4
, i ifWj. at-* / l # > i.^rt-- LhriPfston County, MklugaBt ay, Feb. 10, 1943 Wednesday, 17, 1943 « 3 No. 7 T<^ OUR DEMOCRACY byM.t If ,r - 'J**- Inducted sjant to Fort urt, froor.Camp - •• €' ' for tmti to go . Induction Renter is tM quota>is doubled for SighCijpys from Pin list. ThejL are: William! Shirey lain, Beryl iLewis, ,, • ^ ' / t ' J H l . A r o n , ^ Gexald Swartho'nt,Lou -\^- frPTNKMt^r? Lavem Porath, Rprath The Local Honor Roll r k« Following mr 9 the N*me* of the Boy* from this Section Serving in Their Country'* Armed Force* >** ft. «^ l **.? -•V tt** oc the lfike Parley farm: *fco»e trtmiOrefory are: Walter H* e U^ B«W William Kuhn, Junior Lew R^ellTlover % MP," llei I From Hamburg: Wm. Leonard Devins ~ ^r/]Brightbn: James Green, Hen Ralph Graham Robert Uetzau Fowlerville: ?«f'• S* «?••" Lloyd Hendee Ted Adesh Doni Spears JBennie VanBlaircum Gerald Darrow Marshall Meabon Lt. Lucius Wilson Dick Howlett Julius Aschenbrenner Leo Bettes Lt. Tom Young Gene Soper Howard Read Steve Gerycz Willard Widmayer Lyle Euler Don Babcock Edward Bennett Royal Baker Norman Miller •jDfllitgham, Howell: Paul Uber. v Mra|Helen Burns Young is visiting J»er ^wband, Sergt. Jack Young at ^ a m p <3aiborne 4 La, Gordor. Lamb has-been transferee Custer to Fort McKillen Victor Szymanski Joe Lesiak Arthur Krych Sammie Lafata Paul Singer Burdith Clawson Harold Gallup Gerald Henry Lt. Ed. Howell Maynard Dixon Sergt. Gerald Clinton Bert Wylie Jas. A. Kirtland Harold Farley Clement Thorpe Grant Ward Merle Amburgey Clarence Culver TeJaenhnrn Bourbonnais ir a stud ! Ambrose Kennedy Friday Haines '''"I??, T J ! ? » - ^ J r i . £ ' Resell Gardner Junior Dinkel v -«ftt.**Jlichigan State College in the Glenn Kingsley Walter Rybka Oontast with Notre Dame university Irv. Reynolds! * Wm. Lamb .*>*. won all four fencing bouts in | Lt. Jas. Lamb Ellsworth Kirtland wbach he took part and was com I B«rt VanBlaircum John^ L. Conners >**~J . fcc*, Thi. ™ders him £ . ¾ ¾ . Ch &tk 3 ¾ enable for appointment to West | James McKune Glenn Hall Paint . .... Lt Jas. Nash. Francis Krupa Lloyd Vanfilaricum has been comm , Capt. Walter Mercer Roy Rice tmi*r»4 A eoriv at Rnmnina »t» KB» A Phillip Placeway Junior Lavey ^Sf rf ^f 5 Romulus air base cu#ft ^, Densihore Jack Cadwe Miss Dorothy .Meabon left last we 1 g^ Petrag Wayne Farrell «k to visit her fiancee, Don. Heller' Lloyd VanBlaircum Fred Rice Jfc an army camp at Mississippi. [Vincent Young Paul Younr r-.MH.iiFv i» h«™ ™ - f,«'D. V. Hammer Raymond Ellis Gerald Honry is home on M fur John Carpenter Douglas Hummer loach from Chanute Field, 111. [G^iam Vedder Robert V..-d<!©r, Raymond Ellis was home from the Leu'.. Body i<ay V.iloori *»5Tr'" Sttnda ?;. Whe ™ '* S S S ? ~ y e r S T SSKr- graduated as a motor machinist mate Jact Young Leo McCluskey With the rate of second class petty.:Jack Dillon .Bill,Dillon officer. ;7B. rnaud Dilloway _£yle Cone n*** wu»*v»i> **A ri.ii Uo.^^Clane Gilmore Edward Gil mors Donn Wiefcaeyer and Gail Hondo*,,4 hn EiM]e , Roy clinton were inducted into the army Mono*ay,£fc ttor< i H ow i e tt Joe Maschke Robert Lyndon of DeJtte«hae>envi^ajor Wm. Devereau? Rex Sn ?! th , . in the army photographic dept.^ CJfcpt Wm. Bronson • Lt. Jack White) PinckMy T#am , Spm Ta atk . t B *ll 5 1 ¾.¾^ ^ ^ A^en e Davis ] B i » with Brighton Lo.e 3 to FowJe _ . _ . , . . r Jolm^liUardoir . Sergt G. "birikel 1 «««• «alo^ Pann. was home on a furlottgh j onn Eisele Walter Graves fl«»day. I Robert Kourt Dick Amo Caft. Walter Mercer and sor-JBHiy, Lawrence Umstead, Robert Umstead of Eaet Lamring spent Sunday a t the' Arthur Kram Gordon Iamb jrmiamMircerhoine. He will re- 1 Meriyn Lavjey Alvin Myers turn to Gam^ BerWey;-- Texas this *>**? -Wld'mayeiV^ Gale Hendee week where her 4» in the army medi- Mich. Mirror State News C OMMIN 1 ' **> Ye hrftoi^ Gov. Kelly Appoint* U. of M. Pro- fevior Efficiency Expert 'ihi recei.t action of th e legiyia lure m pa^aig « Uw to »«l th« cle ok* buck an hour seem* to hav# t+ L _ ambltd thing* iu ftnei^TThHBejeU^ Meet youi' new deputy gov. folks, j confusion. Most oJ the cities have 1 *m--ounced that they wilt remain on most Split Contests *Jll Brighton 1 - ^^ffyt. en sent to Dtytoc, Ohio. <o . Lun^1 Tiouble shooting, efficit'iicy sho otin- t'en-eting Robert Ford of Ann Ail»ur is your man. And because his bosrf, (Jov. Kelly hus some idea of efficiecny himaeij' witrths hw inaugeral message to! the legislature la.s-t month- the noisi- henceforth in the vicinity of the stak'liouse consists of loud protest.-,. 1'Oi- 6 years Ford has been assoc- iate professor at the University of of Miehigai: at Ann Arbor and also director of bureau of gove 4 mneiu there. Like Harold Smith another univ er.-it> professoj- who became Mieb igan's budget director at Washing- ion, Ford's Lansing appoinunent is his first public .service. H is interesting to note that the legislative act gives ford the powei \vi*,h appi - (»val of the govunor.t > eon,-*o|idaie state agem ie.s. lie wi'l .iieei<ie the usefulness of a puh.u- jot) a function which recent 1 / !• i- j performed by the Michigan ci\ i[ ser vice commission ur.der its powerfu: anieiidiuent. In this function there s«- ein.-i to be some overlapping ( %r ( iu|, lication but the civil service director is said to have given his blessing to; iho efficiency expert plan. If Robert Ford goes to town as well as going to Lansing, this I!>- •i!] legislative creation may becomr the most important accomplishment >f the Kelly administration. Surely, •he po.s.sjbiltie.s are tfi'eat. And as for the time honored cus -torn of (renting a new conimis. io. every time a group of business n\(m' want t 0 protect the public through collection of fae^ arid issuance of Continued o^ Last l'age V Eastern War time. This includ cities who are engaged in #-¾¾ o* v\ar production. The attorney general ruled that the election must be held on war time, lie haa contended all alonfe t*iat central time was unconst tional. Jackson,Ann- Arbor and other cities are on war time. In Pinckaey the postoffice, bus lines and school etc still use wartime. The proper way to handle this is for every man to carry tw 0 watches and remember which pocket they are in. . V Some people just will not .stand any inconvenience at all and as far as they are corcerned there is no wax At Miami B e ach, Florida, a number 0 f swanky winter re8orters addresex'i letjter.s of complaint to Col. Parker ( ommar.der of the Miami Beach" air base against the practise, of'the '''"'j soUlifrs .singing in the early morning ' and breaking their rest after a hectic night we suppose. The Colonel rep- lied as follows: "The singing will continue. More over pleas e arise at the first S0un£\ of military activity and get down on your knee* with all the members of your household who are disturbed thereby, and offer thanks to God,Wi th me and all the rent os us, that thos,. American* are singing Ameri- can songs ard not Germans or Japs ing-ing victory songs in American «* roots'. ^- oal corp. iHis wife and two children will accompany him and live at Albie- 1 0», near here. I Frank IIeF«dd6» waa rejected for active military service but plac ... in tho class ior Uui'ed servic . \ Julius Aschenbrenner^ son of Mr. j «ad MrjSJ Steve Aschenbrenner sr. of Pinckney who was wounded ir. the ilfhttag in. New Guinea has beer. awarded the <4 0rder of The Purple, MliTt** for bravery in action. He is} atill in the bosprtal and has made | «#Bt#r> with Steve Geryte, also of Pinchney who is a patient there.Tho Uteerwas i» the battlo of ?Ju;>dat- ACQUIRE mBUlSTERED BULL Urs, L.C. Glenn of Pinckney, has recentff v acquired a registered Hoi stein frfesiari bull ' from the herd of S.J. Emmons of Morer.ci. Change of ownership for this an imal, Emmons Farm Pietertje Pride 869989 has been officially recorded by the Hblstein Friesian of America Brattleboro, Vt. -• WaHer Rys%a Jr. of the Grosse Ijefca^^ak-soatioa-and.*wife were • w o e Sunday. MIHor'-of'; Piackaey who MRS. RUSSELL COON Mrs. Rusell Coon, 33, died at the home of her mother, Mrs. John Bel^ j east of Pinckney on Thurs. morning j For the past two year she and her, husband had lived in Lakeland. She; was Jeanette Beard and lived in Dex ter until her marrage to Mr. Coon' in 1939. Surviving besides her hu Pinckney had a aisasteious week at basket ball only winning one ga' me out of five. Fowlerville came over Tuet»day night and took all 3 games. The girls went down in de feat and so did the second team, better things were expected of the varsity team but they took the wor st defeat in the history of ary Pin ckney team Fowlerville,79 and Pin ckney 22 Palmer was out because 1 of injuries and Singer went out on foul; near the half. Friday Pinckney split even with Brighton, the- second team scoring j its first win of the season 30 to 2iL.i This team was powered by the add ; ition of a new spark plug, Harry Melnik, who played his second com est and scored 11 point, eyer 8, Lewandowki <>, Griffith 3, Clark 2 t The Pinckney varsity took it on the chin again 39 to 17. Their offense being weak. Palmer was still out & Jones did not play, Gentile went out on fouls at the half. Singer led the Pinckney scorers with but 5. j Pinckney Liewanaowski Melnik Meyer Clark Griffith i F. C. G. G. Brighton Miller Feltv Clark Mitchall Housner >lil la an •Australian ho * j >*l\ rband are her mother, a brother,Wm. jrfttt- malarial fever has recovered' of Ajnn Arbor and Uhree slater, ffrfficieatly to return to active duty j Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, Pinckney ;Mrs January 29, 1948 Ruth Treaster, Ann Arbor and Mrs. J-Jear Mr. and Mrs. Aschenbrenner, Lawrence Hennes,Dexttr.The funeral 2 don't beleive you know me but I ( wa^a held at the Gorman Funeral ho- ' Griffith tfebik oyu havo heard of me.' t | me Sun. afternoon, Rev. Edward Dre, Subs Pinckney: Doolittle, Brighton What I really meant to write, is! ws of the German Evangelical church; Lestride, Smial. Field goals: Melnik,4 that I mot Julius over here( [ officiating. The body was taken to| Meyer 3 ( Clark l,Griffth l.Leewan.I Detroit for cremation. Miller 2,*Felty 1, Smial 5, Mitchell 4 . | Foul goals-Leewandowski 2, Melnik j 3, Meyer 4, Griffith 1. Referee ;0og i gins. I mot Julius I't tell you Where but you can fsaas where tho oftty safe place !•.)• He told ma that you already kn! w he was wounded. Well it isn' j It seema that a sniper shot through the fist and second kn It is still stiff will soon be I know just the kind of war he had to go through cause £ €ivo months of U in the Solomon MRS. ELLEN LEPARD At gained a lot of weight sin Otj I taw him last and he looks more Ufet * wrestler now than he ever did, i « a i he has don*) good as far as wresf ft** goat. Just as soon as his finger fats batter he ratendi to start again. There isn* much mora that I can WfiU except that he is in a nice city •tad can epjoy life again, be pro UJMtf Mm, he it a good man. truly, P.P.C Stave Gerycz Mrs. Ellen Lepard,97, died at thej Pinckney home of her son. Louis in Lakeland Lamb last Wednesday. He was her only survivor. She was born in 1850 in Erie, Per.n., The funeral was held from St. Patrick's church, Brighton Friday morning with burial there. Singer Gentile Aschenbrenner Ledwidero F. F. C. G. (, Brighton Pitkin Wilkinson Prosner Singer Pearsal NOTICE the) poetofftce wfll close at 11:0) 44*. on Monday Feb.22. There will sW no rural deliveries that day. postmaster SPECIAL COMMUNICATION There will be special commur.icat ion of Livingston lodge on Sat^ night Feb. 20^ starting at 8:00 p. m. the purpose of conferring two third degrees. Refreshments. All ' mem bers of Feilowcraft team asked to be present Paul W. Curlett, Sec. .ici. J. .<1. Mci.ut a», IM!n:slsf rlerman Widmayer, S. S. Supt. Alfred L*ne, A»»t S. 5. Supt. Mr*. Florence Baughn, Organist ~ ^H994x^hair Pirwrtor • .. Mortiing worship and sermon -..- 10:30 Surdiy School ; 11:30 C. E. Society 7:0(, Church services will continue or Eastern war time until further notice Twenty five years ago World War one was raging and a t its close men thought it was the war to end 27th. wars. 25 years latei w^e find our i selves in a much more terrible war, | what we call .a global war. The pre i dident of our U. S. recently in a I radio address reminded the people! that a long and bitter struggle lie.> j ahead for the United Nations and 1 that we must be prepared for a lar ge number of casualties. Are men at' th e clo9e of this war going to try i to build a new world without the assistance of God and the Church? ' A> a minister of ihe Gospel, I note with regret that many people in our community have very little ir terest in church attendance and some never take time to pray. The church doors are open every Sunday call ing- people to prayer and worship and it is imperative that in the face of the plnin hard facts <fof this war that the people of Americ:. (that includes every community) turn to God and give him their support to the churcV they chose in order that religion may be effective at the peace conference In every nation whore the Christ ian church has been reigated to at unimportant place, the society dic- tators have eliminated al 1 free in- stitution^ and destroyed Democracy;. So it behooves you if you want to preserve your way of life then it is time you give your support to the church^ You need the church and the church needs you. Two new flags, American and Chr istian, were dedicated last Sunday morning and placed in the church. DANCE AT MASONIC HALL Over 100 persons attended th dance at the Pinckney Masonic hal Saturday night despite bad weathe A fitifuJfc of 10 came from Howell Jack Cadwell, Fletcher Tracy at i Mrs. Frank Aberdeen furnished mu- < is asnised by Abel Huii.es. Krdley Van Sickle acted as floor maste and called square danoesHarbar Jlpjnes favored with a tap dance Another dance will be held The countj road commission has gone on record at their annual cor. vention against the law introduced to abolinh the state highway dept. ard sirt>stitute it for a three man commission. They would be uppointej •by each governor and instead of tak ing the dept. out of politics would shove it in up to its. neck ard make a political plum of it. The comuusho uldjbe placed-under civil servjea «»*m>v<- a provision that the three man coram could only be removed .for cause such as a criminal act. In other word* it nhould be administered like the cor servation dept. on Fu ^ Cathoiit Rev Franci* Murph) On Friday Pinckney will play the Stockbridge teams 3 games here This will be the last game for the | girls and their last chuncc to break ' into the win column. Subs Pinckney: Haines, Perkow ski Worden, Burns; Brighton, Jar vis* Andrew. Field goals-Haines 2, Singer 2, Gentile 1, Aschenbrenner; T}wsG ^^ wm » prPscr ted to the 2, Pitkin Y, Wilkinson 4, Prober 2 j o h u r c h b y M r and Mrs Percy Swart fori Sin * er *' FoUl tToato U m b 2^ Sin , ^ and a r e y e r y much apprec i ated . ger 1, Ledwidge 1, Pitkin 1, Pro , ^^^^ ser 1, Singer 1 Andrews 2 Referee i ^- Gospel Minimi Mrs. M.B. Hick* has been ill the r past week with flue and a throat in flection. J Err* Beachy Pas'vOT , , _ ... . L ., J ' Superintendent flfarvm STUrey Mrs. M.By Hicks has received word ( g u n d a y Schoo| 10:00 that her nephew, Corp James Fitch W nr«.h*« q, MV { c< , u.oo is in Naval hospital at Corpus Christe r oxmf( Peop|w Meetmj? 7;30 Sunday masses at 8:45 and ll a.ni Catechism classcb after Mas. anu at lU.a.m. on Saturday. N'ovena 12:20 p.m. rnd V :45 on i-Yiday. ( onl'e*sions Sat. 7 to i) p.m. Sunday Fob. 21 is Septuagesima Sunday. Masses X:45 and 11:0(Ja.n. (eastern war time; i'his is the 4ih 1-riday of th^ !•• \ovej-.a Intention.> in Koly M:iss this w.- ek are Sun. foi- ("a*hei-ine, si le. ( . Mrs. Walter Kaiser, requested i-], Lavf-rn Kaiser. Mon. for late KdwarcT Singer, Tues. for thf late i^athe>in< Shehar, )e<nie-ted by Teresa Coyle Mon for James and Alma Uoehe, n (|ueste<i by Mrs. J a me,.- Roche. Thur:- in commemoration Cor puii'-atoii.i society. Players are retjuested f'o the late Fr. Aloysius Duffe chief naval chn plain and a former clas.--.n-.ate of Rev I- ,\ Murphy. Fr. Luffe died Ffl>. 13 at Phil- udeip.'iia, Penn.He \vus captain r»f th« I'.S. navy and served as chap!. ,; r i'(»r 23 years, lie was also officia escort of the unknown soldier when the body was taken from France to Washington. Ordained ir. 1911 by Cardinal Gibbons at linltimore He *c rved a parish in Charleston, S.C. and wu- commissioned in lf'lfi and made chief chaplain in l93o afte •if rvice at sea,the Brooklyn navy y^r and I.akehurst N.J. He retired in lf» V.K He was the first priest to bee ome chief naval chaplain. Death tools place when he was . r >8 years old.' Rev fos'ph Coyie v. as al.so a classmati of InV at Baltimore. MARRAGE LICENSES very ill with blood poisoning and a y/ e#kly p^y.,. ^ ^ ^ W0d serious kidney inflection. The following marriage licences were isnied last week at Howell:Wil fred, Robinson, 21, Ferton. Jennie Mason 21, Holly, Ed*ar Mc?#1en2«, Brighton, Margaret Mason 27, Ionia Otto. Stevensor.,44, Brighton, Evelyn men will be expUined, The judge* of probate have the power to waive the fi day waiting ::criod for marriages and to perform emergency marriages under certain conditions. In one case of a northern probate judge he is said to have made a gold mine out of it and per formed some 72 msrfages for some of which he got as much as $25. fie faces removal. As a generaj .thjag probate judges perform few such marrages. Judge Pray in Washtenaw county only performed 25 marriage* in 1942. " Congress has yelled loudly for ec onomy and the unnecessary expend itures yet last week they missed a big opportunity to put economy into practice when they gave the Die* committee an appropriation to conti nue their smearing activities for another year. This committee has a Communist phobia and can see a communist in every wood pile and corner. On the other hand they have always been unable to see any Nasi or Japs. In a war in which Russia is our ally and by their efforts alone the pa«t year iHHler has been stop ped why vote funds for an organ-feat ion whose time is devoted in blast ing this ally. v Kdsel Fod now has 3 sons in the service, William enhsted last week. However he will be allowed to cont- inue hi- study at Lakewood, Conn. where he is attending the Hotchkis* school, he be'ng under age. It is al. so announced thas) 175 university stud en | at U. of M. will be called" to active duty this month. They are' "on the reserve list # ^v! '-, HELP FOR FARMERS There will he 52 single young man l<!»vr«n the age* cf 17 ai.d ,{0 a t * ailahle to farmers of Livingston and ' adjoining counties. }t any man fa . thJK county is in need pt a full t t a t 4 hired man attend th« meeting Fab 20th at 10:00 am. at the soil con> nervation office* 80S West Graaet] River, Howell, Michj At this tiraT the method of obtaining these jrexicf ' 7:80 Balch, 228, Charlevioux. U.S. ImploywMttt Servloa k "i* - e: 1 i ' •y

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, i ifWj.

at-* /l # >

i.^rt--

LhriPfston County, MklugaBt ay, Feb. 10, 1943 Wednesday, 17, 1943

«

3 No. 7 T < ^

OUR DEMOCRACY byM.t If

,r -

'J**-

Inducted sjant to Fort

urt, froor.Camp

- •• €' ' for tmti to go

. Induction Renter is tM quota>is doubled for

SighCijpys from Pin list. ThejL are: William! Shirey

lain, Beryl iLewis, ,, • ^ ' / t ' J H l . A r o n , ^ Gexald Swartho'nt,Lou -\^- frPTNKMt^r? Lavem Porath, Rprath

The Local Honor Roll

rk« Following mr9 the N*me* of the Boy* from this Section Serving in Their Country'* Armed Force*

>**

ft.

« ^ l

* * . ?

-•V

tt** oc the lfike Parley farm: *fco»e trtmiOrefory are: Walter H * e U ^

B « W William Kuhn, Junior Lew R^e l lT lover % MP," llei I From Hamburg: Wm. Leonard Devins ~ ^r/]Brightbn: James Green, Hen Ralph Graham

Robert Uetzau Fowlerville: ?«f'• S * « ? • • "

Lloyd Hendee Ted Adesh Doni Spears JBennie VanBlaircum Gerald Darrow Marshall Meabon Lt. Lucius Wilson Dick Howlett Julius Aschenbrenner Leo Bettes Lt. Tom Young Gene Soper Howard Read Steve Gerycz

Willard Widmayer Lyle Euler

Don Babcock Edward Bennett

Royal Baker Norman Miller

•jDfllitgham, Howell: Paul Uber. v Mra|Helen Burns Young is visiting J»er ^wband, Sergt. Jack Young at ^ a m p <3aiborne4 La,

Gordor. Lamb has-been transferee Custer to Fort McKillen

Victor Szymanski Joe Lesiak Arthur Krych Sammie Lafata Paul Singer Burdith Clawson Harold Gallup Gerald Henry Lt. Ed. Howell Maynard Dixon Sergt. Gerald Clinton Bert Wylie Jas. A. Kirtland Harold Farley Clement Thorpe Grant Ward Merle Amburgey Clarence Culver

TeJaenhnrn Bourbonnais ir a stud ! Ambrose Kennedy Friday Haines ' ' ' " I ? ? , T J ! ? » - ^ J r i . £ ' Resell Gardner Junior Dinkel

v-«ftt.**Jlichigan State College in the G l e n n Kingsley Walter Rybka Oontast with Notre Dame university Irv. Reynolds! * Wm. Lamb .*>*. won all four fencing bouts in | Lt. Jas. Lamb Ellsworth Kirtland wbach he took part and was com I B«rt VanBlaircum John L. Conners > * * ~ J . fcc*, Thi. ™ders him £ . ¾ ¾ . C h & t k 3 ¾ e n a b l e for appointment to West | J a m e s McKune Glenn Hall Paint. .... Lt Jas. Nash. Francis Krupa

Lloyd Vanfilaricum has been comm , Capt. Walter Mercer Roy Rice tmi*r»4 A eoriv at Rnmnina »t» KB»A Phillip Placeway Junior Lavey ^ S f rf ^ f 5 Romulus air base c u # f t ^ , Densihore Jack Cadwe

Miss Dorothy .Meabon left last we 1 g ^ P e t r a g Wayne Farrell «k to visit her fiancee, Don. Heller' Lloyd VanBlaircum Fred Rice Jfc an army camp at Mississippi. [Vincent Young Paul Younr

r - . M H . i i F v i» h«™ ™ - f,«'D. V. Hammer Raymond Ellis Gerald Honry is home on M fur J o h n C a r p e n t e r Douglas Hummer

loach from Chanute Field, 111. [G^iam Vedder Robert V..-d<!©r, Raymond Ellis was home from the Leu'.. Body i<ay V.iloori * » 5 T r ' " *£Sttnda?;.Whe™ ' * S S S ? ~ y e r S T SSKr-graduated as a motor machinist mate J a c t Young Leo McCluskey

With the rate of second class petty.:Jack Dillon .Bill,Dillon officer. ;7B. rnaud Dilloway _£yle Cone n*** wu»*v»i> **A ri.ii U o . ^ ^ C l a n e Gilmore Edward Gil mors Donn Wiefcaeyer and Gail Hondo*,,4 hn EiM]e , R o y c l i n t o n were inducted into the army Mono*ay,£fcttor<i Ho w i ett Joe Maschke

Robert Lyndon of DeJtte«hae>envi^ajor Wm. Devereau? Rex S n ?! t h , . in the army photographic dept.^ CJfcpt Wm. Bronson • Lt. Jack White) P i n c k M y T # a m , S p m Taa t k . t B*ll

5 1 ¾ . ¾ ^ ^ ^ A^eneDavis ] B i » with Brighton Lo.e 3 to FowJe _ . _ . , . . r Jolm^liUardoir . Sergt G. "birikel1 «««• «alo^ Pann. was home on a furlottgh j o n n Eisele Walter Graves fl«»day. I Robert Kourt Dick Amo

Caft. Walter Mercer and sor-JBHiy, Lawrence Umstead, Robert Umstead of Eaet Lamring spent Sunday at the' Arthur Kram Gordon Iamb jrmiamMircerhoine. He will re-1 Meriyn Lavjey Alvin Myers turn to Gam^ BerWey;-- Texas this *>**? -Wld'mayeiV^ Gale Hendee week where her 4» in the army medi-

Mich. Mirror State News C O M M I N 1

' **> Ye hrftoi^

Gov. Kelly Appoint* U. of M. Pro-fevior Efficiency Expert

'ihi recei.t action of the legiyia lure m pa^aig « Uw to »«l th« cle ok* buck an hour seem* to hav# t+L

_ ambltd thing* iu ftnei^TThHBejeU^ Meet youi' new deputy gov. folks, j confusion. Most oJ the cities have

1 *m--ounced that they wilt remain on most

Split Contests *Jll Brighton1-

^^ffyt.

en sent to Dtytoc, Ohio.

<o . Lun^1

Tiouble shooting, efficit'iicy sho otin- t'en-eting Robert Ford of Ann Ail»ur is your man.

And because his bosrf, (Jov. Kelly hus some idea of efficiecny himaeij' witrths hw inaugeral message to! the legislature la.s-t month- the noisi-henceforth in the vicinity of the stak'liouse consists of loud protest.-,.

1'Oi- 6 years Ford has been assoc­iate professor at the University of of Miehigai: at Ann Arbor and also director of bureau of gove4 mneiu there.

Like Harold Smith another univ er.-it> professoj- who became Mieb igan's budget director at Washing-ion, Ford's Lansing appoinunent is his first public .service.

H is interesting to note that the legislative act gives ford the powei \vi*,h appi-(»val of the govunor.t > eon,-*o|idaie state agem ie.s. lie wi'l .iieei<ie the usefulness of a puh.u- jot) a function which recent1 / !• i-

j performed by the Michigan ci\ i[ ser vice commission ur.der its powerfu: anieiidiuent. In this function there s«-ein.-i to be some overlapping (%r (iu|, lication but the civil service director is said to have given his blessing to; iho efficiency expert plan.

If Robert Ford goes to town as well as going to Lansing, this I!>-•i!] legislative creation may becomr the most important accomplishment • >f the Kelly administration. Surely, •he po.s.sjbiltie.s are tfi'eat.

And as for the time honored cus -torn of (renting a new conimis. io. every time a group of business n\(m' want t0 protect the public through collection of fae^ arid issuance of

Continued o^ Last l'age

V Eastern War time. This includ cities who are engaged in #-¾¾ o* v\ar production. The attorney general ruled that the election must be held on war time, lie haa contended all alonfe t*iat central time was unconst tional. Jackson,Ann- Arbor and other cities are on war time. In Pinckaey the postoffice, bus lines and school etc still use wartime. The proper way to handle this is for every man to carry tw0 watches and remember which pocket they are in.

. V Some people just will not .stand

any inconvenience at all and as far as they are corcerned there is no wax At Miami Beach, Florida, a number 0f swanky winter re8orters addresex'i letjter.s of complaint to Col. Parker ( ommar.der of the Miami Beach" air base against the practise, of'the

'''"'j soUlifrs .singing in the early morning ' and breaking their rest after a hectic

night we suppose. The Colonel rep­lied as follows:

"The singing will continue. More over please arise at the first S0un£\ of military activity and get down on your knee* with all the members of your household who are disturbed thereby, and offer thanks to God,Wi th me and all the rent os us, that thos,. American* are singing Ameri­can songs ard not Germans or Japs ing-ing victory songs in American

«* roots'.

^ -oal corp. iHis wife and two children will accompany him and live at Albie-1

0», near here. I Frank IIeF«dd6» waa rejected for

active military service but plac ... in tho class ior Uui'ed servic . \

Julius Aschenbrenner^ son of Mr. j «ad MrjSJ Steve Aschenbrenner sr. of Pinckney who was wounded ir. the ilfhttag in. New Guinea has beer. awarded the <40rder of The Purple, MliTt** for bravery in action. He is} atill in the bosprtal and has made | «#Bt#r> with Steve Geryte, also of Pinchney who is a patient there.Tho Uteerwas i» the battlo of ?Ju;>dat-

ACQUIRE mBUlSTERED BULL

Urs, L.C. Glenn of Pinckney, has recentff vacquired a registered Hoi stein frfesiari bull ' from the herd of S.J. Emmons of Morer.ci.

Change of ownership for this an imal, Emmons Farm Pietertje Pride 869989 has been officially recorded by the Hblstein Friesian of America Brattleboro, Vt. -•

WaHer Rys%a Jr. of the Grosse Ijefca^^ak-soatioa-and.*wife were •woe Sunday.

MIHor'-of'; Piackaey who

MRS. RUSSELL COON

Mrs. Rusell Coon, 33, died at the home of her mother, Mrs. John Bel^ j east of Pinckney on Thurs. morning j For the past two year she and her, husband had lived in Lakeland. She; was Jeanette Beard and lived in Dex ter until her marrage to Mr. Coon' in 1939. Surviving besides her hu

Pinckney had a aisasteious week at basket ball only winning one ga' me out of five. Fowlerville came over Tuet»day night and took all 3 games. The girls went down in de feat and so did the second team, better things were expected of the varsity team but they took the wor st defeat in the history of ary Pin ckney team Fowlerville,79 and Pin ckney 22 Palmer was out because1

of injuries and Singer went out on foul; near the half.

Friday Pinckney split even with Brighton, the- second team scoring j its first win of the season 30 to 2iL.i This team was powered by the add;

ition of a new spark plug, Harry Melnik, who played his second com est and scored 11 point, eyer 8, Lewandowki <>, Griffith 3, Clark 2t

The Pinckney varsity took it on the chin again 39 to 17. Their offense being weak. Palmer was still out & Jones did not play, Gentile went out on fouls at the half. Singer led the Pinckney scorers with but 5. j Pinckney Liewanaowski

Melnik Meyer Clark Griffith

i

F. C. G. G.

Brighton Miller Feltv Clark

Mitchall Housner

>lil la an •Australian ho * j >*l\ rband are her mother, a brother,Wm. jrfttt- malarial fever has recovered' of Ajnn Arbor and Uhree slater, ffrfficieatly to return to active duty j Mrs. Elizabeth Brown, Pinckney ;Mrs

January 29, 1948 Ruth Treaster, Ann Arbor and Mrs. J-Jear Mr. and Mrs. Aschenbrenner, Lawrence Hennes,Dexttr.The funeral

2 don't beleive you know me but I ( wa a held at the Gorman Funeral ho- ' Griffith tfebik oyu havo heard of me.' t | me Sun. afternoon, Rev. Edward Dre, Subs Pinckney: Doolittle, Brighton

What I really meant to write, is! ws of the German Evangelical church; Lestride, Smial. Field goals: Melnik,4 that I mot Julius over here( [ officiating. The body was taken to| Meyer 3(Clark l,Griffth l.Leewan.I

Detroit for cremation. Miller 2,*Felty 1, Smial 5, Mitchell 4 . | Foul goals-Leewandowski 2, Melnik

j 3, Meyer 4, Griffith 1. Referee ;0og i gins.

I mot Julius I't tell you Where but you can

fsaas where tho oftty safe place !•.)• He told ma that you already kn! w he was wounded. Well it isn' j

It seema that a sniper shot through the fist and second kn

It is still stiff will soon be I know just the kind of war

he had to go through cause £ €ivo months of U in the Solomon

MRS. ELLEN LEPARD

A t gained a lot of weight sin Otj I taw him last and he looks more Ufet * wrestler now than he ever did, i

« a i he has don*) good as far as wresf ft** goat. Just as soon as his finger fats batter he ratendi to start again.

There isn* much mora that I can WfiU except that he is in a nice city •tad can epjoy life again, be pro UJMtf Mm, he it a good man.

truly, P.P.C Stave Gerycz

Mrs. Ellen Lepard,97, died at thej Pinckney home of her son. Louis in Lakeland Lamb last Wednesday. He was her only survivor. She was born in 1850 in Erie, Per.n., The funeral was held from St. Patrick's church, Brighton Friday morning with burial there.

Singer Gentile Aschenbrenner Ledwidero

F. F. C. G. (,

Brighton Pitkin

Wilkinson Prosner

Singer Pearsal

NOTICE the) poetofftce wfll close at 11:0)

44*. on Monday Feb.22. There will sW no rural deliveries that day.

postmaster

SPECIAL COMMUNICATION There will be special commur.icat

ion of Livingston lodge on Sat^ night Feb. 20^ starting at 8:00 p. m. the purpose of conferring two third degrees. Refreshments. All ' mem bers of Feilowcraft team asked to be present

Paul W. Curlett, Sec.

.ici. J. .<1. Mci.ut a», IM!n:slsf rlerman Widmayer, S. S. Supt. Alfred L*ne, A»»t S. 5. Supt. Mr*. Florence Baughn, Organist ~ ^H994x^hair Pirwrtor • ..

Mortiing worship and sermon -..- 10:30

Surdiy School ; 11:30 C. E. Society 7:0(,

Church services will continue or Eastern war time until further notice

Twenty five years ago World War one was raging and at its close men thought it was the war to end 27th. wars. 25 years latei w e find our i selves in a much more terrible war, | what we call .a global war. The pre i dident of our U. S. recently in a I radio address reminded the people! that a long and bitter struggle lie.> j ahead for the United Nations and1

that we must be prepared for a lar ge number of casualties. Are men at' the clo9e of this war going to try i to build a new world without the assistance of God and the Church? '

A> a minister of ihe Gospel, I note with regret that many people in our community have very little ir terest in church attendance and some never take time to pray. The church doors are open every Sunday call ing- people to prayer and worship and it is imperative that in the face of the plnin hard facts <fof this war that the people of Americ:. (that includes every community) turn to God and give him their support to the churcV they chose in order that religion may be effective at the peace conference

In every nation whore the Christ ian church has been reigated to at unimportant place, the society dic­tators have eliminated al1 free in­stitution^ and destroyed Democracy;. So it behooves you if you want to preserve your way of life then it is time you give your support to the church^ You need the church and the church needs you.

Two new flags, American and Chr istian, were dedicated last Sunday morning and placed in the church.

DANCE AT MASONIC HALL

Over 100 persons attended th dance at the Pinckney Masonic hal Saturday night despite bad weathe A fitifuJfc of 10 came from Howell Jack Cadwell, Fletcher Tracy at i Mrs. Frank Aberdeen furnished mu-< is asnised by Abel Huii.es. Krdley Van Sickle acted as floor maste and called square danoesHarbar Jlpjnes favored with a tap dance

Another dance will be held

The countj road commission has gone on record at their annual cor. vention against the law introduced to abolinh the state highway dept. ard sirt>stitute it for a three man commission. They would be uppointej •by each governor and instead of tak ing the dept. out of politics would shove it in up to its. neck ard make a political plum of it. The comuusho uldjbe placed-under civil servjea «»*m>v<-a provision that the three man coram could only be removed .for cause such as a criminal act. In other word* it nhould be administered like the cor servation dept.

on Fu ^

Cathoiit Rev Franci* Murph)

On Friday Pinckney will play the Stockbridge teams 3 games here This will be the last game for the

| girls and their last chuncc to break ' into the win column.

Subs Pinckney: Haines, Perkow ski Worden, Burns; Brighton, Jar vis* Andrew. Field goals-Haines 2, Singer 2, Gentile 1, Aschenbrenner; T } w s G ^ ^ w m » p r P s c r ted to the 2, Pitkin Y, Wilkinson 4, Prober 2 j o h u r c h b y M r a n d M r s P e r c y S w a r t

fori S i n * e r *' F o U l tToato Umb 2^ Sin , ^ a n d a r e y e r y m u c h a p p r e c i a t e d . ger 1, Ledwidge 1, Pitkin 1, Pro , ^ ^ ^ ^ ser 1, Singer 1 Andrews 2 Referee i — —

^ - Gospel Minimi Mrs. M.B. Hick* has been ill the r

past week with flue and a throat in flection. J

Err* Beachy Pas'vOT „ , , _ . . . . L . , J ' Superintendent flfarvm STUrey Mrs. M.By Hicks has received word( g u n d a y S c h o o | 1 0 : 0 0

that her nephew, Corp James Fitch Wnr«.h*« q,MV{c<, u . o o is in Naval hospital at Corpus Christe roxmf( P e o p | w M e e t m j ? 7 ; 3 0

Sunday masses at 8:45 and l l a.ni Catechism classcb after Mas. anu

at lU.a.m. on Saturday. N'ovena 12:20 p.m. rnd V :45 on

i-Yiday. ( onl'e*sions Sat. 7 to i) p.m. Sunday Fob. 21 is Septuagesima

Sunday. Masses X:45 and 11:0(Ja.n. (eastern war time;

i'his is the 4ih 1-riday of th^ !•• \ovej-.a

Intention.> in Koly M:iss this w.-ek are Sun. foi- ("a*hei-ine, si le. ( . Mrs. Walter Kaiser, requested i-], Lavf-rn Kaiser. Mon. for late KdwarcT Singer, Tues. for thf late i athe>in< Shehar, )e<nie-ted by Teresa Coyle Mon for James and Alma Uoehe, n (|ueste<i by Mrs. J a me,.- Roche. Thur:-in commemoration Cor puii'-atoii.i society.

Players are retjuested f'o the late Fr. Aloysius Duffe chief naval chn plain and a former clas.--.n-.ate of Rev I- ,\ Murphy.

Fr. Luffe died Ffl>. 13 at Phil-udeip.'iia, Penn.He \vus captain r»f th« I'.S. navy and served as chap!.,;r i'(»r 23 years, lie was also officia escort of the unknown soldier when the body was taken from France to Washington. Ordained ir. 1911 by Cardinal Gibbons at linltimore He *c rved a parish in Charleston, S.C. and wu- commissioned in lf'lfi and made chief chaplain in l93o afte •if rvice at sea,the Brooklyn navy y^r and I.akehurst N.J. He retired in lf» V.K He was the first priest to bee ome chief naval chaplain. Death tools place when he was .r>8 years old.' Rev fos'ph Coyie v. as al.so a classmati of InV at Baltimore.

MARRAGE LICENSES

very ill with blood poisoning and a y / e # k l y p^y. , . ^ ^ ^ W 0 d

serious kidney inflection.

The following marriage licences were isnied last week at Howell:Wil fred, Robinson, 21, Ferton. Jennie Mason 21, Holly, Ed*ar Mc?#1en2«, Brighton, Margaret Mason 27, Ionia Otto. Stevensor.,44, Brighton, Evelyn men will be expUined,

The judge* of probate have the power to waive the fi day waiting ::criod for marriages and to perform emergency marriages under certain conditions. In one case of a northern probate judge he is said to have made a gold mine out of it and per formed some 72 msrfages for some of which he got as much as $25. fie faces removal. As a generaj .thjag probate judges perform few such marrages. Judge Pray in Washtenaw county only performed 25 marriage* in 1942.

" Congress has yelled loudly for ec

onomy and the unnecessary expend itures yet last week they missed a big opportunity to put economy into practice when they gave the Die* committee an appropriation to conti nue their smearing activities for another year. This committee has a Communist phobia and can see a communist in every wood pile and corner. On the other hand they have always been unable to see any Nasi or Japs. In a war in which Russia is our ally and by their efforts alone the pa«t year iHHler has been stop ped why vote funds for an organ-feat ion whose time is devoted in blast ing this ally.

v Kdsel Fod now has 3 sons in the

service, William enhsted last week. However he will be allowed to cont­inue hi- study at Lake wood, Conn. where he is attending the Hotchkis* school, he be'ng under age. It is al. so announced thas) 175 university stud en | at U. of M. will be called" to active duty this month. They are' "on the reserve list#

^v! '-, HELP FOR FARMERS

There will he 52 single young man l<!»vr«n the age* cf 17 ai.d ,{0 a t * ailahle to farmers of Livingston and ' adjoining counties. }t any man fa . thJK county is in need pt a full t t a t 4

hired man attend th« meeting Fab 20th at 10:00 a m . at the soil con> nervation office* 80S West Graaet] River, Howell, Michj At this tiraT the method of obtaining these jrexicf '

7:80 Balch, 228, Charlevioux. U.S. ImploywMttt Servloa

k "i*

-

e:

1

i '

•y

BBSS • • • • • • • • • W I I W I * -MNCKNRY DISPATCH Wednesday, 17, 1943

SYLVAN THEATRE CHELSEA, MICH.

Fri., S«t Fob. 19, 20

ACROSS The PACIFIC A Melodrama with

H'JM?HREY BOGART, MAR /

t VrO*i, S Y D N E Y GREEN-S T R E E T

•Cartoon Nov

Sun., Mon. Tues. ,Feb. 21 ,22 ,2 ,

Comedy

GEORGE WASHING i ON SLEP I HERE"

with JACK BENNY, ANN SHER!

DAN, C. iARLES COBURN Cartoon "Case of the Missin l iar*" Melody Matter* '• U. I

Navy Band" .Sunday Matinee 3;00 Cont.

Wed. Thur., Feb# 24 , 25 A Musical Co/nedy will)

GIVE OUT SIST R::» IKE ANREWS SIS, R£ GRACE, MacDONALD, DAN

DA1LEY jr. P l u .

A My»tery Comedy

'X MARKS THE SPOT', with

DAMIAN O V L Y N N , KI-'.LEN and DICK PURCELL

il Ccming. "ice-Capades R e v i e w " "Springtime in the Rockies", ' O.ice Upon a Honeymoon''

The Howell Theatre 10' ; t . x on all ticket*

Tiiur., Fri. Feb. 18, 19

A Modern Girl (Juried by a<\

Ancient Legend

^^ CAT PEOPLE* W l l D

SIMONE SIMON, KENT

SMITH a n d JACK HOLT

Added ''Ma»cli o-\ America*'

Comedy C i toon N • v*

Si..., Feb. 20 "^

M \. Sat. 2:00 p. i.i. l i e i ?r

'7 MILES FROM ALCATRAZ"

with

JAMES CRAIG and BON IT A GRANVILLE

TIM MOLT in

"BANDIT RANGER" Cartoon

Sun.,Mon.,Tu*». t Feb. 21 # 22 ,2J

Matinee Sun. 2:00 P. M. ConV

JON HALL, MARIA MONTEZ

a n T S A B U in

-ARABIAN NIGHTS" With

LEIF ER1KSON and BILLY GILBERT

Cartoon

New* Comedy

Wad., Feb , 24 All A * U « M 17c

Double Feature

GILBERT ROLAND, HELEN GILBERT in

"ISLE OF MISSING MEN"

with

•'THE DEVIL WITH HITLER"

Plu.

Added" A Utt*r fr*» B»t"*n'

THE AVON THEATRE Stockbridgo, atsck.

NEIGBORING NOTE*,' isOTEii of 25 YEARS AGO

Fri.: Sat., Feb. . 19, 20 A Good Comedy

"T1SH" Starring

MARj(ORlE MAIN, LEE BOWMAN, and ZAZU PITTS

Alto Cartoon Barney. Bear** Vic­tory Garden"and "Keep 'Em Sail ing"

Sun.a Tue*., .Feb. 2 1 , 22 Triavel in Enemy Territory ....

DESPERATE JOURNEY*' Starring

RONALD REAGAN,ERROL F L Y N N New*

Two recruiting centers have been opened in Ann Arbor at the Dun­bar center and the Carver center where the WAAC>S corp will ret cruit from colored women.

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Ku lbicki of Ann Arbor on Ivb 1 a daughter, N a n c y Karen.

Owinj? to a butter shortage the Detroit schools started us ing oleo IU their lunches last week. I h e y luve beer, using 2 6 0 0 lbs. of butter per week.

Shiawassee county w l l endeavor to enlist a company of W A A C ' S . The quota for Eastern Michigan is 194G.

On F e b , 5 Judge Guy Miller "of Wayne county granted the Johnson

Dispatch of Feb l f t h , 15*1*. Warren A. Carr who died here Fe ,

14 was justice of the peace 25 years

and village attorney lor 20 At a cock main held near Ann Ay

hot the ulher night a number oi pro fjinoiu county officials were caugh: w i e n Uie place was raided by ied cml men. Fighting rooster.- '>; u lawful.

Ella Fitch is now teaching in the

Ilau^e district. Floris Clark left last Thursday for

Parkin's Arkansas to work. Owing to the illness of the edkor

A.J. Sny ihr , there was no Dispau-.: published last week.

Ge"orge Fiske was home from Camp

. ' * <

Jo- ii g««BeU* of Capiatrano^'Cairo" r ^ i n j a t t i e " "War Against Mrs 'ad'oy' . . . .. <J Cpcrate on Eastern Standard

Time

HAMBURG

Milk Co. a 30 day extens ion of the i C i w . e r over the week end. Loo and Adrian Lavey, Lee l i p l a d y

Geoige Crane, Claude Kennedy,Chri* i itzsimmons, Wilbur Eisele Joe St i

wil l be held at fcn L. < Episcopal church Sunday, i \

At* ftftlrnr+IMl by the Ven Leonu. Hugger, arch Deacon at 11:30 p.in

.4. . . . w m . Winkeihous entertained •i,. A.aiiies Guild of St. Stephens Ep ... jv.l churcb at the Feb. meet !,•,,' ....;i u Jinatl attendance owing to iia.l condition of roads. The pre.jl be • ti,; absent was replaced by Mrs. ., ..Iter DeWolf vice- pres. Mrs. Edna

;iblenbeck acted &a sec. pro-tem. i'lie next meeting will be held at

ihe home of Mrs. Edna Hollenbeck i! uis afternoon, March 4th. Mrs.

Winkelhous served cof fee and cake.

injunction restraining the state from ; revoking their license. '

Martha Hart of Fowlervi l le is now a corp. in the WAAC'S at Dcs Moin es, Iowa.

Mtarried at the Plainfield hurch on Feb. G by Rev. Swadl ing Robert $ o l c and Lii.».> i iancU Ruggles , bolh of Gregory

Supt. A.J. Stroud of Stockbridge high school has been nominated for school commissioner of Ingham co urity on the Republican ticket.

Tht adult night school at Howell high school has now an enrollment of 249 .

Mr. and Mrs Ed. Gilmore of Gr<? gory received word that their son son, Corp. Ed Gilmore is improving from wounds received in N e w Guina.

Miss Dorothy Smith of Marion has made application for enlistment in tho WAVES.""ii!ss An ne Cronnen wet of iMowell was recent ly rejected for physical defects . /

Dexter high school beat Stockbri dge last week 37 to 35 .

Ru.shton has a new factory "The

ckable, Harry Frost and George Lav ey were called to Howell for aimy exams last week.

Mrs. Ray Downing was seriously burned Sat. morning when he,- oi: s love set fire to her c loth ing . the \vu„ taken to U. of M. hospital Ann Arbor where she died later.

lUel Gallup has l e n t e d the Nunc;, A^-ebu l u n n i or the coming year^

]>OAII to Mr. and Mrs. i.fcm.v Kei lejiberger one day last v/erk a .- •

It heats steel

X\V t /111 \\1///

V | I U \ \i M \A \ in less than two minutes—

iv'Uihb -.r 5u ItLAtiS AUG

i he Lakeland Circle Kinof; I'-iu ghters met at the home of Mrs. Har Victory Vu Kit which makes a trars-ry LeeTues.aftei*noon in charge of parent lunch box and is swamped . .! .*. /Glen Borton, pres. J with orders^ This does away wiih

Miss Fettys acted as sec. pro-te. . .} opening the* lunch boxes of work-Mrs. Carl Sours, the sec. having j ers employed in war factor ies

moved to Detroit, Mrs. Edward Ho ugliton was elected secretary to fill the vanacy.

The fol lowing committee was ap j pointed for the year 1943. Work Mrs. Smitjh Martin, Mrs

MRS. ELEANOR N E W K I R K

Mrs. Eleanor Birkett Newkirk,8C, wife of J u d g e Newkirk, died at her

Charles I home in Ann Arbor, Tuesday, Sur-

Tl oniaa and Mrs^ James Jury; camp Mr<. Mildred Whitlock and Mrs. E Dunring quilt, Mrs. Edward l+6ugh

on, Mis. Henry M. Queal and Mrs. A. Collum. Silver cross reader—Mrs. James V. Jury.

Tho next meeting will be held at the home of Mr*. Barbara 1- \ ; ivti . Twos, afternoon, March 9.

Following the busur.ess meetin"

viving are her husband, oon, Bir­kett and a daughter, M:s. Nellie Zimmerman of Jacksonvi l le , Florida and four grandchildren.,

Mrs. Newkirk was the only daug­hter of the late Thomas Birkett, who operated a mill at Dover for years. Fol lowing her graduatiort from Dextei high school she acted as her father's bookkeeper for 5 years and

thioo tables of b u n c 0 were played- • got acquantcd with many old tii.. prize winners were-- Mrs. E. Blum ers of this section who patronized Mrs-. Charles Thomas, a^d Mrs. E , the mill. She married in 1880. The,-iioughton. Light refreshments were lived in Dexter for a t ime where s e w e r following the meeting. ; Mr Newkirk was cashier of '!\o

Ralph Holmos is somewhere in the j bank of which her father was :l i ' Pacific and hopes they win clean up J president and organizer. For 'he

past 48 year she has lived in An Arbor. Last Dec. 28 they celebrate their 62 wedding anniverary.

Toe. funeral will be at th? M fh-

thii war by next Xmas. !Te doe^ not see how the enemy could hold out. He will bo 'happy to hear from ' folks back home.

-Rev. and Mrs. F .E . Pearcc a id ma , stoi', Harry, of Dexter called on Dr* Sigter Tuesday.

Fayette Sellman is canvassing Ah ;

town selling the life of ''James u. 151.^1116,^ ;

A tfleigh load of young peopie from Gregory invaded the skating rink Sat (* urday nights j

Catching on bobs is the most p ular sport now days

Officer Eaton the marshal! who shot the negro a t South Lyon la. summer was tried at Pontine I;; t week for manslaughter .We hn\ o n•)', ' heard the verdict yet .

37 University Students will wheel chairs at the Chicago World's Fi i1

this year for the Columbia Rolli.i. ; Chair co. '

•Frank Ives sold a fat beef to Floy-.i Reason last week that weighed 1940 pounds. •-..- j

Messers James Corbett, Job.. L. j Sullivan and Peter Jackson, famoa> > puglibls are now on the stage.

1 Ne4son Burgess sold his fine woo! lambs last week. They were Aprii lambs and averaged 97 lbs.

Adam McCluskey was badly ir jm ed while working at the BuLler sa„ mill last week.

Pinckney -experienced its first st, ike last week when the ladies employ ed in one of t h e bean picking esta: lishrr.ents went on o n e t They deman­ded n raise in pay and after ' n minutejg it was granted and they went back to work.

A sleigh load of people from heu-went to Anderson s i n g i r g schcol Mor

r

lig thapel, Ann Arbor, Thur-i > -and night.

CARD OF THANKS bu.ial at Dexter.

We wish to thank all of our fri ends for the flowers, eats, cards and tho many offers for assistance after our accident

Mrs.' Gorman Kelly has returned home from St Joseph's hospital,Anri Arbor, with her new daughter. Mar

Mr7and*MA. Ed. Parker & family f r e t Aschenbrenner is staying with ™ her.

As Albert Holmes and family are moving to Lansing their friendb ga\*e ir.om a farewell, party Wed# night. After a social evening followed by ielrf.?.hments Mr. and Mrs. HOLTO were presented with a fine boifelc

• • • one of the thousands of jobs Electricity is doing to win the war

The electric induction furnace is an important tool in helping to speed up war production . . . and it is most unusual in it* manner of operation. You can place your bare hand inside the furnace and not feel a hit of heat. But place a steel bar in the same spot, and in one or two minutes it becomes WHITE-HOT.

Induction heating has several eloar-cut advantages. For' example, it is useful in hardening the surface of a steel piece without affecting lbc toughness of the steel below the surface. Armor-piercing shells are point-hardened by this process. Engines and parts for airplanes, tanks, submarines, armored cars, etc. are made with the help of induction heating. A crankshaft whose surface haa been hardened in this way will last five to ten times longer before needing attention than it would without •uch treatment.

Gun barrels of a certain caliber arc now ccntrifiigally cast from alloy*etoel melted in an induction furnace. Stainless steels and "fussy" alloys are commonly melted in these furnaces, as are most of the high-speed and tool steels used for cutting. And bronze castings for naval torpedoes alto come from the induction furnace.

Induction heating and melting represents only ONE of thousand* of jobs that electricity is doing today in arsen­als and war plants. Electric power is a weapon of war.

THE DETROIT EDISON COMPANY

[

THE OLD JUDGE SAYS...

"How soon do you leave lor camp. Bob.'" "Next Tm-sriav. Judge Bill and George

are leaving the same tune. We're hoping to wind up lira tank outfit."

"Well, the way I've seen you handle a •; actor. Bob. you ought to be right at home . : one ol those tanks. You're going to like i.»e service they're a great bunch ol lel-l »ws. Just last week I went down to camp in see a i»>im<; lu-pru'w H mine and hi* introduced me to some ot !...< buddies. Fine

fellows real tv-men fust Itk** von anrf I till and George tumi good Ainmcan homes Handle themselves welt too

_ "You know 1 ve been checking up on it. Bob. and I've loijnd out thai the American .irmy to**jy is healthier, better disciplined. UMtei trained bettei taken care ol th:m i: lias ever bei-ri m Us history And vou can lake mv W'>rrt*'toi it, Mary h:1'!! rorne b:u.\ lo you a titu man ui great sha[«. Best ot luck to you. Bob."

'VV*. ^,

IHHHIHMt '.:!!!'; ^rMMr1!UM!IMUltUlllllItllllUIUiniliniirilTl1Ullimillllltlll1IHItl

I LIVE STOCK HAULING s

i and

5 ^

I GENERAL TRUCKING I Weekly Trips Made to Detroit

J Frank Plasko ; 1 SjiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiriiMm.miiiimiiiiiiiHiMuiiiuiiiiHi

I

I

—I

ttmtttvtU9§ Aturintu tUw*» imdmufu*. ' « .

BE PATRIOTIC

SALVAGE SPELLS VICTOR V • I ' I

Ouri is A Vitally E«««ntal Salvage Organization, > DARLING'S FARM ANIMAL REM OVAL SERVICE

HORSES $7.50 CATTLE $6.00 HOGS, CALVES AND SHEEP

according to siza and conditions .4

DARLING & COMPANY PHONE COLl ECT TO

HOWELL 450 or MASON 3141

LI ^

I PINCKNEY DISPATCH CH $1.25 PER YEAR,

™ - 4

.,. mm Jim -WIB&W*^ V • • • •• •••• «'« " ' , . , < > ' r - ' ; K " •

<

Canned Goods A Complete* Assortment

PINCKNEY DISPATCH Wednesday, 1 7 , 1 9 4 3

C O R M CREAM STYLE Bantam 2 NO. 2 C A N S * 29«

GOOD PACKS

AN0.2CANS -JC C J

2N0.2CAKS 3 g c |

« NO. 2 CAN? yQe \

y NO. 2 CANS O C c

*% NO, 2 CANS 2 Q C

O NO. 2½ CANS Q j c

CORN WHOLE KERNAUFANCY

(HORN C R £ A M STYLE ' FANCY

P E A S STANDARD PACK

PEAS S IFTED O R MELTING

TOMATOES, TNMATOES, DEF,ANCE BRAND

GREEN S£ANS, FANCY PACK p NO. 20 NS 33,, Pumpkin. Lake Shot e 2 N0 2' cANS 29^ Catsup, Symons, 2 8 oz BOTTLES 23c

Catsup, Fancy, *14 oz BOTTLES 29r

W E ALSO H A V E SPINAC H.CARRQTS, A S P A R A G U S LIMA B E A N S MIXED VEGETAPLES, BEETS, BABY FOODS, P E A S A N D CARROTS MIXED

Dates, Dromedary 7% oz PKG

Raising Mission Brand lsoZPKC 15c Raisins, Mission Brand 2 LB PKG 29

1 LB. PKG. Q K * 1

h'inckneyft Dispatch] Cntered at poatoffice *&$£&. \

Pinckney, Mich 4^¾¾¾ i second class u*ltt*f. JMT Jaai ^ Subscription $ i . 2 5 » >«a* ^ f l S k J S f r ' \

PAUL W CURLEU PUBLISHER >

l l Charles bmsmore »s working in the ) i f Hamburg factory, i

Walter Clark and family were in ? Howell Saturday. \

Mr. and Mrs. (jerry Kichman spent / tlie weei% end ir; Detroit i

1 • • I I Misa Marian Shirleyof Ann Arbo* :

r- *•>

)

FOR THAT COLD TAKE OUR

Cold Capsules i FOR T H A T COUGH TAKE OUR -

WHITE PINE & CHERRY

Cough Syrup T H E Y A R E G U A R A N T E E D OR YOUR M O N E Y B A C K

* * R h S C R l P f i O N S ACCURATELY F I L L E D

Kennedy Orii£ Store \ • • ^ <j>*r *T>

23<

Prunes Pineapple, Fancy Grapefruit Fruit Cork«Tail Pineapple Juice Fresh Eggs

2 J 35* NO. 2 CAN a f i r j

2 NO. 2 CANS O C ^

O NO. 1 CANS Q Q C

nNO 2 CANS o r ( 1 ,'

per daz, 35rj

. visited friends here Sat. night, / air. asd Mrs. Lyni; tiendec an.. * son, Kc-x were 114 A4o»*ea i.Mi.uiai4;. )

Mr. and Mw. harold Darrow ) ot Letroat called or. relatives here J Sunday^

Mrs. Ida Mae Mowers who was thealened with pneumonia is much better.

R.A. ihlousner of Brighton was a caller at the Andrew Misbett home r riday.

Miss Leott Reason was home from Ann Aruor last week oil account 01 illness.

I Mrs. Hoy Reason recently fell ii her home and sprained a ligament in her leg.

Charles Eisele and family of Fowl ervilie spent bunday with Mis. Lmma v . ' M V / ^ A ^ W A T V / v W . V A V . V W M M J W A f t ^ ^ V ollmer. ^ 'HMfe. 4 eV ^ A

Mr*. James Shirey jr^ and Uu.iji- «1 Ba ^ ¾ a^Si j&M ^UvSJSJ £ ^ fl 9 1 ^kaJP^Bsi ^ , ter ox Jackson viaued relateci ii.'.t I Friday.

4 Mrjji Percy Mowers wno ha» be.-., j H O R S E S $ 5 . 0 0 C O W S $ 4 - 0 0 5 4 caring for her returned to Detroit f r- * - 1 /~« u 1 r« . C

last Sunday. £ F a m i Animals Collected Prompt ly 5 Mi&s Helen Feidier spent the week £ modern Equ ipment Capab le Men

end with Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Parke, «J £ . L . P A R K E R . A « e n t P h o n e 8 8 , PincIoiCV U \ r l y n ^ t l L r w - „ fY > * F A S T F S T Dead Stock Service in Michigan

Miss Mary J a n e Wittwer ot \ p s i t '• c m^ m i v u i g o u anti spent bat. night at tne home ot % | - * n ^ ^ a% 1 , ¾ ¾ Jt\ **** ^>i ' Z > ^ * ^ . S l^ 4*\ <~^ Mrs. liable Isham. % ^ 6 1 1 1 ^ 3 1 U & S l C l S C O f i K C O

Mis. Norma Merrill of Webster £>.V.-A^VWV.VV.VA%.W^.%VV.\*.-^^ ripen 1 mo week end with her mother, iUis. ^eaie Vaughn.

»»iiss i.^aueile Nash of Ann Arboi

Dead or Alive

Kennedy's Gen St' r . ^ ^ • ^ " K , «*C -C • •

'Em Rolling

for Victory C O - O P E R A T E WITH

Uncle Sam's Conservation

rvice REPLACE W I T H

QUALITY PARTS

REPAIR WITH O U R

MACHINE S H O P SERVICE

spent tiie week end with her parents ..ii. and lurs.Wm. Nash.„

Gene Campbell nas gone tc De-loit to visit his *laug.her. Mrs. Wilbur i ijisde and family. I

Mrs. Eilii Mercer visited her son ! Capt. Yv alter ivierccr and lamiiy in J rjual Lansing 1 .- ..ut. . I

Mr. anu nxiot nu.. *->... ^.ei\. n, 1 Ann Arbor Monday and Tuesday | and in Detroit Thursday.

Miss Mary Maleitzki of Howell was a Sunday dinner guest of Mr. anu Mrst George Meabon jr.

b-'u. Carr and wife visited Mr. and .»irs. liou Ackley ^Mildred Jack) at Keego Harbor last week.

Mrs.Edward Kenny of Rush Lake has been in Henry Ford hospital,, Detroit has returned home

Mrs. Joiui McDonald and Mrs CI ffor Van Horn wer« in Detroit las. 1 uictxlay and Wednesday.

Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack llrant-ley of Hi-Land lake on Friday a son.

Jesse Hogan and son, Blake of Detroit were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Krdley VanSickle.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Aberdeen vis [ited her" parents, Mr.and Mrs. Fred

Cozzens in Detroit last Wednesday. Miss June Cadwell who w.;s re­

cently married to Milburn W ».*t -1 Brighton has gone to that city ro in­side.

Miss Helen Kennedy of Nazareth College, Kalamazoo, spent the week end with her parents, Mr.| and Mrs C. 1-1. Kennedy.

Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs An drew Nisbett were Mr.and Hrs. Gord on Heater of Ypsilanti and DT. and Mrs. W.C. Wylie of Dexter.

Mrs. Constance Dartpw Loomis of Flushing, Long Island met Mrs. iHelen Devereaux Bennett in New York city recently and enjoyed a nice vis it with her.

Mr. and Mrs. E. Dusenbery and

Tin*'Handy Store

The.iligge&t Little itort> iti To vn

Open EvfH*y Evening

ICE C K ^ A M , CANDY 0ir ;AR > T O B A C C O ETC

JOE G&NT1LE ! . -

Mrs. El izabeth Cologne is working in the local te lephone office.

Dr. Holl is S ig lcr of Howell ca l^d on Mrs. HaUie Decker .Sunday.

• m ^-+^1^^0

4

S Mrs. Sadie Moran and daughter, Mar-h

T H E W A R H A S P L A C E D A D D E D I M P O R T A N C E ON T H E N E C E S S I T Y O F MAIN

T A I N I N G T R U C K S and C A R S S O T H E Y W I L L O P E R A T E E C O N O M I C A L L Y A N D EFFIC

I E N T L Y A T A L L T I M E S

G E T E V E R Y MILE FROM E V E R Y G A L L O N O F G A S . S E E U S FOR P A R T S F O R

T H A T O V E R H A U L JOB.

GINSBURG AUTO PARTS PHONE 181 1018 EAST GRAND RIVER

HOWELL, MICHIGAN

PHONE 1S1

Buy War Bonds and Stamps

dell of F l int spent the week end at the home o f Mr. and Mrs. S. K#

Swarthout . Mrs. Of H. Kennedy , daughter*,

Rita and H e l e n and Leor.a Campbell called on Mrs . John Burg and family

1 near Saline Saturday, i Mrs. Elwin Hulce and sons apent ; several days last week with her moth-i er,Mrs. Florence Bahnmiller in Chel­

sea Miss Betty Carr of Detroit spent

;he week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, R.J.Carr.

I Mr. and Mrs. Fred Read looked l up Harold Reason Reason while in I Miami, Florida last week and took i him out to dinner with them.

Miss Peggy Burns hai resigned her position in the Bell Telephone (Co. a4 Ann Arbor and now works* ir. the!

i Clarkston bank and lives at home, i Gene Hogan who is on a gubmari

J ne off San Francisco and his sister ! Doris of Portland, Oregon, were rec

ent sruesta of Mrj and Mrs. Erdly VanSickle.

Mrs* Doris Sneed entertained the bridge club last Tuep. at her homf in Howell. Those present were the Mesdames W.C. Atlee, Eleanor Led widge,Rosfc Read, Reg. Shaefer, John Craft and Lulu Lamb.

Robert McArtor of LSrookport, 111.. 5 has come to Pinckney to reside, S

Mark Nash attended a soil conscr • vation meeting in Howell Friday. S

Mr and Mrs. Louis Stackable of «2 Detroit spent the week at their farm s here. =

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Collins nf S Ypsilanti called on Met Chalk<v Tuesday^

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Griffith and daughter Joan, spent the week end in Detroit. =

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Coyle called or 5 Mrs. Helen Burns Younpr in Ann g Arbor Wednesday. S

Miss iHtarriett Bowman of Jackson g spent the week end with Miss Phyllis E Amburgey. S

The Misses Ruth Culver, Catherine ft Daniels" and Joan Spears of Lowell 5 spent Saturday at the Edward Sp<;a .< | home» S

Mr. and Mrs.Joe Esper and son s have closed their home at Portage ."-Lake and gone to Detroit. £.

The Miases Katherine Dilloway and s Marguerite Harris of Howell were £ Pinckney callers Saturday night. r

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Read and s n g of Grand Rapids spent the week c d 5 at the homes of Fred Real ard g Arthur Bullis. - Guests of Mr; and Mrs. Louis Coyle last Thursday were Mrs. Ray Bums ard daughter, Peggy, and Miss Helen Polan of Clark-rtr. 1 |

Mr. and Mrs*. Fred Read retured 9 home from a months trip to Horida. * While there they looked up Harold £ Reason at the army camp and enter- § tained him at dinner. «5

Miss Dorothy Vixel who is s tayin* 5 with her sifter. Mrs.Mvvin Shirey, S

'OMIIIIIiuMIIIIHIllMIIIIIIUIUIIIIUIIII)

ii'list National * £

ii auk

UNDER FEDERAL SUPERVISION

Member Federal Depos i t Ins-uru>*ce t orporation. All depos­its Insured up to 5 ,000 for e a c h Depositor.

§ BANKS and the W A R

S KOW 1 O PREPARE FOR E INCOME TAXES

TREASURY TAX NOTES, ^«1-iwf provide a practical way to handle incomo tax payment*. These notes come in denomina­tions ol $25, $50, $106, $5C0, $1000, and $5000. They pay inu-rest of almost 2fA You can buy them at any time and use the.11 to pay your Federal taxes (They are also redeemable for

CUM n demand.) As a sugges-•ion 1 y them on a regular monthly plan, say a $25 note each month, or whatever de­nomination is necessary to meet your quarterly tax paf* menu. They can be obtained Iror. the Foderal Pcserve Bank or v.e stall be glad to handle your order, without charge .'

REAL ESTATE MORTGAGE OR PERSONAL AT REASON­

ABLE RATES

RENT A SAFE DEPOSIT BOX For YOUR WAR BONDS AND OTHER VALUABLE PAPERS. THE COST IS LOW

:tory is working in the Electron^ f at Dexter.

Owing to the facfl that Edward Jorenson ha.s moved hU factory from \ Dcxto: to Chelsea^ Marion and Mar- <

ftttfl mini

ix r ir\ngfir?sa*i

Marion and M a r - l Rev . I^organ iFAarris o f PantJtfi

v n Shirey a n d oth'ers employed there . a n d h i g m o U w > ii^AlmaNHafrii 4 are now located at Chelsea during] working hours. * » D e t r o i t w e w i n ^ ^ *"""*- ' 1 * " > . , > •

t;

f

^^22^25¾

*>U 11¾ Wait

for Spring

PINCKNEY DISPATCH WednoMhy, 17,1948 MKHKUa IMJmC*

?l

3

Classified H Ads1

(w«nntK|i licenses^ an obvious method to con trol competion and prices, Gov. Kelly has this ( say.

Many of the so-called regulatory I boards and commissions should be br

U P W T Ati . _ - «««*,„MJ oughi together under one administra R f l : M ^ T . j L r 1 " " ; «ve e n . ™ , s u i t i n g te con.ider.ble FOB

land and 60 acre, ^ f f f r j reducuon in operating per.onn...

to cut wood

PROFESSIONAL CORNER

Get Ready Now 3

WANTEDTParty to cut wooa on shares from property 2 and one half miles east of Pinckney. Many trees already down. Write A.E. Webb, 13 615 Monica Detroit

Smile Awhile- A page of fullcolor g \ cartoona""depicting~ some numerous

side lights of everyday life. See them in The American Weekly, the maga zinc distributed with next weeks Sunday Chicago Herald American.

See us for paint, shelf hard- g 5

war and applian es I

Since the new deputy gov. is to be responsible to the gov. himself; and will serve a* a new ambassador i at large the forthcoming tug of I war will be interesting t^ watch.

And then good measure, the gov ernor suggests a consolidation of in spectionai services which are now pe

The Pmebey Sanitarium Ray a t Duffy, M. D. Pinckaef, Mieblfjan

Office Hearst 2:00 to 4.00 P. M. 7:00 to OiOO P. M.

DR. G R. MaCLUSKEY DENTIST

112¾ N. Michigan Telephone*

rformed by various state dept*# It is Office, 220 Residence, 123J

v =

x

HAVE* HARDWARE lutiiiiitUiitttiaiiiiMiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tiiifiiimiiiunmiiiii.iiHiiiiu.

INCOME TAX REPORTS-Made out at my home. Have had several years experience and have the latest in­formation on 1942 exemptions.

Mrs. J« M. McLucas Phone 60 FOK SALE: li>41 Kelvinator elect ric range with cables for it.

O.W. Umstead FOR SALE: Order your Baby Chicks now. Barred and white Rocks. R.D. Reds, English white leghorns and whi to Wyar.dottes. All blood tested stock Squires Quality Hatchery, 218 So. Mich. Ave. Howell. FOR SALE-AIMSWAY STOCK & ar.d POUTRY FOOD, including Dairy Feed. Calf Meal and Mash.

T. A. Ware Pinckney FOR SALE: Electric brooders and poultry equipment for Baby Chicks Squires Quality Hatcheryjm So.| Mich. Ave. Howell. FOR "SALE -"an'airmetaVday'be^ >r pood condition- Reasonable-phone-69F--21.

CONSERVATION NOTF

So far the c on.se vt rat ion aept. has collected for 215^2^ deer hunting license for 1942 which is only 2,134 short of; the 1941 total. Fishing per mits are also to the 800 000 mark and within 40000 of the l'.»41 record.

lender a bill introduced in the leg islature resident Great Lake fisher men would have to take out a licon o tie same aw inlaid lake fisherman.

Snow 25 feet deep is reported in j^oii B A L E Kitchen the northern deer county. This p i o ' w o o d o r COal. bubly means a heavy deer fatality by starvation. In order to ullevate this and relieve the meat i-iiortagc (iov) Kelly has advocated allowing hunters to kill 2 deer nexj season.

range, burn Jack Wilson

Hi-Land Lakt

Phone 104% Pinckney. FOR RENT - 5 Room House.

the governors' conviction that one inspector, properly trained, would represent a number of state agencies on a field trip thus could save cons iderable time and money for the tax I payers s . )

if the Kelly administration goes $

down on the books as the efficiency' administration modernizing the old' Phone 19F12 machinery whereby the public ser-1

ves itself, the field of potential re­forms may be extended

The state, as long as we are going in strong for this efficiency busine

Evenings by Appointment Howell,'Michigan

CLAUDE SHELDON ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR

Plackney, Mich.

PERCY ELLIS AUCTIONEER

Farm Sales a Speciality Phene Pinckney 19-F11

sj*, why not take the supt of public ' instruction, commissioner of agricul-' ture ar.d state highway commission er out of politics and make them responsible to a non partisan comnii; ssion whose members serve 6 year terms.

These proposals are not new*.|Bills to accomplish these reforms have bo-en introduced in recent legislative sessions. The highway commission id ea is being over hauled this year.

On the highway dept. you find two wSya of thinking. j ^ia6 Maggie Babour is ill in the

One trend is to remove from pol • ytockbridge hospital with pneumonia^ ities by creating a three man commj Mrs. Charles McConnel is ill. Her ission whose members would be appi daughter from Detroit spent the ointed to serve 6 year terms, argue, W,0I}K e n d ^ t h her.

LEE LAVEY GENERAL INSURANCE

Pbone 59-F3 Pinckney, Miekigan

HERBSNEED Pbone 183 207 H E, Great! IVee

HowelL Miekigan Real Estate, Insurance,

City, Lake and Farm A Speciality

List Year Property With Ma i

Bond Home imp. Co* ROOFING SIDING, and AJBlftTOI

SHINGLES "Ail Workmanship Gnareat—<1

WILLIAM DAVIS 12? Narth Court Street

Howell, Miekigan

MARTIN J LAV AN Attorney at Law

Phone 13 Brighten, Miekigan

VanWinkie & VevnWtiaUs Don W. VanWinkie

Charles K. VanWinU Attorneys at Law

First State and Saving* Bank Howell, Miekigan

J

P. H. Swarthout & Son FUNERAL HOME Modern Equipment Ambulance Service

Pbone 39 Pinckney, Michig*

S

ureg«o LIBERTY UMEJ?KKS

r'Uii aALi i— V 1 Truck with 7 tires.

-I ton Chevrolet |

S. H. Carr I 371 oil wells drilled in this state

last year struck oil and 311 were dry holes.

Emergency forest fire fightds will get 30c per hour this year,

FOR SALE: 1^39 Ford 60 coupe, mileage, 5 good tires, radio% heater,

inentsit ....would end the highway I dept. machine, would save money i would make comm. responsible to' i he gov.

The other trend is to leave the' system as it is.

Gov. Kelly is remaining discreet

TOWNSHIP T,,X NOT1CF. Working with oppossum specin\o:i

CM. Taube of Mich. State Collese found their diet to consist of 50 per cent flesh (carrion) 12 percent frui 10 per cent birds ar.d 8 per earthworms.

driving light, heavy duty equipment tly neutral m

and many extras finish like newT However, on the basis of the of owner, son in service. ficiency philosophy of the gov. we

Percy Ellis, phone 78F1-1 will venture one prediction. If the F 6 T " l A l ^ " G e ^ t i r J e l - 8 e 7 ^ w T ~ 7 legislature puts the highway dept., year old fresh in May.Chas Dinsmore: on a commission basis which is *e

1 wnl take in tax<--s at the Putnam io\.n:,iiip hall every Saturday, from 9:00 a.m. until 5:p.m. starting Dec.

cent l y until further notice. Lorenzo Murphy, Township ireas.

FOR SALE--Doors Windows, frames and sash, .... >

....Frank Plaakro

sponsible to the gov. vwil sign it.

liuvry Kelly

HERFERD HOG Fee, $2.00. Time of service. Thomas Love Farm.

+-m.

Housewives!!! SAVE YOU?*

WASTE FATS j The !Iilt*l States Government

Nee<;» them

MRS, CATHERINE SHEHAN Mrs. 'Oatherine Shehan, 61, died

at Jacksen Sat: She was formerly \ Catherine Fohey of Pinckney and wa9

married to Dennis Shehan who died j a number of years ago. Two children \ were bom to her, Wayne, now dec • eased arid a daughter, Mrs. Mary I Terowakfcof Jackson. For some time I Mrs. Shehan has been living with

Mr. and Mrs.* Roy Campbell, west of Pincknej*. The funeral was held Tue-at Queeis Catholic church at Jacl son. Burial was in St. Mary's con etary Pinckney.

at ^Claude Kerschke is working the Willow Run bomber plant.

Mr. and Mrs. Abner Watkins and daughter of Detroit spent the first of the week here.

^

(

SOIL CONSERVATION MEETING Soil conservation meetings are he

ing-held at the Putnam town hall In Wednesday, Thursday and Fr: iay

of this week .V

i tor EXPLOSIVES Leave Them at this Store

WAR BONDS

Mrs. C. F. Bollinger entertained with 4 babies of auction bridge on

., Wednesday night, Mrs. Robert John­son and Mrs. Inomas howlett won high and low pries.

Mrs. W. J. Crosman spent last with in Detroit with Mrs. Herbert Nesbit

Mr*7 F. M.Bowdish is spending the week at home from her work in De­troit.

Mr. and Mrs. Koscoe Arnold of Dansville wereSunday guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Arnold.

Pvt. Clifford Howlett of Washing-spent last week with his mother,Mrs, too, D. C. and his wife and baby Christina Howlett|

Mrs. Driver and son of Parkers Corners were Friday guests of her parents Mr. and Mr i Lawrence Pet­erson.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Barbour o f

St. Johns are visiting at the Thomas Barbour home.

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Riggs are staying with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Briggs of N.W. Stock-bridge.

Effie Reason «ip*.it several days with her cousin, Mrs Wm. Mercer of Pinckney.

Howard Marshall attended the Red .Cross meeting in Howell Tues­day.

Eileen Koha was home from Ann \ Arbor Suata/ . i

Mr. Vorhoorea it ill with paeu monia.

Mrs. Pearl Kirtland is very alck(

Mrs. A. Parker and daughter, Noreen of Howell spent the week end Mrs. C. E.Drown.

Hilda and Carol Reid and Lois Lavey of Stockbridge spent the week

X Ean&ome young ioe-man, Jack Frost,

StM—"War it a terrible

ct>»U An4 yet it's far littler Than bowing to Hitler

jkn4 letting our Freedom be lost!"

L

Your eooaty eaa^elp! out the Asia by roach Ins Its War Bond quota. Bo sure j you do your «hare . . . put 10% of your eaminaa baso - j -War Bonds end Stamp*.

U. S. Treasury D*»t, [

Established 1860 LnconxHrpA** 391C

McPherson State Bank • Over StstE-Slfki JTaara

•f Safe - " r

s

Many of the women of the Worn* en's Auxiliary Army Corps are al­ready overseas serving in various capacities to help win the war. The WAACS go through a strenuous training to fit them for the arduous duties Uey must perform.

H-YOU GET BETTEtihvifeATS AT

Clarks • i

A untform for a WAAC, complete, cosU approximately $170.00. The quartermaster's department must provide thousands of them. Your purchase of War Beads helps pay for these uniforms. Invest at least tea percent of your income in War Bonds every payday through a Pay* roll 8avines plan at your office or factory. v, S. Twiwry DfPartmtnt

Tea per uet of year teeeaae la War Bonds will kelp to aafld the BUBOS aad tanks tut will Wars defeat of Hit-itr aad Ms Axis partaara.

end here. Mrs. Ralph Glenn visited

Clara Taylor at the Gilmore one day list weekj\

Freddie Singer and Georgie enbrenner of Pinckney called friends here Friday night.

Mrs e

home

it WAR PICTURES"

Ash on

You have seen these pictures IA the daily papers and picture maga­zines.

Our boys1 in foreign service 'are * " • really going through great hardships

Here Lady, Find Out if Yeu're ; f o r u s a t h o r a e D o y o u suppose" one REALLY la Love jn , o n e hundred of us are sacrificing

Judith Chase, quii expert^ writing a n d a i d i n g t h e w a r e f f o r t M m u c k

in The American Weekly with this a 8 w e c a r , F o r ^ ^ o f U8 D t t y . Sunday, (Feb. 21) issue pf The Det i n g o{ w a r b o n d 3 a n d gtampg is the roit Sunday Times, offers a question b e r t w e c a n h e ip # T h e s e d o j l a r g ^ nair through which the girls can b u y food a r <j W a r guppn^ f0P o u r

by self apprasal, find out whether m e n i n service and the nations fight-they are in love by answering a ser m g wjth'us~ ies of ruestions. Be sure to see Sun-

At LEAST $1.00 OUT OF EVERY I day's Detroit Times. eetec | $10.00 WE MAKE SHOULD BE A

Beecher FIGHTING DOLLAR. If one would be sucessful in th*

future, let him make the most of the present -Mary Baker Eddy

Look upon the day as the whole of life; not merely a section.-Ruskin

To worry about tomorrow is to fail of devotion to the tasks of today

May we help with your purchase of stamps and bonds.

I

-wimlHud. McPherson State Baft) We sleep, but the loom of ltfs ] Money to loan at reasonable rates

never stops, and the pattern which, Interest paid on Savings Books and was weaving when the sun went do- Time Certif ieates &f Deposit. wn is weaving whan it comas up in ; McPherson State Baal the morning. j All depo4U op to $$,000.00 ii

ktime who is act prudent la the cho-: sored by o r menibersnjp 1st Fader-Ucc of his cesAfeav. af Depostt •'

No man can be protldestt of bis ^

I A

$£r*tf ' 'K