6
**£*. •>*€>: ; * . v* <tv/ t «- V" £ Volume* $8^ * **» «. ^*-4 V *(*V- -**y' 1 Dispatch #; Tht FlndtoeY Dispatch *^~ lesday. May 2, 1951 Mirror appointment of Blair Mcodv Detroit News Washinqton con A? t= Rete i&tee I .•***•* Accidents j Church Notes i , , .-— ~~.* OTG- to abolish the nickel pav .eenendent and columnist cxupe ' v station ccuX * - S^SSSB^ * ^ ¾ known "Russell H. Englehardl, mqr. in ., Mictoqantr having been in, here for the company, arihaunc, WashingtonL 18 years. Senior!"*a that 10c pjfy SJns wnl be^n- teitftpon, Michigan^ fooiiHi "" duded in an application^ 1>e car* senator says h e "is a per j iiled'By Michigan Bell with the sons)!, friend of his . ialfoouar Rublftf Service Xomhiission on Xne^i Siilfer- politically- Fergus*! "MdyCl|'for a jrate; .increase i "t 0 on .sponsored him when Ihej rajse Trevenues' 17 percent or wasfswom in last W^gneeday.-I $22,000-000 a year ' " . Pt&tt: quotas have been cut; ttgain but may be stepped up due 16- the Korean breakthru. Doct<J^;ara ctfco on Jhe • draft list. -•';?- 1 Civffiem defease, fob pefklna up. Savior 'Get* Mainland, d£f. «erise H*ad s a y s -'^gOO/JOO h a s j spent tp^obiain blcxfe types. ! '• f.be Little Hoover commission^ claim^ftca^. save. $114,790 -a! y e a r &---MicruQpcn ' government' eliminating red tape..:- ..--** The 'Michqian Bell ^TelephonV She" MicVann R»» v-i'-i. J**** w , ere auto aceidM fy J? 00 ? 1 C^olte Church W.Mic-uqan Beit Telephone ents over the week end in which* i n^'*?"&**' Michigan men-; was killed, ihe deal' 1%S" &*»** '• Schmitt, Pastor School Notes i No. 18_ Current Comment 'Comiskniy tcda/ 'loined the oar onja man is £ric Casteliro 21, uT^tF i^^SP Masses of M, student, jrcffli 80,001^ &?»» *** *M ™*0' H*P nurt, Inexinver of' the* ear was *~ crmoant -to-l-rsTs day for most residence phbrre. risers' herjff, '" .tfinqleftaidt.saia the .•Tate in ^isu^fc "'is jx:tiejrifly iieeded -to help the_ company .meet tjie mounting cooi^, oi doing' busi ne wa and to .assist it in providing'the service the. stale will need cfur ini| »»he national, emergency.' One of £\$ . - last •• survlvbr^f aqainst the tide of inflation/.1he ,-- ^ *<**- ,^creased 5 ttnt^ci>arc^ at public' i3£' operatihq cpi§!s: TEe*. v ct>mpanv r pi:oncs nc ^ .^ ila - iiea u; ia ^u:.^ earned, 6.25 v on ltj•. investment, e d since (he oiqanizaticn 6t th-i last y A ear, the, ,..hicftffst rale of- Michiqan ..Beii in 1904. In pro »«tum.-fer any-pUbUc .utiity . in. r posint,' to abandon) it, the com t" 8 .* tc 2¾•, > « ,. m , , paiiy follows a national trend.! Tne Michigan* .Bell Telephoned Ten-centdiurqes are ( in ' ejfectj. wants 1^,000 of its vooks out-f ^ Now York, Minnesota, iilinoi^l' n loan hixek. ,-, Direct r relief, /aasefe dropped 437 last mofith, - puttina the re lief load at 2^854 csas^s, : t Tn< ^ e! in N e w j^rsev.' Iddhp an^ •'Retail spies'per , capita •nj ^ txhe -PaKrific : coast: J^rtehiqau' Michiqan last year ;:were $?6 $ i v eS ti m Qt ec i the' increassed pay' ;" 'Station. -> caharqe would rai?e' Leland Stentoivr 23. ot'lad Axo. University senior. Her Shad :io rrtttM .„ drivnig permit: but was Released s^SL by Poiice - after q&estioninq.Cas s^fF. teiihd had been initiated in the Kappi Psi fraternity at.^jhe uni H^ crrU M, -<w^ u ™ « - ' I-' ] versit y ' caiJet c a m e out \o a Por ne saaa uit, icae boost wouaa inb-o +rrv S riA f«^ ~ „ ^ TL Tinnr**-J^-K-^ rt rn i T ront . ^j ^o«e-tavern for a patty, iher- hum J centp aJ W9re -.30 student* in-the party-At ^^- I 2i0a av : m,' they - startei'* home W ) n 4 # 8:00 & 10:00 Noveb&a Devotioas: Corfoffijonif By Gretchgn T n ^ k R ^ ^ Beachv ( ttF^venina at 7:30 p . m. tnaay; after Novenna Dvrotiona 1 ¾¾ f 7:30 to 9=00 P, £ , Sund$&,l>efcre 8:00 Mass, but -kiiled to -rrfaice .^he "^urve at' the McComb farm on the p e k . '•' S! 1 ter road abovg^ the Uttle .^dai* t;ft£_ ! and craahed into the^sarne tre atienal Loamiunity Church onald Braa/, pastor ay.4:00 junior choir /:oU, senior choir prac- fs at church 4:00 p.m. pruyei meoti.'ia at ?• K : -?% ott home. • or Christ m,--t want* ;, a ,irate "...increase of teODD,000'l6^mee^, i ^s -^iuac-T"• h . d t r y VrvStI wfee a doctor.andiwoinurseV ¢^.0¾ 1 ^^ 1 ^ s ^ ^ f t a S 1 from the university wer*IJdlb£ l!!' 0 ^?/ 111 , ^s^nd.c^. oT rnatenaU some years'aqo after a ^fea^ Sul SSfe^- u„ Lake party.- - • •• * ' '^W2°VVVddinq bells ser. - - - .... >."{! vice ; ^^a married couplr-s in memihq .two £caA | v i te ^; ^mon/Give and Take w»'«!cday craohed at M-3&" and Qs^t^r The cars were driven b^v fflbvtl IXindas of Whitmore-Xake who /was oh. M 36 and -Harlan Oliv ''er of Ann Arbor who wa Dexter Rd. The latters;wi; 3 childrenwere withh^in. , „ „ was alone-'All -escape'd ih^Ir\i 01 iv:f7rf|bqe.';Sun. school- 11:30 Jacks'.^n Assn. meots at Jackson 3 to 8 p. m. - Monday 7:00 p.m. Family nito | th--" x | Pot lurk supper. Slid Co; gl. Family Camp. TUGS-, 8:00, Younq Ladies Aux m^ts at Leonard Lee home- j g£ ^0^¾¾¾¾^ f ^ TELEVISI0N ™% Ine hiqhef chajqe ..hag been! A fc bn ; new ..television"'**©"' ; made' m New Jersey- Idqhp and; r~j 1^* „.«^1. ,„fil* '\ 1* .*per persjosn- Total sales were $5,950,268-000. The senate killed- the' capital punishment WU ? S0 io" 42. Th^ l^>use passed the -one, .man flrand jury bill. ;*' The attempt to ^repeal- th- property lien law aqawist per sons receiviriq blcT acfe .'pen -> slohs failed. The - isrincipal ar quemert aqainst - it , w a s it would increase tl»„welfare loddi -7^\.A\$b experts saV.^S^ar ouf- • put 'fh M i c h i q a n tjftS •'• year wiftd be Sver ^500,000 1 ^^ r e v e n u e s . $2,6OQyOOO a vear^. ' Und©£ the application, month | ly'ihcfeases for the various, types of services in Pintrknev 1 would be as follows: 6 ; |- Residence ••service, individual • line, $t;" 2'.i?trty 75c; 4 party . phone? lo.vcents. -75c: rural ^5c; exiensi-n tele! :'., lnd^'iduali-,; CtTQ&jf bltanoziite Church Kev. ^zra Beacb>. Pastor was opened last week, vffefi ?' P * s "^— - • .. Walter Esch the-Detroit 'Edison emplo*-ee> i S sfiS ? xlf -•••• Paul Chaffee and their families in southeast j Ji^nq AorsWp 10:00 Michiqan totallina 12,000 per | ^ , 5 a y , Sc £ ooi 11=00 sons., attended a television pro-1 y? V ? ur \S • • • • • 11: *5 qram- featuhnq ihe activities J oun . a Pe «Ple"|.Meeting ..7«30 of the Detroit Edison Co. - * " fcf™« ^ ° ^ * c * V ' 8:1S Prentis Brown, board -chair , Cottr "^ 0 fellowship Service man opensd the proqram. Oth er sosakers were James Park- er, president and G e c r q e P<:>rte^, chief-- enqineer. p'~ .High points-of the prow were a new ' power' plant ^tia .. Ths past' n^rfiers'"vJin r ^ofk I xiarfcial squeeze /.may Wori 1 ' First doqrees on May i%- I War II between inflation ari~ Business service fet^i^f : ^ ^ ^ e of current with--t Vbf, extension phone ^c ; , Qntario £lerM[c s L^nq distanee rates would r^. T h e n e w pbntj t h e 6 t h ^ main unchcafced. I, be located on the Detroit V i . J Dn>, ehardUcnd. that Migfriaani .*.^>I thr> •Art*-^ -^*—'— x^r:*fcf i^au 'cbnti****— " ' - W^Jnesdcr- 8:00 P, M> A Staden* Peace Deputation Team from Goshen .Colleae will' present 'Ahe proqram at the church" afternoon and evrnina. May 6. Muric bv quortett^. n ' Rouqe. It win j»?|p serve future' adqed loads 0] the company's . 7,'500Q sq>]are-mile area. It will On Friday. May 1ST Ahnj the>imc laq in obtain k na relief , ^ called t he>Riv('r-Rduqa plant ArbjBiiodoeiKNo;'544 will aom® 1 . cifisitf i h e y e a r and a halt dela\ p anjd is n ^ b b ^ PiNCKNEY tUNGS DAUGHTERS The Pincknev ,C':IC1 : J cf Kinq's qhiers will *• Fred Kiaderqarten and First The kinderqarten thanks Bill JJeiireys for makinq their movie box- p r Trie firs> grade liad heir pic taken Iqst ,we*ck and H was in <he Ann A^boi paper. Don Ackleys doq has nine I 1 new papjg*es. j Johnny^iolben % brouqht an In. J dian arrow to school- 1 1 We are brinqinq in train pic 1 I tures for our train unit. ! W saw throe movies t<-d M y. ! 1 Second Grade i We aio,tesfnq Cheryl Fred'-r j ick who is^ntyvinq to Colitonu'a. old "Si.nida'yt * We; ore/iap^)y to have KoL Morqan back from Florida. H< biought bricki-mony souvenirL'. M'iiy Mencke, Paul Endros, Claudia B^wSon,'Lucille Barrett Keren Eich^rianf -and Tommy Read v/ere Asont Monday morninq. * C Wo -T-iyjoyed the movie, Bkr k Beauty, mada by the 4tlr and 5th qrado. ., ^ . We visit';d tlie* kinderqarten last week and saw thier mov Black Sambo. ' ( Our subscription list' ,for thai summer weekly readers is biq' enough to entitle us to receive larqe story book for our library- T>J* llurd Grade Saridy Kuhn is back af'^r >t weeks illness. Sh%.was 9 years old April 23. ^' S a n d y Morqa%- f is \y~\c\ fr^m .Florida. Ho qot'-'a sun tan and brought back a a^coanut and a lot of pictures ' Dudne Haines b'ouqht a craw fish to school and Jack Lee two turtles,a painted arid: a snapper, Bill Jeffreys made' us a box' for j uur. movies. . . The oats we planted -'in' (differ ; exit kindly of «oil are /qrowinq,; those in i am tiicfbo-st Fouiik ana Futn Ui'ades r i n , Are the people of the nation becoming more reliqious or 1^ i it the. war tension thai is fillina the churches. Accordina to Ha* ures compiled by the National J Co until of Churches while the population increased 36 percent 1 church membership increased 60 percent.Armed conflict seems to awajcen the reliqious instinct .and many personis who have never professed any ieliqious belief bofore do so in times of war. We know that attendance in looa] churches has increas- ed to suc:i.nn» extent that at times the churches cannot hand le all those who attend. In many placos more and new hur.-hee are beinq built. The Aim Arbor News in an editorial on the subject says there are 16,000 church members in Ann Arbor and 6000 more who be* long to Sunday Schools. This is a very sizable part of the pop- ulation. We think this is the principal strenqth of this notion aqainst Communism which is a the stic In this country there are few who profess to be ath. estics. The "number d persons who are buried without the aid of ihe clerqy is veryyery small The parents of a new born baby qirl in Chicaqo suffering from a blood s condition were told if tho baby was not criven a! truutiusi'-n she would die. The parents are members of the seot ailed Jehovahs witnesses refused to consent to a trans- fusion saying U was aqainst their roliqion and quoted pass* aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill, the friend of court ftie baby's guard ian. He owsenjsd to the trans- fusion, the baby was given an eiqth of a pint of blood and its lifo saved. These sects who ! found th^ir faith on a sinale verse or chapter-in the Bible do . .,_ We- fim^ied our 'mov^.Black,; themselves and-*• the world a rs WiU •meaUtfhh .Mrs-; * J ^ ! & and showed lt:iqj «he|. disservice. There-are many in^ em en Thursday at 2:W^~^ rooms, . g ^ , : •»-, - ,.. f terpetxations of the"Sibte few of .. to JPinckney caid conferr M-.M-f in qeflrn^ *ie fate increase PegraeSs. "•" .-• 1 By Order of the^W. VL ,+Ba>4 W» Ciirlett, Sec, *. * v .last Jii , "'^n^e meet ; indiV:rv I ynti^H ly^kJ* t Ui^L V*-L V W-i '• have''had to operate under high -er costs' for, many mcrAhs be fore additional.•• revenuesrfcould be.obtained. Furijierniore these j revenue increases have never- m- *~ '* We-have ^received aCietter, _ .... _ ' from the stato^ ixir ' association | Caught up with ^ the postwar ,. v '^iin whi^i' it proposes, sweepina 1 rfsfe hn- our costs." • • chanqeS^i the election * of th©[. *Jjn p a y r o l l s a l o n e hot countina : judqcs^'Cli. V?ould abolish > the! all drfer risir«r* v costs' of doina .^ cprJjS&nV*crnd h a v e t h e U d t e bar[ business, qeneral wage increa- '*"association submit a Jist to the! ses have gde^d^' $40,000,000 governor" who would appoint] rrore a y e a r .to^1he 4 % company's them. It would:-^ increase their t .ex>?&nses than ID years aqo, in tonus from 6 to 8 yeajfs.it wotild raise,- thejr-^salaries arid provide J a fetfrement plan. We ; doubt the lecomm^hdations wul r ,vbe ioll : . owed. We think the iuclqes*-noW in offices, elected, bv the people are satisfactory^".. * •- " -V,**- -V • '' v ^'- /clucintf- the ;$S,000,C>00 etdditigp- xzl payroll expense incurred §v ^the wag^'increases of last Nov. tWe.. increases* dufmq the same »Taeriod have'' yielded,additional "revenues'- of only^ : $21,000,0Q0. Improvements in . the telephonb . art, , economies and- growth in] fufiesi ;the volume of busirj^^ have} -permitted tts^tb nil part of t h e . g a p but infldtlpn r e m o v e d sof flOSPlTAL VISITATION DAYS pansion : program Whtch will bring the Edison qeneratmg cao ability to more than three mill. •ion horsepower by late 1953. ;Studies are-, underway whiclii will result-in* two tfansmissions, one crossinq the Detroit •• river will benefit Canadian) neiqhbors. Also help industry^and aovem- ment jurnish t the nations licrht and pdwer*and -. maintain top •position- rrmoflq power produc inq ajuntii^' of, the world- Chairman" Brown 'commended J the employees for their contri i bution to th*^ companies sound condir!onJJe said 50 percent ol the QOrflpanieJ. 56,078 stockhold ers use' Ed j son- power service. Edisoh 'employee leocentlv won a nation safety award for putmg in 1,000.000 work hours without a single. djsablinq inl HAS HIGH AVERAGE ' At "a Michiqan Normal College ^_ r honc^-icoriVocarJon trn» ; we'eTc.dj' Rapidly t3*crt we could-not ab Y 1950 t^dutfrte of Pinckrtey hitfh' s ^-¾ entire amount of the - Livinget •f, - schdBl received Teoognitik>n' for 33uiiaanav.and maintaining a schooiastic avefdae of bette? than 2.25 "bf "a possible 3.0 - av erage. She is Isabel Brady, ^ daughter of-Rev- and'Mrs. D.D- Brady; of 131 Un6dilla StVPintk- "ney. -She is a freshman, jaaior .¾¾ •.—_•«*- » ••» . • •• * .** ^ ^ 4 ** HE yoiurto * .avfe'<f*ceiye4' r ^ letter iriani deBoom gl thS dis which .states he/ voted House 3ill No. 104 which increase Jhe pjay of state 1 dnd? representatives. ne thinks legislators are , added expense r^ecaUinq that the«- camnanv ^1 proy\jpled mgio^ . insteiirtlcrtions J- a t ' 79''miHTarv and 86. war pro duction estabiijaments durina ,.the-'lcrst : wdr. t iBglo*4a»dt said. that me i'Michigan-Betters aaain moving* ahead .orv a*^umber of the same, types of proie<rts for the-new emero;ency* In addition 19.00Q families ^ u » -wditlria fn L-^-N on county people 019 liivited to visit the Pbntiac* ^tcrte hospital May 2, 34. It will p. m. Mav 3rd- Plans for Mother and Dauqfter banquet and r lec ; *. lion cf ofhgfers. [ * ti. beo. J A. A., A.- SERV1CL STATION I hcrve been appointed AAA Representative and am pre- pared to qive 24 hour a day Wrecker and Towinq Service. HOCKEY'S -«ERVICE,Pnotie 145 .FBEDERIGK ARTHUR BLADES Frederick: Arthur Biades, 66, son. of G«eorqi& and Elizaboth j Blades, died 'irt his home at Pettysville- Apsil 29. He was a I a farmer and .jifelonq resident of this soctionifeurvivinq are his wife, Carolyn? Two sons, Clar- ence and L°o of Hamburg twp., a daughter/- Migs Irene Oesterl^ of .Chelsea qnd*9 qrandchildren- Also.a- brother^ Rutherford of Pon'iac and. thiai s.sters. Mrs. Wm. Leveret'te of Landing, Mrs. Gene! Wines ami Mrs. William Eflch^f Ann Arbor- -The kmeral was at Swarthcut Funeral Home thig.morning ( Rov. Alfred Schmitt pfiida|jiq- .Burial in St. Marys. C^tftery. which aqree. •xJ m Hrie for "service and 133,0001 y?to^addition thf skilled doctors c^isftJlflSers are-.waiting for hiah-1 >crnd nurses an^ssoaal workers /arc«M of service. ..-, * ' "* " ' cbriuniiea. pn 9upp*eircr-- he opeif^KS^se there from 1:00 10/ ^-_ « WTT 9 -J ' #mivto. 4:QTP. m, * ^ SQf T BALL LEAGUE STARTS , TliJsr<>pen houar is for the purpose of crllowinq the people rhe roUowing teams have to seejtoe proqress made in the £e en drawn: Joe Lqvey:Don Am •ectnneSPpf mental cases, new burgey. Twichell, Tack Jeffreys, } S s[ itrfdes toWaraV these cases Hewlett, Cork Darrow, Cairdl .>• •' '—' ' ' *' M^e Carr, Chris Campbell. 1 * Eighth Grade Joe Jeffreys: Burrouqhs, Hurti.'J -We ar4* Adlkinq about seeina b,se, A Mrosfka, B. White,Aaron *" ' " bise.Rebman,Jerry Clark,Aaron Lavey. ' The "5th qra|38*Vior roll-, all A'« is Kancy SiTipin, Ruth 4 Taul,, Sally Utley,GordonTitus, Daruiyl Salyer. Patty Palmeft .''Bobby We are not in ifavor ol the Kelly, Lon nie Hum cqy- .Karen' move to recognize* Spain and ^ ' % " her m e m b rslup inVibe" UN and f n<\ her unonciallv iby q loan. Franco rulor of Cpyin- is the last dictator m Ihe World except Stalin. He gat hiJj power in Span by the aid of f Hrtler and M:jssilin who sentiihim troops and plants. Alone }% could not have accomplished «. He. abolished political rprtiesjbc no oioctions and ha» outlawed all organizationb such as the Masons. Rod Cross, YLM. C. A. f 1 <•'. The arquement ^s that if armed Spain would b^ a bul wark aqainst commuiflsm. We d abt this. Croat Briian with th R o k of Gibraltar* controls the Meditercmian a n ! ynllhouah, sh^ t ok it away froip S.oain a couple of hundred yefr* aco. Spain 'ns made little effort to g-t it b a d : In 1894 it tpolr th^ : countrv but a few defeat.Spcrp. and fre* contest was ono sided- wants worM r&xxmS&QdZ should set his house i n . and adoot he prtatfples fdl$ rest d the world. 0 Gustafsonjohn Burq. Fourth qrada honor foll:E h ita Leo, Kothy Kirschke,J3 ch.c Massey^nly, Patty Rac'i iiz Judy^ r^ocker, Sandy BJan n baken, Dennis Clark- D; k Y. 11'' edy, 'Delia Davis, Dartny S" g er, Susie Clark.Gordon L -B 1:--, Beverly Campbell, Nailcy Wy lie- Wo arc watchinq the" qr.v,'t!\ of a pclywoq, bro .-qh^^in b in by Gordon lab' tie. , *** Richard Soc:k<: .'• was -M yea r r old Sunday. v'- \ Sixth Gr.de ^ * Some of the boys andl girls are makinq puppets out pi pap er ma^he. *\ We are waitinq for our s4aq. • which Mr- Jeffreys is makinq. Mrs. Tasoh is rxtdinq us,Kid ! napped by Robert Louis Steven son. »• ! Seventh Grade ' I The history class is studying I the Articles of Confederation, and Constitutio and are mak- ing .a chart to represent this -ritical period in our country. W« plan to visit Greenfield village on iast day of school Chris Campbell goes to De- trovt Friday fr»r tho Metropolitan s^elliriq bee. It will be broad h Id^&e new facilities available *rfot ttecrtrnent. fcv .•"i*. y. _. _ Votfe- to increase his own sal %"*fr4k*i.<xryat taxpayers expense-tinfll •er 1 \ui hospitals CflMnSJmer state in • stitutions ore paid a wage com parable with wages paid in ' prtycrte industry. He would increase the salar- ies of the House Ways ana * 'Weans Com- and the Senate Finace Com. arid let them m#9i 4 weeks before the legislative session open*. This would en -able them to qet appropriation bills out of the way* shorten lb**sessions and cut expenses. 0, E. S. NOTICE Pmckney O. E S. regular meeting, Friday. May 4 at 8:00 PINCKNEY .BEATS BRIGHTON Pinckriey helped, flrighton' de • day arid Jhrew* a monkev more money he refused 7 dicate fter new diamond Thurs •. 1^ .^.^.-- «•_ ^ ^ . 1 ^ ». •_ il ^V! —_ 1». wrench in the machinery bv Wkininfcr 14 to 9.. Jnak ,^e4frevST tAuny people wonder how the will explain! the' hospital proced lire and the' atfe and crafts and other rehabihlation courses av- ailable there. Each pa*ierrt is examined per iodically as to r proqress and -^bc-^'JBO percent of the .cases *xg „j$Dt home cured. Wb note inat the Geneia^ Mp*« ors is one of the 16 corporations finar.c 'ng a course crt Yale Uni* verSity which hds for lU obiect the rehabilitation of the prob- lem drinker. It was the cc lions which financed i *L ' TV-Z?* VT""" 1 ^^ 4 B«wmq tion back in World W a r . . tne-Qetrtfit Tiqers play a niqht and put it in effect The pre $ ™ e May 25. j ironists sold them the program i • - * % .?rahn.. olr^ Ken Kuhn by promising it would ' ' "S. nyi—pitcheci f o F ' K h c k n e y ..and al thov^gh he allowed 10 hfts.aot better support, Pincknev only making 2 . errors to Brighton's 12. Chas. Ccdrd gbt 3 hits tor Pinfckney and Everson bit a home run for Brighton. ' Bitteries:Pmcknev-ifeffervis & M.Matteson; Brighton- Luekef & Prleskorn- J CARD OF THANKS The sophmore class wish to thank Mrs. Mildred Parks, Don Hudkins,Barbara Bums. Georcre Johnson and Clare Sworthout dor dowittnq their time and serj patients at Pontiac are treated, how they live etc. and by what methods they are cured. These visiting days have been set so these, facts mav become known. Hiram Smithjudqe of Probate MOTHER DAUGHTER . BANQUET MAY 16 ' The Pinctaey Circle of Kino* Daughters will Isold their ann taal Mother and Daughter ban cruet at the school on Wed*May 16 at 7:00 Dinner and pro Reader :Bob Darrow, F. Singer I were ofltlast JtveeK.due to llnnss xt n n - y "" - * ' ' y Those 0& ,the honor roll are Bertie j p p y . Anita Cory.Ken Kuhn, '.•^tirley Had den. Jean HiUinbra^i^vn HowellEva Kell enberger, Sretchen Tasoh.Ricky Miller, - Marilyri Shirey. Those with perfect attendance records" are BUI Rowell.Shirloy Hadden. Jim Doyle, Gretchen Tasch. •» The 8th grrrdo girls 'played tae high school girls at soft ball on J. Mrosfka. Rich. S; Meabori, M.Mattesoni. "G-Darrow. Ii>. Widmeyer:Ge¾tile < R|di|bn,D. Darrow, Scott Barrett, Ware, Jim Matceson, DinkeLC. Barrett. May. 7: Lavey vs Reader,Mav 9," Jeffreys vs Wedmeyer, May 14, • Reader vs Jeffreys. .Mav 16 Lavey vs Widmeyer, Mav 21. Wedmeyer vs Reader Mav 23, Lavey vs Jeffreys, M~ 28, Lav ey vs Wedmeyer M,; 32,Jeff.; Frid ^ , t 2 4 to u reys ys Reader, June 4, T,a rev J vs Reader, June 6, R r ' r vs Wedmeyer. PintfcneV may put a team in the county league that starts at Howell in June. CEMETERY ASSOCIATIOH ^__ At the Pinbkney Cemetery! Tickets 75c for chUdren) I association elected the follow cm* $1.25 for adults. May be oh J j n g officers: Pres^ Don Swar rices at tha sopvinore dance- i itahaed front mrr mesnber or tHout; vice prei-TvJRoss ^ead. OUefje IfeqdUev* Sec. . - •>'. •MiJ^f'i.^ 1 THE J HOP T& MAY 12 V * The Junior Class of Pincknev high school " cordially invites you o attend the annual J-^Hoo on May 12, 1951 at the htaht high shool anditorum 9 p. m- to 1:00 a. m- Admission $2-00 . ex coiple^en Gage 6 piece orches tra. Tickets on sale by all \m> tors cnvic4 Jk^j*. week end drunks and MondaT ! absenteeism at their iactorjee. They overlooked one factl" people like to drink and will so loqardless of cost Com quontly a huge illegal industry called bootlegging spranq va&r who made millions catertna to ths thirst, corrupted public of. ^ iicials and in some places took over tht government Then in- dustry withdrew their support and prohibition was aboushed. Now encouraaeel by thsr ol such holies Arihom will try another moral persuasion may have more .- O V. F W< The 6th district- fk»n will be ^ -¾. •.**.ar|t: •»*? &$M *m$\ :.y-*>' i*$

tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

  • Upload
    halien

  • View
    217

  • Download
    4

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

**£*. •>*€>:

; * . • v *

<tv/ t «-

V"

£

Volume* $ 8 ^

* * * » «. ^ * - 4

V *(*V-

- * *y '

1

Dispatch # ;

T h t FlndtoeY Dispatch *^~

lesday. May 2, 1951

Mirror appoin tment of Blair Mcodv

Detroit News Washinqton con

A? t= Rete i&tee I . • * * * • *

Accidents j Church Notes i

, , .-— ~~.* OTG- to abolish the nickel pav .eenendent and columnist cxupe ' v station ccuX * -S ^ S S S B ^ * ^ ¾ known "Russell H. Englehardl, mqr. in ., Mictoqantr having been in, here for the company, arihaunc, WashingtonL 18 years. S e n i o r ! " * a that 10c pjfy SJns wnl be^n -teitftpon, M i c h i g a n ^ fooiiHi "" d u d e d in an a p p l i c a t i o n ^ 1>e car* senator says h e "is a per j i i led 'By Michigan Bell with the sons)!, friend of his . ialfoouar Rublftf Service Xomhiission on Xne^i Siilfer- politically- Fergus*! "MdyCl| 'for a j r a te ; .increase i "t0 on .sponsored him when Ihej rajse Trevenues ' 17 percent or w a s f s w o m in last W^gneeday.-I $22,000-000 a year ' " . Pt&tt: quotas have been cut; ttgain but m a y be stepped up due 16- the Korean breakthru. Doct<J^;ara ctfco on Jhe • draft list. -•';?-

1 Civffiem defease, fob pefklna up. Savior 'Get* Mainland, d£f.

«erise H*ad s a y s -' gOO/JOO has j spent tp^obiain blcxfe types. ! '• f.be Little Hoover commission^ c l a i m ^ f t c a ^ . save . $114,790 -a! year &---MicruQpcn ' government ' eliminating red t a p e . . : - ..--** The 'Michqian Bell ^TelephonV

She" MicVann R » » v - i ' - i . J**** w , e r e ^ ° auto aceidM fy J ? 0 0 ? 1 C ^ o l t e Church W . M i c - u q a n Beit Telephone ents over the week end in which* i n^'*?"&**' Michigan

men-; was killed, i h e d e a l ' 1 % S " &*»** '• Schmitt, Pastor

School Notes i

No. 18_

Current Comment 'Comiskniy t c d a / ' loined the oar onja

man is £ric Casteliro 21, uT^tF i^^SP Masses of M, student, jrcffli 8 0 , 0 0 1 ^ & ? » » * * * *M ™*0' H * P

nurt, Inex inve r of' the* ear was

*~

crmoant -to-l-rsTs day for most residence phbrre. r isers ' herjff, '" .tfinqleftaidt.saia the .•Tate in ^isu^fc "'is jx:tiejrifly iieeded -to help the_ company .meet tjie mounting cooi^, oi doing' busi ne w a and to .assist it in providing'the service the. stale will need cfur ini| »»he national, emergency.'

One of £\$ . - last •• survlvbr^f aqainst the tide of inflation/.1he

, - - ^ *<**- , ^c reased 5 ttnt^ci>arc^ at publ ic ' i3£' operatihq cpi§!s: TEe*.vct>mpanv r p i : o n c s n c ^ . ^ i l a - i i e a u ; i a ^ u : . ^ earned, 6.25von lt j• . investment, e d since (he oiqanizaticn 6t th-i last yAear, the, ,..hicftffst rale of- Michiqan ..Beii in 1904. In pro »«tum.-fer any-pUbUc .utiity . i n . r posint,' to abandon) it, the com t " 8 .*tc2¾•, > « ,. m , , paiiy follows a national trend.!

Tne Michigan* .Bell Telephoned T e n - c e n t d i u r q e s are ( i n ' ejfectj. wants 1^,000 of its vooks out-f ^ Now York, Minnesota, iilinoi^l' n loan hixek. ,-,

Direct r relief, /aasefe dropped 437 last mofith, - puttina the re lief load at 2^854 csas^s, : t Tn<^e! i n N e w j^rsev.' Iddhp an^ • 'Re ta i l s p i e s ' p e r , capita •nj ^ txhe -PaKrific : coast: J^rtehiqau' Michiqan last year ;:were $?6 $ i v e S t imQt e c i t h e ' increassed pay'

;" 'Station. -> caharqe would rai?e'

Leland Stentoivr 23. o t ' l a d Axo. University senior. Her Shad : i o r r t t t M .„

drivnig permit: but was Released s ^ S L by Poiice - after q&estioninq.Cas s ^ f F . teiihd had been initiated in the Kappi Psi fraternity at.^jhe uni

H^ crrU M, -<w u™«- ' I-'] v e r s i t y ' caiJet came out \o a Por n e saaa uit, icae boost wouaa inb-o +rrvSriA f«^ ~ „ ^ TL Tinnr**-J^-K-^ r t r n i T r o n t . ^ j ^ o « e - t a v e r n for a patty, i he r -

hum J centp aJ W 9 r e- .30 student* in-the party-At ^ ^ - I 2i0a av: m, ' they - s tar te i '* home

W ) n 4 # 8:00 & 10:00 Noveb&a Devotioas: Corfoffijonif

By Gretchgn T n ^ k R ^ ^ Beachv (

ttF^venina at 7:30 p . m. t n a a y ; after Novenna Dvrotiona 1 ° 1 ¾ ¾ f 7:30 to 9=00 P, £ , Sund$&,l>efcre 8:00 Mass ,

but -kiiled to -rrfaice .^he "^urve a t ' the McComb farm on the pek . '•' S ! 1

ter road abovg^ the Uttle .^dai* t ; f t £ _ ! and craahed into the^sarne tre

atienal Loamiunity Church

onald Braa/, pastor ay.4:00 junior choir /:oU, senior choir prac-fs at church 4:00 p.m.

pruyei meoti.'ia at ?• K: - ? % o t t home.

• or Christ m,--t

wan t* ;, a , irate "...increase of teODD,000'l6^mee^, i

^s -^iuac-T"• h . d t r y VrvSt I w f e e a doc to r . and iwo inur seV ¢ ^ . 0 ¾ 1 ^ ^ 1

^ s ^ ^ f t a S 1 from the university we r* I Jd lb£ l ! ! ' 0 ^ ? / 1 1 1 , ^ s ^ n d . c ^ . oT rnatenaU some y e a r s ' a q o after a ^ f e a ^ Sul S S f e ^ - u „

Lake party.- - • •• * ' '^W2°VVVddinq bells ser. • - - - . . . . > . " { ! v i c e ; ^ ^ a married couplr-s in

memihq .two £ c a A | v i t e ^ ; ^ m o n / G i v e and Take w»'«!cday craohed at M-3&" and Qs^t^r The cars were driven b v fflbvtl IXindas of Whitmore-Xake who /was oh. M 36 and -Harlan Oliv ''er of Ann Arbor who wa Dexter Rd. The latters;wi; 3 childrenwere withh^in. , „ „ was alone-'All -escape'd ih^I r \ i

01 iv:f7rf|bqe.';Sun. school- 11:30 Jacks'.^n Assn. meots at Jackson 3 to 8 p. m. -Monday 7:00 p.m. Family nito |

th--" x | Pot lurk supper. Slid Co; gl. Family Camp. TUGS-, 8:00, Younq Ladies Aux m^ts at Leonard Lee home-

j g£ 0^¾¾¾¾^ f ^ TELEVISI0N ™% Ine hiqhef chajqe ..hag been! A fcbn;new ..television"'**©"'

; made' m New Jersey- Idqhp and; „ r~j 1^* „.«^1. ,„fil*

' \ 1*

.*per persjosn- Total sales were $5,950,268-000.

The senate killed- the ' capital punishment WU?S0 io" 42. Th^ l^>use passed the -one , .man flrand jury bill. ;*'

The attempt to ^repeal- th-property lien law aqawist per sons receiviriq blcT acfe . 'pen

-> slohs failed. The - isrincipal ar quemert aqainst - it , w a s it would increase tl»„welfare loddi

-7^\.A\$b experts s a V . ^ S ^ a r ouf-• put 'fh Michiqan tjftS•'• yea r wiftd

be Sver ^ 5 0 0 , 0 0 0 1 ^ ^

revenues. $2,6OQyOOO a vear^. ' Und©£ the application, month |

ly ' ihcfeases for the various, types of services in Pintrknev 1 would be a s follows: 6; |-

Residence ••service, individual • line, $t;" 2'.i?trty 75c; 4 party . phone? lo.vcents. -75c: rural ^5c; exiensi-n t e l e !

:'., lnd^'iduali-,;

CtTQ&jf bltanoziite Church Kev. ^zra Beacb>. Pastor

was opened last week , vffefi ? ' P* s " ^ — - • .. Walter Esch the-Detroit 'Edison emplo*-ee> iS

s f i S?x l f -•••• Paul Chaffee and their families in southeast j J i ^ n q AorsWp 10:00 Michiqan totallina 12,000 p e r | , 5 a y , S c £ o o i 11=00 sons., attended a television pro-1 y ? V ? u r \S • • • • • 1 1 :*5 qram- featuhnq ihe activities J o u n . a P e «Ple" | .Meet ing ..7«30 of the Detroit Edison Co. - * " fcf™« ^ ° ^ * c * V ' 8 : 1 S

Prentis Brown, board -chair , C o t t r " ^ 0 fellowship Service man opensd the proqram. Oth er sosakers were James Park­er, president and Gecrqe P<:>rte , chief-- enqineer. p'~ .High points-of the p r o w

were a new ' power' plant ^tia

.. Ths past ' n^rfiers'"vJin r ^ o f k I xiarfcial squeeze / .may Wori 1 ' First doqrees on May i%- I War II between inflation ari~

Business service

fet^i^f: ^ ^ ^ e of current with--t Vbf, extension phone ^ c ; , Q n t a r i o £lerM[c s

L^nq distanee rates would r^. T h e n e w p b n t j t h e 6 t h ^ main unchcafced. I , be located on the Detroit V i . J Dn>,

ehardUcnd. that Migfriaani .*.^>I thr> •Art*-^ -^*—'— x r:*fcf i^au 'cbnti****— " ' -

W^Jnesdcr- 8:00 P, M> A Staden* Peace Deputation

Team from Goshen .Colleae will' present 'Ahe proqram at the church" afternoon and evrnina. May 6. Muric bv quortett^.

n ' Rouqe. It win j»?|p serve future' adqed loads 0] the company's

. 7,'500Q sq>]are-mile area. It will On Friday. May 1ST Ahnj the>imc laq in obtainkna relief , ^ c a l l e d the>Riv('r-Rduqa plant

ArbjBiiodoeiKNo;'544 will aom®1. cifisitf i h e year and a halt dela\ p a n j d i s n ^ b b ^

PiNCKNEY tUNGS DAUGHTERS The Pincknev ,C':IC1:J cf Kinq's

qhiers will *• Fred

Kiaderqarten and First The kinderqarten thanks Bill

JJeiireys for makinq their movie box- p

r

Trie firs> grade liad heir pic taken Iqst ,we*ck and H was in <he Ann A^boi paper.

Don Ackleys doq has nine I 1 new papjg*es. j

Johnny^iolben%brouqht an In. J dian arrow to school- 1

1 We are brinqinq in train pic 1 I tures for our train unit. !

W saw throe movies t<-dMy. ! 1 Second Grade i

We aio, tesfnq Cheryl Fred'-r j ick who is^ntyvinq to Colitonu'a. old "Si.nida'yt *

We; ore/ iap^)y to have KoL Morqan back from Florida. H< • biought bricki-mony souvenirL'.

M'iiy Mencke, Paul Endros, Claudia B^wSon,'Lucille Barrett Keren Eich^rianf -and Tommy Read v/ere Asont Monday morninq. * C

Wo -T-iyjoyed the movie, Bkr k Beauty, m a d a by the 4tlr and 5th qrado. ., ^ .

We visit';d tlie* kinderqarten last week and saw thier mov Black Sambo. ' (

Our subscription list' ,for thai summer weekly readers is biq' enough to entitle us to receive larqe story book for our library-

T>J* l lurd Grade Saridy Kuhn is back af'^r >t

weeks illness. Sh%.was 9 years old April 23. ^ '

Sandy Morqa%-f is \y~\c\ fr^m .Florida. Ho qot'-'a sun tan and brought back a a^coanut and a lot of pictures '

Dudne Haines b'ouqht a craw fish to school and Jack Lee two turtles,a painted arid: a snapper,

Bill Jeffreys made' us a box' for j uur. movies. . .

The oats we planted -'in' (differ ; exit kindly of «oil are /qrowinq,; those in i am tiicfbo-st

Fouiik ana Futn Ui'ades

r i n ,

Are the people of the nation becoming more reliqious or 1

i it the. war tension thai is fillina the churches. Accordina to Ha* ures compiled by the National

J Co until of Churches while the population increased 36 percent

1 church membership increased 60 percent.Armed conflict seems to awajcen the reliqious instinct

.and m a n y personis who have never professed a n y ieliqious belief bofore do so in times of war. We know that attendance in looa] churches has increas­ed to suc:i.nn» extent that at times the churches cannot hand le all those who attend. In many placos more and new

hur.-hee are beinq built. The Aim Arbor News in an editorial on the subject says there a re 16,000 church members in Ann Arbor and 6000 more who be* long to Sunday Schools. This i s a very sizable part of the pop­ulation. We think this is the principal strenqth of this notion aqainst Communism which is a the stic In this country there are few who profess to be ath. estics. The "number d persons who are buried without the aid of ihe clerqy is veryyery smal l

The parents of a new born baby qirl in Chicaqo suffering from a blood s condition were told if tho baby was not criven a! truutiusi'-n she would die. The parents are members of the seot ailed Jehovahs witnesses refused to consent to a trans-fusion saying U was aqainst their roliqion and quoted pass* aqe in the Bibfe. The case w a s taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill, the friend of court ftie baby's guard ian. He owsenjsd to the trans-fusion, the baby was given a n eiqth of a pint of blood a n d its lifo saved. These sects who

! found th^ir faith on a sinale verse or chapter-in the Bible do

. . , _ We- fim^ied our 'mov^.Black,; themselves and-*• the world a rs WiU •meaUtfhh .Mrs-; * J ^ ! & and s h o w e d lt:iqj «he|. disservice. There-are many in^

em en Thursday at 2:W^~^ rooms, . g ^ , : •»-, - • , . . f terpetxations of the"Sibte few of

.. to JPinckney caid conferr M-.M-f in qeflrn^ *ie fate increase PegraeSs. "•" .-• 1

By Order of the^W. VL ,+Ba>4 W» Ciirlett, Sec, *. * v

.last Jii , " ' ^ n ^ e m e e t ; indiV:rv I y n t i ^ H ly^kJ* t U i ^ L V*-L V W - i

'• have' 'had to operate under high -er costs ' for, m a n y mcrAhs be fore additional.•• revenuesrfcould be .obta ined . Furijierniore these j revenue increases have never-

m-

*~ ' *

W e - h a v e ^received aCie t te r , _ . . . . _ ' from the stato^ ixir ' association | Caught up with ^ the postwar

,.v'^iin whi^i ' it proposes, sweepina 1 rfsfe hn- our costs." • • • c h a n q e S ^ i the election * of th©[. *Jjn payrolls alone hot countina

: judqcs^'Cli. V?ould abolish > t he ! all d r fe r risir«r*vcosts' of doina .^ cprJjS&nV*crnd have t h e U d t e bar[ business, qeneral wage increa-'*"association submit a Jist to the! ses have g d e ^ d ^ ' $40,000,000

governor" who would appoint] rrore a year .to^1he4% company's

them. It would:-^ increase their t .ex>?&nses than ID years aqo, in tonus from 6 to 8 yeajfs.it wotild raise,- thejr-^salaries arid provide J a fetfrement plan. W e ; doubt the lecomm^hdations wulr,vbe ioll :

. owed. We think the iuclqes*-noW in offices, elected, bv the people a re satisfactory^".. * •- "

-V,**- -V • ''v^'-

/clucintf- the ;$S,000,C>00 etdditigp-xzl payroll expense incurred §v

^the wag^ ' increases of last Nov. tWe. . increases* dufmq the same

»Taeriod have' ' yielded,addit ional "revenues'- of only^ : $21,000,0Q0. Improvements in . the telephonb . art, , economies a n d - growth in] fufiesi ;the volume of bus i r j^^ have} -permitted tts^tb nil part of t h e . g a p but infldtlpn r e m o v e d sof flOSPlTAL VISITATION DAYS

pansion : program Whtch will bring the Edison qeneratmg cao ability to more than three mill.

•ion horsepower by late 1953. ;Studies are-, underway whiclii will result-in* two tfansmissions, one crossinq the Detroit •• river will benefit Canadian) neiqhbors. Also help industry^and aovem-ment jurnish t the nations licrht and pdwer*and -. maintain top •position- rrmoflq power produc inq a jun t i i ^ ' of, the world-

Chairman" Brown 'commended J the employees for their contri i bution to th*^ companies sound condir!onJJe said 50 percent ol the QOrflpanieJ. 56,078 stockhold ers use ' Ed j son- power service.

Edisoh ' e m p l o y e e leocentlv won a nation safety award for putmg in 1,000.000 work hours without a single. djsablinq inl

HAS HIGH AVERAGE ' • At "a Michiqan Normal College ^ _ r

honc^-icoriVocarJon trn»; we'eTc.dj' Rapidly t3*crt we could-not a b Y 1950 t ^du t f r t e of Pinckrtey hitfh' s ^ - ¾ entire amount of the - Livinget

•f, -

schdBl received Teoognitik>n' for 33uiiaanav.and maintaining a schooiastic avefdae of bette? than 2.25 "bf "a possible 3.0 - av erage. She is Isabel Brady,

^ daughter of-Rev- and 'Mrs . D.D-Brady; of 131 Un6dilla StVPintk-"ney. -She i s a freshman, jaaior .¾¾ • . — _ • « * - » ••» . • •• * . * *

^ ^

4

* *

HE yoiurto * .avfe'<f*ceiye4'r ^ letter iriani deBoom gl t hS dis

which .states he / voted House 3i l l No. 104 which

increase J h e pjay of state 1 dnd? representatives. ne thinks legislators a r e

, added expense r^ecaUinq that the«- camnanv

1 proy\jpled mgio^ . insteiirtlcrtions J- a t ' 79''miHTarv and 86. war pro

duction estabiijaments durina ,.the-'lcrst :wdr. tiBglo*4a»dt said. that me i'Michigan-Betters aaa in moving* ahead .orv a*^umber of the same, types of proie<rts for the-new emero;ency* In addition 19.00Q families ^ u » -wditlria fn

L - ^ - N on county people 019 liivited to visit the Pbntiac*

^tcrte hospital May 2, 34. It will

p. m. Mav 3rd- Plans for Mother and Dauqfter banquet and r l ec ;

*. lion cf ofhgfers. [

* ti. b e o . J

A. A., A . - SERV1CL STATION I hcrve been appointed AAA

Representative and am pre­pared to qive 24 hour a day Wrecker and Towinq Service. HOCKEY'S -«ERVICE,Pnotie 145

.FBEDERIGK ARTHUR BLADES

Frederick: Arthur Biades, 66, son. of G«eorqi& and Elizaboth j Blades, died 'irt his home at Pettysville- Apsil 29. He was a I a farmer and .jifelonq resident of this soctionifeurvivinq are his wife, Carolyn? Two sons, Clar­

ence and L°o of Hamburg twp., a daughter/- Migs Irene Oesterl^ of .Chelsea qnd*9 qrandchildren-Also .a - brother^ Rutherford of Pon'iac and . thiai s.sters. Mrs. Wm. Leveret'te of Landing, Mrs. Gene! Wines ami Mrs. William Eflch^f Ann Arbor--The kmeral was at Swarthcut

Funeral Home thig.morning(Rov. Alfred Schmitt pfiida|jiq- .Burial in St. Marys. C^ t f t e ry .

which aqree.

•xJ

m Hrie for "service a n d 133,0001 y? to^addi t ion thf skilled doctors c isftJlflSers are-.waiting for hiah-1 >crnd nurses a n ^ s s o a a l workers

/ a r c « M of service. . . - , * ' "* " ' cbriuniiea. pn 9upp*eircr--

he opeif^KS^se there from 1:00 1 0 / ^ - _ « W T T 9-J ' # m i v t o . 4 : Q T P . m , * ^ S Q f T BALL LEAGUE STARTS , TliJsr<>pen h o u a r is for the purpose of crllowinq the people rhe roUowing teams have to seej toe proqress made in the £ e e n d rawn: Joe Lqvey:Don Am •ectnneSPpf mental cases, new burgey. Twichell, Tack Jeffreys, } Ss[ itrfdes toWaraV these cases Hewlett, Cork Darrow, C a i r d l .>• •' '—' ' ' *' M ^ e Carr, Chris Campbell. 1 * Eighth Grade

Joe Jeffreys: Burrouqhs, Hurti.'J - W e ar4* Adlkinq about seeina b,se, A Mrosfka, B. White,Aaron *" ' " bise.Rebman,Jerry Clark,Aaron Lavey. '

The "5th qra |38*Vior roll-, all A'« is Kancy SiTipin, Ruth 4 Taul,, „ Sally Utley,GordonTitus, Daruiyl Salyer. Patty Palmeft . ' 'Bobby We are not in ifavor ol the Kelly, Lon nie Hum cqy- .Karen ' move to recognize* Spain and ^ ' % " her m e m b rslup inVibe" UN and

fn<\ her unonciallv iby q loan. Franco rulor of Cpyin- is the last dictator m Ihe World except Stalin. He gat hiJj power in S p a n by the aid of f Hrtler and M:jssilin who sentiihim troops and plants . Alone }% could not have accomplished «. He.

abolished political rprtiesjbc no oioctions and ha» outlawed all organizationb such a s the Masons. Rod Cross, YLM. C. A. f 1 <•'. The arquement ^s that if armed Spain would b ^ a bul wark aqainst commuiflsm. W e d abt this. Croat Briian with th R o k of Gibraltar* controls the Meditercmian a n ! ynllhouah, sh^ t ok it away froip S.oain a couple of hundred yefr* a c o . Spain ' n s made little effort to g-t it b a d : In 1894 it tpolr t h ^ : countrv but a few defeat.Spcrp. and fre* contest was ono sided-wants worM r&xxmS&QdZ should set his house i n . and adoot he prtatfples fdl$ rest d the world.

• 0 •

Gustafsonjohn Burq. Fourth qrada honor foll:E h

ita Leo, Kothy Kirschke,J3 ch.c Massey^nly , Patty Rac'i iiz Judy^ r^ocker, Sandy BJan n baken, Dennis Clark- D; k Y. 11'' edy, 'Delia Davis, Dartny S" g er, Susie Clark.Gordon L -B 1:--, Beverly Campbell, Nailcy Wy lie-

Wo arc watchinq the" qr.v,'t!\ of a pclywoq, bro .-qh^^in b

in by Gordon l a b ' tie. , *** Richard Soc:k<: .'• was -M yea r r

old Sunday. v ' - \ Sixth Gr .de ^ *

Some of the boys andl girls are makinq puppets out pi pap er ma^he. *\

We are waitinq for our s4aq. • which Mr- Jeffreys is makinq.

Mrs. Tasoh is rxtdinq us,Kid ! napped by Robert Louis Steven son. »• !

Seventh Grade ' I The history class is studying I

the Articles of Confederation, and Constitutio and are mak­ing .a chart to represent this -ritical period in our country.

W« plan to visit Greenfield village on iast day of school

Chris Campbell goes to De-trovt Friday fr»r tho Metropolitan s^elliriq bee. It will be broad

h

Id^&e new facilities available *rfot ttecrtrnent.

fcv

.•"i*.

y.

_ . _ Votfe- to increase his own sal %"* fr4k*i.<xry at taxpayers expense-tinfll

•er1 \ui hospitals CflMnSJmer state in • stitutions ore paid a wage com parable with wages paid in

' prtycrte industry. He would increase the salar­

ies of the House W a y s ana * 'Weans Com- and the Senate

Finace Com. arid let them m#9i 4 weeks before the legislative session open*. This would en

-ab le them to qet appropriation bills out of the way* shorten lb**sessions a n d cut expenses.

0 , E. S. NOTICE Pmckney O. E S. regular

meeting, Friday. May 4 at 8:00

PINCKNEY .BEATS BRIGHTON Pinckriey helped, flrighton' de •

day arid J h r e w * a monkev more money h e refused 7 dicate fter new diamond Thurs •. 1 ^ . ^ . ^ . - - « • _ ^ ^ . 1 ^ ». • _ i l ^ V ! — _ 1». wrench in the machinery bv

Wkininfcr 14 to 9.. J n a k ,^e4frevST tAuny people wonder how the

will explain! the' hospital proced lire a n d the' atfe and crafts and other rehabihlation courses av­ailable there.

Each pa*ierrt is examined per iodically a s to r proqress and

-^bc-^'JBO percent of the .cases *xg „j$Dt home cured.

Wb note inat the Geneia^ Mp*« ors is one of the 16 corporations finar.c 'ng a course crt Yale Uni* verSity which hds for lU obiect the rehabilitation of the prob­lem drinker. It was the cc lions which financed

i *L ' T V - Z ? * VT"""1 ^ ^ 4 B«wmq tion back in World War . . tne-Qetrtfit Tiqers play a niqht and put it in effect The pre

• $ ™ e May 25. j ironists sold them the program i • - * % .?rahn.. olr^ Ken Kuhn by promising it would ' '

"S.

nyi—pitcheci f o F ' K h c k n e y ..and al thov^gh he allowed 10 hfts.aot better support, Pincknev only making 2 . errors to Brighton's 12. Chas. Ccdrd gbt 3 hits tor Pinfckney and Everson bit a

home run for Brighton. ' Bitteries:Pmcknev-ifeffervis &

M.Matteson; Brighton- Luekef & Prleskorn- J

CARD OF THANKS The sophmore class wish to

thank Mrs. Mildred Parks, Don Hudkins,Barbara Bums. Georcre Johnson and Clare Sworthout dor dowittnq their time and serj

patients at Pontiac are treated, how they live etc. and by what methods they are cured. These visiting d a y s have been set so these, facts m a v become known. Hiram Smithjudqe of Probate

MOTHER DAUGHTER . BANQUET MAY 16

' The P inc t aey Circle of Kino* Daughters will Isold their ann

taal Mother and Daughter b a n cruet at the school on Wed*May 16 a t 7:00 Dinner and pro

Reader :Bob Darrow, F. Singer I were ofltlast JtveeK.due to llnnss xt—n— n- y "" - * ' ' y Those 0 & , t h e honor roll are

Bertie j p p y . Anita Cory.Ken Kuhn, '.•^tirley Had den. Jean

HiUinbra^i^vn HowellEva Kell enberger, Sretchen Tasoh.Ricky Miller, - Marilyri Shirey.

Those with perfect attendance records" are BUI Rowell.Shirloy Hadden. Jim Doyle, Gretchen Tasch. •»

The 8th grrrdo girls 'played tae high school girls at soft ball on

J. Mrosfka. Rich. S; Meabori, M.Mattesoni. "G-Darrow. I i>.

Widmeyer:Ge¾tile< R|di|bn,D. Darrow, Scott Barrett, Ware, Jim Matceson, DinkeLC. Barrett.

May. 7: Lavey vs Reader,Mav 9," Jeffreys vs Wedmeyer, May 14, • Reader vs Jeffreys. .Mav 16 Lavey vs Widmeyer, Mav 21. Wedmeyer vs Reader Mav 23, Lavey vs Jeffreys, M~ 28, Lav ey vs Wedmeyer M , ; 32,Jeff.; F r i d ^ , t 2 4 to u reys ys Reader, June 4, T,a rev J

vs Reader, June 6, Rr ' r vs Wedmeyer.

PintfcneV may put a team in the county league that starts at Howell in June.

CEMETERY ASSOCIATIOH __ At the Pinbkney Cemetery!

Tickets 75c for chUdren) I association elected the follow cm* $1.25 for adults. May b e oh J j n g officers: Pres^ Don Swar

r i ces a t t h a sopvinore dance- i itahaed front mrr mesnber or tHout; vice prei-TvJRoss ^ e a d . OUefje IfeqdUev* Sec. . - •>'.

•MiJ^f'i.^ 1

THE J HOP T& MAY 12

V *

The Junior Class of Pincknev high school " cordially invites you o attend the annual J-^Hoo on May 12, 1951 at the htaht high shool anditorum 9 p. m- to 1:00 a. m- Admission $2-00 . ex c o i p l e ^ e n G a g e 6 piece orches tra. Tickets on sale by a l l \m> tors cnv ic4

Jk^j*.

week end drunks and MondaT ! absenteeism at their iactorjee.

They overlooked one fac t l " people like to drink and will so loqardless of cost Com quontly a huge illegal industry called bootlegging spranq va&r who made millions catertna to t h s thirst, corrupted public of. ^ iicials a n d in some places took over th t government Then in-dustry withdrew their support

and prohibition w a s aboushed. Now encouraaeel by thsr ol such holies Arihom will try another moral persuasion m a y h a v e more

. - O

V. F W< The 6th district-

fk»n will b e

^ -¾. •.**.ar|t:

•»*? &$M *m$\

:.y-*>'

i*$

Page 2: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

'•v'V'P-z.

SF^-S^^^

*

Kto.

i t *

^ * < i i • - • iS BttMTtt

n

•p TOT. AfPW ,*??*»?*& , 2 ¾ JULUi

_._ m I

D because it's 7&jgm

Motors?

le Opsraltog. Ivorything about H It automatic. It*« to easy! You |uit Install and forgot It. If H weren't for tho wonderful service it glvoi you'd forgot it wa i around.

la Iffdomy* You'll always havo eloan, conttant-tomporaturo hot wator roady and waiting . . . at tho turn of a tap . . . day or night. Hoots wator ovonly. No hoat wastod.

IN Thrift. Costs far loss than you'd think . . . oporatos for pennies a day on special lew wator heater rates. What's more, it's installed without extra charge in roast residences.

01 Convenience. Nothing for you to do i . heats water automatically. It's so clean, too . . . no soot, no smoke. You can put It in your kitchen if yog wish.

Neignboring Nates The Brighton Arqua state*,

barracks will be builc in the! Brighton area near Wand Lakej to house 80 prisoners who will) work on* state parks maintain..' ence.

Most of the1 Chespeake-OhioJ freight trains now use dieselen gines. This is the old P. M. railroad.

Friday. April 27th was visitat-ion day for Brighton teachers in which they visited different

I schools. Mrs. Don Swarthout visited the Biiminqham school

The annlual Stockbridge J-Hop is Friday, May 4.

Dr. and Mrs. Guy Culver of Stockbridge announce the en gagement oi their daughter, Ruth, to Hugh Griffin of Stock.

bridge-Miss Norma Stecker,Pinckney

high school graduate was one of the 702 University of Mich, students honored at the 28th an nual arts convocation at Hill auditorium April 27th.

A committee oi Huron county supervisors visittd the jail at iHowell lasst week- Huron is to build new icriL

The Livingston county board of supervisors has boosted val-Uations$10p0,000.All townships were boosted except^ tioco and Oceola. Putnam was boosted from $1,575,000 to $1,620,000; Unadilla from $1,120,000 to $1,152,000 and Hamburq from $2,415,000 to $2,520,000.

Wdlliam Ruttman,Marion farm er, died April 22. The funeral was at Schnackenbeig Funeral

Howefl Tli«rtr g p w l L MfcUaaa

I

Tues„ Wef., Thur,. May 1, 2, 3 Gene Tierney, John Lund

Marian Hopkins, Thehna Ritter in

"THE MATING SEASON" Jtnaaj, Saturday. May 4, 9

Jack Carson, Jams Page in

"MISTER UNIVERSE" Plus

Le# J. Cofclb, Jane Wyatt In

/ "THE MAN WHO CHEATED — HIMSELF"

cartoon ^Sunday, Monday May 6, 7

Matiaee Sunday 2tj30 p m continuous Louis Jourdan Debra Paget

Jeft Chandler In

f "BIRD OF PARADISE" In Tecimicolrer

DexterTheatre DE*T£sV MlChXiAN

f Friday, Saturday. May 4, 5

Hovelty I

Cuifooa Latest News

„ Thur,, May 8. 9, 10 ^Iues., Wed, "THE 13th LETTER"

Starring Lfada Darnell Charles Bayer

Mlchal'Reni#e,ConBtance Smith, Cartoon II owe

Coming: Quebec Vendetta '.*!

Friday, Saturday. May 4^5 "A YANK IN KOREA"

A Drama Stealing Pon McAUaster, Wm. PhiUiphs

and Brett King aa4 New*

A Good Comedy I

1 a la n bupex Western with

John Wayne, Montgomery Cliff • Joanne Drew, Walter Brennan f {Disney Cartoon, Moth 6 Flame) .Sun. shows 2*45 cont. TuesM Wed., Thur,, May 8. 9, 10

* "VALENTINO" -A Drama Starring ]

Anthony Dexter, Eleanor Park-

Elsewhere in this newspaper, lu accordance with t ta te law,

you will find a notice of Michigan Bell's intention to ask the Michigan,

Public Service Commission for a further increase in te lephone

rates. Included in that notice are details of the new rates proposed.

* USED c \ns 4950 CHEVROLET SPECIAL 2 1949 CHEVROLET SPECIAL 2

POOR HEATER DOOR, HEATER

frontage. her home here April 30.

1948 CHEVROLET FLEETMAST PR, 2 DOOR. RADIO. HEATER 1947 CHEVROIiT-WErnTJNE AERO SEDAN. RadioHeater 1947 FORD SUPER DELUXE. 2 <DOOR. HEATER

^1946 PLYMOUTH DELUXE. 2 DOOR HEATER \ |946 CHEVROLET l/2TON PAN lEL HEATER

f!946 MERCURY DELUXE, 4 DOOR, HEATER 1949 STUDEBAKER % TON PICKUP. HEATER 1942 PONTIAC "6". 2 DOOR, -RADIO AND HEATER 1950 CHEVROLET V2 TON. PAN EL, HEATER 1946 CHEVROLET 2 TON.LON WHEEL BASE,Brown-Leip Trans. 1942 FORD 1¼ TON STAKE. HEATER 1941 CHEVROLET SPECIAL DELUXE, 2 DOOR, Radio,Heater

QUALITY CHEVROLFT SALES

Mrs. E W. Martin, 85, died at Robert Stackable is senior

class valetdictorian and Bertha Waiters, salutatorian

Pinckney lost to Howell av base ball Friday 12 to 9.

Earl Bauqhn has bouqht the' lots on East Main St., across j from the Georqe Teeple home and will build a houses there. '

Home, April 25< Arthur Yost principal oi Dex

ter h i g h S c h o o l W a s a p p o i n t e d ^unday, Monday May 6, 7 supt. oi Litchfield hiqh school ( , "RED RIVER" to succeed Hubert Bears, dis-charqed. *1

Kalamazoo is losiflq the title of Michiqans celery city. Pro 202,500 crates, compared to duction dropped last year to 387,000 the year before and

i aceiaqe tumbled from 860 to 450. Labor costs and a disease which qot in the plants is blam­ed. Much of celery consumed here comes from California and Florida- ,

Cpl. Stanley Reece, arandson of Abel Haines, has been aw-arded the bronz star for hero­ism at the battle of Kamiii in in Korea. . , , , ,

The Fowlerville hiah school band won a first ratinq at Yp. silantt recently.

Mrs. Claude RounsvUle. 78, formerly of Fowlerville, died at Fremont, Ohoi, April 20.

Ardis Srhultz is valedictorian of the Dexter senior class and Robert VanAtta, salutatorian.

South Lyon voters will vote fcn May on erectinq a $280-000 school. ,

South Lyon has 4 locations under consideration for the con strutcion of 20 federaL aid hou-

"BOWERY BATTALION" 1 A Good Cavody Starring

Veo Gorcey and Bowery Boys ilti

"MYSTERY SUBMARINE"

'Martha Toren, Robert Douglas Shows 7i00 and 8»30 '

\Sunday. Monday May 6, 7 "IT S BEDTIME FOR BONZOI

A Comedy Starring ' Ronald Reaqaa, Diana Lynn

and Bonjo. the baby chimp Tom and Jerry Cartoon Now* 'sport reel woody woodpecker

Sundoy Show 3, 5, 7, 8 tTues.. Wed., Thur„ May 8, 8, 10

"BRANDED" A. Western in Coiu?

Btamng Allan Ladd, Mona Freeman

Cartoon and Latest Newt

Thur., May 10 "HAMLET*

O. Oliver, J. Simmons One Day Only, Special Adm.

All Students 25c plus tax See this play bv Shakespeare!

AVON m Btockbodqe, Mi<

•?riday, Saturday. May 4, 5 X>otiWe Feataro

\ "I'LL REACH FOR A STAR'

i -— i

Francis Longford, Phil Regan Plus

"POWDER RIVER RUSTLERS* A Weitem in Color

wttb Alkm Rocky Lane

/Sunday. Tuesday May 6, 8 "SLEEPY TIME GAL"

A Comedy Starring ludy Caniova

Comedy Cartoon J*™ VComing=North oi the Great Div-'dds, The Outlaw

, , ,. Mrs. Marqaret Burns has re^ er, Richard CarlsoruOtto Kruger • turned home from St. loo hospit

al, Ann Arbor, where she was a patient.

and Donna Drake Cartoon

shows 7:10, 9:15

M&S0H * RE ALL Y FJL

, /

ses. The Washtenaw-Post Tribune took a poll on the iirina of Gen. MacArthur. 50 percent were opposed, 37 in favor and 14 •undecided.

\

47 Years Ago \

his He

On© of the old landmarks in )

Lorey White,76, died at home in Putnam April 22. leaves 10 children.

Frank Collier, 82. died at his UnadiUa(the John Dunnina store home Tuesdcry.The funeral was

IHOWELL MUCH.

*$"''* * • * *

I «ew*tfctlo

for

i_ 114 S. MICHIGAN

has been torn dbwn, Friends of Georqe Hudson of

Howell who lost his arm in a | com busker have collected1

$1000 ior him. I

The neiQhbors of Mr. and* Mrs. Walee Leland who arej

at the home, Rev. Oope ofhc iatinq. Burial in Dixboro.

Dale Darrow has qone to. Three Rivers to work in a taiuv j eIA number from here are aoinq ] ^ 3 &>*& Howell to St.Louis. Mo., to see the, world's fair. Amonq them nr »

Your Maton Mgn oivet you personal

flttir.9 iervlee»^

^'rr r l^ecoui • ' Y O U ft eoiMrement»"go to the|

ACTO RY ^whero?youf hoes ur* made ••;( •r'tonat Fitting Service in the rivtoy of your home or oflic«» iven without charge by your ja$on Man, gives you an utterly ew idea of shoe comfort.*

_ He'rthe#ttirect*to'you Fac> bry Representative of the eading manufacturer^of its

kind in ihe# world.^__^ _ He'll be glad to~call and giTe

.ou a Demonstration of 250) Style* of dress, work, or sport •hoe$r including the amazing VelveC-Eez Air-Cushion Tnsole Shoe, which cradles your foot on 10,000 tiny Air Bubble*.

Drop a card and we'll have him call. No charge-* no obli. gation )o buy.

JACK HANr ETT, Agent I Phone 11. Pinclcney, Mich,

a iarewill party Monday niqht i~*»-~~»

/»HtC**l \fhs*

RiO ROYAL 21" cut V/t hp

Cut grass the easy way with the Big Copodfy j Reo Royole. Easy »0 handle. Quick storting 1 </4 £ 4-cycle Roe engine. Power to spare for sleep grades •oughest grass. Gross cotcher optiofioJ.

Mm. M- T. Graves in behalf of present, presented them with a purse oi xnohtoy.

Barney Lynch, veteran black­smith, has retired and rented his shop 10 Jim Bell.

Fremont Kennedy of Lincoln. Neb., 1* visitinq here. He left Pinfcknoy 48 years aqo.

STATE OF MWHXaJUf I &• P/obctte Oeiai tor xne Ceimt| «1

TH£ STATB MICHIGAN the Probate Court tor the County

Uvl&gatoft At a eeeilon of -aid Court held crt

of The STATE OF MICHIGAN

Probate Court foj the County Of Uviaaaton..

At a 1001101 cf said dean uoU to flu

Johnson, , . , Carl Sykes has received an

offer of $100 a month to n l n v ' " «• *»*a uoiux held en i *** » " • " • e« •»«» wow*

bcdl with Hurley, Wis,, We Piav ^ Prabaf ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ , probQte ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ed there last year.

Teeple Hardware have pur-chaWd the brick b acksmith shop on Howell St of W. H. Placeway and wiU use it for a 8 1 £ ^ of Unadilla has

the Teeple double

to eedd County on the A, D, 1951,

Present Honorable Hiram R Judge of Probate

In The Matter of the fcSTATE MAY A. MTTCHEU. Deceased

12th of April.

Or

In taid County on ths 12th of A, D„ 1951

Smith f ^ r e R e n t Honorable Hiram R ' Judge of Probate 1

In the Matter of the ESTAtB Walter Kaiaer, also know as

U

PRICE $124.75

Lavey Hardware

At 0 eeeelan of add Court held at the 1 olds to Sexton Bros, of ManojR-pjneknev hiqh schoo

. the Chelsea Junior Start s e a Saturday. Cracker

Milton B.Mitchen,having filed h8 peti ; u w ; n n m « m a c h i n e ' l u o n * Prayina that an lnetruement filed house. He will run a maemi ( t a tcnd ¢ ^ ^ aaxaixlBd t o Probate <* S h 0 ? # r<Urrr\o« Leland VanOr- tt* *<"* *»U and testament of eaid d». , ^ 1 ¾ T ^ wihrSrvnle 'i'ues. « * « * amd that admHunraiion of tedd! «

d W m ^ n S n a hat sold his •»**• b. granted to Stanley Berriman' « matched team oi four vear

ft* W, Kaiaer Deceased, It appeaxlitej ID 9+ aourt that

time for preeentatton of akrim* against aaid oetcrte ihonld be United, and thai a tli* and place be appointed tore

. exarnuie and adjuet all cJaimB or eome other euitabJe pereon, i ^ d before eaid G M I *•» sJ6 It ie Ordered, Thatthe 7th day of May 1»d *al the toad heln' of eofd decsom.

ics» iw ~-rr~u---hnrA lost to A . D.-1951 at ten A, M, at sold Probate ** •"titled to inherjt the oetcrte of *%teh Pinckney mqri BC£™ ^ ^ ^ Office b hereby appointed for hearino "dd deoaassd dkd eeleed ahouid be ad Probate Office in the City of Howell

OF

Bf 4i^ot»cf42 to 50 the house | Again we repeat what thi» d the leaiskrture killed the cap/ C * ^ * * ! 8 u • » * « « • ^

^Jcd punishmefit bill 50 to 42- b u t m o r e enforcem«iL m e t the leqislature abolished. tlMi death penalty in 1834 21 at Wttpts bare been made to re 25 Years Ago

*£K '-*••'

i t all of which failed. The tfme the people voted on it S t a t e d it htr 83.000 votes. jHife) Pkpii are made to sub

mu to a YQW aaain in 1952.

e-\t*

:v.;v^

Norman Reason and Earl Bauqhn have bouqht the Leel farm at Basinq Lake- They hovel renamed it Cedar Lake and wul|**«*ttr «1 Profac* develop and »ubcj(lvide the iakm

A tree e*jr

U the Matter of fixe BSTATE Stewart Aaderooa, Deceased,

q^»ao Yoaaa baMn, file ^ > p # t

*«on praylnQ that the . ao nlntatrattow |tl eaid eettfte he granted to .Qerald jJUaeon or eome other notable paraon. It If Ordered that the 21st day of May

A. D- 1*51 at tan o'clock in the fore noon at eaid Probate Office le hereby * hereby appaattod lor hearing acrid petition 1

It la Further Ordered, That Public Notfoe thereof be ghren oy publication of a copy of this order once each week

•aid day at 1i • wfrj is the Ptacfc. y a

It le Further Oedered, That public not ™* °*' p i t r ^ t y ° r c S r k t a W u l i » Lvons t k» thezeof be gtrao by aubneation of „

has passed the state

iCV

bar ©^ j copy of fbie order anise eaen week for 9 ^ r £ » £ n ~ a t " Larisinq. , : •ucceetlve week* prevloue to eaid day ^ ^ &n5rew Roche has taken oi hearing m the Pinckney Di«patch ove^" uw practise oi the late Dr. newepape. ptteted aod eterulated m -WirWs at Lansinq. Cageif advertise to do carpet and rua A tru# M„ ^ ^ R# g ^ c ? Y ^ l ! e^rvipfl and Hoard oeleetta Parehall

Hegleter of Probata

Jtldft of

Mesdames Sayles and

^rSrS?' Hewlett an d Christine DentoToi Greqory were marr. 1 MrtPS G Toppina and Ed-

I Art Sheen's hpuae. ^ ^ .

, Mr*. Alb** MilWr lawt wteK.

It 1H Ordered, That all of fhe creditor^ of said H^ceased are ' required to pro sent theh claims .u eaid Court at fold Probcttf Office and to serve a copy there

a of upon Leah Kaleer, administratrix tremor of said estate whose address If

-Gregory, Mich, Route 1 on or before? 30 day of June A,D,1951 at ten o'clock

l u a V of' Probate ( in the foronoon, saM time and pkBS bah* appotatod to * • at amlnatlon and adtustmeot of an clalnd

Andrew Campbell and family Iand ddttGnd* a 9 a t a - c " ^ ^ ^ ^ , moved over the Roy Clark store * * ***•* **"**._ ^ ^ Saturday and Mr. Fuqate and Notice thereof be gives by pubttcatton wife of Whitmore Lake into the °« a «>py °* thl9 ^ ^ ««» •«* w 7 * house vacated by them. - *» *"» successive ^BifMirtaiis M

Pichard Younq USN was | «cad day of heartr* to tho /to^f^^rc^ homo for 5 days over the week j P*<*. « newsoaoet printed and dreoiat e n (^ I ed In said County

Clyde Darrow and wife of A true espy Htrom R* b*b Miliord spent with Mrs. Flora. <*£* ^ L i e Panawv [ "•B"111 » J §[wm

Judge of Probato

Page 3: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

•wwppwp^pua,,! i m.gp.ii in.j ^wmw^%*W?yFW®$

'"> l\L" < •*>! -*« • •«

^ , • * * *

^.••^'/-NJ / * • • . ,

' • . « • V

t f . S '

•+•-«? V

* * i » » v * * ' :

Tha Pincknev Dispatch Wednesday. May 2, 1951

# • 4

A

"telephone rate if you

were in our shoes ?

« » illion

I IP i i IS

Rates Up $21 Million

^ 7 ^ ^ « 1

*2 for

Telephone wages versus telephone rotes

1941-1950

s upposeyow were managing Michigan Boll. Suppose that your job was to continue supplying the kind of telephone service that Michigan and the nation can depend on in these critical times.

Immediately, you'd run up against these inescapable facts:

Revenues from increased telephone rates have gone up 2 1 % while the

cost of living has gone up 84%.

1.

2.

3.

>i

4.

To maintain the quality of service expected by the public, to provide improved service for many thousands of present users, and to meet the needs for new service in growing communities, your Company must continue to expand.

On top of that, the grim shadow of war demands that telephone service be ample for the giant job of national defense. New communication facilities must be added to handle the vital needs of military establishments, defense projects, and expanding production programs.

But the millions of dollars to finance this essential expansion and improvement of the tele­phone system must come from thousands of people who have savings to invest. They'll put their money in the telephone business only if they're assured that the Company's^ earnings will provide them a reasonable return.

You'd find that Michigan Bell's earnings—the money left over after expenses are met—are far below the earnings of oth£)y businesses. In the postwar period, Michigan Bell averaged only a little over 5 cents on each dollar invested com­pared with 12 to 16 cents for leading industrial concerns. The Telephone Company must com­pete with these other concerns in attracting money from investors. And the prospects for present telephone rates to produce adequate earnings from now on are mighty slim.

3» You'd realize that previous adjustments in tele­phone rates haven't caught up with the increases in the Company's cost of providing service. The last rate increase in June, 1950, substantially improved Michigan Bell's earnings. However, a lot' has happened since then. Wage increases,

• made effective last November, have added 5 million dollars a year to operating costs. Taxes, too, have been increased and it f.eems certain that they will be going even higher. Ccsts of materials and supplies have hit new highs. And there's no getting away from the simple fact that higher costs mean higher prices.

« • As a public utility your rates are regulated by the Michigan Public Service Commission. So, it would be your responsibility to propose —and among the Commission's responsibilities to cstab-lish—rales adequate to fa) assure continuation of high-quality service; (h) pm foiv wages to telephone employees; and (c) permit earnings that will protect the savings of telephone investors and attract the additional capital needed to do the job.

Faced with those facts, what would you do?

Sit back and do nothing . . . stop adding facilities . , . get along as best you can with what you have and let it go at that?

Of course you wouldn't.

Even though you'd rather not ask your customers to pay more for their service, plain horse sense would tell you that you should apply at once for increased rates to make your Company's earnings adequate for the job that has to be done.

And that is what Michigan Bell is planning to do

Size of "telephone package" is larger—more telephones can be reached without a toil charge.

Ai^,-

Average worker earns enough to pay telephone bill in one-third less time than it took in 1940.

For most residence customers; the increase needed is lest

than 3c a day.

^ ^

* ^ ^ * *

M I C H I G A N BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY Telephone service

would still be one of the cheapest things In the average family budget.

j * - - '

I fW. *

I

I

I

J

Continued from First Pago I

MICHIGAN BELL ASKS r RATE INCREASE l n P ° s t war years Mich. Bell*

return to investors w a s 5 b e 7 cent comopared to 12 for 1700 Mich, corporations

While Mich. Bell revenue ha» increased 21 percent in 10 vnT toe number of phones has doub led and 13,000,000 calls h a v e oeen chanqed from toll to no charge service.

At present it takes the aver-c q e worker 2.2 hours to earn t ^ S V 0 W h l s telephone bill. Before the war it took 3.9 hours.

The cost of livina; has increas ed 82 percent and telephone costs only 21 The xninimun res­idence rate is only 10c and 14c a day. The Mich. Bell is the states 5th larqest emploev.

Local Notes Mis. Dorothy Dinkel and Chi*

<ine spent Thursday in Stock-bridqe.

The John Smith family, Walter Clark and wife and Mr. and Mr?.. Russell Clark spentv the w ..no in Mic.

jo K Clark spirit the week end with the Edsel Meyer fam ily in Ypsilanti.

George Driver of Fowlerville was a Sunday caller of Mrs. Marqaret Clark.

Mrs. Herb Palmer and d a u a h tor, Patty, spenft Sunday in Detroit,

Stanley Dinkel and Tony de Fillippi were smelt lishinq at East Tawas last Wed.

Pvt. Wesley Palmer is now with the air corp. police at Man Chester, New Hampshire.

Mrs. Marqaret Clark. Marv Marqaret, Mrs. Mary Eichman and Mrs. G^raldine Sincrer were in Jackson Wednesday*

Merwin Campbell, Clare Miller, Lair/ Cam bur i, Harold Porter Olin Robinson and v e editor attended the 7th district Masonic meeting at xter Monday niqht. Glen Alt, Ann Arbor and Erwin Hendershott fef Monroe, of the board of qen eral purposes talked. 100 were present.

Euqene Mainly re of Fowler villet called at the Dispatch off ice Tuesday.

Mrs. Earl Suqqet qave a p re . nuptial show for Miss Barbara Clark a t Silver Lake Friday night Bingo w a s played and th# • miest of honor qiven the Drisesv )el la cako <-rnri coffee w a s ser­

i n e large barn on the GecWe* •***% VarHorn farm at Rush Lake. burne down Tuesdoy. Cause <*• ictive wirinqThe tire dept. wsw* and saved a smaller barn.John Ni'.hols is the tennnnt.

LOSE AT STOCKBRLDGE ^inrkney K ; t cat Stockbndqe

Monday niqht 15 to 13-Thev qot 6 hits to Sockbridqes 11.Jeffreys started for Pincknev was taken' "• nt in the 4th, leadinq 13 to 12. Hewi t t who replaced him w a s vvi' , i . I lotteries: PincJaiey--Jejrreys. Hev'ett & MattesoncStookbridae -B'.Horff, Watson, CnmpBa sore :: id Moffat.

CARD OF THANKS Mrs. Lulu Darrfcw, ticket, ch.

We sin- • -rely thank *he neiah bars and friends of Stewart An­derson for their kindness to him durinkj his illness.Also the don-ors of flowers, the bearers, the minister and the Swarthout Funeral Home

Georqe Younq and Family Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson Mr. and Mrs.Daniel Phelphs

V. F. W. INSTALLATION A qood crowd w a s present at

the installation of the officers Of Pinckney Post 7301 VFW on Saturday niqht. Wm. _B i d*25gJ; past commander of Arm A r w installed. We published the hst of officers last w ^ k - Rerresh-nients were served-Nelhe Gard ner received the $50 award.

,*• ' - I -

* * ' > • *

-*-'#

v

t IWSY #

'Ik

1

CAN'T 4¾ '*!*$&?

DO f t4> *m

i

•*myM' • > # • ' . , ;

; • ) • ' • • -

Site of the .*w Pincknev elom entaty school on M 36W at the vil lage The " » ^ J l J g \ contractor, Borschma. Part of walls^for the building are now up. Work is ahead of schedule.

\

V

•'is

tm,0»

Oil drilling operations on tiie Jam iarm .south ot Oi&qory

> • > '* w *****,<& U»iiy you can (

., V, I! «.

Elsewhere in this newspaper, ln accordance with state law,

yon will find a notice of Michigan BellV intention to ask the Michigan-

Public Service Commission for a farther increase In telephone rates* Ineloded in that notice are details of the new rates proposed.

*/,i^fc?C^m^C:

&:•* KELP

nrtuV;:

Page 4: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

m.

,:

j^itpcncn, ' V '^:t4f-

1 r r.

C m Yields Boosted 34 Bushels Per Acre

ft Better Soil Care VJ «d as much as VO per *cre through conservation * # ^ j ™ S * ife, TclndtrVg contour W^v^on, SrVmmouBU of fertilizer and the return of crop residue* on Purdue University's Throokmorton tarm, agronomists report.

yields have risen steadily ajaosj 1942* according to the agronomistf-The 1949 average net profit per acre)

, ^ Up Off ante Matter Important in Buffllhur Up Soil,

was nearly twice th«t of the average «eve» years before. ' In the tests, some fields have been farmed with common practices; Others with a conservation system. JBoth groups have a four-year rota­tion of corn, soybeans, wheat and mixed legume-grass meadow. Fields receiving the common treatment are Itraight-row farmed. The conserva­tion fields are farmed on the contour and receive larger amounts* af fat* (tHizer, plus crop residues, ,' i Additional supplies of tftsml tod, organic matter and moisture hav*

teamed up to boost crop yields on the conservation fields, the agronomists say. As a result of these benefits* corn yields have averaged 106 bush* els per acre on the conservation fields, compared with 72 bushels on tht common fields in the 1942-49 period. Soybean yields have averaged 37 bushels per acre compared to 30; wheat, 34 bushels as against 27; and hay yields 2.2 tons per acre com­pared with 1.2 tons.

The tests are carried on coopera­tively by the Research Branch of the U. S. Soil Conservation Service and the Purdue Agricultural Experiment Station.

Uncle Sam Says

"The TJ. S. Defense and War Bonds that my wife and I bought for oar coon-try's defense helped as to build our own home." Those are not the words of a man working for a big salary or who 1 invested In the stocks and bonds mar- [ sets. They are the words of a wage earner, a factory employee. Security for yourself and family and for oar American way of life Is contained tv your purchase of U. 8. Defense Bonds. Enroll today for tho Payroll Savings Plan where yon work, or if self-em-Pfeyad* the Bond-A-Montb Plan at yonr •Sfls%. U. I . Treasury Deporfmeet

NotkBof

iawvitably

J" TO MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE CUSTOMERS: W*f sm to the Michigan Public Service Commission by the Michigan Soil Tolophono Company !

4 for Authority to Mob £ff*sm* (trtakSdrnMrn of ftafet, fteoJaV, ax/ ONVOM

^J^SJUfJSrSf^f co/ *•*•* Pric** end tho cost of furnJohLnj your telephone service ^ / S E f i S S ^ - co«t«/ ab el *»§• increases for our employee* last November, greater Q/tfm/ <o» of wage increase* lor our

• * e l services and materials, the rates authorized by the Commit* fe*i.la,t ' S X i f V ? * *-H"--We»t to «»ver our needs. For that reason we shall apply to the lUeUgan PuWie Service CommUrion on May 14, 1951 for authority to apply t f f ^ p o a o d rates shown below, and ask the Commission lo set a date for a hearing on our^eiuesU

EXCHANGE RATES (ixdvdlng fecfarof Tax)

I t S J L t ^ P ^ J L ^ - S ^ - T S B S l ^ ^ *>> 19^Ti"> a™**"* rise ore base* ^ Set nso P-^p****! J * ! _ „ . „ , mtm _

•JMJ k» lejsMaefl w»*f M m jgg] gh^Bj,, xho present grouping f» based on the number of telephones the nuraheT of telephones on December 31, 1950.

^ " ' PRESENT SCHEDULES OF BASIC MONTHLY EXCHANGE RATES

t> v^wupyanrstrws, as shown In the) following tables, now are) applicable In BRIGHTON.

SOttNtSS S U V K I

t a s 4 s a

£r

t f o 1,800 1401 to 3,090

es^sas^swsj ^pasj esesosBBojssBj

SvOOfts ItjSOO 1*4*1 » 18*000 SS>OMs» 80*000 SOtSDI to 100.000

'!» 1 •OeJb/

$8.00 SJO

evSO 7.00

9.50

to) I

$ -

UOOT

s -

3.00t

$440 4.50 5 4 0 5.50 6.00 6JO

*««ar-

I .17 .13 .20 .22 .22 .22 .22

Sural

$3.50 3.73 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75 5.00

Exton. •ten

Of *PBX

WEstlsM

$1.50 1.50 1.50 1.50 1.50 1.50 i.sott

N H S * SJS1-

w $2.75

3.00 3.25 3.50 3.75 4.00 4.50

Two

$ -

US 3 4 0 340 3.25

patty

$i25 2^5 2AS 2.50 ^50 2^5 340

total ^Aal

$150 2.50 2.50 2^5 2.75 340 3L25

9Sorvlo»

SwOcn-

S.rvtco

$ .35 .35 .85 .85 .85 .85 .85* *

$1.00 1.00 1 4 0 1.25 1.50 1.50 1.50

At Ail Exchangoo

M I V A T B BRANCH I X C H A N O I TRUNK U N I S t \

WHti Flat Roto Sorvico

Cemmordal Ratot—Thofaaiis 1 '/4 Nmti Hio rata for Indivldoal b««in«n or rotlaonco linoc Hotol R o t t » - RAW GROUPS

1

$6.25

2

$6.75

3 .

$7.25

4

$7.75

5

$8.25

* S

$9.25

7>

$10.75

With Mottago Roto Sorvico (Roie Croup 7 only)

Commercial and Hotoi Rates—The ratos aro tho H I M a« for ono-party mottogo rate buiinoet torvlce llno«.

oa ovxiilary Uaot. Additional •Wi»agoi 4< d For

•»$ JO wMi. . . . * Par rransloot

Ha

* o f S X

Sai mlnimwai ckorgo par lino It tho tharao for 6 lelophone*.

' • k i i ^ l M i . ^ - • ^ ' T : .-.1-- • ' i y **-•*•-• |g»3-N

- ^ - - - ^ - ^ ^ PROPOSED SCHEDULES OF BASIC MONTHLY EXCHANGE RATES

• Tht now Group 3 ratos for BRIGHTON would be as shown In tho following tabltvt

f fe otou*

H

t 2

S 4

s 6 7

•aj^SAS&A^SJ

l i e 1,800 1 4 0 1 •> >/000 3 4 0 1 » » 6 4 0 0 6 4 0 1 t e 1 2 4 0 0

11401 to 2 5 4 0 0 2 1 4 0 1 1 « 1 0 4 0 0 5 0 4 0 1 to 1 0 0 4 0 0

SUStNSSS SMVtd

f $ 6 4 0

6.50 7.50 8.50 9.50

10.50 1 2 4 0

One party

lotHao

7.50f

Auxiliary Una

$ -

3.50 f

Two party Hat

$4.75 5.50 6.25 7.00 7.75 8.50

*Ooar. aiaoo poy cla-Hon

$ .19 .21 .23 .25 .27 .28 .26

Sural Sat rata

$4.00 4.25 4.75 5.25 5.75 6.25 6.75

Exten­sion or

*nx Station $1.75

1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75 1.75ft

MSIOSNCl SStVKl

One party flat rate

$3.75 4.00 4.25 4.50 4.75 5.00 5.50

Two •a rase

$ -3.50 3,50 3.75 4.00 4.25 4.50

Poor pjjfy 8w rale

$ 3 4 0 3 4 0 3 4 0 3.25 3.2J 3.50 3.75

toraJ Sat NBBB)

$3.25 3.25 7.25 3.50 3.50 3 ^ 5 4 4 0

Bxtea-siaa

$1.00 1.00 1.00 1 4 0 1.00 1.00 1.00**

BUSI­NESS *.

RIS1-DSNCS

4>Sarvl«o StaNon SwHch-

(n« Sorvico

$1.75 1.75 1.75 1 0 0 2 4 0 2.25 2.25

At Ail Exchanges

PRIVATE BRANCH

With Flat Rale Service

EXCHANGE TRUNK LINES!

Commercial Rates—Tho rate It V/% timet Iho rate for individual buttnott or residence lines. Hotoi Rates— RATE GROUPS

1

$7.25

2

$7.75

3

$8.75

4

$9.75

5

$10.75

6

$11.75

7

$13.25

With Message Rate Service* (Rate Group 7 only)

Commercial and Hotel Rates—Tho rolco aro the tamo at for ono-party mettaoe rate business sorvico lin«t.

on local aietiuQei only. 4*** oa«h telephone. However, too minimum charge per line Is the charge for 6 telephones. ieo> 7 i oa 1st One, aone oa auxiliary Sues. Additional messages 5c each. "" *•$.73 with mouage rate •Ofvios. ^ , . .

rate sorvico. * *•» troeslont hotels the PSX staHoa rate Is $.15 lets. if

LOCAUTY ABIASi The ratos in the HAMBURG ond HARTLAND locality areas of BRIGHTON would Increase In the tamo amounts as indicated above for baste monthly exchange rates.

•Ootr goaraol

CAIJJ R O M C O I N T t U t M O N S S l b Is proposed tbaf oil calls from coin telephones which now cost 5c would be increased to 10c. Charges en ether calls from coin telephones would remain unchanged.

MISCELLANEOUS RATES (Excluding Federal Tax) * S r t V I C I CONNECTION CHARGES

• ••

S t l S l N T C M A t O t M O P O S J O C l t A t O I

iNSTRUMtNTS NOT IN PIAC8

Main MaMOB and PSX Troak

Bach

$8.80 5.50

SoeidoncOf Bach

$2.00 3 7 5 .

Extension and P BX Station

Buttnott, Bach

$1.75 2.75

tXotidoPce, Bach

$1.25 2.25

INSTKUMINTS IN PLAC8 All Per ittot ReWnod

Business

$1.75 2.75

BosMoneO

$1.25 2.251

INSIDE MOVE AND • C H A N G E CHARGES

PRBIINT CHARGE PROPOSED CHARGE

BUSINESS

$1.25 2.25

RESIDBNCB

When Establishing Main Service

$ .75 None

tOthor

$1.25 2.25

aro eel noailieMs to Service Stations, tNot applicable when certain other torvlcot are pert or mod at she tamo time, at outlined In tho Company's Tariff.

*Net applicable when a change it made nocottary by a change In dot* of torvlce or type of tytlem.

EwtCHANOI UNI JSJLIAOI CHARGES—A tfiniunun cx-bonge line mileage charge of 50c per month for the first }{ tulle beyond the base rate ami locality rate areas l»f^ r '"••«' *-* ^T**^ «*rvice8. This would result iu an increase of 25c per mouth for 4-party customers located within )i mile of snch areas.

tkdV TBLIPMONB SYSTIBAf—It b proposed that the following features associated with 1A Key Equipment be increased 5c each, per month: Pick-up, Lino Hold, Station Hold, Cut-off, Cut-off-Transfer, Manual Exclusion.

M I C H I G A N B E L L T E L E P H O N E C O M P A N Y

c^^sisy ?^^^^<^&l>O0 RESEARCH CENTER

Jackson Races Start May 11

UQCP BV THE NQRM*P«* ON THE PROWS O^TH&R.?^

> AVf£W//M(X00dif xWSW OWN CHECKING ACCOUNTS UKtriHC&WtfmmHtHA lWi«KCURnVTRUETTa>.lUX>f^TON: APS VALUABIC TOR JP&fe fOtVMS i?ICT0« IS ON THE CHECKS; tF/amoN WHPO&* Iit*mm* PRINT IS HIS SICNATURB

O 28», Oarass-Poff n$*afeh Ctnfr. ^. 7. C.

We are living today tn the automatic age, the era of automatic bome_apj$v ances, of gadgets, Your government has made available an automatic way of saving by the Payroll Savings Plan where you work and the Bond-A-Montb Plan at ytfur bank. The purchase of U, S. Defense Bonds spells financial protection for your family and for your country. "Security is not only a matte of individual concern, the security ( all is America's security." On? u . you can provide double- security t-stert buying U. S, nefe>ise Bor.ds -

•I i r-p>-.w\ C

Use Your Ashtrqy

^ ¾

1 ^ Mttftf fer a workv

STtefB Plan Ior Tings Bonds/'

ttaosntands of em-era today helping

SB wen. of a coaple ta

a 4own pay-witB Saviafs

ieNlaj Itpar cent Bessiaso that

, Temtee earn 1 &**2**>far

M; I

Ecuador^IwHa and Tnfoelavla havsf been elected by ; < U.N. Oeneral Assembly to-occupy the seats wi the Security Cbuucil to be vacated next January by Arfenttna, Canada and the Ukraine.

todia, and Dr. Kdrard M*^,F*fa<*Uaym,t XwgimUilm.

"Action at Jackson" will be the theme and the promise of the harness racing meeting at Jackson Raceway again this year, according tu Leon A. SUvin, president of Jackson Trotting Association. 26 excituv nights of racing with pari mutuel wr Wrxr v/n pet under way with Jhe inaugural program nf eight racf-3 ,^...,, to Uie post at 8:15 p.m., Friday, May 11. The Jackson Raceway meeting, which will be con­ducted under the supervision of the Michigan Racing Commission and the United States Trotting Association, will open the 1951 racing season in the state.

I Learning Better Child Care in India

t

S

• \

/

A pediatries none and a student from liidia'* Delhi College of Nnrslnf shdw a group of Indian ntothers how to take better care of their children. The aone visits homes in India under a child care profTiun iet op by too UnitadjNatiottS World Health Orgiwliitton.

f. i

Page 5: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

(CENSr «SPATty Wedokdoy. May 2, 1951

***'*;

Peopl Store

Groceries* Drygoods Canned Goe^s, Shoes Gents, Furnishings

Linyerfc

Kenn 0WE5T PVtICE EVER!

Specialrtslow PHIL6ASTAPPAN Range

Viiickney Dispatch

Entered as 2nd class matter at postofhce Act of March 6, 1877

114 So.Howeil St,Pxnckney.Mich. Subscription Price $1.50 per year

Paul W. Curlett, Publshei

Barney Wilson and wife of Ann Arbor called on* Mr. and Mrs. Percy Ellis Sunday. They were north trout fishina over the week end.

Percy Ellis eroded and seeded the lawn in front ot nis ntewj home on West Main St., Satur ' day. Norman Miller drew ini over 50 loads of dirt.

Hoy Carpenter and wife of Ann Arbor called at the J. H. Hooker home Sunday.

Mrs. Floyd Weeks and daugh­ter, Elizabeth, of Grand Ledae, visited at the Clifford VanHora home last week. Elizabeth has just returned from a trip to Col­orado and California.

Cpl. Robert Bekkerina of Chanute Field, IU., spent the week end here. I

Mrs. Ella Stapish and tho' Clarence Stapish family of Chel( sea spent Sunday at the Louis

Coyle home» Phillip Hudson of Detroit was

a week enki quest at the Lester MacAfee home.

The Winston Baucfin family called at the Gordon Allen

I home in Lansinq Sunday. I Cecil Hooker of Ann Arbor <

spent the week end at the Roy J Dillingham home.

Mrs. Louis Coyle and Mrs. Helen Younq were in Jackson Saturday.

John Boyer.and wife were Sun i guests at the Georqe Helek J home in Ann! Arbor.

Mrs. Ben White visited her hospital, Ann Arbor Thursday, sister, Mrs. Joie Tomer at St.Joe . who underwent an ooeiationi f

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Sprout, i were Sunday dinner quests of t Mr. arid Mrs. Ed Huschman in1

/ Ann Arbor. j r - "'• ~ — ( Mrs. Louis Coyle, Mrs. Ray! I 5 Burns and Mrs. Helen Youna' I The marriaqe of Pvt. Thomas were in Ann) Arbor last Wednes ! \ '.lark of Camp Carson, Col.,and day. U 4 " t i l l ' \ Doris Ryan of Marion will take Mr. and Mrs. Guy Blair of'

place at St. Mary's'church here! Fowlerville spent Thursday at" } Saturday, May 5. Hecepnon at f • the Roy Dillinqham home. ' Brighton American Legion hall. Mrs. Madeline Shehnn and -

Hiss brother, Jerry, will be mcnx Mrs. Polly Roche of Ann Arbor) ied here May 19 tto Barbara called at the Wm.Shehan home! Cle*^ \ Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Faster of

Gen. Star

Visit Our New Location 10W EAST M-36 NEAR DEXTER ROAD

I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF

Puiups Bathroom, Fixtures and !

Electric Heaters, Pipes»Fittinjs'

Myron Hughes LICENSED MASTER PLUMBER PHONE 183F2 Pinckney

Alive Dead or FARM ANIMALS COLLECTED PROMPTLY

HORSES $10 Each COWS $10 Each

HOGS $2.50 per. Cwt

JA/F. BUY HIDEb mtO CALF SKINS

Phone 88 Plaafcse?

Central Dead Stock CO' Kjt-z,vcy.<: w-—;

Plueabing Water Systems etc!

Stanley Dinkel ~"^ *•>«# &<

The Joe Griffith family spent Sundry at the Ted Olson homee home ?n Dearborn.

The Murray Kennedy family land Mrs. irvin Kennedy called at the Stanley Culver farm.

Paul and Marqaret Broqan of Chilson and Mrs. Mae Barron

Walled Lake were Sundav i quests of Mrs Jessie Wvlie. j

Albert Shirley qot emery dustj In his eve rececntly and infect­ion developed, qlvinq him a painful time.

Mr. and Mrs. Ben White at­tended the funeral of Wm.Rutt-

—GOOD QUALITY—

C O A L

turner*... removable poree* MB drip trays.

fbualit e oven with \fiam win* few and oven light

14-hour dock with built-in

Vlsimtnder sitaalscooftfug time, up to 30 rr.Inutee.

>/ IWgukie gives time and tern*

^•rature information. >/

wen a «n. . V

t*?tf mm**** «**** ** r

I US BSfcfc

1M- Pore* ied w«t

-J

tIBERAL TRADE-IN ALLOWANCI ON YOUR OLD ftAMOit

•Nfr>w Is the tim* tcr modernize ymt* kitchen with Philgss . . . the thrifty fcottlod gas for farm and town horned you can huat far and wide, but yo» won't find a bigger value anywhere than this beautiful de luxe raa^e! Remember, too, w« will glv* you a generous toade-in allowance on your «4d range... regardless of type, make, St condition! Essy ferms, if you wish!

«Ahr OTHER PHILOAS AmiANCtS SROM WHICH TO CHOOSE!

and Mrs- Kit Berqin cf Howell' man at Howell last week Tues-called on! Mrs.Eleanor Ledwidae day. •Sunday. \ Dr. W. C. Wylle and wife of.

Miss Minnie Tolles of Bay I Dexter were Sunday quests oft City who spent the winter with Andrew Nesbitt and wife.

Mrs. Mary Hoff, returned home Mrs.Georqe Bullis entertained today. \ 20 ladies Friday niqht at a Stan

Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rohrer ley shower. of Detroit were week end vis , The Dr. Walter Mercer family itors of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne j of East Lansinq spent Sunday AtLee. " ' the Wm. Mercer home. Mrs.

Mrs. Dorothy Meabon Dilla Helen McGreqor of Briqhton flew here from Warrinqton- W- j called Sunday.

ALL SIZES ON HAND

PROMPT DELIVERY

Virginia last week to see her brother, Dale, She went back

Sunday via Wlilow Run. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Nesbitt

spent last Wednesday in De­troit

Mr. and Mrs. Earl Bauqhn en­tertained their children Sundav at a farewell dinner for Neil Baughn who returned to the* USN hospital at SanFranclsco,

Cal., Monday. Mrs- Frank Aberdeen, Mrs. i

Baughn and Neil were in Jack J son last Wednesday. I ' Rex Noqqle, Ann Arbor, spent!

Sunday at the Frank Aberdeen

D. E. Hoey Sons

her son, Jack Fairchild in New York. . :

Fred Read and wife were Sunday quests of the Robert Read family.

Christopher Campbell aoes to Detroit Friday to take part in the state spelling contest as 3rd district winner. His parenta,Mr, and Mrs,- Andrew Campbell, will go with him. The contest,

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Rouse and dauqhter of Flint called at the Asher Wylie home Sun. Sunday.

Mrs. Harry Clay entertained 20 ladies at her home Friday niqht at a baby shower for Mrs. Barbara Clay.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward Nuoffer of Holt spent the week end at the Lloyd Henklee home.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Dinkel were in Mason Sundav.

Mr. and Mrs. John Sanford of Cohoctah called at the Albert Dinkel home Sunday.

The Jesse Henry family were I

PHONE DEXTER 2 6 8 J

home. Mrs. Noqqle is visitinq I , S u n day quests at the I.. J.Henrv home Sundav The Albert Dinkel family spent

Sunday at Lake Chemunq.hor-orinq Gerald's birthday

Mrs. Alma Harris and. dauqh­ter, Zita, of Detroit called at the Wm. Shehan home Saturday.

Gene Dinkel anjd wife of De ttoit spent part of last week at the Albert Dinkel home.

Many from this section went

/ f / • i '

^ - 1 / -

WATER ; . *

"'# ' v « - ' " - ' • • ' " • ' ' v ' •*

F0^KK) a year Have quick - sudsing toft wofer for eo*i«f dithwoihmg, whittr w a t h i t , g l o r i o u t lhcmpoot, deligKffyl bathing G«* complete delail« on thii omoi-ing new ouromoHt water iofrcn*r.

FvU-tta* Mch— tMiflM from $99.M

SEE US TODAY ** HAN«M

Ail INSfAlUTIOM

KTAAS '

which will be broadcast, is at; ^^J^33^ o v e r t h e " • e ^ e n d the coliseum, state fair qrounlds.

Mrs. Edna Reason and Leota and the Roy Reason family call ed at the Roy Reason home in Ann Arbor Sundav.

Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Miller, Mrs. Beverly .Pilqrim. Barbara, ^:—. . ' T *

i Miller; Darlene Lewis, Mary j Sinqmq Briaqe. _ 4 Jean KirschkerAnn Shirlev Rea ! , , ¾ ° ¾ Swarthout Wipam

son and Paula Curleti attended McDonald and Kenneth Wo:in the Rairtbow Girls meeting a t . were trout fishina at _Chto.

[ Howell Saturday niqht. j Mrs. Mable Suydam of Jack-, son spent the week end at- the

M. J. Reason home, Mesdames Fred and Ross

Read were l n Detroit Friday.

Amonq them were Mark Nash, Merwin) Campbell, Eric

Rose, H. C. Vedder, Ona Camo bell, Elqin, Kenneth and Don Line and Mrs. and Mrs. Joe Gearhart. Merwin Campbell-and Eric Rose abt a tub full at

:m

Hocke* Swarthout

The Leo Bettys family of Wah ^d Lake were week end quests tho the Roger Carr home.

Mrs. Ona Campbell and Mr. and Mrs.Tom Howe spent Sun day with Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lentz of Charlotte.

Mrs. Rote Handee spent the *eek end with the Max Pc^dn-son family of Chariot*

Lake over the week end. Joycec Clark returned hoxr>~

from Unlveritv Hospital. A n ^ Arbor Saturday. Mrs. Lucille^ Shirey brought her.

Basil White who was in charqe of the Holstein herd at Xhe Mich. State San. for 18 years has been named tuot.of a Jackson prison farm and took over last week. The Sanitarium Holsteins were sold.

PERMUTir

WATER SOFTENER

Cesfs 43% fess than pr*-wcr

automatic modeli

Ask for mi heme trial

GEORGE ROUSH Plumblnq

"WATER SYfcirMS'* J 4 0 North Stewart St-

Phooe Plnciawy 153F11

Auto-Owntrs will w place your privet P9§*en?er carer *Me acdiHsetflemenf without depreciation

tfmecar *a* purctoud new It 1$ damped to the extents total losa. Would your present

policy dothfa?

HOLUS WYUE * " General Insuraace

355 East Man Ptodmer, Mich.

Phone 138 / *"tr^%4«

Mr. and Mrs. Rav Wilhams have sold their home utNashe's. bridqe to John Eisele who in turn sold it \e Mr. and Mrs.Al Lelonik (Shirley Coona).

Hubert Ledwidqe of Royal

Robert Wiqht at rVrndale spent Sunday with 3lair Steele and wife.

The fire enqine made a run Thursday to_a qrase, if ire at the John Connors , home at .Silver Lake. Saturday moratosj I t CO*

Oak underwent an_ operation; back of Wm..Jetoey^hce^.lat E « d Mrs Jack ] g ^ ^ ¾ ^ ^ ^ ^ j S ^ T t a 3 w 5 5 S X

•^ ,_i:» _ > - — i *widfie>s bought a tavern. house cauflht All hies

Page 6: tv/ Dispatch - pinckneylocalhistory.orgpinckneylocalhistory.org/Dispatch/1951-05-02.pdf · aqe in the Bibfe. The case was taken to circuit court and Judge Dunne appointed Col. Hill,

Plhcfciwt •a

Wedneador- Mar 2, 1951

•Why Wait? |ii|oy T^ew.Appliances NOWl WE OFFER LOW-COST CONVENIENT.

Oftder Tour

W A R M NOW

AlfaKa, Clover stid All Other Seeds

Farmsrs Feed &SuppJy Co, B MAX BUSSBX. MGR. Pinckney, Michigan

HOW JERRY LESTER GOT INTO TELEVftSIOM

He parlayed a quest appear­ance on a TV network into nat­ional fame.Success didn't come easily. Learn how Lester made ex-show qirl Daqmar the talk of television. An article obcu: Lester is one oi many features in this Sunday's 'May 6) issue of The American Weekyl, EX CLUSIVELY with The Detroit Sunday Times.

PROFESSIONAL CORNER THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM

fiey M. Duffy, M. D. fack&ey Michigan Eaiiy 11:00 A. M. to 2:00 P / M .

Except Wednesdays Moo., Tues^ Fri. Sat , 7 to 8 p.

OR. a & MCCUJsror . ^ ^ ,. maSg Deaist j Plurnbina gad Keotina

112½ NorTi Michigan Ave. State 8717Lakesi*»e Drivs Telephones: (License Rush Lake

\?%£n by A P S S S S . 8 1 ! * * SWARTHOUT * SON

B ? j l L E S T A T E farms. Homes. Lake Properties

<md Business Opportunities 0 8 1 YJ&F!°**SL*N>> MS*

GERALD REASON Broker —2 0 9 North Pearl

Pinckney, Mich. Phone 1 3i3 Phone 157F11 R e a r i n g

Your Saviagg Accoount will work for you to provide a future

[ new home, a new car, a new, > j household appliance or to meet i family emerqencies j

In savinq ybur part in helpinq combat inflation is also beinq accomplished by decreaslnq the

I amount oi money in circulation. \ Begin a savinqs proqram now. •

Each dollar saved aids in the' battle aqainst Inflation.

1 M c P H r ^ S O N S to l e B A N K 1 Howell Mich,

) All deposits up to $10,000 in-j sured by am membership in the Federal Deposit Insurance Cor poration.

Howell .. __ ___ HERBSNEED

Phone 183 207 E. Grand River Howell :: Michigan Real Estate, Insurance, Brokeraqe

{City, Lake and Farm Property ! A Speciality

?ist Your Property With Me

LEE LAVEY

Generrl Insurance Phone 59F3_ Pinckney^ Mich, I

A U C / l O N E E R farm Sales A Speciality

Funeral Home £>on C. Swarthout, Director

Modern Equipment Ambulance Service

Phones 39 $ 63, Ptackney^ MJcl* FRED C RHCKHOFF &.

OPTOMETRIST 120 West Grand River Av«,

Howell :: Michigan j Phone 358 Residence 615

3SYD"HENDEF

PLANS Through j

:>; E ITITTTO

C R E D I T C O R P O R A T I O N

r (

LAVEY HA^.OtVAUt-

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

WHEN YOU BUY AT; (HOMfcj

A sale doesn't complete the transacton when you buy at ly settled to your complete sat-mhoe? Any compliants is usual-lsf action. That doesn't happen when you buy out of town. Remember every dollar you spend at home helps your com­munity arid what is. qood for your home town is qood for you-

<"5r

«V»*i'i lr« '- . . III fc i. «A - -. . 1 ' - . T-C'it*. .- ..LsjWSaS*

The Wm. Lamb- family oi Ann Arbor spenX Sunday at tlie W. H. Meyer home.

Annex Watkins and Jam:lv cf Detroit spent the week end at Swarthouts Cove.

Mrs. Alta Meyer attended tho Mich. Educational meeiina al Fowlerville last Wed. r\iqht. She-was succeeded as district pr.s idant by Mr. Christopher of Fowerville.

GretchenJ and Kristin Tasch •spent the week end in /Vn AT • bor with their qrandmcthcr.Mri. Anna Tasch.

Susan Campbell WLT n Sun­day dinner quest at iho Vir.cent Ypunq home at Greqorv.

WE HAVE AMPLE FUNDS AV­

AILABLE FOR SOUND LOANS

CIRCUIT COURT NEWS , Joseph St. Aubin29. V/ho pled \

quilty to stealinq a tel'-visisora. \ and othci c.rtU.-s at Brighton j R E A L j^ip^^ MORTGAGE O was cuvon 14 months to 5 1 _ ^, year

RATES in Jackson: He is a Can­

adian and may be deported. Jam-'s Harrison who pled

quiiiy to rr.bbinq the Hotel j Granam, Brighton, was aiven 65 days more in iail. He has already served 65.

The examination of Charles Set. sky, harq d with man

rjhier in the death of Ram

BERT W/LIE Phone Pinckney 78F2__

REFRiQERATION SERVICE HAROLD R A W

; Repairs On All Makes J Phone Pinclney 1S4F3

j DR. C. I. TOWNER 4 Dentist

6044 Portage Lake Road. Dexter I Phone Dexter 3461

Cia^silied Advs. FOR SALE:7 room house, 2 car, hip roof qaraqe, 3 lots.qcod location, in town, reasonable price. Call

livestock HauKna Weekly Trips Made To Detroit

General Tmcktaq Phone 64F14 Pinckney, Mic*

I

H. w. ^ r L 1 E —NOTARY—

INSURANCE and BOND* PH^NE I3S - ?INCKNEY

FOR MUNT2 T. V-S E E

R O Y E. F I S H E R Factory Representative

Free Demonstration Every Day F % i 10:00 A. M. fo 10 00 P.M 509 East Main St, Pmckney

! L I , A A. A. A

HF

Phil Barney KralzmiAef Livingston Jounty Phone 2556s Repr^orf <*ve Ann Arpot

price. Coil evenina or phone-1 FOUND:Two wheeled Trailer 127. Albert Balder. 625 West1 1^9 xvlichiqan licensb No. <J3-09

^

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

si I Hewca Mich. ! Member Federal P*poslt Insur-

on F.: tra la has been ind^finit- ' once CorporatiorL AU Deposits adioi-rnc I. His attjomev.Martiii Insured up to $10-000 for each Lavan. questioned 1he iurisdict-j Deposito-ion. o' J'l^hce- Yell anas court

Unadilla, Pinckney, Mich FOR SAhb":Weslinqhour.s hoasti ex. a 20 inch girl's bicycle, 24 inch boy's bicycle. BB4U 'Lakkeview, Rush Lake,

f SPINET PIANO BARGAIN:Rath-j ei than box and reshlp, we of ter at a bargain price to some responsible party w*th qood credit, a lovely like f.pinet pia I no. Fully guaranteed. Requires' only a small down payment and a few easy monthly pay

-69. Owner can have bv prov-inq ownership and' 'payinq for this adv- Bill Bauqhn

2201 Swarthout Rd. WANTED :Baby Sitting.

fternlce Sinqer> Phonp> 127

FOli SALE.One 507 Interaaonai baler with motor, waqon load er. Jewell wheels, used very lift-

•oP o\ Apoei <a[ , W__. G. Reeves, Stockbridqe

rOh SALErTo close estate. Th© . . . . Fr©d Jagusch house and 24

ments. Quick action necessary.} acres at 9058 Cedar Lake Road Write Credit Dept., 76 East V-er nor, Ddfrott 1, Michc; and we will make arranqement3 for you to soe the piano.

al i

Pinckney. A good chance to go Pinckney. A good chance to go in chicken business.

Fied Teeple, adm. pnone 675 Howell, hlbhtqtm.

FOR SALE:200 bales oi mixed hay. CT Murray £280 Farley Rd.

ckney's 1

QUALITY

a

WANTED: Custom Plowing so tields to rent for com. Earl Schroeder corner M 36 and - ^ . . : , , ^ - ; • -Pinqee Road- ( p E A L ^ WANTED:Thoee fam-FOR SALE: John Deere automat produetThe product is fertiliser. ic wire baler No. 114 W. aaoa The nlap te^umque. T l^ money condition, also a ton oi wire. ( ample, If Interested write to_

bridqe, Mich- '

&>

V gingham girl

Fruit "roceHes

Vegetables Fish

Market Prices

Hereto thoroughly appealing young dress

of Galey & Lord checked gjngham that does a good bit for

your own personal appeal. Features a pretty shawl collar, brief sleeves and a

x skirt that boasts x. tome unpressed

pleats and a pair of , rick*rack trimmed patch pockeli. Rust,

navy, green, alack— each wlHrwhlte.

$lie#10to 18,

, WANTED TO BUY :A 4 or 5 room house from owner, $4,000 or less, close in Pinckney.

; 2368 Howell St. Phone 146F12

WANTED POULTRY:Will pay Detroit Market Prices. C. H. Lk>yd Phone 62F13

FOR SA1&10 inch Munts Tele-j vision 3et, a year old far $75. ]

Gen© N. Druin, Patteftoh Lake ) f^esh Air Camp Rd-1 FOR RENT.-Equippecf" 153 acre j Dairv Farm. I C. Murray, 8280 FARLEY Rd.

Pinckney, Mich. A U T O M i S c ' S A W i i w < L 7 S c

General Liquid Ferruizer Co,. Rent CUty. Tjrchio>-3n

FOR SAli-Smail White Enam-e' ''ltchen Ranqe, burns wood

, 0 coal, qood condition. ) Phone 137F11 { 7439 Bently Road

FOR SALE: We now have our DeKalb Seed Corn on hand. Get yours while we have numbers you want. Price $11.90 per bush­el. If interested either come and see us or write us what kind you want and we will hold it for vjou.

Ralph Glenn and Son _ ^ _ ^ . Gregory, Mich.

FOH SAlE:Gordeif Tractor 5 HP Garden Kinq with 5 attachments, plow, cultivator, sickle bar. disc and spike tooth. Reasonable.

Lucius Doyle. Phone 42 L A W N * ^ O w S s ' SHARftNEDjwAMtOiFAKM LISTINGS, we

$1.50 (Let us help you sell your farm. Also Sissors and Knives have more prospects than farms. Service While You Wait

All Work Guaranteed MANDELL'S SAW FILING SHOP 11524 River Drlve,Hl land Lake

L HAROLD CRANDJLL Phoijy 305W Howell. FOR SALErPotatoes Onions.

Cabbaqe 6J

At arfverfised In i January Vogue.

tiiiii PRICE $8.95

^aL

Peirce's -STORE FOR WOMEN"

"BUY WITH CONFIDENCE* HOWELL MIOTIQAN

1 Jfr**Z^2S£Z^l^ fi

!;

V >

4

1

/H

A %\