- t-r Don Swar thou t took j
Green were in Howell S a t u r d a y . \ ^ f ^ I o w i n g Seout- to th - M.ch.-j Mr<. A n n a Ei-win of Owo.-.-u i J
visi t ing Mrs. Kdna Spea : s . j
•F lo rence Mui7)hy w a s ^ h o m e f r i ; ^ ;
Jackson the w c - k end. Mrs-. S. H. C a r r e n t e r t n i m d a t a,
dfnner p a r t y S u n d a y honor ing h. r A b o u t a 0 ^ couple a U n d e d th ^ husband on his b i r thdav . The out V f i '>. K. S. Ma-ttjuera<le dance held a t town g u e s t , w e r e Mr. and, Mr- . ! the i r h- l ! 1 h ^ F r i J ; i > ' n i « h l - . ^ u ^ < ' Clarence- Smith of Ypsi lant i , Cha , . I ;-•« fu rn idv - l V the Dalke orches t ra . 1 Smith and wife of Chubb^ C o r n e r , ' W a y n - AtLee tfot first p n z - for the j Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y ! / • • and ' . i ^ . ' l r - t eo^tume ;,. a negro m a m m y
Mian, football gane- at Ann A r b o r S a t u r d a y : l iobert Read, Jack Rea--on, Willi- Darrow, Cyru^ At Lee J T 1 C h a r h s Rat t le . Floyd Haines also a t t ended .
SKKMS MOST 1 'OPLLAR W I T H T H O S H W H O L i : AST THI-; s ( D O L L . M i S ) T i l K V S A V K .
NKKD
THJS MAY !JK V O I R O P P O R T L X 1 T Y TO s - W K V<H K T K E T H AND PI Y TDK T H I N ' C S YOU W A N T W I T H THK MONKY Y O U SAVK ON D K N T A L B I L L S .
O T W K N T Y F O L R Y K A R S K \ P K R I i ; \ ( P ! \ | : \ PRY B R A N C H O F ! D K N T I S T R Y KNAIH.KS MH T O C O R R K C T L Y . D I A f i N O I S A N D J C'ARK F O R Y O U R D K N T A L T R O l ' P L K S . ASK 1000s ( T H O U - I S A N D S O F S A T I S F I K D P A t l K N T S . •«
O
OR. R. G. S'GLER D. D.S " ^ ^ ^ _ ^ _ _ _ ^ _ ^ u n i V- Mr. and Mrs. H a r r y L e - and -.>:\ ' ^ i c., .unn.- .^ a M.-KMJ „.........> , , . P I N C K ^ ' " ' > " C ;
J - P T o l l o ' m d B o r n e o M u r p h y Alger , the Misses Mildn-d, Madg -j and t h . Jack twins won second f T A K K P l N C K X K Y - P O R T A r ; K LAKF-DKX R R O A O ! M H S Mario Monks of Jackson ^ " " ™ •» ^ 1 • - _ » d R o b , . r t a J a f . k o f I j a k ( . , o n d , Mr. , i>n/ - - . I h - y *-n dressed a- M . c k e y . l , , ( ) l R S ;> t o 1 2 _ , t o 5 F V P N L N C S UV AI>POINTMENT
. , , e * ' """ r h 1 1 ' ' h o m c ' f T l • - J w -md M M Mvlo K e t t l - r and daugh- ] and Mi iud- M o . . , - . A n o t h e r dance I P H O X K l s F o
8 P c n t U,c w c ^ end a t the home of , , y t h „ l l l n c M o f t h c i r thcr, ^ . ( ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ o i Ilowdl.|wiU be given 8oon. S „ ,
Mr, vid Mrs. W, EJ. Murphy, E. Murphy • ^
/
The Pinckney Dispatch, Wednesday, November 22, 1933
FORLORN ISLAND
By EDISON MARSHALL
WNUSerrloe
Cepyrtsut by Bdlson Marshall
SYNOPSIS
Bis yacht the Intrepid, abandoned ST Its crew, Felix Horton, millionaire, with hi* mother, hie daughter Nan, aad Boy Stuart, puts Into Squaw Harbor, Alaska, to recruit. He engages a boaoh of nondescripts stranded there. A flffMtlo PoU, Sandomar, 1s their leader. Captain Way mire, the Intra-Old's skipper, Engages Eric Erlcssen, sktt old friend, to sail as chief officer. Naa and Stic indulge in a moonlight flirtation. The Intrepid Is wrecked.
Uavlng her in a small boat, with fcfs party. Sandomar kills
fejrtnlr* and leaves the ship -crowd. On landing, Eric
is no communication with ttt^ejefjlie world. Flreheart, priestess •
would ftare no time U rata* hit band - from his blade and Interpret the captain's shouts.
"Garge. I can't take your pal," Erie said. *Tvs got to hare someone who can hear. Will yon go without him?"
The little cockney looked to the ground. "I wouldn't be no good without Sandy. Anyhow, I can't leave hint-
Eric nodded, and turned to bis lesser enemies. "Who else wtH try i t r
Sydney BUI, hard-handed Australian, was the first to move forward, and murderous Big Smith second. ' Eric accepted them, and commandeered from the squaws three kamleikas (water-proof outer garments) for them and himself. The hunters had started across the headland with the boat; final preparations for what might be a one-way journey must now be made.
Eric called Boy aside, ran with him fifty yards down wind until the murk grew thick between, and passed him his revolver. "To protect our party— In case I don't come back," be said quietly In bis rival's ear.
Boy's hand gripped it strongly, and a look of steel came into bis face. His first thought was to thrust the barrel Into Eric's side and order him not to go. The stubborn fool would not listen to reason, but he might heed the cold steel in his ribs!
But when he gazed Into the narrowed pupils, he knew the bluff would not work. Anyway the whole situation had cnanged now that he had yielded tfp his scepter of authority. It
Nan under! • f Ms sere, but she Is uncertain of
beart. In a sudden, terrific •tons* a ehfld of the tribe is left helpless M a sand spit.
C H A P T E R VUI«~Cont inu«cl —14—
Tuts was only too true. Ohlkak's father worshiped her; he would starve -lor fear <n A lean winter, or die for •iter when death was written In black And white; but he could not push out to that watery earthquake for life nor love. It was not Just wind and wave, but the boorga.—For—bim^thA
_ to e able-bod-
scud barely concealed unearthly living shapes. He was not one of the white masters, to challenge the elementary powers, but a man of the Aleuts, with tbe darkness of subjection on his face.
"If they don't go, who will?" Hoy Insisted.
"I, for one. You'd better not try ttt< it I can get two of the sailors. They're handy at Jobs like this—and anyway, Nan'll want you to stay."
**Catch me going!" Roy's cold eyes flashed. "Thank God I'm not such a fool as that." Then, almost shouting: "It's a crazy gesture. The child's done for anyway. Eric, you mustn't go either. You're needed here. It's the life of an Aleut brat against Nan's future safety^
Eric hesitated only • an instant. ••You'll have to protect her. the best fou can. If I'm lost, two of the pang will be lost, too, and you can hold 'em at bay."
Roy cursed tilni to nis face., then >led to Nan. "Speak to that fool."
••Tell him he can't throw awty his life on a chance like this— that JTOii need him. that we ail need Jbint A|t>eal to his crazy chivalry."
.Nan slowly shook her head. "T «csm*t do It," She did not seem to •raise ner voice, hut as her lips were >ne*r, her tone rang clear. "I'm not • even iurt that I want him to stay. "Yon see—he may be right—and you unay be wrong."
Brie bad now turned to the outlaw erbW massed around Sandomar. Their facet ware drawn, their eyes wolfish; It seemed hopeless to appeal to them. l e t Eric knew men—their evils, their ftoftles, their Innate greatness—and he spoke boldly.
*f want two good men. Who will 4#mtV
There was a brief pause. Sando-saar's somber gaze fell to Garge's flut-terinf hand, then he threw up his •imian head.
*I will be one," he answered In his dull monotone.
"And If Sandy goes, I want to go, too," Garge said. "Anyhow, I don't like to think of that little [.apoose out there all by 'erself, waiting to be drowned."
Eric's face flamed. Even his moment of surrender, on the Cliff of Death with Nan, held no greater glory, no higher truth, than this. The strong cup of bis being ran full and overflowed.
True, tt was only a brief truce. An feoorAfoStBdenmr would have butch-ered^wioi without mercy; an hour from now, ** both survived, he would again be plotting his overthrow. They were Implacable foes. They could not Inhabit the same world; Eric knew well. In tome cold inner mind, that In the end be must slay Sandomar, or be Slain by him. But now they might strive, strike, and if worse comes to. front, cress the bar together.
Ba was at the point of accepting the fcety of his two foes, when he remembered gandomar*s deafness. Amid the falllaf saountains of water, Garge
She strained Into the murk, to follow4
the dimming, living shape so small,.so brave, In the heaving desert of death. Not once did it soar out of the roaring valleys but that her heart soared too. Not one billow grappled It only to drop behind la writhing fury but that her lips breathed thanks.
"Fight on, Eric," she whispered. "Go and come back safe. . . . Bring him back to me, little ship. Ob, don't fail him now I**
Beside her, Sandomar and his gang cursed and breathed hard.
Meanwhile Eric was fulfilling his destiny. A1V his long journeylngs had been toward this one goal, a grain of sand in a lonely sea, and an Indian child calling him with outstretched arms. This was the great battle of bis life. Nan, Boy, Sandomar had no part In this. It was all between him and his fierce old dam, the sea.
She was the mother of his race. She had fed blm, schooled him, cherished him, and now she would try him to the bone. And the test was commensurate with his rank—the heir of sea-kings. Ever she had spared no pains on his blue-eyed, fair-haired brood. From those dim days they had sailed forth In painted galleys, red-bearded fierce-browed brutes In winged hats, from the deep-cut fiords of Scandinavia, she had harried them, proved them, slain them without mercy, until she had bred men!
Yet to the dark spawn of the western Isles Eric owed his fighting chance. The wooden dory that was his cradle would stand short shift in seas like these; she would fill and flounder at the first rush of the rolling mountains: and only the Alaskan kayak, developed In centuries of rough sailing after walrus and whale, could shake free and leap to the crest. It was no more than a whale-bone frame covered with walrus hide, yet Eric blessed it in the name of his Norse gods. No stately ship beating through a tropic typhoon had ever made his heart glow so warm.
The hatch he occupied came nearly to his nrmplts, and was scarcely large enough to admit his body. The folds of his kamleika made It watertight, and though one wave after another broke over him. blinding him, bludgeoning his head and shoulders, always the craft buoyed up. shook off the
ter-arms. and fought on. True, If It once fell In the trough of the seas the repeated onslaughts would cave In Its ribs, but by good seamanship and paddling for his life with the double blade, he managed to avoid this pitfall. The decfcwasT so low~ that" the win 9 could not seize and hustle It. His two comrades timed their strokes with his; caught up by his conquering spirit they fought as they had never fought before, drunk or sober, on land or sea, for life, bread, or favor of woman.
Their goal slowly neared. They could see fhe kneeling child, braced
The Rird
Sandomar Came Fighting Back, Failing, Rising to Reel on Again.
led men on hand waded In the boiling foam, and although the waves smote them like sandbags and made them reel, they held the kayak while the three voyagers boarded and drew the hatches tight.
Could they get through the surf Into deep water? The answer lay with one man alone—Sandomar. With a grunt, he seized the gunwale and lumbered Into the tide. On and on he stumbled, his gorilla strength and animal courage matched against the fury of the breakers. Blow after blow they dealt him, first against his thighs, then his barrel chest, finally breaking over him. bludgeoning his head, blinding his fireball eyes.
When he could go no further, he passed the boat along until his big hands were on the stern. Watching his chance.' as a billow rushed sea; ward, he gave a mighty thrust. The kayak shot forward, then up to the crest of the next wave. The billow met it well beyond the breakers. Sandomar came fighting back, falling, rising to reel on again, hurled forward with back-brenking violence, at last lumbering through the foam with immense arms hanging limp, his eyes like a dead seal's.
With a suffocating heart, Nan watched the little craft beat out to sea. Once siie thought It was gone. An avalanche of water swept It down. For a frigid eternity, perhaps ten seconds, possihly twenty, there was naught where It had been but a gray hillside streak with foam. But presently the pointed bow shot out like the snout of a shark, and the heads of the boatmen appeared one by one. The paddies glinted wanly, as the little ship sailed on.
Nan's chill despair began to change to flaming hope. A daring' thought stole Into her stunned brain; not Just that Eric had done right in some vague abstract sense, but tha+^rfs foolish dream was Inspired truth, that there were hidden laws governing life which Roy's materialism* could never explain and which had decreed Eric's victory. How did she or anyone know what was true, what was false? Per haps Eric's Idealism was not Just a splendid illusion, to trick him to a fruitless death, but s working force, a living, conquering pv>wer. Perhaps he would yet win to his goal and return to stand beside her on the strand.
Her bands clasped over her breast
against the wind, pitched down sometimes as the rising waves broke over the sandy shelves and washed her to the waist, but always struggling up.
"Hold on!" Eric shortted, hoping against hope that the cry would heat through the wind to her ears. "We're coming for you!"
She appeared to take heart. She could hear naught hut the bellow of the gale, but she saw his lips move, and some fellowship of courage leaping across the foam made her fight like a shoaled salmon.
The kayak came up on the lea of the Islet. In comparative quiet water. With a yell. Eric sprang out, waded to land, and clasped the fainting child In his arms. Roaring' he knew not what—perhaps the ancient battle-cry of the Vikings welling up from some old cellar In his brain—he waded back, thrust the limp body Into the hold, cllmhed into the hatch, and smote th» water with his blade.
CHAPTER IX
The watchers on shore waited desolate eternities. Had Roy glanced at Nan. he would have wondered where her dusky beauty had flown. Her eyes were dark wounds. Her cheeks were haggard and gray, her Hps drawn. Yet If she loved the man she had lost, she still did not know It. Love was the
ash of a lighthouse through the storm, and the storm blew too thick between.
But presently she hit her lip until it bled. She • thought she saw a strange-shaped shadow on the Water, revealed only an Instant through the fluttering curtains of spindrift. For nil she knew It was only a trick of her tortured fancy. . . .
A moment mnrp she waited. Then, over the rolling hills, a dark shape took form. At the same instant, the murk parted like a torn veil, and the scene was etrhed in vivid black and white on her memory. The kayak seemed to be riding the storm. For an instant It hung poised, a symbol of victory, on the wind-whipped crest of the highest billow, looking down on Its domain. The paddles flashed val-lantly. The sea light was on Eric's face. Then It came leaping toward land.
She could not utter a sound. Her throat was too full. But Sandomar grunted—she heard him—and Roy gasped out what she thought was an oath of amazement. Mother Horton threw up her lean arms with a yell.
"By G—d. he's made it!" But no one blamed the old woman for the oath.
The watchers never lost sight of the boat again. It came with a rush, the wind behind It. hurled through the foam, dodging, rocking, pitching, soaring up and darting down. The boorga roared In vain. The foiled seas chased the little ship, to spring upon its back, but always their leaps fell short
(TO B * co?mmj»r*.>
i
^BecauseoiTby Great Bounty
by GRACE NOLL CROWELL ia Factor*! Council Bulletin
OECAUSE 1 have been given much, * * 1, toe, shall *ive; Because of Thy great bounty. Lord,
Each day I Uvo I shall divide my gift* from The*
With every brother that 1 see Who has the need of help from ma.
Because 1 have been sheltered, fed. By Thy good car*,
I can not see another's lack And I not share
My glowing fire, my loaf of bread. My roofs shelter overhead,
That, he, too, may be comforted.
Because tore baa been Isviabed so Upoa-me, Lord, — .
A wealth I know that wee ttot mean! For me to hoard,
1 thai] giro lave to those ia need. The cold and hungry clothe end feed.
Thus shall I show my thanks indeed.
IKatherine Edelmanl
THINGS had been going rather badly with the Hamptons the past few months. It was true
no great calamity or sorrow had befallen them, but Just a series of petty annoyances and worries had cropped up almost daily—the kind of things that gnaw and eat away the roots of the tree of happiness and content.
This morning they had almost quarreled before Arthur left because Janet had decided that they would not have a turkey for Thanksgiving. Arthur believed, and rightly so, that a turkey with all the trimmings was a part of
married life she saw that It was this penurious trait of hers that had been accountable for most of the trials that had beset their path. Coming from a home where every penny counted, she had found it hard to spend two dollars where one would do If one only skimped enough. John ha'd tried to reason It out with her many 'times, explaining to her that he would be the last man In the world to urge her to live beyond their means, but, since they were In a position to do so without endangering their future, he would like to live better than they did. There was a generous nest-egg in the bank and a goodly sum In life insurance should he be taken, so, why, he had often reasoned, couldn't they enjoy a good show or dinner when they felt like It?
Now, In the light of the awakening I hat had come to her, Janet saw that she had been unjust to Arthur. It was
Howe About A Loafer's Utopia The Final Average Leading a Normal Life
By ED H O W S X J O NEWSPAPER manager can pos-* ^ slbly keep nonsense oat of his columns, but he should be careful to carry along- every day a suggestion ef the old conservative common sense necessary In properly distinguishing right from wrong. Most newspapers do this with considerable faithfulness In spite of the increasing demand for sensationalism. Some of them call tt humor, but the common sense is suggested, and may be worked out by those who care for i t
As an example of this I note a recent syndicated article by Westbrook Pegler, and appearing in a good many first rate papers. In Introducing Mr. Pegler the paper I see regularly says: "Pegler Gives a Humorous Slant on the New Deal."
What is called a humorous slant is actually the most Important piece of wisdom I have seen printed In many months. Mr. Pegler says:
"The trouble with the Russian Soviet system has been that it sought to compel the citizens to work, sometimes resorting to enforced labor, whereas under the American plan enforced loafing will be held over the heads of the comrades as a threat to work hogs who endanger the success of the new deal by indulging a selfish passion for toil."
Mr. Pegler works out the Idea to the extent of a column, which Is not too much; many others would have made It Into a book, and thus buried the good Idea.
I cast my vote for a wreath to Westbrook Pegler for writing the most Illuminating piece of American wisdom In 1933; possibly for all time.
s e e In being careful I'm rather an en
thusiast ; when In such mood, and receive an Important paper or letter, I put it away so carefully 1 can't find It later. . . . Altogether my average In exercising care Is low, although I believe such virtue one of the first a human being (constantly In danger) should exercise. . . . The time to lock the stable door, of course, Is when the thought of thieves first occurs to you, but so many delay that a warning maxim was written centuries ago. The wisdom conveyed by the
-maxim ts-so~Important that all care-
He Paused Long Enough- at the Door to Call Back.
Thanksgiving itself if one could afford it, but Janet insisted that a chicken would do them Just as well: "What's the use of spending ten dollars or more for a dinner when we can get one that will do just as well for less than five?" she had argued, and finally Arthur let her have her way, but he paused long enough at the door when leaving to call back: "Ixwks as If we ceeW- TTveTtke real folks on Thanksgiving day at least"
After he had gone Janet sat in deep thought—his parting remark had stung her deeply. How could he talk like that after all she had done—all the sacrifices that she had made so that things would be easier for him in the future! Then it suddenly dawned upon her that a great many of the worries that had annoyed and upset them of late were mostly of her making. Looking back over their five years of
On Thanksgiving There Was a Large Turkey on the Table.
true, she told herself, that she had been doing all the saving and skimping for his sake, but she realized now that she had been robbing him of many joys that were his right, and, perhaps, keeping him back in his profession— keeping him from rising beyond a certain level. She knew, too. that in cheating him she had also cheated herself and made the way hard, but it was of Arthur she was especially thinking. But joy came to her at the thought that it was not too tate to make amends.
And on Thanksgiving there was a large turkey on the table, with all the trimmings that anyone could crave, and Janet had invited a few of the people that she knew Arthur liked best to share the feast with them.
©. 19**. Western Newspaper Union.
We Thank Thee
less men have been familiar with and frequently repented It hundreds of years without it doing them any good. That Is what discourages me.
e e e
A young man went to a doctor for advice, and the doctor asked : "Have you been leading a normal life?" The young nmn implied that he had. " W e U r ^ continued the doctor, "you must cut out liquor and women for at least six months." . . . This may he a good Joke—I confess to a smile myself— but it displays a fault common to most American Jokes, in that it gives the Impression that all normal men drink too much intoxicating liquor. Not one in twenty of them do. How many confirmed drunkards do you know? I have asked myself the question. My reply Is. I do not know to exceed three or four, and these so widely scattered they annoy me rarely. . . . In thinking over that part of the joke referring to women, I become more serious, but risk no figures.
e e o
A new word lately becoming popular is moron. (Meaning a man suffering: from arrested mental development.)
It Is rather a better word than fool, which seems to mean a man who Is not a full shilling; who never had any sense, and never will have any. ; But a moron means one born with sufficient and average Intelligence, and, after reaching twenty-five or thirty, becomes shiftless as to his mind, and quits developing It.
I estimate there are hundreds of morons to one fool; the number of complete fools is actually not great; there seems little doubt that the mind may be developed as naturally and easily as the muscles, by proper exercise; but as we grow older our natural disposition Is to become flabby in flesh and mind. Millions are today supporting doctrines as foolish as perpetual motion. (Inflation, as an example; it is the same thing,)
All such are suffering from arrested mental development; they do not take a proper daily dozen for their heads.
Men die unnecessarily every day because of arrested physical development, and morons develop In the same way : they become poorer thinkers because they eo not fairly and properly exercise thel: minds, and shuffle shiftlessly-along to the bread line or poor house when they might have easier lived fairly respectable and successful lives, and finally achieved a very good obituary In the local papers.
e e . e After young men become educated
in engineering they begin clamoring; for Jobs. This clamoring has already resulted in the present staggering appropriations for unnecessary and foolish dams, reservoirs, lakes, river Improvement, etc.
The more young men act like ean-tious old men, the better they wWY * get along.
• • •
Usually an American will cheerfully attend a reform convention, and make and listen to flowery and foolish speeches; but he is very slow In shouldering a musket and attending the secret meeting of a vigilance committee that means business.
0 . t m Bell Syndicate.—WNU'
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tjjjftodflwy Dbpatch We<jne^y> November 22> .OL
THE INQUIRING REPORTER
to All Charity toward None
"Hello everybody," (with apol-to Kate Smith) .
Con, how does it feel to be kissed by a movie s tar? Or wasn' t that Harpo Marx?
We wonder if Floyd's A in Latin has any connection with his giving ithe teacher a big rush at the
asquerade dance? We wonder if Bern ice gave Percy
the inspiration to sing "Somebody Stole my Gal" so beautifully last Friday night?
Pinckney Lamb \ $.jET. B. Bekz '" R.* T. Spears L. G. Singer C. Hinchey R. G. B. Beltz R. T. Kovac R. E. Dinkel Q. B. Shehan L. H. Kennedy R. H. Gerycz F. B,
Touchdowns Kennedy, Gerycz Shehan, M. Sibert. Ext ra points Gerycz 2, Schneider. Substitutions Dilloway for Kovac, Kovac for Dinkel, Dinkel for Kovac, Battle for
IM. Sibert, Laszlo for Jones. First
Broadway Mer. i '.* D. Sibert I
Jones Hooper
Zill W. Hedleski
Jnoes M. Sibert McCollum
J. Hedleski Schneider
Schleede
Bill Lamb didn't live up to his 'downs—Pinckney 12, Ann Arbor 7, Passes completed Pinckney 3, Ann > Arbor 7. Referee Mason. Hea 1,
paH as a "big game hunter" at the masquerade dance. Did you ever he.T of a big game hunter chasing l inesman_J)evereaux. mice? ' 1" ^ n o Pinckney Independents will
Floiine is going in for all the play the St. Thomas Alumni of Ann football heroes in a big way. Her Arbor a t Pinckney on Thanksgiving latent is John -Wylic i D a y a t HUM) A M.
Hey, boys, give vu the low down
FOR S A L E 6c EXCHANGE hen
bfcBbAYEiY UQOOYEAft TUULS
HtNtti<iiifiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiihiiiiuiiiiHiumiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiii»i
on why the medicine show left town in such a rush?
Who were the two Lambert and Grace were stepping out with the other night at the medicine show?
lAr . i we thought their interests we-e 5 strictly centered around Pinckney S i ami vicinity!
"0"
\
Ertahliahcd 1865 I n c o r o o ^ t e d 191*
« y ? i ' ^Sixty-fiv* Y e a n of S a f e *
* «
McPhersori State Bank
H.'weiL. MkA.
Capital 1150,000.00
Surplus $75,000. :3
fcwCanWe Hdp
SCHOOL NOTES
Well, the banquet for the football team should be next in order. This .should be an opportunity for the high school girl-;.
The field was dried up some at tb^c end of the game us Gordon Lamb carried quite a lot of the mud Howell the bther night? home with him. The water splashed' The Howell girls don't seem very 3 flk't high when he hit the first flattered because Am visits the old puddle. Donny Spears and John. home town so often. Am certainly
We wonder if Leonard and Oliv" ••njoyed their tete-a-tete over cotf.-o and doughnuts Friday night?
Who was the girl paging Lefty Reason at the dance Friday night
Who were the four girls Walter took ri ling the other night? He believes in .safety in numbers!
Who were the two girls Ross and Reg entertained a t the show in
an award to Boy Scout troops, Cub,
W A N T E D _ T o buy a stack of wheat straw Harold Doody
has sponsored c r s for eating purposes. 10c per lb.
FOR SALE-Gobbler and two turkeys Lto Frye
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT 5PONSORS SCOUT AWARDS
President Franklin D. Roosevelt, according to an announcement from the National Office of the Boy FOR SALE Plymouth Rock roostr (Agents wanted) . Scouts of America,
TEXAS MINERAL WELLS CRYSTALS
$1.50 and $1.00 sizes. I n t roduce tory offer: Both sixes sent prepaid for only $1.00. Boone Pharmacy (Distr ibutors) , Kentland, I n d «
T units and to $$c$l Councils of Boy Scout; who ^develop efficiency and proficiency to ' i high degree, and which evidence %ie development Jin the Scout program and activity s which comes from continuous membership. £
Believing tha^ Scouts will gain from a longer t l hu re the Scouting authorities have devised the plan of awards which the President, who is Honorary President of the Boy Scouts of America, and still retains his active Scouting*" connections as
Mrs. Geo. Hassencahl.
FOR S A L E _ A l f a l f a hay. I Mike Pankoff, • Pinckney Duck Farm
FOR SALE Either a Thoroughbred Holstein or Short horn bull.
K. F . Placeway.
FOR S A L E _ R a b b i t Dog, Cheap. Charles Whalen.
W A N T E D _ B u t c h e r i n g to do. 75c
Wylie of it.
also soake J up considerable
Jack Dillwoay formerly played with Brighton but they did not rate him very high there and he was not given imuth opportunity to displuy hij talents. He sure got back at them Friday. They did not hand). trim very easy as^tirne w~al out twice for him and h<* hat jer /ey torn oh".
Capt. Louie Wilson doesn't to like kicking I'rom mud
taken I hi,-
is an all American boy! Speaking of Howell, did you
know Hud Dilloway's got a "secret passion" in Howell? Ho-hum!
j Thanks for listenin'. I We wonder where Bob Read was , when Stanley Dinkel took Jane Hall t home from the football game i Better watch—yaw step, Bobl
President of the Boy Scout Founda- per head and up. Wednesdays only, tion of Greater New York, has . Reason & Sons Kponsored. Many of the awards will '
WANTED BIDS FOR^_8 cords o i hard wood and 2 cords of wood fii for kindling, delivered in the HarrU School District wood house.Contract to be let the lowest responsible bid* dor.
A. F. Brown, Director.
— ' O • — FOUND—Strayed to my premises^ a course wool ram. Owner can have by proving property and paying for this adv.
L. W. Hcndoc, Phone 35F12
be made during the celebration of LOST Bunch of keys on Chevrolet laying or eating.
FOR SALE Live large barred rock pullets from Michigan State accred-ted stock. Also year oKl hens for
ihe twenty-fourth birthday of Scout- key ring, ing. February 8.th to 14th, 1934. j office.
There will be a red, white, and
Finder leave at Dispatch VanHorn Hillside Fa rm
COMMUNICATION Editor of Dispatch >
sen j The letter of E. W. Mann in your li'>;*s. Uisue of the lftth must be of the
Brighton blocked two puma on him. | greatest interest to any of the older Up-to.daU? he had not hud :t kick
In the National Crisis sid blocked thi* year.
'' Hookie Battle also pulled oil' KfO yard run when he grabbed aj Brighton Tumble. However it was are
people Qf J^jnck^iey at home or ooi-
blue silken streamer for each Troop FOR SALE—A. large stack of bean _ --4h4vt--^uaUfies and a knotted wide lpo is cheap.
ribbon of red, white and blue silk j Earl"TJaTfup, Gregory. for the Scout Councils which, by a ' high figure of proficiency among ( WANTED—All kinds of raw fur the troops are entitled to the C o u n - ' a n o - hides. Highest market price cil awards. The troop award and the paid. Council ribbon, bear the following Lucius Doyle. inscription: "The President Frank-)in D.—Ropaevclt—ms—T-cn—Year FOR 3ALE.
WANTED TO BUY A hand power stock food cutter or stalk shredder.
StepMnJPeto.
FOR SALE A Chrysler 6 cylinder coach. In fine condition..
See Don Sigler
Ropaevcl t—ms—T-cn
One of the parties he list.- a< F. *>Kn*m Award," (J. Rose, I can remember and others The point of membership tenure
remembered from mention by has been strewed in connection with
-Canary Singers. Mrs. Robert Jack,
Phone C2F22 Lakeland a
Probably no one knows or can prophesy definitely when business trill be back to normal. We. do know tha t general business is now at least 20 percent bettor than it was last spring.
Here ' s ono thing that we know will help. One hundred Dollars dbpo&ited in the bank will do ten to twenty times that amount of business through credit expansion.
Your business always appreciated.
wasted when the referee ruled it a , dead ball and carried it back to its , Pa r t i ng place.
Pinckney opened up the game with a forward pass which was intercepted by Hrightnn. Brighton however lost the ball on the fir. t play with u fumble.
Hrighton's coach seems to have instilled a lot of light into hi-> tvii.-n. The dny* seem to be gone win n Pinckney could figure Hrighton as a setup.
Well, Pinckney's record this year is nx wins and three lo.-ses. Their record is as follows: Pinckney 0, Milford 7 Pinckney K3, Brighton <> Pinckney 13, Hartland 0 Pinckney 0, St. Thomas 12
I Pinckney 19, Manchester 0 Pinckney 12, Hartland 0
-j Pinckney (5, Fenton 25
A* ft IftorpliT £ M Lavu> I Pin<-'k.ney i]' -^ n n Arbor Res. 0 [Pinckney 12, Brighton 7
fto*i* N: I aad S9F3 i Total points: Pinckney 81 , oppo-Pinckney, Michigan i m ' n t s G3-
my parentn. the award because of the fact that FOR SALE—Dry pop corn.
CIDER- MAKING, cept Saturdays.
.Every day e:*«
Unadilla Cider Mill Roland Gorton, Prop.
There is a story, however, of the the Kcoutlng authorities feel that in J Norman Reason.
\ "©"
Ulerson State Bank
tieneral Insurance
begin ing of an earlier settlement view of the proposals for increased . . , fouth of Pinckney, a little way, that leisure time, as dovelopei in the FOUND Strayed to my farm, promised to develops Into a village. Federal program, the Scout program J heifer, owner can have same
keep
FOR SALE or TRADK—Model T Ford truck, complete or in par+.-«.
Geo. Rearon
This was the stream above Little of activities proposes excellent ways proving property, paying for Portage, just north and east of Sil- for boys to use this time. For older and this advertisement. v i f Lake. Here was created a boys the Sea Scout program offers! R. K. Elliott water power and a »aw mill was a list of leisure time activities. r o actually built, but whatever the Every troop whlqh makes appllca-'. FOR SALE—Tom Thumb pop corn. J progress, the onterprlz" was des- tlon for the award must demonstrate troyed with the burning of the saw- that it has carried on an approved mill and it used to be said that in program during, 1933 and it must such an occidental way ..was Pinck- ..how an increase Jn membership ney village made possible, Also by ever lf>32. In addition ut least half th«-> same authority tho record plans 0 f the new members the Troop gains for this project were left in England during the year must be boys who as the ownership remained with have parsed their 12th birthday but parties there. arc not yet 13, and at the same
There remains only tradition con- time, eighty percent of the boys cerning all this but tradition is who become troop members In 1934 important and among your readers must bo registered for a continuing probably are some tha t may amplify membership,
a | FOR SALE—Cement blocks, 4 - 6 -h y J 8 - 12 inches in thickness a t my farm
necr State Sanitorlum, Howell, Mick George E. Dafley.
$1.00 per bu. R. K. Elliott.
FOR S A L E _ B e a g l e , Blu bit dog, female. Cheap.
Ed. (Fr iday) Haines
tick liab-
FOR SALE__Yearling Rock hvns and springers.
Robert Kelly.
Plymouth
*
Did You Know That? Onr Meals Are Guaranteed
- *
As To
Q U A L I T Y , FRESHNESS
CLEANESS A N D PRICE YOUR MONEY BACK IF* NOT
'"* ENTIRELY SATISFIED
-THE HOME OR HIGH QUALITY MEATS"
tlie statements above. M. T. Kelly.
Dexter, Mich. A ' "••
The- awards are co-ordinated with the Boy Scout Ten Year Plan of (Jrowth which seeks to give the benefits of the Scout program to a million membership next year.
O
FOR SALE OR I farm. Inquire of
Dispatch Office.
R E N T _ S 0 . ac re '
GAVE HIS LIFE — 'TWAS ALL HE HAD TO GIVE
An article describing tho astonish- Charles and Arthur BUIHH are sawing exploit of a poor and aged ( ing out timbers In their woods pre jo^yrmilist who planned suicide to paratory to building a new barn.
t front page1 publicity for a '
FOR SALE—Dry and green wood. Geo. Reanon
struggling little actress. Sec The American Weekly with next Sun-dav's Detroit Times.
:o NOTICE CIDER MILL
Grinding 3c a gal. Cider loc per pal
P»S, LOST—7o pound boar 2 rings in its nose,
M. Head, VanBlaricum Farm
with
FOR SALE__<) room house, good
basement, good well, good barn with henhouse attached; outdoor «-'let, 2 acres of good lanvl with email fruit and vines. Situated in village limits, %'i mile south o f d rug store.
Price ¢900. cash, or $950. pa ' t o.i
time.
Josephine Beardslcy Lt'tate,
A. F. Brown, Adm.
o FOR SALE 130 acre* o r nice, clay loam soil, fair buildings. 3 miles cast of Chelsea, Teuns . Thid farm is known as the Weidemeyet farm. Inquire at Dispatch office*
The work of making a skating pond for £n^ on the pubic square is now underway.
by the jug, 10c per gal. by the J barrel and keg. Barrels and Kegs
Ed. H. Maas.
LOST—A small brown dog. Finder pleaue return and receive ¢-10.00 reward.
Otto Shonk, Pinckney R. F. D.
O
Norman Reason REAL ESTATE BROKER
Farm, Residential Proper ty and
Lake Frontage a Speciality I afso havo city property '
Pinckney, Mick
niiruuiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiitiiiiiHifiHtiiiiiHHiniiiiiiiitiiiimiiiiiHiiHiiiiiiiiiiniiiimiin*
FOR SALE—Cabbage, Carrots Potatoes.
Ignace Soloson.
and
FARMERS
: ^
£>
i t .
i.'»
Clark's Phone 51
Your property in Michigan's Largest Farm Mutual Insurance Company with a policy that has no technical loop-holes to avoid liability, consistent wtih safe underwriting. A blanket policy on personal property. Net resources nearly One-Half Million Dollars. Losses satisfactorily adjusted and promptly paid. Careful underwriting and a thomugh system of inspection maintained eliminating over-ins ruance, fir* hazards and undesirable risks. Insures both rodded and-tinrodded risks. -t
. -" * •
For further information see C. G. STACKABLE,
Pinckney Phone 68, or write the Home Office.
State Mutual Rodded Fire Insntiice Co. HOME OFFICE 702 CHURCH ST., FLINT M I C H *
W. V. RURRAS, President H, K.~FISH, -Secretary
.20 small pig«, FO RSALE, months old.
V. Heggison, John Monks farm.
2',II
FOR SALE—Fine wool, "^ryoar old Black Top sheep. Will Loll cheap. Vs', Corn Husker.
George Lo>ig.
FOR SALE—$3,0«* cotf-ar t o n modern home In nearby city Will give 20 percent discount for cash.
Inquire a t Dispatch effice
Don W. VanWiakle Attorney »t Law
Office ov • First SUU SaWrngt &nh
How.ll, MlrH.
Drs. H.F.& C. L SlfiLEI PINCKNEY
Offico Hour* I t00 to 2:30 P . I t
f ALBERT FR0S1
Jay P. Sweeney A u o r a t f at LAW
t«utmiHiHiHii«ai»i«Hiiim Q ^ * °^S^i!^HlQAH
PERCY HJ..IS AUCTIONEER
"arm S a k s a S p ^ U U t y .
Phone, Pinckwy 19PX1
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Rcprewntlng tnalHtroft ffr# mA Marine tfesfonet C*.
a¥Mo*u &&•• v • • • * *