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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>— No. 3 — Ph. UP 8-3111 PiackMy, Mich^oa — Wtdatsday. J a m r y 17, 19*2 Siagte Copy, 10c&#13;
Chronology Continues With&#13;
Recap of News During July,&#13;
August and September, 1961&#13;
Our chronology of 1962 continues&#13;
this week with notes of new&#13;
events that happened in July,&#13;
August and September. It may&#13;
seem like "it was just yesterday**&#13;
but 1962 was more than h a l f&#13;
over when—&#13;
JULY 5th—&#13;
The Village Squares, the local&#13;
square dancing club, attended ths&#13;
Tenth Annual National Square&#13;
Dance Convention at Detroit*s&#13;
Cobo Hafl ibis week. They were&#13;
among more 4han 17,000 registered&#13;
menben of dance c l u b s&#13;
attending and participating in the&#13;
event. James E. Jones, 27, of&#13;
Dcaet conft*M»ri thji wnIr in J3crobbed&#13;
the Pinckney Branch of the&#13;
McPherson State (lank of $3,786&#13;
at gun point in April. Mrs. Ralph&#13;
Hall was elected president of the&#13;
PEGS, home extension club, for&#13;
the ensuing year. Miss Nancy&#13;
Nash, who won the Miss Livingston&#13;
contest during Michigan&#13;
Week is competing this week in&#13;
the State contest for the M i s s&#13;
Michigan title at Muskegon. John&#13;
Walton, president of the l o c a l&#13;
school board, accepts post as assistant&#13;
director of special hospital&#13;
project at St. Joseph Mercy hospital,&#13;
Aim Arbor. Oil well on the&#13;
Wagoner farm at depth of 350&#13;
feet now.&#13;
JULY 1 2 * - . *&#13;
Carol HNtfftnd Edsel Thorn-&#13;
Con are numM on July 8 at&#13;
Congregational church. Topical&#13;
fluoride dental program for local&#13;
children announced for Aug. 4-15.&#13;
Cadet Richard Wylie in Europe for&#13;
six weeks training with Army.&#13;
Shafer T. Presley, 52, dies after&#13;
long illness. Norman Fohey, 60,&#13;
dies at Caseville. Kiwanis Club's&#13;
annual auction sale on village&#13;
square attracts big crowd, frnckney's&#13;
Babe Ruth League team doing&#13;
fine in league standings; beat&#13;
Saline 4-0.&#13;
JULY 19th—&#13;
The Huron-Portage yacht dub&#13;
rebel crew won the Lee-Wilson&#13;
trophy at Vermilion, Ohio, Mailory&#13;
Chib elimination races Sunday.&#13;
Enfaffment of Marilyn Atkins&#13;
and Donald R. Kaiser told.&#13;
Hell Mich., feu a postal sub-sutkm;&#13;
opens for business this week.&#13;
Many tourists Ime&#13;
cards and letters&#13;
mart Tom Read&#13;
and reports&#13;
ing Germany&#13;
an family&#13;
trees up-rooted and boats over&#13;
turned on lakes. Loretta Wilson&#13;
and Lester Sharp are married at&#13;
St Mary's church.&#13;
AUGUST 2nd—&#13;
Kristen Tasch and Lonnie Huhman&#13;
are married in home wedding.&#13;
St Mary's annual homecom&#13;
ing attracts over 2000 for roast&#13;
beef dinner and 'carnival* on&#13;
church grounds on Sunday. Weg&#13;
ener oil well now at dept of 2060&#13;
feet. Mrs. L. J. (Bonnie) Henry&#13;
awarded B.S. degree at Summer&#13;
Convocation E.M.U. on July 24.&#13;
Biilie and Bonnie Wylie tfke top&#13;
awards with their 4-H club sheep&#13;
at county fair. Irving Millers obsary&#13;
on Sunday. Dr. Marvin&#13;
merhorn announces plans to move&#13;
to Milford soon. Ron Bechler ap&#13;
pears on Minnie Pearl show at&#13;
Fowlerville Fair, young singer and&#13;
guitarist wins praise as performer.&#13;
AUGUST 9th—&#13;
Bufjhn visited Play&#13;
age games and coin machines at&#13;
recreation center. Memorial bar&#13;
ness race scheduled at Mason Fair&#13;
by family of the late A. M. (Bert)&#13;
Roche. Hartland couple, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Kenneth Haas, buy Gentile&#13;
Home Center and assume operation&#13;
of the hardware store. John&#13;
Beiry of Portage Lake writes of&#13;
vacation experiences in Bogata,&#13;
Colombia, South America. A son&#13;
born to Mr. and Mrs. Mark Abney&#13;
at McPherson Health Center.&#13;
John F. Burg, Industrial Arts&#13;
teacher, hospitalized with heart&#13;
attack. Sharon Line wins two Reserve&#13;
championship honors in 4-H&#13;
horse class at Fowlerville F a i r .&#13;
Miss Ann Harris resigns as high&#13;
school math teacher to accept a&#13;
position with municipal league in&#13;
Ann Arbor. Mrs. Wilma Terry&#13;
Gibson, 47, dies at McPherson&#13;
hospital. Rev. Win. Hainsworth accepts&#13;
call to serve as pastor of&#13;
Congregational church. Ground&#13;
broken for new home of Dispatch&#13;
office on Dexter street&#13;
AUGUST 16—&#13;
Carol Ann Cosgray and Glenn&#13;
R. Vliet are married at Congregational&#13;
church. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Don Weed of Pontiac buy Hambun&#13;
Hardware store. E d w i n&#13;
stock-&#13;
Rainbow Girls&#13;
Installation Is&#13;
Tomorrow Eve&#13;
Plan Community College&#13;
Survey; Local Man Chosen&#13;
To Serve on Committee&#13;
Formal action on starting a survey&#13;
to (1) determine if a Washtenaw&#13;
Community College is needed&#13;
and (2) measure the ability of the&#13;
area to finance such a college was&#13;
taken in Ann Arbor in late November&#13;
by the Community College&#13;
Survey Committee.&#13;
Pinckney has been invited to&#13;
participate in the survey and in&#13;
the project should it become a&#13;
reality.&#13;
In action by the local Board of&#13;
Education at its December meeting&#13;
Lee Goucher, a trustee, was&#13;
[appointed to represent the local&#13;
on me Execuiive Board&#13;
Judy Bekkering, daughter of&#13;
Mrs. Clayton Bekkering and the&#13;
late Mr. Bekkering, will be installed&#13;
as the Worthy Advisor of the&#13;
Pinckney Assembly, No. 67, Order&#13;
of the Rainbow for Girls, at the&#13;
30th Installation service of t h e&#13;
group tomorrow evening at t h e&#13;
Masonic temple. Florence Mrofka,&#13;
daughter of the Steve-Mrofka's of&#13;
Dexter-Pinckney road," will take&#13;
office as Worthy Associate Advisor.&#13;
Also to be installed are J u d y&#13;
Church Names&#13;
Committee of the survey, which&#13;
is composed of one member from&#13;
each participating area.&#13;
A Citizen's Advisory of area&#13;
residents for this study was also&#13;
named by the school board upon&#13;
its decision to take part in the&#13;
work. Those who have accepted&#13;
appointments are George Van&#13;
Norman, Louis A. Rogers, Melvin&#13;
Retnhard and Don A. Gibson.&#13;
The survey will be conducted&#13;
under the direction of Prof. Raymond&#13;
J. Young of the University&#13;
of Michigan through its Bureau of&#13;
School Services.&#13;
June 30, 1962, has been i@t as&#13;
the date for completion of all survey&#13;
work and August 15 as a&#13;
deadline for publication of 200&#13;
fcers&#13;
Officers for 1962 were elected&#13;
at the annual meeting of the Community&#13;
Congregational Church on&#13;
Monday evening, January 8 when&#13;
more than 75 members turned out&#13;
despite icy roads and snowdrifts&#13;
for a family dinner and to hear the&#13;
annual reports of the church.&#13;
Mrs. Sadie Moran was re-elect&#13;
ed clerk; Herman Vedder was&#13;
named treasurer to succeed Ona&#13;
Campbell who did not choose to&#13;
run after holding the office for the&#13;
Borovsky, charity; Kathe Shettle-|Past l 3 vcars- Mrs. Merlin Amroe,&#13;
hope; Frances Reason, faith; hur*ey aruJ Mr&amp;- L e o n a r d L c c&#13;
Patricia Borovsky, recorder; Kathy&#13;
Gustafson, treasurer; Mary Wylie,&#13;
chaplain; Sybil Huntley, drill leader;&#13;
Pamela Winslow, love; Carlean&#13;
McCarty, religion; Linda Wylie,&#13;
nature; Janice Heiner, immortality;&#13;
Margaret Ackley, fidelity; Mary&#13;
Sullivan, patriotism; Cindy Borovsky,&#13;
service; Patty Hadden, confidential&#13;
observed; Joyce K i n g ,&#13;
outer observer and Sharon Gallup,&#13;
musician.&#13;
Installing officers conducting the&#13;
services tomorrow include Kathy&#13;
Gustafson as installing officer,&#13;
Caroline Nichoks, installing mar&#13;
shall; Sfttron Gallup, installing&#13;
chaplain; Karon King, installing recorder,&#13;
Mrs. Eloyse Campbell, installing&#13;
musician and Mrs. Nancy&#13;
Litner, installing soloist.&#13;
Miss Leota Reason was named&#13;
Mother Advisor of the Assembly&#13;
for the ensuing year.&#13;
Masonic Guest&#13;
Mrs.&#13;
dies at P o m *&#13;
is winner of&#13;
of&#13;
daas of 1957&#13;
Set&#13;
Guest Night and&#13;
of the Livingston&#13;
6, F. &amp; A. M., has&#13;
for Saturday eve-&#13;
10. Dinner win be&#13;
USWL Maty McOeer a n d&#13;
Navam flurried hi Jack&#13;
ate Cobb's Karl tag receives&#13;
E M U . Daughter, Martine Mane.&#13;
Dwjbt Waf- bom&#13;
Doyle; , too, for Mr. and&#13;
(Judy Shifty)&#13;
Aajytf 16. Diane Hal breaks arm&#13;
On the Map-at hi fal Irani ridin* hone. Kiwanis&#13;
Uoflkey bal pm attracts g o o d&#13;
l l C i&#13;
p. m. in the high&#13;
the women of die&#13;
145.&#13;
win foUow the dinare&#13;
now available&#13;
member or reserbe&#13;
made by catting&#13;
or Secy Menm CampbA UP&#13;
8-3136.&#13;
O. E. &amp; CALENDAR&#13;
O . E . S . practice Sunday, Jan.&#13;
21 « Manic H A 3:3a&#13;
iMHiifj 29 — at 7:30,&#13;
of Instruction. Officers wear forwere&#13;
reelected to serve another&#13;
year as financial secretary and&#13;
benevolent treasurer, respectively.&#13;
Mrs. Doris Shettleroe has accepted&#13;
the post of Sunday School&#13;
Superintendent. She succeeds Mrs.&#13;
Harold Henry. An assistant superintendent&#13;
will be named in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
Also elected were two deacons,&#13;
Herman Widmayer and Ralph&#13;
Hall; two trustees for three year&#13;
terms, Charles Ward and Marvin&#13;
Hoard; one trustee for a two year&#13;
term, Russell Cbnklin.&#13;
Serving as ushers for the year&#13;
will be M. E. Darrow, Clare&#13;
Swarthout, Otto Poulson, Jack&#13;
Bilkovsky, Paul Howell, Paul Russell,&#13;
Neil Hall, Jerry Van Slambrook,&#13;
Herman Vedder, Herman&#13;
Widmayer and Eric Rose.&#13;
Highlighting the evening's activities&#13;
was the mortgage burning&#13;
vcreini ony of the indebtedness on Pilgrim Hall; Max Reynolds, Herman&#13;
Widmayer and Mrs. Robert&#13;
Read, three who were members of&#13;
the board at the time of the decision&#13;
to build Pilgrim Hall performed&#13;
the honors.&#13;
BASKETBALL&#13;
NEWS NOTES&#13;
HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
After a long holiday vacation&#13;
and the postponement of the basketball&#13;
game with Chelsea a week&#13;
ago because of bad weather the&#13;
Pirates returned to play again, only&#13;
to be walloped by Dexter Friday&#13;
night.&#13;
It was a 76-50 victory for the&#13;
Dreadnaughts on their home court&#13;
after they dazzled their spectators&#13;
with a 29-point first quarter.&#13;
Terry Rowell and Jack Young&#13;
each made II points for the Pirates&#13;
while Ed Guy caged 10&#13;
points. The local team ranks fifth&#13;
this week in the Washtenaw league&#13;
race.&#13;
The Little Pirates lost the preliminary&#13;
game to the little Dreadnaughts,&#13;
62-37.&#13;
The Pirates will host University&#13;
High this week Friday.&#13;
DEXTER LEAGUE&#13;
In the adults game of the Dexter&#13;
League last Wednesday the&#13;
Pinckney team lost to Dexter 83-&#13;
64 after a sensational first half in&#13;
which the victors scored 48 points&#13;
and the local cagers 26 points.&#13;
In the second game of the evening&#13;
Stockbridge came from behind&#13;
to beat Chelsea 68-51.&#13;
In the first game Cerkin was&#13;
high scorer for Pinckney with 20&#13;
Billy Graham&#13;
Film Offered&#13;
"Shadow of the Boomerang," a&#13;
new Billy Graham evangelistic&#13;
film wUl be shown at the Peoples&#13;
church hew Saturday evening at&#13;
7:30.&#13;
feature depicting a powerful tfocy&#13;
Tonighfthe local men will meet&#13;
Stockbridge and Dexter will battle&#13;
Chelsea at the Dexter High school&#13;
gym. The first game it at 7 p. m.,&#13;
the last game at 8:30. The public&#13;
is invited; no admission charge.&#13;
• • *&#13;
LITHE LEAGUE&#13;
Hamburg upset the Pinckney&#13;
Pilgrims* 23-22, in Saturday morning's&#13;
game. Clare Bel scored 12&#13;
for the Pflgrirm, Mike Stevenson&#13;
11 for Hamburg.&#13;
Playland waBoped the Pinckney&#13;
Merchants, 32-13, with Robert&#13;
Uomead looping 13 pok* lor&#13;
the winners and Rudy loofphaon&#13;
Mike M a m and Jack Young&#13;
of Man and God. The&#13;
spans two oonunents.&#13;
Georgia Lee and Dick Jones tfat&#13;
in the tfory written by John Font&#13;
The public is invited to attend! SL Mary&#13;
this fhowinf. There k no J ' l F&#13;
skMi charne; a frae-wal &lt;&#13;
| wii be receWed to cower frnwei | P&#13;
were die ifftiw Sntmoiy*&#13;
STANDINGS&#13;
W L&#13;
11 2&#13;
7 4&#13;
4 5&#13;
3 6&#13;
0 1&#13;
Local Items&#13;
A daughter, Scharme Marie,&#13;
was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ted&#13;
Stockton on January 9 at Me-&#13;
Pherson Health Center. She weighs&#13;
8 pounds, 6 ounces.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lavey are&#13;
announcing the arrival of t h e i r&#13;
third son, Terrence Patrick, on&#13;
January 9 at Me Pherson hospital.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. L. J. McKinley&#13;
left Saturday on a trip to California&#13;
where they will visit their&#13;
son and his family for about three&#13;
weeks.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Richardson&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
• ( '&#13;
HowcM Phone 1769&#13;
Wed* Thurs., Fit, Sat.&#13;
17—18—19—20&#13;
A free record of Jimmy&#13;
Ctanton Singing the title&#13;
song to every teenager&#13;
who buys a ticket.&#13;
Sun., MonM Tues.,&#13;
Jan. 21—22—23&#13;
Matinee Sunday at 2:30 p.m.&#13;
IALIEWOOD'COLOR&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Jan. 24—25—26—27&#13;
have gone to St. Petersburg, Florida,&#13;
for the remainder of the winter.&#13;
Birthday greetings, go today to&#13;
David Taylor, tomorrow to Carmen&#13;
Bonsaire; Friday to H e l e n&#13;
Marie Porter and Roger McCleary&#13;
and on Saturday, Jan. 20, to Mrs.&#13;
Emma Boyd, Phylis Gentile, Lori&#13;
Schenden, Mrs. Don Swarthout,&#13;
Richard Blades, Fern Hopton and&#13;
Martha Hopton. Helen Wooten,&#13;
Viola Webster and Violet Fearn&#13;
share Jan. 22 as their birthday—&#13;
while Richard Joseph Higgs will&#13;
have his birthday cake on Jan. 23.&#13;
Local residents who were patients&#13;
recently at McPherson&#13;
Health Center in Howell include&#13;
John Higgs, Mrs. Keith Koch,&#13;
Mrs. John Aldrich, Mrs. Ted&#13;
Stockton, Jerry Lou Barron, and&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Lavey.&#13;
The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Aldrich of Patterson Lake,&#13;
whose arrival,made the headlines&#13;
across the country as "being delivered*&#13;
by telephone" when H e l l ,&#13;
Mich, was frozen over, has been&#13;
named, Kenny Lee. Icy roads&#13;
prevented Mrs. Aldrich from traveling&#13;
to the hospital the morning&#13;
of her delivery and the doctor&#13;
from reaching her bedside so he&#13;
gave instructions by telephone to&#13;
three neighborhood women w h o&#13;
successfully attended the birth.&#13;
Baby-wefghed" 8~tbs7~afui^i"4~2bz7&#13;
when he finally checked in at the&#13;
McPherson Health Center where&#13;
he and his mother were&#13;
Miss Sharon Griffiths whose&#13;
wedding to Floyd Campbell of&#13;
Portage Lake will take place Saturday&#13;
of this week was feted at&#13;
a beautifully appointed bridal&#13;
shower attended by 26 guests Friday&#13;
evening at Pilgrim Hall. Hostesses&#13;
were Mrs. Clifford Miller&#13;
and Mrs. Otis Matteson.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Tansley&#13;
were Saturday dinner guests of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Camburn&#13;
at the Canopy in Brighton,&#13;
in honor of Mrs. Tansley*s birthday.&#13;
H. S. CAFETERIA MENU&#13;
FOR WEEK OF JAN. 22nd&#13;
(As prepared by school lunch&#13;
official)&#13;
Monday, Jan. 22 — Goulosh,&#13;
sandwiches, fruit, milk.&#13;
Tuesday, Jan. 23 — Spaghetti,&#13;
Cheese wedge sandwiches, fruit,&#13;
milk.&#13;
Wednesday, JUa. 24 — B e e f&#13;
stew, sandwiches, fruit, milk.&#13;
Thursday, Jan. 25 — Hot Dog,&#13;
Vegetable, Ginger Cake, Milk.&#13;
Friday, Jan. 26 — Escalloped&#13;
potatoes with cheese. Vegetable&#13;
sandwiches, fruit, milk.&#13;
GOP WOMEN'S CLUB&#13;
The Livingston County Republican&#13;
Women's Club will meet at&#13;
1:30 P.M., Wednesday, January&#13;
47, at the Howell Township Ha)I&#13;
on Byron Rd., Howell.&#13;
Effective January I, 1962, the&#13;
Driver License-Bureau^*^&#13;
ews Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA Mrs. Eva James was a Sunday&#13;
dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. E r&#13;
ston Clarke.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hornei&#13;
and Mr. and Mrs. John Gay ol&#13;
Wayne spent the weekend with&#13;
their mother, Mrs. Roy Shelhart&#13;
joining them for dinner Sunday&#13;
was Mr. and Mrs. Orlin Jones&#13;
Bob and Beverly. Richardson.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Maschke&#13;
attended the Livingston County&#13;
Soil Conservation dinner meeting&#13;
Thursday evening at the Gregory&#13;
school.&#13;
Margaret Livermore was a overnight&#13;
guest last week at the home&#13;
of Miss Nancy Snay of Stockbridge.&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Livermore was a&#13;
Saturday evening supper guest of&#13;
Mrs.. Lena Rudnicki and family&#13;
of Fowlerville.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
aao in i&#13;
wadnaaflay by C. ML la^oy and t . W« Poylo+ ^wiinoft m&#13;
^•^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^•^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^Q^^^^^^^^^M&#13;
IRQ Of Mkift p t f i t f 9J% 4ft QpOA fOWM wnOfl§ WW&#13;
h l mwwiiont *• lh» only r—irktiow.&#13;
kal.&#13;
Stftt&#13;
U.S.&#13;
117*&#13;
QHJH0 O p&#13;
awd thkal comwwiiont *• lh» only r—irktiow.&#13;
, 12.00 ptr y«tr m advance in MkhlfMn $2J0 in otfwr m m «td&#13;
1400 fai tiot 14.00 to faraien coumritt . SSiix« mwoow**ii*t i r**a*t**** II II JJOO IInn MMkkfhcJtggwonn,&#13;
ot*wr itolM w d U . i pouMsiafWi U.00 to tertian counlriw. Milil«y&#13;
12JO par year. No mail lubatriptiont takan for IOM lhan iis manf**.&#13;
ralot upon appikation. News Notes F HAMBURG The Odd Fellows and the Rebeccas&#13;
Lodges of Hamburg held&#13;
d joint installation of officers on&#13;
Saturday evening at the Lodge&#13;
hall in Hamburg.&#13;
Officers who were installed in&#13;
the Rchcccus are as follows: Noble&#13;
Grand, Mrs. Margaret Smith;&#13;
Vice Grand, Mrs. Ruby Vasher;&#13;
Recording Secretary. Mrs. Eleanore&#13;
White; Financial Secretary,&#13;
Mrs. Edna Peach; Treasurer, Mrs.&#13;
Jean Fisher. Others are. Degree&#13;
Captain, Mrs. Shirley Williams,&#13;
Warden, Mrs. Florence Kiner,&#13;
Conductor, Mrs. Mae Rocppcn,&#13;
Chaplain, Mrs. Lucille Bennett,&#13;
Outside Guardian, Lorraine l.itkc;&#13;
-Ciuardian, Louise T i k&#13;
Supporters for the Noble Grand&#13;
are Clarice Watefbury and Winni-&#13;
Vice Cirand are Helen DeWoff&#13;
ami Normu Krienbring. Musician&#13;
is Grace Harris. Mrs. Alice Lindsey&#13;
is the Piist Noble Grand.&#13;
The following Odd Fellows were&#13;
installed as officers, Noble Grand,&#13;
Orville Bcekman, Vice Grand,&#13;
Richard Schaner, Recording Secrotary.&#13;
Roy Merrill and Treasurer,&#13;
CARD OK I HANKS&#13;
We wish to take this opportunity&#13;
to express our gratitude tor the&#13;
many comforting words of sympathy&#13;
and acts or kindness shown&#13;
us during our recent bereavement.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Otto&#13;
Poulson and Grace&#13;
Earl Fisher.&#13;
Entertainment was presented&#13;
after the installation. There was a&#13;
tap dance by Kathy Vasher and&#13;
Patty Mickelson of Brighton. An&#13;
accordion solo by Butch Duty&#13;
also of Brighton was enjoyed by&#13;
all. Lunch was served by the Rebeccas&#13;
and the remainder of the&#13;
evening spent in visiting.&#13;
Mrs. Clifford Van Horn and&#13;
Mrs. Hollis White called on Mrs.&#13;
Van Horn's uncle, George Parker&#13;
and Mrs. Parker on Geddes&#13;
Road near Ann Arbor on Monday.&#13;
Mr. Parker was recently a&#13;
patient in an Ann Arbor hospital.&#13;
Mrs. Douglas Smith entered&#13;
Health&#13;
Center on Wednesday. She will&#13;
undergo major surgery.&#13;
^ rrii'^;- ^r'^c^~y"fe&#13;
he&#13;
rriJiiV" horn&#13;
spent five days&#13;
w ne re&#13;
business&#13;
"S«y It with How*nn&#13;
PkoiM 2M&#13;
HOWELL. MICHIGAN&#13;
CHOICE STEAK SALE&#13;
ROUND OR&#13;
RIB STEAK Ib. 79*&#13;
SIRLOIN STEAK&#13;
T BONE OR&#13;
CUBE STEAK.&#13;
Luncheon Meat&#13;
SWIFT'S PREM - 2&#13;
Sliced or Halves&#13;
HUNT'S PEACHES&#13;
HUNT'S&#13;
CATSUP&#13;
Ib. 8 9&#13;
Ib. 99*&#13;
12-Ox.&#13;
Tint&#13;
for&#13;
RIVAL&#13;
DOG FOOD&#13;
JIFFY POP&#13;
POPCORN&#13;
5c Off Label&#13;
GIANT TIDE&#13;
WITH&#13;
PAN&#13;
Lara*&#13;
Caas&#13;
or PINCKN PRICES&#13;
17&#13;
Opt* html** CM 9^0—StwdUy, W)0 M I . to 1^0 pjm.&#13;
Tm&amp;phoM nnckwy l^^own ••"721&#13;
'W&#13;
State Government Agencies&#13;
Planning for Michigan Week&#13;
State . government officials are&#13;
looking far ahead to two major&#13;
non-official functions.&#13;
Most state agencies are already&#13;
making plans for their participation&#13;
in the 1962 Michigan Week'&#13;
in May, and Gov. John B. Swainson&#13;
has called for attention to&#13;
the state's contribution to the&#13;
Seattle World's Fair in June.&#13;
Among the agencies with specific&#13;
plans in the works for Michigan&#13;
Week, May 20 - 26, is th?&#13;
Department of Public Instruction&#13;
headed by Superintendent Lynn&#13;
M. Bartlett.&#13;
Bartlett, chairman of the schoolcollege&#13;
activities board for Michigan&#13;
Week, has called for school&#13;
administrators to plan field trips&#13;
to business and industry as part&#13;
of the ninth annual salute to state&#13;
interests.&#13;
Education Day during the year's&#13;
MAE'S&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
CLEARANCE SALE&#13;
Now in Progress!&#13;
observance will be May 24.&#13;
"Lights On" programs at night&#13;
in the schools to focus citizen attention&#13;
on education opportunities,&#13;
open houses, or public assemblies&#13;
in the schools were among Bartlett's&#13;
other suggestions.&#13;
Schools have been active in&#13;
Michigan Week in the past. Last&#13;
year a Kalamazoo grade school&#13;
class staged an all-Michigan fair;&#13;
high school students took over city&#13;
offices in Mount Morris on Education&#13;
Day, and poster, essay and&#13;
speech contests were conducted in&#13;
other areas.&#13;
June 19 has been set aside as&#13;
Michigan Day at the ]962 World's&#13;
Fair at Seattle.&#13;
Swainson has asked any college,&#13;
high school or other group with&#13;
musical or entertainment units&#13;
which might be interested in participating&#13;
in the Michigan D a y&#13;
program to contact his office.&#13;
The Governor will be the top&#13;
representative of the state at th^&#13;
exposition. He said he and his&#13;
family will fly to Seattle for the&#13;
I special salute to Michigan.&#13;
Plans call for an airport welcome&#13;
for the Swainsons, followed&#13;
by"a motorcade fnroughr the~Weii&#13;
Coast city, a dedication program&#13;
10544 Whitewood Road&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
and a funcheon in the Governor's&#13;
honor. Swainson also will be u&#13;
guest of honor at a state dinner&#13;
given by Washington's Gov. Albert&#13;
D. Rosellini.&#13;
Special Offer... from your dairy only&#13;
&gt;!•?£&#13;
NEW! SPARKLING! STURDY!&#13;
HOT CHOCOLATE MUG&#13;
Mmmm! Everything is Jim&#13;
Dandy when you drink delicious&#13;
healthful DAIRY CHOCOLATE.&#13;
It's the big energy drink&#13;
for children and adults. Adds&#13;
flavor and zest to meals and&#13;
snacks... served hot or cold. So&#13;
restful at bedtime, too.&#13;
IT'ft R K A D V T O S B R V B I&#13;
£v«ryon« will «njoy a Jim Dandy Mug! Order Todayi&#13;
t please leave qts. of Dairy Chocolate&#13;
Jim Dandy Mugs on your next delivery.&#13;
Hickory Ridge Farm Dairy&#13;
STOCKIRIDGE. MICHIGAN&#13;
Apportionment Commands Attention in Con-Con&#13;
THE 144 DELEGATES to Michigan's Constitutional Convention will probably have no&#13;
thornier problem than that of apportionment And, this subject will likely dominate discussions&#13;
and debate in Con-Con over the next few weeks. Dr. John Hannah (R-East Lansing),&#13;
chairman of the Legislative Organization Committee, indicates an area under discussion&#13;
to vice-chairman Dr. Melvin Nord, (D-Detroit) and Judge Herman Dehnke (R-Harrisvme;.&#13;
five one for most people than th?&#13;
summer months.&#13;
State Health Commissioner Albert&#13;
Heustis warns that the lessened&#13;
physical activity may not be&#13;
entirely to blame for a lazy, tired&#13;
feeling common during the winter.&#13;
In fact, this feel may be a first&#13;
warning of a threat to life.&#13;
Carbon monoxide leaking from&#13;
a furnace can cause tiredness or&#13;
other discomforts, Heustis said.&#13;
"When the cold weather approaches,&#13;
storm windows go up&#13;
and most houses are completely&#13;
sealed off from the outside air/1&#13;
Heustis said. "The insidious nature&#13;
of carbon monoxide makes i: difficult&#13;
to detect by the human&#13;
senses, and thus increases the dangers&#13;
inherent in this silent killer."&#13;
Carbon monoxide is colorless,&#13;
tasteless and odorless, and it affects&#13;
the human body gradually.&#13;
"It is very important that furnaces&#13;
be checked regularly," said&#13;
Heustis. "The combustion products&#13;
of any fuel: oil, gas, coal or wood,&#13;
ire corrosive, and in time causj&#13;
leaks in the combustion chamber&#13;
of a furnace.&#13;
"Under certain conditions, carbon&#13;
monoxide can be formed by&#13;
any of these fuels and with a leaking&#13;
combustion chamber, tragic results&#13;
can be expected/' Heustis&#13;
said.&#13;
The health commissioner's point&#13;
was proved recently when a Central&#13;
Michigan couple was f o u n d&#13;
dead in their home, the victims ot&#13;
an accumulation of deadly carbon&#13;
monoxide fumes.&#13;
Auditor general, a post now filled&#13;
by general election, is a job&#13;
whose responsibilities are l i t t l e&#13;
known and often misunderstood.&#13;
The position is also under considerable&#13;
discussion by the Constitutional&#13;
Convention with t h c&#13;
view of possibly abolishing it as&#13;
an elective office.&#13;
Under the present constitution&#13;
and state law. Michigan's Auditor&#13;
General is a member of the executive&#13;
branch. He is responsible for&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc,, from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 84621&#13;
Pincknoy, Michigan&#13;
all&#13;
cies, commissions and boards, and&#13;
county governments.&#13;
In addition, the auditor general&#13;
approves subdivision plats, administers,&#13;
the annual delinquent t a x&#13;
sale, and prepares the a n n u a l&#13;
financial reports of state and th?&#13;
county governments.&#13;
The law places him as a member&#13;
of the State Administrative&#13;
Board, Municipal Finance C o m -&#13;
mission, the State Employes, Judges,&#13;
and Probate Judges Retirement&#13;
Boards, State Police Pension&#13;
Board, Corporation Privilege Tax&#13;
Board, and Franchise Tax Appeal&#13;
Board.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 17, 1962&#13;
derstand the difference between&#13;
eloquence and endurance.&#13;
Today's youngsters don't leave&#13;
footprints on the sands of time —&#13;
just tire tracks.&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SIRVICE&#13;
435 E. Main&#13;
24 HOUR&#13;
8-3148&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
140 Livingston St. Phone UP 8-3149&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
- S P E C I A L -&#13;
THIS WEEK ONLY&#13;
Skates Sharpened.... 25c&#13;
W l u m v e r a n F m e r ^ e n c v AriM.s Let I ' s H e l p ^ m i&#13;
Mitt I f&#13;
^ ( M i l &lt;.KT IMMKD1ATK ACTION&#13;
CITIZENS FINANCE CO.&#13;
lion u&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
W. M-36WITH TM puvor&#13;
UP 8-9756&#13;
Con-Con Delegates Go Back To School&#13;
CONFRONTED with an overwhelming amount of reading material daily, delegates to&#13;
the Constitutional Convention requested assistance from Michigan State University.&#13;
Through the cooperation of Delegate John A. Hannah, president of M.S.U., a five-week&#13;
course in Rapid and Efficient Reading is being given to a class of 35 delegates. A typical&#13;
section of the class shows Miss Kathryn Burns of M.S.U. giving instruction to Delegates&#13;
Herbert M. Turner (R-Saginaw, Morris W. Hood, Sr. (D-Detroit), Adelaide J. Hart&#13;
(D-Detroit) and Ervin J. Haskill (R-Lapeer).&#13;
MOTES&#13;
Episcopal Bishop Richard S.&#13;
Emrich and Neil Staebler, former&#13;
chairman of the state Democratic&#13;
party, will receove honorary degrees&#13;
at University of Michigan&#13;
Mid-year Graduation exercises on&#13;
Saturday, Jan. 20.&#13;
A new funeral home was opened&#13;
last week in Fowlerville. Gale&#13;
Dillingham is the mortician. He&#13;
recently received his certificate&#13;
from the Mortuary Science Department&#13;
at Wayne University in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Income Tax&#13;
Service&#13;
Jim Vasher&#13;
Phone for&#13;
Appointment AC 9-2972&#13;
10514 Hamburg Rd.&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
Twonaf-the" thTecrcounties in the&#13;
South Lyon - Whitmore Lake area&#13;
have reported heavy increases in&#13;
the number of hepatitis cases reported&#13;
in the latter part of 1961.&#13;
Manuel Castro. 26, is the new&#13;
editor of the Brighton Argus. He&#13;
succeeds Walter Ruch. Castro, a&#13;
native of Dearborn, claims no relationship&#13;
to Fidel. He holds a&#13;
B. A. Degree from Wayne State&#13;
University.&#13;
Cieorge Almashy of Brighton&#13;
has invented a toy destined to take&#13;
the spotlight in the field of educational&#13;
toys for youths interested&#13;
in math. MY. Almashy h o p e s&#13;
to realize enough profits from the&#13;
toy, now being manufactured in&#13;
Detroit, to Kuild a fine nursing&#13;
home for the aged in Brighton&#13;
township.&#13;
John Proctor was installed last&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 3301&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Putnam Township&#13;
Property and Dog Taxes&#13;
art now due and payable at my&#13;
horn* from 9 to S on Saturdays.&#13;
All dogs 3 mo. old and ovor must&#13;
bavt lietnso—$2.00 malo—$3.50 fontalo.&#13;
NOTE: Dog taxes become delinquent on&#13;
MARCH 1st. (NOT APRIL 1st as in the&#13;
past).*&#13;
Helar&#13;
Phom UP 84922 545 E. PifNR St.&#13;
* After March 1st. tfcty Mutt ba pftrcbasad&#13;
at Comty Traas. offica, Hew.il, wit* a*&#13;
adaWoaal $2*00 pMalty.&#13;
week as president of the Howell&#13;
Kiwanis club.&#13;
date or tfitrschoot "rSond&#13;
issue election. A $500,000 bond&#13;
issue is sought.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
I wish to thank my neighbors,&#13;
friends, and the Pinckncy O. E. S.&#13;
Chapter 145, Ann Arbor O. E. S.&#13;
chapter and Cassidy Lake Technical&#13;
School staff for the many&#13;
cards, gifts, flowers and telephone&#13;
calls during my recent operation&#13;
and convalescence. Special thanks&#13;
to Mr. Ralph Trotter for my&#13;
transportation home on such an&#13;
icy day.&#13;
Mrs. L. George Tansies&#13;
$T. MARY'S CATHOLIC CHURCH&#13;
Pincknty, Michigan&#13;
Ray. Fathtr Gaorga Horkan, Paitor&#13;
Sunday Masses: 8:00, 10:00, II1 30&#13;
Weekday Mais 8:00 a.m.&#13;
Novena devotions in honor of Our&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 5:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
HIAWATHA IEACH CHURCH&#13;
Undenominational&#13;
luck lake, Michigan&#13;
Rev. Chariot Michael, Pastor&#13;
Bible School ' 10:00 em.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 atm.&#13;
Young People 6:445 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Boy* Brigade (12 • 18 yrs.), Mon. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise &amp; Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST. 7MHTIU"TH7IAN"CHU"«CH&#13;
(MS«M«ri Sfiyorf)&#13;
E. M&gt;34, HMsbvra, Michigan&#13;
Ltff wr Kriefa,l l, PPastor&#13;
•547 N. Main Street, Whitman lako&#13;
Divine Sorvjces:&#13;
Metim . 8:45 a.m&#13;
Sunday School and Bible Clan 9:445 p.m.&#13;
liturgy, with sermon 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Communion: All major festivals and the&#13;
last Sunday of every month.&#13;
For information phone&#13;
ACedemy 9-3532 or Hickory 9-7061&#13;
CAIVAVV MINNONlTr^HURCH&#13;
Pvrna« between Hawaii and Mill Street*&#13;
Pattor: Melvin Stwrffer&#13;
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Prayer Meeting, every Thursday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
T J i ' f CHURCH&#13;
H O W f l l , MICHIGAN&#13;
tobort M. Taylor, Pastor&#13;
Sunday" School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Denial's Bend, Young People's&#13;
Group • Sunday 6r00 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship • Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bibte Study, Prayer Mooting&#13;
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNITY CONOR8OATIONAI&#13;
Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.&#13;
Sunday Sehool j _, 9*30 • « •&#13;
Choir rehearsal Wednesday evening 7:30&#13;
TNI PfOPUl CHU*CM Of MNOCMEY&#13;
SERVICES: School 9:45 a. m.&#13;
ina Worth'* 11£0 •• m.&#13;
Youth Mooting AM p. m.&#13;
Lumntna Torwifn 7:00 0. m&#13;
IUd2 brooScU - Station WHMI. Sj-v&#13;
4ov, 1065 «. m. . 10:20 a. m. - Dial 1350&#13;
"Poopta's Church of fho Air."&#13;
Mod. Choir Practic* 7:30 p. m. Thura. NUoVwook Sorviot 7:30 p. m.&#13;
0AUU^~tAPm~O««CM&#13;
99M&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 ft.m.&#13;
1140&#13;
Youth&#13;
Wodnwdty night prayar tarviot 7:30 _&#13;
E v a * * * Worship 7:30 P J » .&#13;
y&#13;
Morning Worsnip&#13;
h NHowahip&#13;
New 'Easy1&#13;
Tax Form&#13;
Offered&#13;
The Internal Revenue Service&#13;
today reminded taxpayers about&#13;
the new two page Form 1040&#13;
which combines the better features&#13;
of the 1960 Form 1040 and the&#13;
discontinued Form 1040W.&#13;
R. I. Nixon, District Director&#13;
of Internal Revenue, announced&#13;
that page one of the new Form&#13;
1040 provides space for listing the&#13;
sources of income, computation of&#13;
tax, a listing of tax payments and&#13;
credits, and a computation of tax&#13;
due or refund. The Director added&#13;
that page two provides a&#13;
schedule for listing exemptions&#13;
and various schedules for itemizing&#13;
deductions.&#13;
It was further pointed out that&#13;
schedules for reporting various&#13;
types of income which previously&#13;
appeared on page 3 and 4 of the&#13;
Form 1040 will be contained in&#13;
a separate Schedule B for 1961.&#13;
This schedule need only be completed&#13;
and attached to the Form&#13;
1040 when required.&#13;
Director Nixon feels that the&#13;
revised Form 1040 should make&#13;
l%?s-!JSSrS^i©?f of" fax laeftS&#13;
trmch Iraiief ^or those individuals&#13;
who previously filed on Forms&#13;
1040 and 1040VV.&#13;
TREE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
TV ANTENNA&#13;
REPAIR&#13;
BOB VEDDER&#13;
UP 8-3452&#13;
VERY REASONABLE&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
STATE OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Tho Circuit Court for the County of&#13;
Livingston&#13;
In Chancery&#13;
Lotti* Plummet end Iva Plummer,&#13;
Plaintiff*&#13;
vs.&#13;
Ma/iah Winans, Chvles Dunfcin, Stephen&#13;
Sol en, Stephen Soylos, William C. Dunning&#13;
and Nellie L. Dunning, his wife, and&#13;
Albert Reason and Arlenie Reason, his&#13;
wife, and their unknown heirs, legate;*,&#13;
devisees and assigns.&#13;
Defendants&#13;
O t D H FOt APPEARANCE&#13;
At a session of said Court held at the&#13;
court house in the city of Howell, in said&#13;
county of Livingston, on the 22nd day of&#13;
December, 1961.&#13;
PRESENT: Hon. Michael Carland, d o i t&#13;
Judge.&#13;
On reading and filing the bill of complaint&#13;
in said cause from which it satisfactorily&#13;
appears to the Court fh*t the&#13;
defendants above named, or their unknown&#13;
heirs, devisees, legatees and assigns,&#13;
are proper and necessary parties&#13;
defendant, end&#13;
It further appearing that after diligen*&#13;
search and inquiry it cannot be ascertained&#13;
and it is not known whether such&#13;
defendants are living or dead, or where&#13;
they may reside if living and, if dead,&#13;
whether they have personal representatives&#13;
or heirs living or where* they or&#13;
some of them may reside, or whether the&#13;
title, interest, claim, lien or possible right&#13;
has been by them assigned to any prson&#13;
or persons or been disposed of by will,&#13;
and that plaintiffs do not know and have&#13;
not been able after dilig3nt search and&#13;
enquiry to ascertain the names of the persons&#13;
who are included in siid bill as defendants&#13;
therein without being named:&#13;
On motion of Hiram R. Smith, attornev&#13;
for plaintiffs, IT IS ORDERED thit said&#13;
defendants and their unknown heirs, devisees,&#13;
legatees and assiqns cause iheir&#13;
appearance to be entered in this cause&#13;
within three months from the date of this&#13;
order and in default thereof that s*id bill&#13;
of complaint be t«Un « co*&gt;fe&gt;wd by -•h»-&#13;
It is- FURTHER ORDERED that wi hin&#13;
forty days plaintiff cause a copy of this&#13;
order to be published in the Pincknev&#13;
Dispatch, a newspaper printed in said&#13;
county, such publication to b? ccntin.od&#13;
therein once each week for six weeks in&#13;
succession.&#13;
Michael Carland&#13;
Circuit Judge&#13;
Take Notice: This suit involves the tith&#13;
and is brought to quiet title to th? following&#13;
described hnds situated in the&#13;
Township of Unadilla, Livingston Cojnty,&#13;
Michigan:&#13;
Part of the Northwest Q ' w t e r of Section&#13;
24, Township 1 North, Ranqe 3&#13;
East, described as follows- Beginning&#13;
At a point 839 4 fe^t east of the&#13;
west quarter post of said s&gt;ction 24'&#13;
thence e^st 9 4 0 4 6 fe?t along th?&#13;
quarter line to the center I n e o"f&#13;
Graves Road; thence n-vth 61° 33'&#13;
west 354 5 f*et alonq th? center In-*&#13;
of Graves Road; thence north 2 3 °&#13;
32' easj 433 6 feel, thenc- north&#13;
6 0 ° 59' west 222.3 f«et to th? center&#13;
Ime of Highway M-36: fhenc? so th&#13;
38P 18' west 442.2 feet alono the&#13;
center line of Highw.-y M 35; thence&#13;
soufh 46° 35' west 468.5 feet ,il-nq&#13;
ih? cen'er line of Highway M-36 to&#13;
the point of b?qinninn; and con'ainmq&#13;
6,23 acres of land, more or less,&#13;
and subject to highway easements.&#13;
Hiram R. Smith&#13;
Attorney for Plaintiffs&#13;
Business Address&#13;
H2''3 State Street&#13;
Howell, Michigan.&#13;
29c&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agency]&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agtnt Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Strtet&#13;
Pificlrnty, Mich. Phont UP B-3133&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modtrn Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 8-3172&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Poftog* Loke Rood Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-6188&#13;
132 W. Mom Street, Pincknoy Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Ttrrftoriol Rd., North Loke&#13;
Choltoa Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITAftlUM&#13;
Bay M. Duffy, MJ),&#13;
O f f ICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 AJ*. to 240 P.M.&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pincknoy&#13;
Phono UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's&#13;
Ditptayt of Monumonfs&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
Mon., Two*., M , and Sot.&#13;
7«00 to 8:00 P-M.&#13;
L J, Swarthoat&#13;
•UiWNO 4 CONTRACTING&#13;
UP842U&#13;
Lse&#13;
OENOAl MSUMNCE&#13;
UPM22I&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff. Sr&#13;
OPTOMETtlST&#13;
120 Wott Grand tfcor&#13;
613&#13;
Stal Estate&#13;
Gerald Beaioo&#13;
102 W Main Stroet&#13;
$4S64&#13;
Business Population For&#13;
County Shows Increase&#13;
Today Willard S. Garrison, district&#13;
manager of the Detroit office&#13;
of Dun &amp; Bradstreet, Inc., announced&#13;
requests for a financial&#13;
statement were mailed to 469&#13;
businesses in Livingston County.&#13;
He said the figure obtained from&#13;
a physical count of the Dun &amp;&#13;
Bradstreet Reference Book for&#13;
January, 1962 compared with 382&#13;
in 1947 showed an increase of 23&#13;
per cent for the period.&#13;
Mr. Garrison stated that during&#13;
January business concerns in all&#13;
Snow Plow&#13;
Debate Ended&#13;
44 Years Ago&#13;
Motorists long ago learned to expect&#13;
that Michigan highways&#13;
would be kept free of snow and&#13;
ice during the winter.&#13;
But the State Highway Department&#13;
reports that when the first&#13;
snow plowing efforts were made&#13;
hack in 1918 there was a good&#13;
of^&#13;
parts of the United States are&#13;
asked by Dun &amp; Bradstieet for&#13;
copies &gt;f their financial statements.&#13;
This year resquests are being&#13;
sent to approximately three&#13;
million business concerns — to&#13;
the corner grocery store worth a&#13;
few thousand dollars as well as&#13;
to businesses worth millions.&#13;
Reference Book listing&#13;
1947 1962&#13;
Brighton 89 159&#13;
Cohoctah 5 6&#13;
Fowlerville 60 60&#13;
rollers over the snowy roads,&#13;
packing them solidly for horsedrawn&#13;
sleighs. But by 1918, a&#13;
considerable number of Michigan&#13;
people owned automobiles which&#13;
cut deep ruts in the snow packed&#13;
roads.&#13;
The year 1918 was the climax&#13;
of World War I. Michigan's defense&#13;
plant workers were playing&#13;
a vital role in winning the war.&#13;
(ietting them back and lonh to&#13;
work was a matter of prime importance.&#13;
A few counties banded together&#13;
and put up $^.500 and the Liberty&#13;
Loan Board put up an equal&#13;
amount. The money was used to&#13;
clear snow from 590 miles ol the&#13;
state's most important highways.&#13;
The idea was conceived as&#13;
strictly a wartime measure, but&#13;
car owners liked it and the State&#13;
Highway Department was assigned&#13;
the job and the cost.&#13;
By 1925, the snow plowing expense&#13;
had risen to 15 times the&#13;
amount it cost that first year. And&#13;
it has been increasing nearly&#13;
every year since until now it costs&#13;
an average of S51/: million a year,&#13;
depending on the weather.&#13;
A big storm means lots ol&#13;
money will be spent to clear highways.&#13;
But when big storms do come,&#13;
there's no longer any debate about&#13;
whether the highways should be&#13;
cleared.&#13;
That debate ended 44 years ago&#13;
when the rollers were put away&#13;
and snow plows first went to work&#13;
on Michigan highways.&#13;
Gregory&#13;
Hamburg&#13;
Hartland&#13;
Howell&#13;
Lakeland&#13;
Oak Grove&#13;
Pinckney&#13;
TOTAL&#13;
15&#13;
15&#13;
6&#13;
158&#13;
5&#13;
4&#13;
25&#13;
382&#13;
14&#13;
20&#13;
6&#13;
170&#13;
4&#13;
3&#13;
36&#13;
469&#13;
Wayne U&#13;
Offers New&#13;
Support Plan&#13;
Wayne State University officials&#13;
are awaiting the opening of the&#13;
legislature January 10 with a stillunanswered&#13;
question: "Will the&#13;
lawmakers accept our plan to raise&#13;
tuition in return for an increase in&#13;
state support?"&#13;
The proposal, made to appropriate&#13;
legislatives committees in&#13;
October, envisioned the restoration&#13;
of the $217,000 cut made in the&#13;
University's appropriation for the&#13;
current year.&#13;
This would be coupled with a&#13;
$1.25 per credit hour increase in&#13;
tuition. Money from the two&#13;
sources would make possible the&#13;
admission in February of qualified&#13;
students turned away in September&#13;
and the restoration of some of&#13;
the services curtailed or eliminated&#13;
by the budget cut.&#13;
The two amounts to be provided&#13;
under the plan would be&#13;
roughly equivalent.&#13;
"This matching feature," points&#13;
out Pres. Clarence B. Hilberry,&#13;
means a sharing of responsibility&#13;
of the taxpayers and by the families&#13;
immediately concerned, rather&#13;
than the assignment of the whob&#13;
cost to either."&#13;
In preliminary hearings the&#13;
legislators received the plan favorably.&#13;
The cut made by the legislators&#13;
in Wayne's allocation last spring,&#13;
point out Wayne officials, reduced&#13;
by $217,000, not just the requested&#13;
budget, but the actual appropriation&#13;
of the preceding year. It&#13;
was this feature, in the face of increased&#13;
demands for Wayne services,&#13;
which brought about the rejection&#13;
of some qualified students&#13;
last September.&#13;
WINDSHIELD&#13;
The National Safety Council says:&#13;
Reduced visibility and inadequate&#13;
traction are major, added hazards&#13;
of winter driving. Be sure your&#13;
wiper blades are in good condition,&#13;
and have arm pressure of one ounce&#13;
per inch of blade length to sweep&#13;
off snow and sleet instead of sliding&#13;
over it. Check defroster, and always&#13;
carry a pair of reinforced tire&#13;
chains to back up your ability to&#13;
go and stop safely.&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED&#13;
January 12th,&#13;
Hoc Haws&#13;
Toppers&#13;
Checkmates&#13;
Bombers&#13;
Sodbustcrs&#13;
Double D*s&#13;
Sharpies&#13;
P. Polkats&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
Patt. Lake 4&#13;
Bee Bees&#13;
Bill Posters&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
1962&#13;
48&#13;
47'/2&#13;
47 Vi&#13;
40 Vi&#13;
39 Vi&#13;
38»/2&#13;
38'/2&#13;
28&#13;
28'/2&#13;
28 Vi&#13;
35 Vi&#13;
36 Vz&#13;
34'&#13;
34&#13;
31&#13;
20&#13;
37 Vi&#13;
39 V4&#13;
4P/2&#13;
42&#13;
45&#13;
56&#13;
MEN'S 'A9 LEAGUE:&#13;
January 10, 1962&#13;
Velvet Ecz SIVi 24 Vi&#13;
Lee's Standard —50~- 26&#13;
JinVs Gulf 49 27&#13;
Van's Motors 39«/2 36'/i&#13;
Plastics 39 37&#13;
Integral Corp. 38 38&#13;
Read Lumber 37&lt;/2 38Vi&#13;
Kiwanis IV/i 38'/2&#13;
Beck's Marathon 34V^ 36*4&#13;
Lavey Hdwe. 29 47&#13;
ACO, Inc. 28 48&#13;
Altes Beer 21 55&#13;
High Ind. game—Beryl Lewis,&#13;
264.&#13;
Your&#13;
Work Harder&#13;
For You&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK NOW OFFERS YOU&#13;
On certificates ef Deposit if funds are on deposit&#13;
for one year or more.&#13;
On certificates of deposit if funds are on deposit&#13;
for six months or more.&#13;
On regular savings accounts - for cash reserves&#13;
available whenever needed.&#13;
HiuiminiHiniiiiHiiiiuiiiuiiiiiiui&#13;
| Certificates of deposit presently outstanding will earn interest&#13;
" at the above rates, subject to the above conditions effective January&#13;
1,1962, No need to bring them in or exchange them.&#13;
HOWELL -&#13;
"Serving Since&#13;
TRY OUR DRIVEFOR&#13;
LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney district man*,&#13;
ger, Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
FOR SALE: Stove (Philgas), refrigerator&#13;
(Servel Philgas); tractor,&#13;
Cub International at 5325 Patterson&#13;
Lk. Rd., Patterson L a k e ,&#13;
Pinckney 2—3p&#13;
NOTICE: I will not be responsible&#13;
for any debts incurred by my&#13;
wife, Shirley Gray DeKett on or&#13;
after this date. Clarence DeKett,&#13;
3013 Keith Dr., Flint, Mich.&#13;
3-4-5p'&#13;
SMALL FIREPLACE wood —&#13;
along the roads on the Jos. D.&#13;
Stackable, Sr. farm. Yours for cutting,&#13;
taking away and disposing of&#13;
FOR SALE: B flat clarinet with&#13;
case. Call 2272413. 3-4c&#13;
FOR SALE: 1957 Great L a k e s&#13;
trailer, 10' x 45\ inquire at 8884&#13;
Kelly Rd., after 4:30 p.m. a n d&#13;
week ends. 3—4p&#13;
FOR RENT: Five room house&#13;
with bath and garage. Call UP&#13;
8-3260. 51tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
bath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
49tfp&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer s&amp;ns and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed.sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell XX A^LGravel^Co,~ -&#13;
WINTER PRICE SPECIALS 2 BEDROOM year round home on beautiful Hi-Land Lake&#13;
front. Stone fire place, oil furnace,&#13;
furnished $10,000 terms.&#13;
1 - LARGE bedrm. year round home, lake front on Hi-Land&#13;
lake. Full basement. Alumn. skjing, stone fire place, completely&#13;
furnished, with new washer and spin dryer, power&#13;
lawn mower $10,000 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM small home on Vi acre of land. New well, on&#13;
Cedar Lake rd $3,000 Small dwn. pymt.&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home on Vi acre land. Picture window, Perma&#13;
stone front, in Pinckney. Reduced to $10,000 terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM home, 1 car garage, on 2 lots. Full basement,&#13;
excellent condition, in Pinckney Village.&#13;
Reduced to $13,000 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home with bath, year round cottage on 2 lots,&#13;
On Buck Lake $7,000 Low terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM Brick home, 2 car garage, on Corner lot, utility&#13;
room, oil furnace, New well 400 ft. deep, plastered&#13;
walls, 2 car garage, low taxes $15,250 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM cottage, lake privileges, on Bruin Lake. Completely&#13;
furnished. $4,500 Low terms&#13;
LAKE FRONT lot on beautiful Patterson Lake.&#13;
67 x 100 $2,000 Low terms&#13;
4 - BEDROOM brick home, near Ann Arbor, Express Way,&#13;
8 miles to Brighton or S. Lyons on 2 lots. Full basement,&#13;
with recreation room. 2 fire places, natural gas, Whitmore&#13;
Lk. area, 2 car garage $16,500 terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM home, Rush Lake privileges, hard wood floors,&#13;
2 fire places, birch cabinets, built in oven, full basement,&#13;
200x200 lot, on black top rd. $16,500 Terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM canal front, year round home on 2 lots, full&#13;
basement, on Cordley Lake. Garage $7,500 low dn. pymt.&#13;
111 - ACRE farm on good road, 5 bedrooms, 2 barns, Vi mile&#13;
road frontage $21,000 low dwn. pymt.&#13;
Or will divide farm in 3 parcels, 31 acres, 59 acres, 20&#13;
acres with house.&#13;
MUST HAVE A 3 BEDRM. YEAR ROUND LAKE FRONT&#13;
HOME ON HI-LAND LAKE. BETWEEN $12,000 TO&#13;
$13,000. HAVE A BUYER.&#13;
4 FAMILY apartment in Pinckney Village, with good income;&#13;
a sound investment $17,500 terms, low dwn. pymt.&#13;
1 LOT IN Pinckney, including small building, could be made&#13;
into a home $800.00, $100.00 DWN.&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home on 2 acres, full bath, full basement, oil&#13;
furnace; 2-car garage. Taxes only $76. 2V4 miles to&#13;
Dexter 10,900., low terms&#13;
Henry Krahn Real Estate HNCxranr 117 E. MAIN UT S43S6&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscape&#13;
ing. Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
Library News&#13;
New this week is "The F a i r -&#13;
brothers" by McMeekin. This is&#13;
a story of Kentucky just after the&#13;
Civil War and should appeal to&#13;
*n- thi v&#13;
like stories of family life.&#13;
The Department of Alcohol of&#13;
the Michigan Department of&#13;
Health has given us "Alcohol Education&#13;
for the Layman" by Monroe&#13;
and Stewart. This is a short&#13;
comprehensive study of the problem&#13;
of alcoholism and should be&#13;
helpful to all interested in this&#13;
problem.&#13;
HCROSS ONLYJ&#13;
CORNE&#13;
WINNER, AAA TRAFFIC&#13;
SAFETY POSTER CONTEST&#13;
Chronology&#13;
crowd of spectators. Putnam township&#13;
board acts to post dump and&#13;
to set regular hours for use; hire&#13;
custodians.&#13;
Official Village&#13;
Council Minutes&#13;
Jan. 9th, 1962&#13;
Regular meeting of the Village&#13;
Council called to order by Pres.&#13;
Stanley Dinkel followed by roll&#13;
call of Officers. Present: R o y&#13;
Clark, Don Swarthout, Lee Tiplady&#13;
and Mrs. Marian Russell.&#13;
Absent: Albert Shirley and C. M.&#13;
Lavey.&#13;
Motion by Russell supported by&#13;
Don Swarthout to allow following&#13;
bills.&#13;
Ohio Oil co., Oil 26.08&#13;
Pinckney Typesetting Co.,&#13;
Minutes, Notices, Envelopes,&#13;
and Christmas greeting 35.55&#13;
Lavey Ins. Agency,&#13;
Ins. on Tractor 53.20&#13;
Robt. Egeler&#13;
(Continued from front p«e)&#13;
AUGUST 30th—&#13;
General Store announces plans&#13;
for extensive exterior remodeling&#13;
of four store buildings *&gt;n Main&#13;
street. Engagement of Crystal&#13;
Campbell and Jack D. Lee t o 1 d .&#13;
James E. Jones, 27, Dexter, is&#13;
sentenced to 25 years in Federal&#13;
prison for robbery of Pinckney&#13;
branch bank last April 12. Noted&#13;
author Louis Reimann, founder of&#13;
U. of M. Fresh Air camp h e r e&#13;
dies in Ann Arbor; Julius Aschenbrenner,&#13;
Sr., dies August 25; Mrs.&#13;
Nellie Haight, 85, passes away.&#13;
8.50&#13;
8.50&#13;
La Rosa, Use or electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Roy Clark, Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec.&#13;
Phil Gentile, Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec.&#13;
Oscar Beck, Use of Electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Hollis Swarthout. Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Leonard Lee, Use %of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Howell Cons't Co., Bal.&#13;
On Major St. Work 1,000.00&#13;
Hewlett and Vedder, Removing&#13;
Christ Dec. 30.00&#13;
Bob. Vedder, Labor&#13;
on St. 30.00&#13;
Hachey, Labor on St. 15.00&#13;
Motion to adjourn.&#13;
Mildred Ackley, Clerk.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The regular meeting of the&#13;
Putnam Township Board held on&#13;
the third Wednesday of the month&#13;
has been postponed this month&#13;
to January 24, according to Supervisor&#13;
Lloyd Hendee.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 17, 1962&#13;
CHILLED APPLE RICE FOAM&#13;
Now here's a folksy, friendly rice dessert that anyone can&#13;
make with a mere smidgin of effort. Yet it packs a wonderful&#13;
lot of goodies . . . canned apple sauce for the surprise tang of&#13;
apple, coconut, maraschino cherries and almonds. And it has&#13;
whipped cream frothed through it.&#13;
So pretty and tempting is it, you might almost decide to reserve&#13;
it as a guest-time dessert But how about the members of&#13;
the family? Serving it to them is one way to send them from&#13;
the table in a sunny frame of mind So better just acknowledge&#13;
that here's an all round winner and proceed accordingly.&#13;
1 cup uncooked rice&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
3 cups apple juice&#13;
&amp; cup sugar&#13;
2 cups canned apple sauce x cup sliced maraschino&#13;
cherries&#13;
1 cup flaked coconut&#13;
1 teaspoon vanilla extract&#13;
1 teaspoon almond extract&#13;
1 cup heavy cream, whipped&#13;
% cup toasted slivered&#13;
almonds&#13;
Cook rice and salt according to directions on package usin&#13;
apple juice in place of water. Add sugar; cool slightly. Ad&#13;
apple sauce, maraschino cherries, coconut, vanilla and almond&#13;
extracts; mix well. Chill; just before serving fold in whipped&#13;
cream and spoon into sherbet glasses or dessert dishes. Garnish&#13;
with almonds. Makes 8-10 servings.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 6th—&#13;
Albert Fredenburg, local bank&#13;
manager, is named winner of&#13;
prize melon growers contest at 2nd&#13;
annual Melon Festival in Howell;&#13;
trip to Florida is prize. John J.&#13;
Pietras enters Army training in&#13;
Kentucky; stationed at Fort Knox.&#13;
Ross Lambs (Alice Lee Ware) announce&#13;
birth of daughter, Bonnie&#13;
June, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Miss&#13;
Barbara McAfee and Duane Waterburg&#13;
are married in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Lightning strikes barn on Frank&#13;
Pearce farm; burns to ground&#13;
quickly, J, R- Vamiet Werveo.&#13;
parents^ of g&#13;
Timmy Kaiser, age 9, hospitalized&#13;
with spinal meningities at St.&#13;
Joseph. Ann Arbor. Henry Krahn&#13;
opens real estate office on Main&#13;
street. Ben Scguras move to Ann&#13;
Arbor where they have purchased&#13;
a restaurant.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 13 th—&#13;
Ron Hoscney, age 3, drowns at&#13;
Portage Lake when boat operated&#13;
by grandfather flips. Local&#13;
residents urged to give blood to&#13;
nearly depleted Red Cross Blood&#13;
Bank. Pirates scheduled to meet&#13;
Hartland this Friday in first football&#13;
game of season. Daughter,&#13;
Jean, born to Mr. and Mrs. Bill&#13;
Baughn. Dennis Morgans arc the&#13;
parents of baby girl, Dcnise, born&#13;
Sept. 4. Carolyn Fillmorc, home&#13;
economics instructor here, and&#13;
William G. Fredrick married in&#13;
Detroit Aug. 26.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 20th—&#13;
Signs regarding village ordinance&#13;
—to stop lor school buses, loading&#13;
and unloading children, installed&#13;
at village imits. Pat Borovskv&#13;
installed as Worthy Advisor of&#13;
Rainbow Ciirls. Carol Yochcs and&#13;
Richard Miller arc married. County&#13;
voters name Thomas G. Sharpc&#13;
of Howell as representative district&#13;
delegate to Con-Con. William&#13;
Bova, 73. dies at McPhcrson&#13;
Heath Center. Pirates win football&#13;
opener, 13-0, at Hartland. Pvt.&#13;
Caroline A. Worth completes&#13;
training as WAC in Alabama; assigned&#13;
to Brooke Army Medical&#13;
Center at Fort Sam Huston, Tex.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 27th—&#13;
Robert Hollister and Judy Root&#13;
married. Pinckney Typesetting&#13;
company moves into new plant on&#13;
Dexter street. Mrs. Max Russell,&#13;
village councilwoman, represents&#13;
village at 63rd annual convention&#13;
of Michigan Municipal League on&#13;
Mackinac Island. Dare! M. Baker.&#13;
67, dies at Lakeland. P.H.S.&#13;
Pirates win football game from&#13;
Manchester, 26-0, for second victory.&#13;
Specializing in Fin*&#13;
AB1NETS&#13;
Work of All K&#13;
Sw&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
NOTES FROM T H E - ELEMEHTARY SCHOOL EIGHT H GRADE—&#13;
This week in Scienc e we arc&#13;
studying the huma n body. Clair&#13;
Bell brough t a musk rat to school.&#13;
We arc going to skin and dissect&#13;
it today.&#13;
Last week Lynda Gilbertso n&#13;
came gack from Wisconsin to visit&#13;
us at school . She told us what the&#13;
school that she goes to in Gree n&#13;
Bay is like.&#13;
In arithmeti c we arc studying&#13;
the rate of discount .&#13;
This week we have had some&#13;
library periods .&#13;
K « *&#13;
SKCON1 ) GRADE —&#13;
David Kimble r is back from&#13;
Alabama where he spent the holidays&#13;
with his grandparents .&#13;
Ciary Josephso n and Gordo n&#13;
Marshal l are ill.&#13;
Most of the childre n have&#13;
brough t a toy or game to show&#13;
the class.&#13;
We have several childre n out&#13;
with mumps .&#13;
We are makin g a pictur e with&#13;
tunn y snow men . We are learning&#13;
poem s about winter.&#13;
SIXTH GRADE—&#13;
This week we have been working&#13;
on Myths . Just about all of&#13;
us have mad e one up.&#13;
Lately Mrs. Tasch has been giving&#13;
us dictatio n using our spelling&#13;
words.&#13;
We had a spelling bee Friday ,&#13;
Rod Widmayer won and Scott&#13;
Carver was runner-up .&#13;
The winner s from the two previous&#13;
spelling bees had a run-off ,&#13;
lhtr e was Bob Wiley, Rod Widmayer&#13;
and Denni s Vertin. Bob&#13;
Wiley won that contest .&#13;
* » •&#13;
KINDERGARTEN —&#13;
Beckie Bowen celebrate d her&#13;
birthda y last week. Kevin Doug -&#13;
las and Laurie Hewlet t celebrat e&#13;
their s this week.&#13;
We are makin g a mura l of children&#13;
sliding down hill.&#13;
r_ tiXHttt—&#13;
In arithmeti c one&#13;
studying about area and perimete r&#13;
of objects, anothe r group is studying&#13;
about increas e and decrease .&#13;
In Scienc e we are learnin g all&#13;
about simple machines .&#13;
Art Kitche n has moved to Missouri.&#13;
№ M » ^M • » ^^^» ^B OB ^m ^m ^m a Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCIN G EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
faettuing&#13;
am KIAVE TRIO&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 6-818 3&#13;
HA 6-918 1&#13;
Don't Ride&#13;
With Stranger s&#13;
^&#13;
new warnings to their youngsters&#13;
against acceptin g rides or getting&#13;
into auto s with strangers at any&#13;
time.&#13;
An alleged attemp t by a stranger&#13;
to lure two seven-year old girls&#13;
into his car an a village street here&#13;
Saturda y was reporte d to the local&#13;
deput y and to Michiga n State Police&#13;
at Brighton , who obtaine d a&#13;
descriptio n of the car and the man&#13;
from the children .&#13;
We like our new puzzles and&#13;
books very much .&#13;
We know all the number s&#13;
throug h 10 and can write them&#13;
now. We learne d to cut out snow&#13;
flakes.&#13;
We have learne d to spell several&#13;
words besides our names .&#13;
We have learne d two new&#13;
songs: "Mr . Snow Man " and&#13;
"Brothe r John " in French .&#13;
• * •&#13;
FOURT H GRADE—&#13;
We were glad to have a holida y&#13;
on Friday . On Monda y ther e were&#13;
six absent who did not make the&#13;
schoo l bus.&#13;
We made Swiss clocks to com -&#13;
plete our study of Switzerland .&#13;
On Monda y we are going to&#13;
start using pens. Most of us are&#13;
writing very well.&#13;
Laur a Bell cam e to visit us Fri -&#13;
day. We were glad to have her&#13;
here .&#13;
Plan TB Clinic&#13;
The Livingston Count y Healt h&#13;
Dept . has announce d plans to hold&#13;
a tuberculi n testing clinic for persons,&#13;
IS to 29 years of age inclusive,&#13;
who do not fall in the age&#13;
groups for the Mobile Chest XRay&#13;
program . Time and place will&#13;
be announce d in this newspaper&#13;
nj\ l week, accordin g to Doroth y&#13;
Dinkel . R. N. of the Healt h Dept .&#13;
THE FINAL MEETIN G FOR CITIZEN S OF&#13;
THE VILLAGE TO DISCUSS THE&#13;
PROPOSED&#13;
VILLAGE-ZONIN G&#13;
ORDINANCE&#13;
WILL BE HELD&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
JANUARY 18th, 19(2&#13;
AT 8 P.M .&#13;
AT THE —m r sttroor ALL INTERESTED PROPERTY OWNERS&#13;
SHOULD PLAN TO ATTEND&#13;
THIS MEETIN G -The Village Council&#13;
S-A-L-E&#13;
(Don't Delay -&#13;
Call Haniwt t Today!&#13;
TKe B-l- G Man&#13;
with B-l-G-G-E- R&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
Home Permanent&#13;
Hair Spray&#13;
1.90&#13;
1.50&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.7 0&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz. 1.85&#13;
Cinnamon , Vx Ib. 1.45&#13;
Value 3.30&#13;
SALE—$2.6 0&#13;
Vanilla, II oz.&#13;
Pepper , Vi Ib.&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.7 0&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz.&#13;
Nutmeg , VA oz.&#13;
1.85&#13;
2.00&#13;
Value 3.85&#13;
SALE—$2.9 0&#13;
Nit e Club Cologn e Mist 2.75&#13;
Liquid Crem e or Blue&#13;
Crystal Shamp. , 8 oz. 1.00&#13;
Value 3.75&#13;
SALE—$3.0 0&#13;
Hous e of King&#13;
Color * Mist 2.25&#13;
Antiseptic Liq. .98&#13;
Value 3.23&#13;
SALE—$270&#13;
JACK HANNETT&#13;
318 S. Howell St.&#13;
Phone UP 8-317 5&#13;
Don't Forget—CALL&#13;
TODAY-He'll be out&#13;
Your Way if He Needs&#13;
A Sleigh ! ! ! !&#13;
For General Machine fork — Dies and Fixture!&#13;
CALL&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
TANSLEY&#13;
UP 8-994 4&#13;
Pincknev, Michiaan&#13;
Note s of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
The Congregationa l churc h is&#13;
makin g plans to sponsor an Amateur&#13;
Broadcastin g WLS show at&#13;
the Communit y Hall. Local "artists'*&#13;
are invited to try out for&#13;
part s in the production . Goo d&#13;
impersonation s are in demand .&#13;
Miss Maxin e Smith and Lawrence&#13;
Seim were marrie d at St.&#13;
Joseph Churc h in Howell l a s t&#13;
week. Mrs. Seim was formerly a&#13;
nurse at McPherso n hospital .&#13;
Fre d Howlett , former Gregor y&#13;
hanke r and a brothe r of the late&#13;
Rep. Henr y T. Howlett , was appointe&#13;
d to the job of steward or&#13;
business manage r of Michiga n&#13;
State San., near Howell. He formerly&#13;
held the same position unde r&#13;
Gov. Comstock . Floyd Weeks,&#13;
whom Howlet t succeeds, has been&#13;
transferre d to a new sanitariu m&#13;
now being built at Gaylord .&#13;
Dr . W. C. Wylie is the new&#13;
presiden t of the Dexte r Savings&#13;
Bank. He has served as a directo r&#13;
ther e for a numbe r of years.&#13;
The Independen t Doo r Chec k&#13;
compan y recentl y established here&#13;
by For d Lam b and W. C. Alice&#13;
is going stron g and working 24&#13;
hour s a day this year. Nin e men&#13;
are employe d ther e now.&#13;
Miss Rut h Johnso n and C a r l&#13;
SheIIhar t of Unadill a were marrie d&#13;
this week in LaGrange , Indiana .&#13;
Col. Edwin S. Georg e of Bloomfield&#13;
Hills was a guest this week&#13;
at the Leo Frye home .&#13;
The new house of the Thoma s&#13;
Clark farm near Silver Lake, owned&#13;
by Mrs. Georg e Pearso n of&#13;
Howell, is complete d and Oliver&#13;
Clark, the tenan t on the farm&#13;
wilt occup y it.&#13;
Virginia Baughn underwen t a&#13;
lonsillectom y at the Pinckhe y san.&#13;
this week.&#13;
Dr. Jame s Nash and his sister,&#13;
Isabel Nash , were injured in an&#13;
auto acciden t this week. Thei r car&#13;
skidded on ice and hit a telephon e&#13;
pole while they were enrout e&#13;
home .&#13;
Mrs. Alma Utle y welcomed a&#13;
granddaughte r on Monday , Jan .&#13;
15, when Mr. and Mrs. Rober t&#13;
LeVansder (Sally Rootman ) became&#13;
the parent s of a baby girl at&#13;
St. Joseph Mcrcy&gt; hospital . The&#13;
little lady weighed seven and one&#13;
half pounds .&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
By RUSS ENGELHARDT, Manager&#13;
ASK FO R YOU R free copy of&#13;
the 1962 Telephon e Almana c&#13;
at our Business Office. I t con -&#13;
tain s item s of interes t for th e&#13;
\yhol e family. Di d you know&#13;
tha t 1962 mark s th e 100th Anniversar y of th e Battl e&#13;
Hym n of th e Republi c an d th e abolishmen t of slavery&#13;
in th e Distric t of Columbia . Thes e and othe r interestin&#13;
g facts are found in th e 1962 editio n of th e&#13;
Telephon e Almanac . Don' t forget to work th e Rebu s&#13;
on page 28.&#13;
PROPRIETORS OF SMALL&#13;
BUSINESSES, including farms,&#13;
are discovering the value and&#13;
convenienc e of Michiga n Belt's&#13;
new complet e interphon e system.&#13;
With it, telephone s used for regular&#13;
calls can also be used for&#13;
intercommunicatio n betwee n&#13;
house or office and yard and&#13;
outbuildings . It also provides for&#13;
calls betwee n location s with In a&#13;
building. A specia l speaker-mi -&#13;
crophone is availabl e which lets&#13;
a person who is calle d answer&#13;
"hands free " without touching a&#13;
telephone . For more informatio n&#13;
on how new interphon e service&#13;
can help you, |ust call us here at&#13;
the business office .&#13;
HERE'S A GOOD example of how an apparently small&#13;
change in your Telephone Company's way of doing&#13;
Aings results in better service. Overhead phone cables&#13;
used to be supported by a&#13;
strong wire strung above&#13;
diem. Not any more. Now,&#13;
in many cases a cablewrapping&#13;
machine winds&#13;
the wire around die phone&#13;
cable. It saves time, and&#13;
cables last longer. Justooe&#13;
of the many ways Mkhigui&#13;
BeD is furnishing betoown&#13;
costs*&#13;
r&#13;
t&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney district man*,&#13;
ger, Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
FOR SALE: Stove (Philgas), refrigerator&#13;
fServel Philgas); tractor,&#13;
Cub International at 5325 Patterson&#13;
Lk. Rd., Patterson L a k e ,&#13;
Pinckney 2—3p&#13;
NOTICE: I will not be responsible&#13;
for any debts incurred by my&#13;
wife, Shirley Gray DeKett on or&#13;
after this date. Clarence DeKett,&#13;
3013 Keith Dr., Flint, Mich.&#13;
3-4-5p"&#13;
SMALL FIREPLACE wood —&#13;
aldhg the roads on the Jos. D.&#13;
Stackable, Sr. farm. Yours for cutting,&#13;
taking away and disposing of&#13;
the brush. 3-4c&#13;
FOR SALE: B flat clarinet with&#13;
case. Call 2272413. 3-4c&#13;
FOR SALE: 1957 Great L a k e s&#13;
trailer, 10' x 45', inquire at 8884&#13;
Kelly Rd., after 4:30 pjn. a n d&#13;
week ends. 3—4p&#13;
FOR RENT.y Five room house&#13;
with bath and garage. Call UP&#13;
8-3260. 51tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
bath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
49tfp&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer stins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed.sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
WINTER&#13;
2 BEDROOM year round home on beautiful Hi-Land Lake&#13;
front. Stone fire place, oil furnace,&#13;
furnished $10,000 terms.&#13;
1 - LARGE bedrm. year round home, lake front on Hi-Land&#13;
lake. Full basement. Alumn. siding, stone fire place, completely&#13;
furnished, with new washer and spin dryer, power&#13;
lawn mower $10,000 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM small home on Vi acre of land. New well, on&#13;
Cedar Lake rd. $3,000 Small dwn. pymt.&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home on Vi acre land. Picture window, Perma&#13;
stone front, in Pinckney. Reduced to $10,000 terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM home, 1 car garage, on 2 lots. Full basement,&#13;
excellent condition, in Pinckney Village.&#13;
Reduced to $13,000 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home with bath, year round cottage on 2 lots,&#13;
On Buck Lake $7,000 Low terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM Brick home, 2 car garage, on Corner lot, utility&#13;
room, oil furnace. New well 400 ft. deep, plastered&#13;
walls, 2 car garage, low taxes $15,250 terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM cottage, lake privileges, on Bruin Lake. Completely&#13;
furnished. $4,500 Low terms&#13;
LAKE FRONT lot on beautiful Patterson Lake.&#13;
67 x 100 $2,000 Low terms&#13;
4 - BEDROOM brick home, near Ann Arbor, Express Way,&#13;
8 miles to Brighton or S. Lyons on 2 lots. Full basement,&#13;
with recreation room. 2 fire places, natural gas, Whit more&#13;
Lk. area, 2 car garage $16,500 terms&#13;
3 - BEDROOM home, Rush Lake privileges, hard wood floors,&#13;
2 fire places, birch cabinets, built in oven, full basement,&#13;
200x200 lot, on black top rd. $16,500 Terms&#13;
2 - BEDROOM canal front, year round home on 2 lots, full&#13;
basement, on Cordley Lake. Garage $7,500 low dn. pymt.&#13;
111 - ACRE farm on good road, 5 bedrooms, 2 barns, Vi mile&#13;
road frontage $21,000 low dwn. pymt.&#13;
Or will divide farm in 3 parcels, 31 acres, 59 acres, 20&#13;
acres with house.&#13;
MUST HAVE A 3 BEDRM. YEAR ROUND LAKE FRONT&#13;
HOME ON HI-LAND LAKE. BETWEEN $12,000 TO&#13;
$13,000. HAVE A BUYER.&#13;
4 FAMILY apartment in Pinckney Village, with good income;&#13;
a sound investment. $17,500 terms, low dwn. pymt.&#13;
1 LOT IN Pinckney, including small building, could be made&#13;
uiiw 3 IIWIIM&gt;I ^O4A#»\A/, 9 1 \A/i&#13;
2 - BEDROOM home on 2 acres, full bam, full basement, oil&#13;
furnace; 2-car garage. Taxes only $76. 2Vi miles to&#13;
Dexter 10,900., low terms&#13;
Henry Krahn Real Estate wmaomt 117 E. MAIN UP 843M&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscape&#13;
ing. Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Alters Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
Library News&#13;
New this week is "The F a i r -&#13;
brothers" by McMeekin. This is&#13;
a story of Kentucky just after the&#13;
Civil War and should appeal to&#13;
all interested in this period of&#13;
American History and to all who&#13;
like stories of family life. -—=—&#13;
the Michigan Department ^rr o?&#13;
Health has given us "Alcohol Education&#13;
for the Layman" by Monroe&#13;
and Stewart. This is a short&#13;
comprehensive study of the problem&#13;
of alcoholism and should be&#13;
helpful to all interested in this&#13;
problem.&#13;
HCROSS ONLYJ&#13;
CORNE&#13;
WINNER, AAA TRAFFIC&#13;
SAFETY POSTER CONTEST&#13;
Chronology&#13;
crowd of spectators. Putnam township&#13;
board acts to post dump and&#13;
to set regular hours for use; hire&#13;
custodians.&#13;
Official Village&#13;
Council Minutes&#13;
Jan. 9th, 1962&#13;
Regular meeting of the Village&#13;
Council called to order by Pres.&#13;
Stanley Dinkel followed by roll&#13;
call of Officers. Present: R o y&#13;
Clark, Don Swarthout, Lee Tiplady&#13;
and Mrs. Marian Russell.&#13;
Absent: Albert Shirley and C. M.&#13;
Lavey.&#13;
Motion by Russell supported by&#13;
Don Swarthout to allow following&#13;
bills.&#13;
Ohio Oil co., Oil 26.08&#13;
Pinckney Typesetting Co.,&#13;
Minutes, Notices, Envelopes,&#13;
and Christmas greeting 35.55&#13;
Lavey Ins. Agency,&#13;
Ins. on Tractor 53.20&#13;
Robt. Egeler&#13;
Marshals Salary 125.00&#13;
Vincent LaRosa, Use of elect-&#13;
fterty-fofC-hristnrss&#13;
(Coatiued frat fro* page)&#13;
AUGUST 30th—&#13;
General Store announces plans&#13;
for extensive exterior remodeling&#13;
of four store buildings \&gt;n Main&#13;
street. Engagement of Crystal&#13;
Campbell and Jack D. Lee t o 1 d .&#13;
James E. Jones, 27, Dexter, is&#13;
sentenced to 25 years in Federal&#13;
prison for robbery of Pinckney&#13;
branch bank last April 12. Noted&#13;
^author Louis Reimann, founder of&#13;
U. of M. Fresh Air camp h e r e&#13;
dies in Ann Arbor; Julius Aschenbrenner,&#13;
Sr., dies August 25; Mrs.&#13;
Nellie Haight, 85, passes away.&#13;
Phil Gentile, Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Oscar Beck, Use of Electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Hollis Swarthout, Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Leonard Lee, Use of electricity&#13;
for Christmas Dec. 8.50&#13;
Howell Cons't Co., Bal.&#13;
On Major St. Work 1,000.00&#13;
Hewlett and Vedder, Removing&#13;
Christ Dec. 30.00&#13;
Bob. Vedder, Labor&#13;
on St. 30.00&#13;
Hachey, Labor on St. 15.00&#13;
potion to adjourn.&#13;
Mildred Ackley, Clerk.&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The regular meeting of t h e&#13;
Putnam Township Board held on&#13;
the third Wednesday of the month&#13;
has been postponed this month&#13;
to January 24, according to Supervisor&#13;
Lloyd Hendee.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 17, 1962&#13;
CHILLED APPLE RICE FOAM&#13;
Now here's a folksy, friendly rice dessert that anyone can&#13;
make with a mere smidgin of effort. Yet it packs a wonderful&#13;
lot of goodies . . . canned apple sauce for the surprise tang of&#13;
apple, coconut, maraschino cherries and almonds. And it has&#13;
whipped cream frothed through it.&#13;
So pretty and tempting is it, you might almost decide to rethe&#13;
family?&#13;
the table in&#13;
that here's&#13;
ing it to them is one way to send them from&#13;
sunny frame of mind. So better just acknowledge&#13;
all round winner and proceed accordingly.&#13;
1 cup uncooked rice&#13;
1 teaspoon salt&#13;
3 cups apple juice&#13;
% cup sugar&#13;
2 cups canned apple sauce&#13;
cup sliced maraschino&#13;
1 cup flaked coconut&#13;
1 teaspoon vanilla extract&#13;
1 teaspoon almond extract&#13;
1 cup heavy cream, whipped&#13;
% cup toasted slivered&#13;
Cook rice and salt according to directions on package usinc&#13;
apple juice in place of water. Add sugar; cool slightly. Add&#13;
apple sauce, maraschino cherries, coconut, vanilla and almond&#13;
extracts; mix welL Chill; just before serving fold in whipped&#13;
cream and spoon into sherbet glitter or dessert ^'fhM Gir"'*h&#13;
with almond1* Makes 8-10 servings.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 6th—&#13;
Albert Fredenburg, local bank&#13;
manager, is named winner of&#13;
prize melon growers contest at 2nd&#13;
annual Melon Festival in Howell;&#13;
trip to Florida is prize. John J.&#13;
Pietras enters Army training in&#13;
Kentucky; stationed at Fort Knox.&#13;
Ross Lambs (Alice Lee Ware) announce&#13;
birth of daughter, Bonnie&#13;
June, in Cincinnati, Ohio. Miss&#13;
Barbara McAfee and Duane Waterburg&#13;
are married in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Lightning strikes barn on Frank&#13;
Pearce farm; burns to ground&#13;
quickly. T. R. Vander Werven&#13;
dies suddenly. Bill Hollisters a r e&#13;
parents of daughter born Sept. 1.&#13;
Tim my iCaiscr,&#13;
opens real estate office on Main&#13;
street. Ben Scguras move to Ann&#13;
Arbor where they have purchased&#13;
a restaurant.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 13th—&#13;
Ron Hoscney, age 3, drowns at&#13;
Portage Lake when boat operated&#13;
by grandfather flips. Local&#13;
residents urged to give blood to&#13;
nearly depleted Red Cross Blood&#13;
Bank. Pirates scheduled to meet&#13;
Hartland this Friday in first football&#13;
game of season. Daughter,&#13;
Jean, born to Mr. and Mrs. Bill&#13;
Baughn. Dennis Morgans arc the&#13;
parents of baby girl, Dcnise, born&#13;
Sept. 4. Carolyn Fillmorc, home&#13;
economics instructor here, and&#13;
William G. Fredrick married in&#13;
Detroit Aug. 26.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 20th—&#13;
Signs regarding village ordinance&#13;
—to stop lor school buses, loading&#13;
and unloading children, installed&#13;
at village imits. Pat Borovsky&#13;
installed as Worthy Advisor of&#13;
Rainbow Girls. Carol Yochcs and&#13;
Richard Miller arc married. County&#13;
voters name Thomas G. Sharpc&#13;
of Howell as representative district&#13;
delegate to Con-Con. William&#13;
Bova, 73, dies at McPhcrson&#13;
Heath Center. Pirates win football&#13;
opener, 13-0, at Hartland. Pvt.&#13;
Caroline A. Worth completes&#13;
training as WAC in Alabama; assigned&#13;
to Brooke Army Medical&#13;
Center at Fort Sam Huston, Tex.&#13;
SEPTEMBER 27th—&#13;
Robert Hoi lister and Judy Root&#13;
married. Pinckney Typesetting&#13;
company moves into new plant on&#13;
Dexter street. Mrs. Max Russell,&#13;
village councilwoman, represents&#13;
village at 63xd annual convention&#13;
of Michigan Municipal League on&#13;
Mackinac Island. Darel M. Baker.&#13;
67, dies at Lakeland. P.H.S.&#13;
Pirates win football game from&#13;
Manchester, 26-0, for second victory.&#13;
in Fii&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
WltUftfl&#13;
HOMB ft OAtAOtS&#13;
Work of All Kindt&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
NOTES FROM T H E - ELEMENTARY SCH n roinp_ SIXTH GRADE— w EIGHTH GRADE—&#13;
This week in Science we arc&#13;
studying the human body. Clair&#13;
Belt brought a musk rat to school.&#13;
We arc going to skin and dissect&#13;
it today.&#13;
Last week Lynda Gilbertson&#13;
came gack from Wisconsin to visit&#13;
us at school. She told us what the&#13;
school that she goes to in Green&#13;
Bay is like.&#13;
In arithmetic we are studying&#13;
the rate of discount.&#13;
This week we have had some&#13;
library periods.&#13;
SECOND GRADE—&#13;
David Kimbler is hack from&#13;
Alabama where he spent the holidays&#13;
with his grandparents.&#13;
Ciary Josephson and Gordon&#13;
Marshall are ill.&#13;
Most of the children have&#13;
brought a toy or game to show&#13;
the class.&#13;
We have several children out&#13;
with mumps.&#13;
We are making a picture with&#13;
funny snow men. We are learning&#13;
poems about winter.&#13;
SIXTH GRADE—&#13;
This week we have been working&#13;
on Myths. Just about all of&#13;
us have made one up.&#13;
Lately Mrs. Tasch has been giving&#13;
us dictation using our spelling&#13;
words.&#13;
We had a spelling bee Friday,&#13;
Rod Widmayer won and Scott&#13;
Carver was runner-up.&#13;
The winners from the two previous&#13;
spelling bees had a run-off.&#13;
I htre was Bob Wiley, Rod Widmayer&#13;
and Dennis Vertin. Bob&#13;
Wiley won that contest.&#13;
* * *&#13;
KINDERGARTEN—&#13;
Beckie Bowen celebrated her&#13;
birthday last week. Kevin Douglas&#13;
and Laurie Hewlett celebrate&#13;
theirs this week.&#13;
We are making a mural of children&#13;
sliding down hill.&#13;
ij:&#13;
MRS. DOUGLAS' ROOM—&#13;
—.11—-afiihflwtt€~0n^—grouping&#13;
about increase and decrease.&#13;
In Science we are learning all&#13;
about simple machines.&#13;
Art Kitchen has moved to Missouri&#13;
B m mm m aim x x m m"i&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
BILL KIAVE TRIO&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMAU&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
Don't Ride&#13;
With Strangers&#13;
Says Deputy&#13;
Deputy Robert F.geler suggesis&#13;
Lhati43Lu:££iis_in- the-xummiiail y res&#13;
new warnings to their soungsters&#13;
into autos wuh^strimgel^T ai&#13;
time.&#13;
An alleged attempt by a stranger&#13;
to lure two seven-year old girls&#13;
into his car an a village street here&#13;
Saturday was reported to the local&#13;
deputy and to Michigan State Police&#13;
at Brighton, who obtained a&#13;
description of the car and the man&#13;
from the children.&#13;
Plan TB Clinic&#13;
The Livingston County Health&#13;
Dept. has announced plans to hold&#13;
a tuberculin testing clinic for persons.&#13;
IK to 2L) years of age inclusive,&#13;
who do not fall in the age&#13;
groups for the Mobile Chest XRay&#13;
program. Time and place will&#13;
be announced in this newspaper&#13;
iu\t week, according to Dorothy&#13;
Dinkel, R. N. of the Health Dept,&#13;
THE FINAL MEETING FOR CITIZENS OF&#13;
THE VILLAGE TO DISCUSS THE&#13;
PROPOSED&#13;
VILLAGE-ZONING&#13;
ORDINANCE&#13;
WILL BE HELD&#13;
THURSDAY,&#13;
JANUARY 18th, 19(2&#13;
AT 8 P.M.&#13;
AT THE HIGH ALL INTERESTED PROPERTY OWNERS&#13;
SHOULD PLAN TO ATTEND&#13;
THIS MEETING&#13;
-The Village Council&#13;
We like our new puzzles and&#13;
hooks very much.&#13;
We know all the numbers&#13;
through 10 and can write them&#13;
now.We learned to cut out snow&#13;
flakes.&#13;
We have learned to spetl several&#13;
words besides our names.&#13;
We have learned two new&#13;
songs: "Mr. Snow Man" and&#13;
"Brother John" in French.&#13;
* • •&#13;
FOURTH GRADE—&#13;
We were glad to have a holiday&#13;
on Friday. On Monday there were&#13;
six absent who did not make the&#13;
school bus.&#13;
We made Swiss clocks to complete&#13;
our study of Switzerland.&#13;
On Monday we are going to&#13;
start using pens. Most of us are&#13;
writing very well.&#13;
Laura Bell came to visit us Friday.&#13;
We were glad to have her&#13;
here.&#13;
Watkif* Products&#13;
Don't Delay—&#13;
Call Hannttt Today!&#13;
The B-l-G Man&#13;
with B-l-G-G-E-R&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
Home Permanent 1.90&#13;
Hair Spray 1 50&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.70&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz. 1.85&#13;
Cinnamon, &gt;/i Ib. 1.45&#13;
Value 3.30&#13;
SALE—$2.60&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz. 1.85&#13;
Pepper, Vi Ib. 1.55&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.70&#13;
Vanilla, II oz. 1.85&#13;
Nutmeg, VA oz. 2.00&#13;
Value 3.85&#13;
SALE—$2.90&#13;
Nite Club Cologne Mist 2.75&#13;
Liquid Creme or Blue&#13;
Crystal Sham p., 8 oz. 1.00&#13;
Value 3.75&#13;
SALE—$3.00&#13;
House of King&#13;
Colone Mist&#13;
Antiseptic Liq.&#13;
Value&#13;
SALEJACK&#13;
HANNETT&#13;
318 S. Howell St.&#13;
Phone UP 8-3175&#13;
Don't Forget—CALL&#13;
TODAY-He'll be out&#13;
Your Way if He Needs&#13;
A Sleigh M M&#13;
For General Machine&#13;
Dia*~aa&#13;
CALL&#13;
GEORGE&#13;
TANSLEY&#13;
UP 8*9946&#13;
Pincknev. Michiaan&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
The Congregational church is&#13;
making plans to sponsor an Amateur&#13;
Broadcasting WLS show at&#13;
the Community Hall. Local "artists*&#13;
1 are invited to try out for&#13;
parts in the production. Good&#13;
impersonations are in demand.&#13;
Miss Maxine Smith and Lawrence&#13;
Seim were married at St.&#13;
Joseph Church in Howell l a s t&#13;
week. Mrs. Seim was formerly a&#13;
nurse at McPherson hospital.&#13;
Fred Howlett, former Gregory&#13;
hanker and a brother of the late&#13;
Rep. Henry T. Howlett, was appointed&#13;
to the job of steward or&#13;
business manager of Michigan&#13;
State San., near Howell. He formerly&#13;
held the same position under&#13;
Gov. Comstock. Floyd Weeks,&#13;
whom Howlett succeeds, has been&#13;
transferred to a new sanitarium&#13;
now being built at Gaylord.&#13;
Dr. W. C. Wylie is the new&#13;
president of the Dexter Savings&#13;
Bank. He has served as a director&#13;
there for a number of years.&#13;
The Independent Door Check&#13;
company recently established here&#13;
by Ford Lamb and W. C. Atlee&#13;
is going strong and working 24&#13;
hours a day this year. Nine men&#13;
are employed there now.&#13;
Miss Ruth Johnson and C a r l&#13;
Shellhart of Unadilla were married&#13;
this week in LaGrange, Indiana.&#13;
Col. Edwin S. George of Bloomfield&#13;
Hills was a guest this week&#13;
at the Leo Frye home.&#13;
The new house of the Thomas&#13;
Clark farm near Silver Lake, owned&#13;
by Mrs. George Pearson of&#13;
Howell, is completed and Oliver&#13;
Clark, the tenant on the farm&#13;
will occupy it.&#13;
Virginia Baughn underwent a&#13;
lonsillectomy at the Pinckhey san.&#13;
this week.&#13;
Dr. James Nash and his sister,&#13;
Isabel Nash, were injured in an&#13;
auto accident this week. Their car&#13;
skidded on ice and hit a telephone&#13;
pole while rhey were enroute&#13;
home.&#13;
Mrs. Alma Utley welcomed a&#13;
granddaughter on Monday, Jan.&#13;
15, when Mr. and Mrs. Robert&#13;
LeVanscler (Siilly Roetman) became&#13;
the parents of a baby girl at&#13;
St. Joseph Mercy hospital. Thj&#13;
little lady weighed seven and one&#13;
half pounds.&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
By RUSS ENGELHARDT, Manager&#13;
ASK FOR YOUR free copy of&#13;
the 1962 Telephone Almanac&#13;
at our Business Office. It contains&#13;
items of interest for the&#13;
\yhole family. Did you know&#13;
that 1962 marks the 100th Anniversary of the Battle&#13;
Hymn of the Republic and the abolishment of slavery&#13;
in the District of Columbia. These and other interesting&#13;
facts are found in the 1962 edition of the&#13;
Telephone Almanac. Don't forget to work the Rebus&#13;
on page 28.&#13;
PROPRIETORS OF SMALL&#13;
BUSINESSES, including forms,&#13;
are discovering the value and&#13;
convenience of Michigan Bell's&#13;
new complete interphone system.&#13;
With it, telephone* used for regular&#13;
calls can also be used for&#13;
intercommunication between&#13;
house or office and yard and&#13;
outbuildings. It also provides for&#13;
calls between locations within a&#13;
building. A special speaker-microphone&#13;
is available which lets&#13;
a person who is called answer&#13;
"hands free" without touching a&#13;
telephone. For more information&#13;
on how new interphone service&#13;
can help you, just call us here at&#13;
the business office.&#13;
HERE'S A 6 0 0 0 example of how an apparently small&#13;
change in your Telephone Company's way of doing&#13;
things results in better service. Overhead phone cables&#13;
used to be supported by a&#13;
strong wire strung above&#13;
them. Not any mote. Now,&#13;
in many cties a cablewrapping&#13;
machine winds&#13;
the wire around the phone&#13;
cable. It&#13;
cables last loafer. Justooe&#13;
of the many ways&#13;
Delegate Sharpe Tells Views&#13;
on Civil Rights In Speech&#13;
At Con-Con Convention&#13;
Since it has come to my attention&#13;
that the Committee on&#13;
Rights, Suffrage and Elections&#13;
have recommended the deletion of&#13;
the majority of Section 10, by 7-8&#13;
vote, I have found myself acting&#13;
contrary to what many of y o u&#13;
have heard me recommend and&#13;
that is that we should, "by and&#13;
large", take the recommendation&#13;
of the committee as being the last&#13;
word in sound judgment.&#13;
1 have been in every session of&#13;
this Convention since its opening&#13;
and as you know I have been&#13;
saving my words on unimportant&#13;
matters for occasions such as this.&#13;
This proposal to delete from our&#13;
constitution the amendment of&#13;
1936 permitting the introduction&#13;
of certain weapons in evidence,&#13;
and the amendment of 1952 permitting&#13;
the introduction of narcotics&#13;
into evidence whenever the&#13;
same are seized outside the curtilage&#13;
of a dwelling house. These&#13;
amendments were added to the&#13;
1908 Constitution after the proper&#13;
deliberation and a 5 - 1 vote of the&#13;
people of the State of Michigan,&#13;
and I say, "the will of the people&#13;
ts the Law of the Land". This section&#13;
incidentally is not a part of&#13;
the so-called horse and buggy constitution,&#13;
since its last revision was&#13;
side red necessary in order to enable&#13;
the police to effectively combat&#13;
gangsterism and traffic in narcotics.&#13;
What are you proponents of this&#13;
change going to tell that mother&#13;
whose daughter is involved with a&#13;
dope pusher, who is given a license&#13;
to carry without the threat of&#13;
having it used against him in court?&#13;
I am well aware that the constitution&#13;
must protect the rights&#13;
of the people and that, we as delegates&#13;
to this Convention should not&#13;
be permitted to transgress the&#13;
rights of the individual. However,&#13;
we must have the proper regard&#13;
for the rights of society as well&#13;
as the duties imposed upon 1 a w&#13;
enforcement officials by the people.&#13;
A police officer as well as&#13;
a prosecuting attorney is also&#13;
bound by our constitution in performing&#13;
his duties. Protection of&#13;
our society should not be sur-&#13;
[ pressed, law enforcing officers&#13;
must have the backing of every&#13;
honest citizen. They must continue&#13;
to achieve victory over those&#13;
in our state who are habitually&#13;
committing crimes against our society.&#13;
The fiberty of the honest,&#13;
hard working citizen must be protected&#13;
from the racketeers and the&#13;
hoodlums. They have never workintend&#13;
to. This proshould&#13;
not be weakened. We, I am&#13;
sure, want to live in a state we can&#13;
be proud of* with the honor and&#13;
integrity and not one that is full&#13;
of corruption.&#13;
Let us stiffen the backbone of&#13;
our state and for heavens sake,&#13;
let us not relax our guard against&#13;
the thugs and murderers. T h e&#13;
hands of our law-enforcing people&#13;
should not be tied so that&#13;
he couldn't perform his duties&#13;
which he has sworn to perform at&#13;
the best of his ability.&#13;
I presume that the proponents&#13;
of the movement to strike out&#13;
these provisions are motivated by&#13;
one or more of the Civil Rights&#13;
groups, and possibly they honestly&#13;
feel that the rights of the individual&#13;
are transgressed by t h e s e&#13;
clauses; however; I don't see how&#13;
any individual here could object&#13;
to a clause permitting the seizure&#13;
of illegally carried guns or narcotics.&#13;
I am aware of the decisions of&#13;
our Supreme Court in the&#13;
case of the People vs. Gonzales,&#13;
356 Mich. Page 247 and the People&#13;
vs. Zeigler. 358 Mich., Page&#13;
355. These cases carefully define&#13;
the rights of a police officer to&#13;
search an automobile on the highway.&#13;
The case held that this constitutional&#13;
amendment was not in&#13;
violation of the United S t a t e s&#13;
Constitution, and I repeat, not repugnem&#13;
to United States Constitution.&#13;
I would guess the officer who&#13;
stops an auto for a traffic violation&#13;
and finds a half dozen stolen&#13;
items only to have the evidence&#13;
supressed would be discouraged&#13;
to say the least, but I ask you,&#13;
would you want a similar circumstance&#13;
to occur however instead&#13;
of typewriters the officer would&#13;
find a quantity of illegal narcotics,&#13;
would you like to sit back and&#13;
watch the narcotic peddler go on&#13;
his merry illegal way?&#13;
Illegally carried weapons a n d&#13;
narcotics are certainly two items&#13;
which should not be carried by&#13;
the violator under immunity given&#13;
to that violator by us delegates&#13;
of this Convention. If these clauses&#13;
come out of the constitution, as&#13;
has been recommended by the&#13;
committee, a police officer in order&#13;
to prosecute, will have to have&#13;
advance reliable information that&#13;
such narcotics or guns are actually&#13;
being carried in the specific automobile&#13;
before he stops it.&#13;
If the criminal is given a license&#13;
to carry his tools in the s a m e&#13;
Obituaries&#13;
MRS. ROSE POULSON&#13;
Mrs. Rose Poulson, 84, mother&#13;
of Otto Poulson of 540 Unadilla,&#13;
died on January 6 at the hospital&#13;
in Hastings following a long illness.&#13;
A native of Michigan she was&#13;
born Jan. 27, 1877. Her husband&#13;
preceded her in death.&#13;
Surviving in addition to her son&#13;
here, are two sons, Clinton of&#13;
Middleville and Eldon of Hastings&#13;
and five daughters: Mrs. William&#13;
Lanz of Apopca, Fla.; Mrs. L e o&#13;
V e r n&#13;
fashion as the carpenter, plumber&#13;
or even the lawyer, this will encourage&#13;
the cunningly defying lawless&#13;
individual to undermine every&#13;
branch of society in our state.&#13;
I would not want to be guilty&#13;
of following the role of appeasement&#13;
regardless of any pressure&#13;
that 1 might be subject to. I don't&#13;
believe in giving up essential liberties&#13;
that the people of Michigan&#13;
saw the need for and passed the&#13;
present amendment that we are&#13;
asked to leave out of the new constituiont.&#13;
When the roll call vote was&#13;
taken, it was 74-62 in favor of&#13;
retaining the language as is. However,&#13;
this section was brought back&#13;
for reconsideration on January 11&#13;
and was defeated, but I can assure&#13;
you that it will be brought&#13;
up again soon. We hope to be able&#13;
to maintain this section in our&#13;
constitution as it now stands.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe.&#13;
PRICK SUPPORT&#13;
OF ADI INKS&#13;
Mr. Jacob Bontckoe. Chairman&#13;
ot the Livingston County ASCS&#13;
Count) Committee, wishes to announce&#13;
that January 31, 1962 is&#13;
the deadline for obtaining a Warehouse&#13;
Loan or a Purchase Agreement&#13;
on the above mentioned commodities.&#13;
Price support availability for thi&#13;
19(S! corn crop extends- through-&#13;
Miiv 31. 1962.&#13;
dm.&#13;
.:•'•'.•/'•:•:•',&#13;
old Haskins of Saranac and Mrs.&#13;
Vcrna Belle Baird of Lake City;&#13;
one sister, Mrs. Nellie Wooster of&#13;
South Lyon; 24 grandchildren and&#13;
IS great-grandchildren.&#13;
Funeral services were held last&#13;
Monday at the Beeler Funeral&#13;
home in Middleville. Burial \^as in&#13;
Middleville.&#13;
With nearly 3! 2 million t e l e -&#13;
phones in the state. Michigan alon^&#13;
has almost as many telephones as&#13;
Wednesday, January 17, 1962&#13;
JOSKPH BARKER&#13;
Joseph K. Barker. 82. of 9058&#13;
Cedar l.k. Rd.. dies Tuesday evening&#13;
at the University Hospital in&#13;
Ann Arbor, following a short illness.&#13;
He was born Feb. 29. 1880. in&#13;
Kcnton countv. Kv.. the son ol&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Elisah Barker.&#13;
He married Ella M. Callen at&#13;
Covington, Ky., in 1899. She died&#13;
in August, 1943.&#13;
Mr. Barker came to live v\ith&#13;
his son, Marion K. Barker, in&#13;
Pinckney in 1947.&#13;
He is survived by two sons,&#13;
Marion K. of Pinckney and Stanley&#13;
V. Barker of Indianapolis, lnd..&#13;
four grandchildren and nine greatgrandchildren.&#13;
Funeral services were conducted&#13;
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday in the Geer&#13;
Funeral Home of Ypsilanti.&#13;
Burial was in Cadillac Memorial&#13;
Gardens, near Wayne.&#13;
2 MOHEy-SAVtNG REASONS WHY&#13;
900 SHOULD BUY AH ELECTRIC DRYER HOW&#13;
Ft§t StntiCtf Buy an eleetrie clothes dryer and you&#13;
save money—Edison repairs or replaces electrical operating&#13;
parts without charge for either parts or labor.&#13;
That means no worrisome hunting for a qualified appliance&#13;
repairman, too. A well-trained, courteous Edison&#13;
repairman is just a phone call away. This service takes&#13;
effect after the dryer maker's regular warranty expires.&#13;
JpMMr AMAMSV rriCti Buy an electric dryer&#13;
now and the price will include installation. This moneysaver,&#13;
available for a limited time, covers standard&#13;
wiring (one 220-volt dryer circuit), when the dryer's&#13;
installed on Detroit Edison lines in any dwelling up to&#13;
and lnrhnf*wg a 4-family residence.&#13;
There's a wide range of well-known electric&#13;
dryer makes and models to choose from—&#13;
now, while the price includes the wiring&#13;
installation. You are sure to find what you&#13;
want at your favorite appliance dealer's . . .&#13;
but make sure it's electric!&#13;
1893—1962&#13;
Over 6S Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
DEXTER, MICHIGAN&#13;
When if s o&#13;
matter of&#13;
form, sot us&#13;
When it comet to devising a form (or&#13;
forms) lo expedite your office operations,&#13;
see us. We hove Hie "know&#13;
how" to come up with suggestions&#13;
that will save time and money. You'll&#13;
like the quality and speed of our work&#13;
T&#13;
•an&#13;
mm&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
tort us quote on&#13;
your n*xt jobl</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 17, 1962</text>
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                <text>January 17, 1962 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1962-01-17</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>VoL 79 — No.2 — Ph.UP8-3IM Pinckney, Michigan — Wednesday, January 10, 1962 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
Chronology Continues With&#13;
Events That Made News&#13;
During April, May, June&#13;
Our chronology of 1961 continues&#13;
this week with a brief review&#13;
of the news of the second&#13;
quarter of the year, April, May&#13;
and June. The story of work and&#13;
play, the happiness and the sadness&#13;
in a community was recorded&#13;
in these news notes:&#13;
APRIL 5th—&#13;
Ed Gil mo re, nationally-famous&#13;
square dance caller and recording&#13;
star from California was the guest&#13;
caller for the Village Squares&#13;
Dance here this week. Donald Me-&#13;
Anish, former resident and father&#13;
an Inkaid&#13;
Tennenhouse are married in&#13;
Ypsilanti. Putnam and Hamburg&#13;
townships both have fine turn-outs&#13;
for election. Putnam votes down&#13;
Con-Con proposal, 218-113. Mrs.&#13;
Julia A. Brown dies.&#13;
APRIL 12th—&#13;
Walter Glover, 65, former resident&#13;
here, dies at farm home in&#13;
Fowlerville. Cadet Richard Wylie,&#13;
studying at West Point Military&#13;
Academy, named to Dean's List.&#13;
Sharon Gallup receives honorable&#13;
mention in Detroit News Scholastic&#13;
Contest. Sally Roetman and&#13;
Robert Levanseler married at Congregational&#13;
church. Bruce Henry&#13;
nominated for Michigan F. T. A.&#13;
Newsletter editorship. Mrs. Eugen&#13;
Shehan (Catherine Gibney) dies in&#13;
Ann Arbor. Fire damages home&#13;
of Harry "Zip" Frost, 72; he is&#13;
saved by Herman Widmayer who&#13;
finds him overcome by smoke.&#13;
APRIL 19th&#13;
Barbara Massey and Jerry Orville&#13;
Reams are married in Howell&#13;
Baptist church. James Brotz,&#13;
Howell 8th grader, wins county&#13;
Spelling Bee held here. James&#13;
Jones, 27, of Dexter held as a&#13;
suspect in armed robbery of Mc-&#13;
Pherson Bank this week; $3,789&#13;
in cash taken at gunpoint in 9:30&#13;
a.m. hold-up. Ronald E. Marsh of&#13;
Ann Arbor, sentenced to not less&#13;
than four years or more than fifteen&#13;
years for breaking and entering&#13;
of Jim's Gulf Station here.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Rolfe Gustafson are&#13;
honored at party on their 25th&#13;
wedding anniversary. Pirates off&#13;
to good start in 1961 Baseball&#13;
season, win 2 of 3 games to date.&#13;
APRIL 26th—&#13;
A 35-mile per hour speed zone&#13;
established in Hell, Mich. Twenty&#13;
eight boys and girls make First&#13;
Holy Communion at St. Mary's&#13;
this week. Don Gibson named&#13;
Cancer Crusade chairman for the&#13;
Pinckney drive.&#13;
MAY 3rd—&#13;
Playland, a new recreation center,&#13;
owned and operated by Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Mel Reinhart opens at&#13;
Hell (Hi-Land Lake) this week.&#13;
Silver Lake Grocery team wins&#13;
top honors in the Men's Thursday&#13;
night bowling league for the&#13;
season. P.H.S. track team attracts&#13;
attention at Tecumsth relays; Tom&#13;
Ritter takes first place in milerun&#13;
over 11 CUstC schools. The&#13;
Clark's Grocery team captures&#13;
first place m Tuesday night Ladies&#13;
bowimg league; Roy Clark rewarded&#13;
with trophy for nine yean as&#13;
of&#13;
MAY 10th—.&#13;
Several hundred attend annual&#13;
J-Hop at P.H.S. as Juniors honor&#13;
the seniors in gala Hawaii setting.&#13;
Pinckney has been named host for&#13;
the U. of M. Uth annual spring&#13;
Festival of Song**. High s c h o o l&#13;
band and chorus presents another&#13;
outstanding Spring Concert. Dr.&#13;
Eugene Thomas named as speaker&#13;
for P.H.S. June graduation exercises.&#13;
Pirates* track team sets&#13;
more records at Saline this week.&#13;
MAY 17th—&#13;
Karon King installed as Worthy&#13;
Advisor of Rainbow Girls t h i s&#13;
National Science Foundation&#13;
Scholarship for summer studies at&#13;
Grand Rapids. Carole Miller&#13;
named valedictorian of 1961 class;&#13;
Louise Basydlo, salutatorian. The&#13;
track team sweeps meet at Chelsea.&#13;
A boat mishap on Portage&#13;
Lake Saturday takes life of sixyear&#13;
old John Evans. Eight members&#13;
of Village Squares earn the&#13;
"Knothead" badges for square&#13;
dancing at Spring Lake.&#13;
MAY 24th—&#13;
Plans and program all set for&#13;
annual Memorial Day Parade;&#13;
Rev. Merle B. Meeden of Howell,&#13;
guest speaker. Seniors enjoy boat&#13;
trip to Niagara Falls. Suzanne&#13;
Dettling and Henry L. Molnar are&#13;
married. Pirates' 'trackless' track&#13;
team wins share of track conference&#13;
crown; co-holders with Saline.&#13;
MAY 31st—&#13;
Miss Nancy Nash of Pinckney&#13;
is named Miss Livingston County&#13;
for Michigan Week; will compete&#13;
in Miss Michigan contest in July.&#13;
George Tansley of Patterson Lake&#13;
is the first motorist to be ticketed&#13;
for speeding through Hell, (Mich.)&#13;
Patricia Borovsky undergoes corrective&#13;
heart surgery at University&#13;
Medical Center; the teen-ager&#13;
makes good recovery. Two hundred&#13;
attend farewell dinner for&#13;
Rev. J. W. Winger and family&#13;
moving to Eldora, Iowa, where he&#13;
assumes new pastorate. Louis W&#13;
Esch dies at wheel of car and&#13;
crashes into vehicle driven by M&#13;
J. Reason; latter is hospitalized&#13;
Post offices to enforce ruling&#13;
"names must be on mail boxes**&#13;
on rural routes. Engagement of&#13;
Kristen Tasch and Lonnie Huhman&#13;
told.&#13;
JUNE 7th—&#13;
Karen Ann Bollen and Robert T.&#13;
Murphy married in St. Mary's&#13;
church. A daughter, Mary Helen,&#13;
born to Mr. and Mrs. John C.&#13;
Burg (Bonita Lee). St. M a r y ' s&#13;
graduates 21 eighth graders. Largest&#13;
commencement crowd ever, attends&#13;
P.H.S. graduation as 76 seniors&#13;
receive diplomas. Ruth Ann&#13;
Brown and John Paul Milam married&#13;
at Congregational church. The&#13;
Little League baseball teams started&#13;
summer games today. David&#13;
Mark Nash awarded Master of&#13;
Arts degree at Bob Jones University,&#13;
South Carolina.&#13;
JUNE 14th—&#13;
Larry Van Slambrook is named&#13;
to Deans list at Olivet College,&#13;
Krwanb dub sets July 6 for the&#13;
Engaged-&#13;
NANCY WYLIE&#13;
The engagement of Nancy Wylie&#13;
to Roger Sprague of Brighton&#13;
has been announced by her par&#13;
ney.&#13;
The bride-elect is a graduate of&#13;
Pinckney High school and is employed&#13;
at McPherson Health Center.&#13;
Her fiance is the son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Leo Sprague of Brighton.&#13;
The couple has not set a wedding&#13;
date.&#13;
Local Cagers&#13;
Enter New&#13;
Dexter League&#13;
Pinckney has a men's basketball&#13;
team in the newly organized&#13;
Dexter area Adult Recreation&#13;
Basketball League. The league,&#13;
formed to encourage young men&#13;
who have graduated beyond high&#13;
school athletics to participate in&#13;
organized sports, is composed of&#13;
four teams; Chelsea, Stockbridge,&#13;
Dexter and Pinckney at the present&#13;
time. Games are scheduled&#13;
for every Wednesday evening at&#13;
Dexter High school. All four&#13;
teams play weekly with two games&#13;
on each evening's program. The&#13;
first game is at 7 p. mr.; the secand&#13;
at 8 p. m.&#13;
Tonight Stockbridge and Chelsea&#13;
meet in the first contest; Dexter&#13;
will challenge Pinckney in the&#13;
second.&#13;
The weekly schedules will continue&#13;
thru March 21. The public&#13;
is invited to these games; there&#13;
is no charge for admission.&#13;
In the opening games last&#13;
Wednesday, Dexter d e fe a t e d&#13;
Stockbridge in a close game, 65-&#13;
63. Top scorer .for the winners&#13;
were Duane Clark with 19 points;&#13;
Pat Long led Stockbridge with 23&#13;
points.&#13;
Chelsea came from behind in&#13;
the final quarter of the game to&#13;
whip Pinckney, 78-69. Dan Gerkin&#13;
was high for Pinckney with&#13;
28 points while Fredricks and&#13;
Murphy tied with 11 each for&#13;
Chelsea.&#13;
Phil Gentile is manager of th:&#13;
local team. The players now on&#13;
the roster are Doug Gerkin, G!en&#13;
and "Red" Gil let, Don Packer,&#13;
Dick Darrow, Tiger" Wilkinson&#13;
and Tom Wylie.&#13;
Seaman, 1st class, Tom Auxier,&#13;
who is stationed at Treasure Island,&#13;
CaJif., with the Naval Elec&#13;
trontcs school spent the recent&#13;
holidays with his parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Frank Auxier. Tom joined&#13;
his family on a Christmas visit&#13;
with die Jay Shirey family in Httlman.&#13;
He returned to me coast on&#13;
January 8.&#13;
Citizens Advisory Group&#13;
Co-Chair men Are Named&#13;
At is regular meeting last&#13;
Thursday night the Board of Education&#13;
of the Pinckney Community&#13;
schools named co-chairmen to&#13;
head the four major committees&#13;
of the Citizens' Advisory Group&#13;
now being organized to assist the&#13;
board with the proposed expansion&#13;
program for which a bond&#13;
issue election will be held in the&#13;
near future.&#13;
Roy Hoeft and Hugh Radloff&#13;
will head the Buildings and Facilities&#13;
committee; Howard Thayer&#13;
and Willard Wiltse the Curriculum&#13;
Committee; Ralph Hall and&#13;
John McMillan, the Finance Committee,&#13;
and Murray Kennedy and&#13;
Charles Michael, Site Selection&#13;
Committee.&#13;
Thesr&#13;
the Board at the high school tomorrow&#13;
evening for the purpose&#13;
of naming sub-committees to study&#13;
the various items coming under&#13;
each division. Many citizens will&#13;
be asked to serve and volunteers&#13;
for any committee will be welcomed.&#13;
At Thursday's meeting a datj&#13;
will be set for the first meeting of&#13;
the entire Citizens* Group and&#13;
Mrs. Staclcable&#13;
[Heads Confab&#13;
Mrs. Germaine Stackable, principal&#13;
and assistant Supt. of Pinckney&#13;
High School has been invited&#13;
to be a discussion group leader for&#13;
the sequential curriculum meetings&#13;
at the St. Louis Convention of th?&#13;
National Association of Secondary&#13;
School Principals, February 24-&#13;
28.&#13;
Mrs. Stackable will head a&#13;
"buzz-group" in one morning and&#13;
two afternoon sessions. The theme&#13;
of the convention this year is&#13;
'The Arts in the Comprehensive&#13;
(Secondary School.1'&#13;
Hamburg&#13;
League Names&#13;
Officers&#13;
The Hamburg Citizen League&#13;
held their election meeting on&#13;
January 3 and named Raymond&#13;
Baumgartner as the president for&#13;
1962. Herbert T. Sheldon was&#13;
elected vice-president and Mrs. R.&#13;
Baumgartner, secretary - treasurer.&#13;
committee memberships will be&#13;
completed at that time. Every&#13;
citizens of the school district&#13;
would have an opportunity to contribute&#13;
to the school planning by&#13;
attending meetings.&#13;
After a lengthy study of growth&#13;
and needs, finances, population&#13;
trends, enrollment, and exis:ing&#13;
facilities, the Board decided, by a&#13;
vote of 5-2, to seek a $1,175,000&#13;
bond issue to meet current and&#13;
well - planned future requirements.&#13;
The school election date will be&#13;
told soon.&#13;
Stork Resorts&#13;
Telephone&#13;
Ice, sleet and snow may not&#13;
stop a mail carrier from keeping&#13;
his appointed rounds, nor can&#13;
they stop the stork from making&#13;
a landing. The long - billed fellow,&#13;
used to arriving under practically&#13;
any known conditions, was baffled&#13;
only momentarily last Friday&#13;
morning when his unexpected&#13;
destination in Hell, Mich., was&#13;
frozen over by the slickest kind&#13;
of ice. He took over by telephone.&#13;
It became apparent quite early&#13;
in the morning that Mrs. John&#13;
Aldrich would not be able to travel&#13;
because of the icy roads to the&#13;
McPherson Health Center in&#13;
Howell. Her doctor tried, but&#13;
could not have reached her in&#13;
time. Three neighborhood women,&#13;
friends of Mrs. Aldrich, did&#13;
reach her home on foot, and with&#13;
Dr. Morris Chelsky of Howell&#13;
giving instructions over the telephone&#13;
the women delivered successfully&#13;
a nine-pound boy at 8:40&#13;
a. m.&#13;
Mrs. Robert Rush at the telephone&#13;
directed Mrs. Edward Bennett&#13;
and Mrs. John Booth in doing&#13;
what Dr. Chelsky later pronounced&#13;
a "wonderful job." The&#13;
doctor arrived at the Aldrich&#13;
home about 11 a. m. and called&#13;
an ambulance to take mother and&#13;
son to the hospital; both were&#13;
doing fine."&#13;
The baby, not yet named, is&#13;
the second son of the Aldrich's;&#13;
daughter Kathy is three years old&#13;
and Robert John is one year old.&#13;
Dad is employed at Pinckney Fabricating&#13;
and Sheet Metal Company&#13;
here.&#13;
HELL FROZEN OVER: ice, snow, and stillneat cover the&#13;
most popular spot in the heart of Hell, Michigan — the ole&#13;
twimming hole just above the Hi-Land Lake dam that alt&#13;
tummer rings with laughter of swimmers and the boo*n of&#13;
the water.&#13;
A long stranger contemplate! the icy beauty of the&#13;
stream below in a setting that resembles a charcoal sketch.&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Shelhart&#13;
and family, Mr. and M r s .&#13;
Duane Shelhart and family and&#13;
Mr. Charles Shelhart and girl&#13;
friend all of Dexter, and Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Wm Reames were Sunday&#13;
dinner guests ad visitors at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Roy Shelhart.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. David Haines announce&#13;
the birth of their son Daniel&#13;
Hugh, born to them December&#13;
28th. Danny weighed 7 pounds&#13;
and 4 ounces.&#13;
HOVVELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
lowell Phone 17691&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fit, Sat&#13;
Jan. 10—11—12—13&#13;
Ifetmr Mule Untie Mnki&#13;
to see the m l r&#13;
Sun., Mon., Tues.&#13;
Jan* 14—15—16&#13;
Matinee Sunday at&#13;
TOWN&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Jan. 17—18—19—20&#13;
MUSICOLOR&#13;
A free record of Jimmy&#13;
|Clanton singing the title song&#13;
to every teenager who&#13;
buys a ticket.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schiller sr.&#13;
of Detroit, were Sunday dinner&#13;
guests at the home of the son, and&#13;
daughter-in-law, Mr. and M r s .&#13;
Wm. Schiller Jr. and family.&#13;
Paul Larnard was home with his&#13;
parents for the holidays.&#13;
Robert Richardson of Texas,&#13;
spent the New Years holidays with&#13;
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Olrin&#13;
Jones. Tom Spooner of S o u t h -&#13;
field was also a guest for several&#13;
days.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Marshall&#13;
and Mrs. Clyde Robeson w e r e&#13;
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Harlin Robeson in Stockbridge.&#13;
The Livermore family spent&#13;
New Years day with Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Paul tomstock in Livonia.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm Schiller and&#13;
family were dinner guests Saturday&#13;
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Goodwin in Fowlerville.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McCleer entertained&#13;
the Clyde McCleer family&#13;
Christmas night and on Tuesday&#13;
a sleigh ride and buffet supper&#13;
was enjoyed.&#13;
Mr. Jack Ackerman flew home&#13;
from New York for Christmas&#13;
the holidays at the Ackerman&#13;
home also included Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Patrick Dennis of Grosse Point,&#13;
Mr. Tom Taylor of Detroit, and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Callahane of&#13;
Mil ford.&#13;
The family of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Arthur Bullis joined them N e w&#13;
Years day, for dinner.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Don Cole of&#13;
Howell were Sunday dinner guests&#13;
at the home of their parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Mort Cole.&#13;
Miss Bonnie Greenamyer spent&#13;
Wednesday thru Saturday w i t h&#13;
Gaye Hartsuff.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mort Cole were&#13;
hosts for a New Years party.&#13;
For the first time in two years&#13;
Notes of&#13;
48 Years Aqo&#13;
S. H. Can- of Portage Lake who&#13;
recently purchased the Bower's&#13;
property on Main street has erected&#13;
a large ice house there (on&#13;
Livingston street and the Mill&#13;
Pond) and is preparing to service&#13;
this community with ice in the&#13;
summer.&#13;
State 'Game Warden O a t e s&#13;
stated here this week that he has&#13;
been asked to urge passage of a&#13;
law to prevent hunters from taking&#13;
whiskey into their hunting camps&#13;
during the deer season. The majority&#13;
of fatalities in the n o r t h&#13;
woods, it seems, have resulted&#13;
from over indulgence in whiskey;&#13;
more and more of the drink being&#13;
carried into the north this season&#13;
than last.&#13;
Faye McClear and Germaine&#13;
Ledwidge have returned to Adrian&#13;
to resume their studies at St. Joseph&#13;
Academy.&#13;
Harold, the youngest son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Sanford Reason, is seriously&#13;
ill with pneumonia.&#13;
L. L. Crippen, nephew of William&#13;
Gawley, died at the Pinckney&#13;
Sanitarium this week; he had been&#13;
an invalid for 3 years. His mother,&#13;
Mrs. Martha Crippen died just&#13;
two weeks ago,&#13;
the. .Clyde.. McCleer family spent&#13;
were, James McCleer (M/M 2)]&#13;
U. S. Navy, Mr. and Mrs. William&#13;
Navarre, Carolyn, Sara, Tim, Ann,&#13;
and Mr; and Mrs. Thomas Basore&#13;
and sons.&#13;
Friends may send cards of cheer&#13;
to Mr. William LaPrad who is a&#13;
surgery patient at the Saint Joseph&#13;
hospital in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Eva James has returned&#13;
home after visiting with her family&#13;
in Southfield.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest C l a r k e&#13;
were dinner guests Monday at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Pearl Marshall.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Weidman and Jim,&#13;
and Mrs. Margaret Cosgray were&#13;
in Lansing Friday celebrating the&#13;
latters birthday, with dinner out.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
ISTABLlSHtt IN IMS&#13;
Wirtnmliy by C. M&#13;
.. lUZAMfN&#13;
C. M. Uwy m* I t OoyW,&#13;
d m patf*t t»* « Undtmy, Mkhl—«&#13;
Iht tply—ii&#13;
•tftkal&#13;
forum&#13;
U.S.&#13;
l)?5 In etfwr tt«*t&#13;
$4.00 to foreign&#13;
« * t «nd U.S. t&#13;
rattt upon application.&#13;
tot Mkhkj«v 9 U O in altar st&#13;
Six month* rafett » » • » * »&#13;
$9*00 to foroisn&#13;
•vaocrlptiom takon for lot*&#13;
The following pupils of the&#13;
Hicks school district were .neither&#13;
absent or tardy during the months&#13;
of October, November and December:&#13;
Carter and Edwin Brown,&#13;
Hazel Fiske and Stanley Hall.&#13;
The Knox-Harris Packing company&#13;
of Jackson has announced&#13;
plans to install a pickling plant&#13;
here this coming summer. T h e&#13;
company will pay 75c per bushel&#13;
for cucumbers raised on contract&#13;
basis.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
This column will be resumed&#13;
next week; our files for the early&#13;
part of January seem to be missing.&#13;
Local Items&#13;
Mrs. George Tansley is a patient&#13;
Toffowing surgety on~Uanuary&#13;
She is reported to be making good&#13;
progress.&#13;
Cherie Darrow who underwent&#13;
an emergency appendectomy shortly&#13;
before midnight on New Years&#13;
Eve is home from McPherson&#13;
Health Center. She is the daughter&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Darrow.&#13;
Many friends and relatives attended&#13;
the Open House at t h e&#13;
Lonnie Van Slambrook home in&#13;
Gregory on December 31, honoring&#13;
Lonnie's mother, Mrs. Minnie&#13;
Van Slambrook on her 80th birthday.&#13;
The more than 60 guest came&#13;
from Pontiac, Detroit, Waterford,&#13;
Chelsea, Ann Arbor, Gregory and&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
Obituaries&#13;
GEORGE KETCHUM&#13;
George M. Ketchum, 40, of&#13;
Gregory, died of a heart attack on&#13;
Monday at his home.&#13;
He was born May 21, 1921, in&#13;
Detroit, a son of Bud and Lillian&#13;
Merrill Ketchum. He never married.&#13;
Mr. Ketchum moved from Detroit&#13;
to Lakeland in 1943, moving&#13;
to Gregory in 1957.&#13;
Survivors are his father of Gregory&#13;
and several nieces and nephews.&#13;
Funeral services were held at 1&#13;
p.m. Thursday at the Swarthout&#13;
Funeral Home, with the Rev. William&#13;
Hainsworth officiating. Burial&#13;
was in Roseland Park Cemetery,&#13;
Royal Oak.&#13;
MRS. WILLIAM KISTER&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth D. Kister, 92, of&#13;
11466 Patterson Lake, died Saturday&#13;
at McPherson Health Center&#13;
inHowell.&#13;
Ann Arbor, a daughter of John&#13;
and Mary Itsell Yedeley, and married&#13;
William H. Kister on Sept.&#13;
14, 1915, in Detroit. He survives.&#13;
The couple lived in Detroit until&#13;
moving to Patterson Lake about&#13;
five years ago.&#13;
Mrs. Kister was a member of&#13;
the Maccabees in Detroit.&#13;
Besides her husband, survivors&#13;
are two brothers, Fred Yedeley of&#13;
Detroit and John Yedeley of Ypsilanti;&#13;
and two sisters, Miss Clara&#13;
Yedeley ot Detroit and Mrs. Emma&#13;
Zimmerman of Ypsilanti. A&#13;
son, Glenn G., died five years ago.&#13;
Funeral services were held on&#13;
Tuesday at the Swarthout Funeral&#13;
Home&#13;
Lean End Cut&#13;
PORK CHOPS&#13;
Swift's Rasher&#13;
LICED BACON&#13;
Farmer Peel's&#13;
SLICED BOLOGNA&#13;
Del Monte&#13;
CHUNK TUNA&#13;
Tall Cans&#13;
PET MILK&#13;
Cut-Rite&#13;
WAX PAPER . 2 rolls for PINCKN&#13;
DIME SALE!!&#13;
LOOK WHAT lie WILL BUT 1111&#13;
I LB. BAG NAVY BEANS&#13;
50 COUNT BOOK MATCHES&#13;
TAST-D-UTE KIDNEY OR Pork &amp; Beans&#13;
NO. 300 CANS&#13;
Allen's SPINACH&#13;
TOMATO JUICE No. 300 CANS&#13;
FAMO PANCAKE MIX 12 Oz.&#13;
BUTTERFIELD POTATO STICKS&#13;
NO. 211 CANS&#13;
YOUR CHOICE&#13;
FMCES&#13;
W«d.. Jan. 10 thru S«t., J*n. I34h&#13;
ODM Cw 'til 960 — •©1:30 pjm.&#13;
News Notes F» M&#13;
FREE AND CLEAR: The Board of Trustees of the Community&#13;
Congregational Church burned the mortgage of Pilgrim&#13;
Hall (above) at the annual meeting of church members&#13;
on Monday night A family supper in the hall preceded the&#13;
ceremony. Built at a cost of $65,000 in donations and pledges&#13;
the building was completed in 1953. It includes an all-purpose&#13;
room with the seating capacity of about 300 for meetings&#13;
and dinners; modern kitchen facilities, the pastor's office,&#13;
a downstairs sanctuary complete with altar and 7 classrooms&#13;
for the Sunday School Department.&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
Dr. Norman D. Wilner was installed&#13;
as the new president of the&#13;
Dexter Kiwanis Club there last&#13;
night. Ralph Keyes of Ann Arbor,&#13;
past Michigan District governor&#13;
administered the installation&#13;
rites.&#13;
of the Detroit Edison scholarship&#13;
winners last week. The company&#13;
sponsors 51 college study grants&#13;
annually on the basis of scholarship,&#13;
character, citizenship and&#13;
school activities.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Gehringer of&#13;
Howcll ohnrrvni -4ke&amp;— (3olden&#13;
beginning with an Alaskan adventure&#13;
program by Donald Cooper,&#13;
prominent television personality&#13;
who will appear at the Chelsea&#13;
High school auditorium on February&#13;
8. The club is now offering&#13;
season tickets at $3.00 each for&#13;
the programs.&#13;
Fredrick A. Miller, of Stockbridge,&#13;
a student at EMU was one&#13;
Sumfc^r&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
CLEARANCE SALE&#13;
Now in Progress.'&#13;
UP 8-9726&#13;
10544 Whitewood Road&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
an open house at St. Joseph&#13;
school.&#13;
Brighton, too, is foreseeing a&#13;
considerable increase in school&#13;
population. H. Gordon Hawkins,&#13;
Supt., said last week that even&#13;
without population growth this&#13;
coming fall will find 114 more&#13;
students entering school. The present&#13;
school population there now is&#13;
1,961.&#13;
Kenneth C. Weber, Brighton&#13;
township Justice of the Peace, is&#13;
the 1962 president of the Brighton&#13;
Kiwanians.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Poulson&#13;
were in Hillsdale Monday to attend&#13;
the funeral of the former's&#13;
mother, Mrs. H. Poulson who&#13;
passed away Saturday following a&#13;
long illness. A complete obituary&#13;
was not available this week.&#13;
Mrs. Irene Jack left yesterday&#13;
for a three-month stay in Gulfport,&#13;
Mississippi.&#13;
WMMM .&#13;
Phone UP 8-3149&#13;
HAMBURG-Janet Wiseman&#13;
and Allan D. Santure exchanged&#13;
marriage vows Saturday morning&#13;
, in St. Patrick's Catholic&#13;
Church, Whitmore Lake, during&#13;
a ceremony performed by&#13;
the Rev. Leo Malkowski.&#13;
The bride,/daughter of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Vance Wiseman of&#13;
Hamburg, was attired in a floorlength&#13;
gown of white'taffeta&#13;
designed wtih long sleeves and&#13;
V neckline, which was accented&#13;
with F r e n c h lace and seed&#13;
pearls. The chapel train terminated&#13;
from a large bow.&#13;
Miss Cathy Showerman of&#13;
South Lyon was the maid of&#13;
honor, and the bridesmaids were&#13;
Mrs. Jack Terry and Miss Gwen&#13;
Bennett, both of Hamburg.&#13;
Gary Santure of Hamburg was&#13;
best man, and the ushers were&#13;
Philip Rutledge of Whitmore&#13;
Lake and Gary Wiseman of&#13;
Hamburg.&#13;
The reception was held in the&#13;
Hamburg IOOF Hall.&#13;
Parents qf the bridegroom&#13;
are Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Santure&#13;
of Whitmore Lake.&#13;
The bride was graduated from&#13;
American School in Chicago,&#13;
LegalNotice*__&#13;
140 Livingston St.&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain saws and lawn mowers repaired and sharpened.&#13;
Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
- M S O -&#13;
Water pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
and used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
When ifs a&#13;
matter of&#13;
form, see «s&#13;
T&#13;
• a *&#13;
When it comet to devising o form (or&#13;
forms) to expedite your offto oporo-&#13;
Horn, see us. W# hove the "know&#13;
how to com# up with suQOjMttOfts&#13;
thot will sove tint* ond money. You'll&#13;
like the quality ond sptod of our work&#13;
. . . ond our prices!&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Claude Sw&#13;
UP 13108&#13;
"- The= Circuit Court for the County of&#13;
Livingston&#13;
In Chancery&#13;
Lottie Plummer and Iva Plummer,&#13;
Plaintiff*&#13;
vs.&#13;
Mariah Winans, Charles Djnkin, Stephen&#13;
Solen, Stephen Soyles, William C. Dunning&#13;
and Nellie L. Dunning, his wife, and&#13;
Albert Reason and Arlettie Reason, his&#13;
wife, and their unknown heirs, legate**,&#13;
devisees and assigns.&#13;
Defendants&#13;
ORDER FOR APPEARANCE&#13;
At a session of said Court held at the&#13;
court house in the city of Ho well, in said&#13;
county of Livingston, on the 22nd day of&#13;
December, 1961.&#13;
PRESENT: Hon. Michael Carland, Citcjit&#13;
Judge.&#13;
On reading and filing the bill of complaint&#13;
in said cause from which it satisfactorily&#13;
appears to the Court trut the&#13;
defendants above named, or their unknown&#13;
heirs, devisees, legatees end assigns,&#13;
are proper and necessary parties&#13;
defendant, end&#13;
It further appearing that after diligen*&#13;
search, and inquiry it cannot be ascertained&#13;
and it is not known whether such&#13;
defendants are living or dead, or where&#13;
they may reside if living and, if dead,&#13;
whether they have personal representatives&#13;
or heirs living or where they or&#13;
some of them may reside, or whether t^e&#13;
title, interest, claim, lien or possible right&#13;
has been by them assigned to, any p:r»on&#13;
or persons or been disposed of by will,&#13;
and that plaintiffs do not know and have&#13;
not been able after diligent ssarch and&#13;
enquiry to ascertain the names of the persons&#13;
who are included in siid bill as defendants&#13;
therein without being named:&#13;
On motion of Hiram R. Smith, attornev&#13;
for plaintiffs, IT IS ORDERED th*t said&#13;
defendants and their unknown heirs, devisees,&#13;
legatees and assiqns cause iheir&#13;
appearance to be entered in this cause&#13;
within three months from the date of this&#13;
order and in default thereof that s*id bill&#13;
of complaint be taken as confessed by th*&#13;
said defendants and their unknown heirs,&#13;
devisees, legatees and assigns.&#13;
It is FURTHER ORDERED that wi hin&#13;
forty days plaintiff cause a copy of this&#13;
order to be published in the Pincknev&#13;
Dispatch, a newspaper printed in said&#13;
county, such publication to b» continued&#13;
therein once each week for six weeks in&#13;
succession.&#13;
Michael Carland&#13;
Circuit Judge&#13;
Take Notice: This suit involves the titl*&#13;
and is brought to quiet title to th? following&#13;
described Unds situated in the&#13;
Township of Unadilla, Livingston Cojnty,&#13;
Michigan:&#13;
P»rt of the Northwest Quarter of Section&#13;
24, Township 1 North, Range 3&#13;
East, described as follows: Beginning&#13;
at a point 839.4 feet east of the&#13;
west quarter post of said sxtion 24;&#13;
thence e«sf 940.46 feat along the&#13;
qyrter line to the cent-r Ine of&#13;
Graves Road; thence n*rth 61° 38'&#13;
west 354.5 f*et along the center I'n*&#13;
of Graves Road; thence north 28°&#13;
32' east 433.6 feet; thenc- north&#13;
6 0 ° 59/ west 222.3 f«*et to ths cenfr&#13;
line of Highway M-36: thenc? so th&#13;
38° 18' west 442.2 feet alona the&#13;
center line of Highway M 35; thence&#13;
south 46• 35' west 468.5 feet along&#13;
the center line of Highway M-36 to&#13;
the point of b*o inning; and con'a in-&#13;
*ng 6.23 acres of land, more or less,&#13;
and subject to highway easements.&#13;
Hiram R. Smith&#13;
Attorney for Plaintiffs&#13;
Business Address:&#13;
1121/2 State Street&#13;
Howell, Michigan.&#13;
29c&#13;
Specializing in Fine&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wf MM* COMFlfTI&#13;
HOMB * OAtAOtt&#13;
kerpenttr Work of All Kindt&#13;
01. Her husband was graduated&#13;
from Ann Arbor High School&#13;
and is now serving with the&#13;
Armed Forces at Ft. Benning,&#13;
Georgia.&#13;
YPSILANTI - Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John £. Teasdale of De Soto&#13;
Ave. announce xhe marriage o!&#13;
their daughter, Sharon Ann, to&#13;
Walter Joseph Pietras, son of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John J. Pietras&#13;
of Pinckney.&#13;
The Rev. Maurice Decker&#13;
performed the rites last Saturday&#13;
in St. John's C a t h o l i c&#13;
Church here.&#13;
The bride wore a floor-length&#13;
gown of taffeta fashioned with&#13;
scoop neckline, long sleeves and&#13;
bouffant skirt.&#13;
The couple's honor attendants&#13;
were Miss Mary Lou Teasdale&#13;
of Ypsiianti and John Pietras&#13;
of Pinckney, sister and brother&#13;
of the bride and bridegroom,&#13;
respectively.&#13;
The bridesmaids were the&#13;
Misses Kay Teasdale of Ypsiianti&#13;
and Marilyn Pietras of&#13;
Pinckney, sisters of the newlyweds.&#13;
Ushers were Ron Perry of&#13;
Pinckr,ey and Peter Gerycz of&#13;
Pinckney.&#13;
ianti was flower girl m her sister's&#13;
wedding.&#13;
The reception was held in the&#13;
Labor Temple Hall following&#13;
the ceremony.&#13;
The couple was graduated&#13;
from St. Thomas High School,&#13;
Ann Arbor. The bride attended&#13;
Aquinas College, Grand Rapids.&#13;
The couple is residing at Ft.&#13;
Gordon, Ga., where the bridegroom&#13;
is stationed with the&#13;
333rd Reserve Unit from Ann&#13;
Arbor. .&#13;
Larry Rowland is a patient at&#13;
St. Joseph Mercy hospital in Ann flf*&#13;
Arbor. Larry had surgery last&#13;
Thursday and is much improved&#13;
according to latest reports.&#13;
George Gulich also has been&#13;
patient at St. Joseph hospital for&#13;
several weeks. He is also coming&#13;
along very well.&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SIR VICE&#13;
n. Uf S-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 10, 1962&#13;
Church&#13;
$T. MAtrS CATHOUC CNMtCH&#13;
m w v * Wm^WkW H^n?»w^a? w ^ ^ r m ^ § ^ ^ m&#13;
Sunday M M M I : 8:00, 10:00. 11:30&#13;
Weekday Mas* SKtt •m.&#13;
Novena devotion* in honor of Our&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 9:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
HIAWATHA MACM~CHUtCH&#13;
Une-e» l&#13;
tuck lake, MkfcifM&#13;
lev. Charles MidieeJ, Patter&#13;
Bible School 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Young People 6:445 p.m.&#13;
Evan ing Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Boys Brigade (12 • 18 yrs.). Moo 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise &amp; Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST. P A U l T l U T N t R A N CHU1CH&#13;
(Miseeuri Sityod)&#13;
E. M-36, M w a W e , Michifjaii&#13;
Luther Kriefall, Patter&#13;
9547 N. Main Street, Whmnere Lake&#13;
Divine Servicas:&#13;
Matins . 8:45 a.m&#13;
Sunday School and Bible Class 9:445 p.m.&#13;
Liturgy, with sermon 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Communion: All major festivals and the&#13;
last Sunday of every month.&#13;
For information phone&#13;
ACademy 9-3532 or Hickory 9*7061&#13;
CAIVA|TY~MINNC&gt;NITI CHURCH&#13;
Putnam between Hawaii and Mill Streets&#13;
Patter: Mel win Stawffer&#13;
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School . 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Prayer Meeting, every Thursday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Services&#13;
uTll»ApfisTcHuirC&#13;
4060 Swarthewt Read&#13;
M O W f U , MICHIGAN&#13;
Robert M. Taylor, Pastor&#13;
Danieri Band, Young People's&#13;
Group - Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship • Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bible Study, Prayer Meeting&#13;
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNITY CONORIOATIONAl&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
tav. Wm, Hainiwwth&#13;
Morning Worship 10=45 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School °;30 a.rrr&#13;
Choir rahtartal Wednesday evening 7:30&#13;
THE 7l0nt'l~CHU*CH OP PINCKNEY&#13;
Wait Main Stfeet, Pinckney,Mich.&#13;
Pastor Thomas C Murphy&#13;
SERVICES:&#13;
_ible School * &lt; 5 a. m.&#13;
Morning Worihip 11 = 00 a. m.&#13;
Youth Meeting 6:00 p. m&#13;
Evening Service 7 -00 o m.&#13;
Radio broadcast - Station WHMI. iu*-&#13;
10:05 a. m. • 10:20 a. m. - Dial 1350&#13;
'People's Church of the Air."&#13;
Wed. Choir Practice 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Thurs. Mid-week Service 7:30 p. m.&#13;
OAULEAVIAPTIST CHURCH&#13;
9700 McOreejor Road&#13;
Sunday School ° 4 5 * m -&#13;
Morning Worihip 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday night prayer service 7.30 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
"Say It with Flowtn"&#13;
Phoiw 284&#13;
HOWELL. MICHIGAN&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
Putnam Township&#13;
Properly and Dog Taxes&#13;
are now due and payeble at my&#13;
home from 9 to S en Saturdays.&#13;
AH dogs 3 mo. eld and over must&#13;
kave license—$2.00 male—$3.50 female.&#13;
NOTE: Deg taxes become delinquent on&#13;
MARCH 1st. (NOT APRIL 1st as In the&#13;
Reynolds Treasurer&#13;
•^•«*i a&#13;
•NITlfJNJl S2Jt »aaerry&#13;
ICE-FISHING shares the spotlight with ice skating in this&#13;
area. Joe Plum me r, a local youngster, proudly displays a&#13;
pike measuring nearly 30 inches he caught with a "tip Up"&#13;
while fishing on a near-by lake.&#13;
Wedding anniversary congratulations&#13;
are in order next Monday,&#13;
January 15, for Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Murray Kennedy.&#13;
Crazy Daze&#13;
Watkins Products SALE&#13;
Don't Delay—&#13;
with B-l-G-S-E-R&#13;
BARGAINS&#13;
Home Permanent&#13;
Hair Spray&#13;
1.90&#13;
1.50&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.70&#13;
Vanilta, 11 oz.&#13;
Cinnamon, Vi lb.&#13;
•&#13;
Value 3.30&#13;
SALE—$2.60&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz.&#13;
Pepper, Vi lb.&#13;
Value 3.40&#13;
SALE—$2.70&#13;
Vanilla, 11 oz.&#13;
Nutmeg, VA oz.&#13;
1.85&#13;
2.00&#13;
Value 3.85&#13;
SALE—$2.90&#13;
Nite Club Cologne Mist 2.75&#13;
Liquid Creme or Blue&#13;
Crystal Shamp., 8 oz. 1.00&#13;
Value 3.75&#13;
SALE—$3.00&#13;
House of King&#13;
Colone Mist&#13;
Antiseptic Liq.&#13;
Value&#13;
SALEJACK&#13;
HANNETT&#13;
318 S. Howell St.&#13;
Phone UP 8-3175&#13;
Don't Forget—CALL&#13;
TODAY-He'll be out&#13;
Your Way if He Needs&#13;
A Sleigh ! ! ! !&#13;
News of Men&#13;
In Service-&#13;
Fort Hood, Tex. — Army Specialist&#13;
Four Reace O. Gudith, son&#13;
of Mrs. Gaynell Gudith, 1225 Byron&#13;
rd., Howell, Mich., recently&#13;
participated in Exercise Tiger, a&#13;
series of command post exercises&#13;
conducted at Fort Hood, Tex.&#13;
The exercises provided Gudith&#13;
and other members of Headquarters,&#13;
III Corps the opportunity for&#13;
practical application of procedures&#13;
required to maintain the combat&#13;
Livingston&#13;
Players Plan&#13;
Casting&#13;
Membership in the Livingston&#13;
Players, a dramatic club organized&#13;
recently in the Brighton area,&#13;
is open to any interested adult in&#13;
this county.&#13;
The group will hold its first&#13;
meeting of 1962 tomorrow evening&#13;
g&#13;
school aitn Bthrieg htWone sat t 8E lpe.m men.tary&#13;
Anyone contemplating membership&#13;
is urged to join at this&#13;
time because try-outs for the casting&#13;
of the club's spring performance&#13;
will begin very soon.&#13;
Delegate Believes Local&#13;
Government Question Will&#13;
Be Solved By January 15th&#13;
ters.&#13;
The 24-year-old soldier, a clerk&#13;
in the headquarters at the fort,&#13;
entered the Army in January, I960&#13;
and completed basic training at&#13;
Fort Knox, Ky.&#13;
He was graduated from Pinckney&#13;
High School in 1957.&#13;
Great Lakes, 111. — Geoffrey&#13;
C. Linden, son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
U. Linden of 11970 Portage Lake&#13;
Ave., Pinckney. Mich., completed&#13;
two weeks of Naval Reserve recruit&#13;
training, Dec. 30, at the&#13;
Naval Training Center, G r e a t&#13;
Lakes, III.&#13;
Ordinance, gunnery, damage&#13;
control, water survival, physical&#13;
fitness, military drill, naval orientation,&#13;
sentry duty and first aid&#13;
were all covered during the training.&#13;
The reservists have returned to&#13;
their home towns to continue their&#13;
training with their local Naval&#13;
Reserve units.&#13;
Local Items&#13;
Fred Evers is a patient at St.&#13;
Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann Ar-|&#13;
bor.&#13;
Victor and Louise Basydlo&#13;
spent their holiday vacations at&#13;
the home of their parents, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Joe Basydlo, have returned&#13;
to their studies at Stout&#13;
State College in Wisconsin and&#13;
the Jackson Business College, respectively.&#13;
Birthday greetings are extended&#13;
this week to Norman Boch, Harris..&#13;
Eisenhardt and Margaret&#13;
Our Committee on Local Government&#13;
has called a week end&#13;
session, January 12, 13 and possibly&#13;
14, in an effort to complete&#13;
as much of its work as possible.&#13;
I believe, without a doubt, that&#13;
we will have the complete local&#13;
government package wrapped up&#13;
by the middle of the month. 1 feel&#13;
confident that every branch of local&#13;
government in the state will&#13;
have, "at its option," the necessary&#13;
tools to draft for themselves a type&#13;
of government they so desire.&#13;
One problem you might be interested&#13;
in is in relation to County&#13;
Health Departments. It seems we&#13;
have 14 counties in Michigan that&#13;
do not have County Health Departments&#13;
and there are those that&#13;
feel the constitution should provide&#13;
that the Legislature require&#13;
all counties or groups of counties&#13;
to organize and support a County&#13;
Health Department. Another problem&#13;
is, "in what method we are&#13;
going to best serve the southeastern&#13;
counties in Michigan with a&#13;
metropolitan form of government?"&#13;
Mr. Madar, (D) from Detroit,&#13;
appeared before our committee on&#13;
3*&#13;
ings tor sometime now and I can&#13;
see no relief from the long hours&#13;
in the near future. Our general&#13;
sessions are growing steadily longer&#13;
as each constitutional measure&#13;
comes up for debate and there is&#13;
even talk about the possibility of&#13;
night sessions.&#13;
I would like to remind you&#13;
once more that you are welcome&#13;
to attend the Convention*&#13;
Master Joe Basydlo observed&#13;
his 10th birthday recently with a&#13;
•party at which 10 of his friends&#13;
and classmates were guests. Birthday&#13;
party fun and fare were enjoyed&#13;
by all.&#13;
' M&#13;
SET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
Birthdays today; to James kobfri-"&#13;
son and Sybil Huntley tomorrow;&#13;
to Al Bobon on Friday and Janet&#13;
Shehan and Cathy Wiltse Doyte&#13;
on Saturday.&#13;
Gregory Amburgey and Milton&#13;
Winters share Sunday, Jan. 14, as&#13;
their natal day. Five local residents&#13;
will be cutting birthday&#13;
cakes on Jan. 15; Gloria Henry,&#13;
Jim Baughn, Christine Dinkel,&#13;
Laura Hewlett and Marvin Light.&#13;
January 16 will find Carmen&#13;
Bonsaire, Betsy Howell, Honey&#13;
Mahler and Becky Henry receiving&#13;
congratulations.&#13;
Sharon Griffiths was the guest&#13;
of honor at a bridal shower given&#13;
by Chiquita Amburgey Sunday&#13;
afternoon at the home of her parents,&#13;
the Merlin Amburgeys. Chiquita&#13;
will be one of the bridesmaids&#13;
at her cousin's wedding on&#13;
January 20; Sharon is the brideelect&#13;
of Floyd Campbell. Shower&#13;
guests were eleven friends and former&#13;
classmates of the bride-to-be,&#13;
a I960 June graduate of P.H.S.&#13;
The Reverend Roland Crosby&#13;
of Union Lake, near Pontiac, has&#13;
been named pastor of the Galilean&#13;
Baptist church, 9700 McGregor&#13;
road. He succeeds the Reverend&#13;
N. Eastman. The Crosbys are&#13;
"house-hunting" currently in the&#13;
Portage Lake area hoping to bi&#13;
able to move here soon. Rev. and&#13;
Mrs. Crosby are the parents of&#13;
three pre-school age children.&#13;
in&#13;
Tiis proposal to aHow~a euy of over&#13;
one million population to become&#13;
an individual county.&#13;
The Committee on Declaration&#13;
of Rights, Suffrage and Election&#13;
are expected to complete their&#13;
work within the next two or three&#13;
weeks, according to Chairman Dr.&#13;
Pollock.&#13;
I might say that the committees&#13;
have been holding evening meet-&#13;
TREE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
TV ANTENNA&#13;
REPAIR&#13;
BOB VEDDER&#13;
UP 8-3452&#13;
VERY REASONABLE&#13;
Obituary&#13;
WILLIAM C. GEARHART&#13;
The Reverend William C. Gearhart,&#13;
a retired minister and brother&#13;
of Mrs. Mark Nash of Pinckney,&#13;
died suddenly at his home&#13;
in Holland, (Mich.), on Saturday.&#13;
He was the oldest son of th?&#13;
S. E. Gearharts of Livingston&#13;
County.&#13;
J Survivors include his widow,&#13;
Mildred, three sons, Rev. Forest&#13;
Gearhart of Wheaton, 111., Ezra&#13;
Gearhart of Holland, Dr. Lawrence&#13;
Gearhart of Wiscinson, and&#13;
a daughter, Mrs. Marcella Rock&#13;
in Illinois. Three brothers and five&#13;
sisters, also survive.&#13;
Funeral services were conducted&#13;
yesterday in Holland and diplicate&#13;
yesterday in Holland and duplicate&#13;
noon at 2 o'clock at the Wesleyan&#13;
Methodist church in Brighton,&#13;
with the Rev. A. C. Barker officiating.&#13;
Burial will be made in&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
Vasher&#13;
Appointment&#13;
Hamburg&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
WHEN YOU BANK BY MAILBowling&#13;
News&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED DOUBLES&#13;
January 5, 1962&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MelNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS temr wmt T M FtAvor* W . M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
Toppers&#13;
Checkmates&#13;
Hee Haws&#13;
Bombers&#13;
Double D's&#13;
Sodbusters&#13;
Pinckney Polkats&#13;
Sharpies&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
Bee Bee's&#13;
Patt. Lake Four&#13;
Bill Posters&#13;
46 V*&#13;
44J/2&#13;
44&#13;
4O'/2&#13;
37 V*&#13;
36V2&#13;
35 Vi&#13;
3P/2&#13;
31&#13;
30&#13;
19&#13;
25 V*&#13;
27 V*&#13;
28&#13;
31 V*&#13;
34 V*&#13;
35'/:&#13;
36 V*&#13;
36«/2&#13;
40 Vi&#13;
41&#13;
42&#13;
53&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVEftY&#13;
SATUtOAY NIGHT&#13;
BILL KIAVE TWO&#13;
We're&#13;
as Clese&#13;
as Your&#13;
Nearest&#13;
Mail Bex!&#13;
BANQUETS lAftGE or SMAU.&#13;
For Reservttipm C*l&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
Deposits co saving* or checking accounts can be&#13;
made conveniently by mail. We furnish&#13;
envelopes^ and mail you a receipt promptly&#13;
time a deposit is received (together with a&#13;
bank-by-mail envelope). You can get your bank-by*&#13;
mzil envelopes without charge by dropping in at&#13;
the bank, or just phone or write and we'll mail&#13;
them to you.&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK&#13;
HOWELL-PIKCKMEY&#13;
"Serving Since 1865"&#13;
Letters To Editor Discuss&#13;
Various Education Problems&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
In reference to question number&#13;
15 submitted to the Parents* Club&#13;
for the November 30th meeting at&#13;
the Elementary School which was&#13;
not answered by the panel: We feel&#13;
that this is the real issue before the&#13;
people. The public is entitled to a&#13;
definite answer. The alternate proposal&#13;
is — that building is necessary&#13;
at the elementary level immediately.&#13;
This will alleviate&#13;
crowded conditions which e* ' at&#13;
the present time. It will b cessary&#13;
to acquire additional &gt;perty&#13;
adjacent to the present P . kney&#13;
Elementary School. We also feet&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
that a multi-purpose room at Hamburg&#13;
School is long overdue. We&#13;
feel that a citizen committee is&#13;
necessary to work with the people&#13;
to get an opinion canvas of pertinent&#13;
questions concerning the demolition&#13;
of the old section of the&#13;
present high school and erection of&#13;
any needed classrooms as determined&#13;
with the help of the administration.&#13;
We also feel that the&#13;
teachers should be consulted before&#13;
a proposal for a bond issue is considered.&#13;
We definitely feel that&#13;
this program will meet the needs&#13;
of the district and will not put our&#13;
district into financial chaos.&#13;
Thomas Line, Trustee&#13;
Lyle Kinsey, Treasurer&#13;
Board of Education&#13;
(Editor's Note: Question fifteen&#13;
referred to above was one of the&#13;
sixteen questions submitted earlier&#13;
by interested citizens to the Parents&#13;
Club who in turn prepared a&#13;
list of the questions for the five&#13;
school board members they had invited&#13;
to answer same. The question&#13;
reads:&#13;
15. "This taxpayer says no to&#13;
$1,175,000. What are the alternatives?&#13;
For this area, is a separate&#13;
building necessary for Junior High&#13;
School? Why not trade school&#13;
sites, (elementary for high school&#13;
for learning first of all, and not&#13;
concern ourselves with more prosperous&#13;
nearby school districts.&#13;
School rooms first and athletic&#13;
fields, for all."&#13;
Model 84-85&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
At the November meeting of the&#13;
Pinckney Parent's Club I was appointed&#13;
chairman of a committee&#13;
to investigate the possibility of advance&#13;
weekly publication of school&#13;
lunch menus in the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
We have no quarrel with the&#13;
menus as they are because we&#13;
don't know what they are. We have&#13;
heard so much about the balanced&#13;
diet and we are anxious to know&#13;
that our children get a balanced&#13;
diet. Most of us could not wear&#13;
the title of "Dietitian" but most&#13;
mothers are quite expert in the&#13;
field by the time they have children&#13;
of school age.&#13;
Many has been the time that&#13;
children have come home to dinner&#13;
only to find that mother is&#13;
serving a rerun of the day's school&#13;
lunch.&#13;
We have heard the argument&#13;
that the quantities of food could&#13;
not be planned properly because&#13;
of the children's likes and dislikes.&#13;
That is admitting failure to say that&#13;
one must prepare as much of an&#13;
unpopular dish as of a popular one.&#13;
Also it is possible to add a tasty&#13;
side dish with the unpopular main&#13;
dishes to gain, popularity, -&#13;
It is understood that advance&#13;
menus are only an indication of&#13;
ones future plans and that they&#13;
must remain somewhat flexible; depending&#13;
on the availability of certain&#13;
food items.&#13;
We feel that this is a just and&#13;
reasonable request, that it would&#13;
work no hardship on anyone, and&#13;
that it is something that we as parents&#13;
and taxpayers are entitled to.&#13;
I further have requested ' that&#13;
this be taken up at the next regular&#13;
meeting of the School Board&#13;
and that I be allowed to attend so&#13;
that I can report back to the Parent's&#13;
Club.&#13;
Respectfully yours,&#13;
Virginia Slagle&#13;
To the Editor:&#13;
Please be kind enough to allow&#13;
the writer space in your paper to&#13;
deny a false and malicious rumor&#13;
being spread regarding the writer's&#13;
interest in the architectural contract&#13;
for the proposed school&#13;
building program.&#13;
Section 547. Chapter 31 of the&#13;
General School Laws of the State&#13;
of Michigan specifically prohibits&#13;
any school board member from&#13;
performing any paid service for the&#13;
school district while holding office.&#13;
The Registration Act of the General&#13;
Laws of the State of Michigan&#13;
concerning architects and engineers&#13;
specifically prohibits the&#13;
writer from any participation in&#13;
this building program as an archi-&#13;
HOOVER&#13;
CONSTELLATION&#13;
This is the cleaner that walks&#13;
an air. Na pulling, no tugging,&#13;
cleaner follows after you on&#13;
its own air stream.&#13;
at a NEW&#13;
if New low silhouette nozzle&#13;
removes dirt and lint faster,&#13;
easier because if* a Hoover.&#13;
l I T N i l IAPTIST CHURCH&#13;
4040 Swwthwit R M 4&#13;
HOWILL, MICHIGAN&#13;
ftttort M. Taylor, Pislcr&#13;
Service!:&#13;
Sunday School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Daniel's Band, Young People's&#13;
Group • Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship • Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bible Study, Prayer Meeting&#13;
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNITY CONORIOATIONAl&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
«ev. Wm. Haimwerth&#13;
Morning Worship 10:45 e.m.&#13;
Smday School 9:30 e.m.&#13;
Choir rehearsal Wednesday evening 7:30&#13;
THI PIOPU'S CHUICH&#13;
Undenemifiational&#13;
Rev. Themes Murphy, Paster&#13;
M-3e West between Unedilla end Mein&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Choir 6 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 7 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday senior choir practice 8 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. mid-week prayer service 8:00 p.m.)&#13;
"OAUIEAN BAPTIST CHURCH&#13;
9700 McOrefor Read&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday night prayer service 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
ST. M^RYT^ATHOMC CHURCH&#13;
Pinckney, Michie.an&#13;
R«v. Father Oeeree Horke*. Paste*&#13;
Sunday Masses: 6:30, 8:00, 10:00, 11:30&#13;
Weekday Mass 8:00 a.m.&#13;
Novena devotions in honor of Our&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 5:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
~MIAWATHA BEACH CHURCH&#13;
Undawemiiiatiewal&#13;
Buck Lake, MkhifleA&#13;
Rev. Charles Michael, Patter&#13;
Bible School 10:00 a.m&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Young People 6:445 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Boys Brigade (12 • 18yrs.), Mon. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise &amp; Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST.&#13;
other architect.&#13;
The writer, for reasons of professional&#13;
ethics as a member of the&#13;
American Institute of Architects,&#13;
will not accept any part of the architectural&#13;
assignment involved&#13;
even should he cease to be a member&#13;
of the Board of Education.&#13;
All work of a professional nature&#13;
that the writer has performed&#13;
or will perform for the Board of&#13;
I Education sucii as site evaluation,&#13;
population trend studies, building&#13;
and bond issue cost estimates, etc.,&#13;
has been done and will continue to&#13;
be done on a gratus basis, subject&#13;
of course to acceptance of such&#13;
services by a majority of the&#13;
Board members.&#13;
Lee Goucher,&#13;
Trustee.&#13;
(iMejwi Jyoej))&#13;
M44, H M W I , Michigan&#13;
Ivffcer KriofaJI, Patter&#13;
•547 N. Main Street, Whmmore lake&#13;
Divine Services:&#13;
Matins 8:45 e.m&#13;
Sunday School and Bible Class 9:445 p.m.&#13;
Liturgy, with sermon 11:00 e.m.&#13;
Communion: All major festivals and the&#13;
lest Sunday of every month.&#13;
For information phone&#13;
ACedemy 9-3532 or Hickory 9-7061&#13;
if Exclusive double-stretch hose&#13;
reoches everywhere.&#13;
NOW ONLY&#13;
if King size throw-owoy&#13;
bog holds more dirt.&#13;
if Full h o r s e p o w e r&#13;
motor. 4995&#13;
WHh trade LAVEY HARDWARE&#13;
114 W. MAIN PH. UP t-3221 PINCKNEY&#13;
a«e&#13;
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 11:00 e.m.&#13;
? Meeting, every Thursday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
8-9726&#13;
Graduate of&#13;
Jet School&#13;
John W. Marhofer, airman,&#13;
USN, son of Mr. and Mrs. William&#13;
F. Marhofer of 7860 Hinchey&#13;
rd., Pinckney, Mich., was graduated,&#13;
November 16, from the turbojet&#13;
course of the Aviation Machinist's&#13;
Mate School at the Naval&#13;
Air Technical Training Center&#13;
Memphis, Tenn.&#13;
The seven-week course offered&#13;
instruction in jet power plant fundamentals,&#13;
operation and designations;&#13;
familiarization with lubrication&#13;
systems, ignition systems, fuel&#13;
systems, air systems and compressor&#13;
design, and inspection procedures,&#13;
power plant replacement&#13;
and jet aircraft line operations.&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
MORTOAUl SAIE&#13;
Default having been made in the&#13;
conditions of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Russell&#13;
B. Buckner and Dorothy V. Buckner,&#13;
his wife, as mortgagors, to Thurber&#13;
Cornell, as mortgagee, and recorded in&#13;
the office of the Register of Deeds for&#13;
Livingston County, Michigan, April 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber 155 at page 626; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
December 16, 1954, assigned by J. Hen-&#13;
/y Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administrators&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cornell,&#13;
deceased, to Esther D. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in Liber 298 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January ) / , 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Athey, by assignment&#13;
recorded on the same date in&#13;
Liber 2 ^ 3 0 V b ^&#13;
power of sale and the premises therein&#13;
described as land in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wit:&#13;
The north half of the southeast quarter&#13;
of Section twenty-six (26), in Township&#13;
4 North, Range 4 last, Michigan,&#13;
containing eighty acres of land, more&#13;
r less, excepting the right of way of&#13;
he Ann Arbor Railroad and also excepting&#13;
easement to Consumers Power&#13;
Company recorded in Liber 187 of&#13;
Deeds at page 206, Livingston County&#13;
Records.&#13;
Will be sold at public auction to the&#13;
highest bidder for cash by the Sheriff&#13;
of Livingston County, Michigan, at the&#13;
west front door of the Court House in&#13;
the City of Howell, in. said County end&#13;
State, on Friday the fifth day of January&#13;
1962, at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
of said day. There is due and payable&#13;
at the date of this notice upon the debt&#13;
secured by said mortgage, the sum of&#13;
Four Thousand two hundred eighty-six&#13;
Dollars and Fifty-three. Cents ($4286.53).&#13;
Ruth Cornell Athey,&#13;
Assignee of mortgagee.&#13;
Dated: October I I , 1961&#13;
Van Winkle, V*n Winkle &amp; Heikkinen,&#13;
Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee.&#13;
Business Address:&#13;
Howell, Michigan.&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agency&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agen&gt;&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
P/ncfcney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3733&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, M.D.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Mon., Tues., Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
BUILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
Home*, Cottages, Garages&#13;
1297 Darwin Road, Pinckney&#13;
thorn UP 44234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENEftAL INSURANCE&#13;
UP t-3221&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 83172&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's largest&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickf}off. Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
Phone 358 Residence 613&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Farms, Homes* Lake Property&#13;
Business Opportunities&#13;
List Your Property with Gerald Reason&#13;
ijfQeter 102 W MOMI Street&#13;
Phone UPtown 8-3564&#13;
HOWELL K. of C. SELECTS&#13;
ST. MARY'S AS SITE OF&#13;
CORPORATE COMMUNION&#13;
Knights of Columbus, H o w e 11&#13;
Council jNo. 2659 have selected St.&#13;
Mary's Church of Pinckney as the&#13;
site for their Corporate Communion&#13;
on Dec. 10, 1961, at the 8:00&#13;
a.m. Mass. Breakfast will be served&#13;
at the Parish Hall following t h e&#13;
Mass.&#13;
Honor guest speaker will be Alfred&#13;
Lyons, State Deputy of t h e&#13;
Michigan State Council of Knights&#13;
of Columbus.&#13;
This Council No. 265^ K. of C.&#13;
serves the following parishes of the&#13;
County: St. Joseph, Howell; St.&#13;
Mary's, Pinckney; St. Patrick's and&#13;
St. John's, Brighton; and St. Agnes,&#13;
Fowlerville. The Council extends&#13;
an invitation of attendance to all&#13;
Catholic men. St. Mary's Holy&#13;
Name Society is participating in&#13;
this observance as part of t h e i r&#13;
Catholic Activity Program. A large&#13;
crowd is anticipated.&#13;
Michigan has produced at least&#13;
one-half of the nation's red t a r t&#13;
cherry crop during each of the past&#13;
10 years.&#13;
The average factory worker can&#13;
buy one month's food supply for&#13;
the average family with the wages&#13;
from 43 hours of work.&#13;
Farming*-employs. over, seven&#13;
States.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
All five of the defendants in the&#13;
Silas Coleman murder case were&#13;
DONT PLAY WITH&#13;
FIRE — EXTINGUISHERS&#13;
Many families are being p r e s -&#13;
sured to buy automatic fire extinguishers&#13;
misrepresented as approved&#13;
by the State Fire Marshal and&#13;
by "name' insurance and chemical&#13;
companies. Some recent buyers of&#13;
extinguishers have found them to&#13;
be not approved as represented,&#13;
and also to be loaded with chemicals&#13;
found dangerously toxic when&#13;
tested by the State Health Department.&#13;
The law requires certain standards&#13;
of safe content for some fire&#13;
extinguishers, but this law does not&#13;
cover single family dwellings.&#13;
Thus, the homeowner is on his&#13;
own.&#13;
Don't play with fire or w i t h&#13;
hazardous fire extinguishers. Check&#13;
sales claims before you buy. If in&#13;
doubt, ask the State Health Department&#13;
to analyze the extinguisher&#13;
for safety of content.&#13;
Uniformed Guides Greet Con-Con Visitors&#13;
YOUNG PEOPLE who have the responsibility for guiding Constitutional Convenat&#13;
Lansing's Civic Center are attired in attractive new uniforms consisting of dark&#13;
THE&#13;
blue jackets and ^"onrrasting gray Ylacks or" "skirts." A white shield on the left jacket pocket&#13;
carries the words Constitutional Convention and the guide's name. Prom the left are Mrs,&#13;
Harriet Schiff of Okemos, Sergeant at Arms Jack DesRocher of Lansing, Donajld J. Faber of&#13;
Byron Center and Jennie Veen of Grand Rapids. All convention sessions and committee&#13;
meetings are open to the public,&#13;
in a Detroircotffr^his"weckr&#13;
jury was out six hours. The negro,&#13;
Coleman, was shot by the five near&#13;
Nash's bridge on Cedar Lake road&#13;
on May 25, 1935.&#13;
The marriage of Miss Marjorie&#13;
Hendee and Max F. Parkinson&#13;
took place on Thanksgiving Day,&#13;
1935, at the home of the bride's&#13;
parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Hendee.&#13;
The Rev. C. H. Zuse officiated.&#13;
The couple was attended by&#13;
Miss Evelyn Hendee, niece of the&#13;
bride and Larry Young, cousin of&#13;
the bridegroom. Master LaVerne&#13;
Clark was the ring-bearer. The&#13;
newly weds are 1934 graduates of&#13;
P.H.S. and of Cleary College.&#13;
Guy Marshall, 44, of Brooklyn&#13;
was fatally burned Monday when&#13;
an oil can exploded as he was attempting&#13;
to start a fire. He was the&#13;
son of the Will Marshalls of Gregory&#13;
and a brother of Mrs. George&#13;
Meabon Jr., of Pinckney.&#13;
At the annual election and meeting&#13;
of Livingston Lodge No. 76,&#13;
Percy Ellis was elected W o r t h y&#13;
Master; Ford Lamb, Senior Warden.&#13;
Lucius Doyle recently purchased&#13;
the lots of the Wm. Moran estate&#13;
near St. Mary's cemetery and has&#13;
sold them to John Hammer w h o&#13;
plans to build a cottage on the&#13;
pond.&#13;
Another Hamburg death reported&#13;
this week was Mrs. Henry Leece,&#13;
mother of Mrs. George Van Horn.&#13;
The new addition to the h i g h&#13;
school will be in use starting on&#13;
Monday of next week. The installation&#13;
of a new automatic stoker&#13;
delayed the opening somewhat. The&#13;
iiew-_gym,will be with 400&#13;
Miss Arietta Palen, a P.H.S.&#13;
graduate, and Jack Delmar were&#13;
married in Detroit last week.&#13;
Harry Wallace, 28, was badly&#13;
hurt in an auto accident while returning&#13;
home from work in Pontiac.&#13;
It is believed he fell asleep&#13;
and his car left the road.&#13;
The sale of cattle, milk, a n d&#13;
poultry products accounts for about&#13;
&gt;&gt;0 per cent of Michigan farmers'&#13;
gross income.&#13;
Specializing in Fine&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wf tUlin COMPUTf&#13;
HOMES ft OAtAOiS&#13;
Carpenter Work of All Kinds&#13;
Claude Swar+ho&#13;
10007 Dexfer-Pinckfiey&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
Visit our Cosmetic Counter&#13;
for COLOGNES, Dusting&#13;
Powder. Toilet Water.&#13;
Desert Flower&#13;
Christmas&#13;
COMPARE BEFORE YOU BUY...&#13;
AND NOW'S THE TIME I ! !&#13;
FLAMELESS&#13;
ELECTRIC DRYER DAYS&#13;
Leek for this aeal displayed by your electric appliaaee dealer.&#13;
COSTS LESS TO BUY-Model for model, electric clothes dryers cost&#13;
less than other types because they're simpler in design, have fewer operating&#13;
parts.&#13;
YOU PAY NO MORE TO INSTALL Buy « , « * the p ^ you&#13;
pay for a 220-vok electric dryer includes normal wiring installation on&#13;
Detroit Edison lines in dwellings up to and including four-family. "Normal&#13;
wiring installation'* means one 220-volt dryer circuit.&#13;
FREE SERVICE&#13;
Over and above the manufacturer's warranty, you are protected&#13;
by Edison's well-known service pobcy. We will&#13;
replace or repair electikal operating parts without charge,&#13;
utdiiui&amp;s motor* tnenROstets* oeatins uost* omer« ooor svfitCBL&#13;
cord sod Dflfjt ooptrol. jneres never any charge for labor.&#13;
DETROIT EDISON&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
, MIRROR&#13;
Installment buying and "charge&#13;
it" plans have grown in popularity&#13;
with increasing speed in recent&#13;
years.&#13;
Like many mushrooming facets&#13;
of America's economy, the b u y -&#13;
now, pay-later plans have led to&#13;
many problems for the consumer,&#13;
probably the greatest of which is&#13;
staying within a budgeted income.&#13;
With the growth in the use of&#13;
credit purchasing, a large number&#13;
of Americans have found themselves&#13;
over their heads in debt.&#13;
Others, classed as opportunists or&#13;
enterprising businessmen depending&#13;
on how you look at it, found this&#13;
a chance to help themselves while&#13;
managing other people's affairs.&#13;
&gt;j: &gt;}: i;t&#13;
"Debt management" came into&#13;
the vocabulary only a few years&#13;
ago. It means the planning a n d&#13;
management of the financial affairs&#13;
of a debtor for a fee.&#13;
A wage earner who has a lot of&#13;
creditors hounding him for payment&#13;
and threatening repossession,&#13;
garnishment or worse, may hire a&#13;
debt management firm to work out&#13;
a compromise with the creditors,&#13;
for a percentage fee.&#13;
• * *&#13;
Experience in Michigan indicated&#13;
some of the debt management&#13;
firms which arose nearly overnight&#13;
were abusing the purpose of their&#13;
existence.&#13;
Corporation and Securities Commissioner&#13;
Raymond F. Clevenger&#13;
said reports indicated some "unscrupulous&#13;
operators" entered t h e&#13;
field.&#13;
"It is said that in some cases&#13;
money turned in (to the manager)&#13;
is not passed on to creditors; that&#13;
there are exorbitant forfeiture penalties&#13;
when management plans are&#13;
dropped and dishonest advertising&#13;
and other abuses." said Clevenger.&#13;
•v- 'U* «••&#13;
••• *»» v&#13;
Before the 1961 session of the&#13;
legislature, the wage earner had&#13;
only his own resources to rely on&#13;
to correct any abuses. Most individuals&#13;
who found themselves the victims&#13;
of unreliable debt management&#13;
programs had enough problems&#13;
without adding this, lawmakers&#13;
thought.&#13;
The more ethical segments of&#13;
the debt management industry were&#13;
also anxious that a policing job be&#13;
done to get rid of the undesirable&#13;
practices.&#13;
This year Michigan became one&#13;
of the few states which regulate the&#13;
business of debt management by&#13;
license.&#13;
* * *&#13;
"The new law provides that a&#13;
When Santa Sits Down To Christmas Dinner,&#13;
Be Sure His Goose Is Cooked!&#13;
If the cook carries her roast meat thermometer into tho (lining&#13;
room while serving Christmas dinner, it will be no breach&#13;
of etiqtiette. Even Santa's kitchen elf. Sugarplum, could hardly&#13;
resist sharing the credit for a perfectly roasted Christinas bird,&#13;
says Pat Desmond, Taylor Instrument Companies' cooking expert.&#13;
Stuffings that have "little or no fat are usually preferred with&#13;
goose. A succulent Apple Apricot Stuffing will extend the number&#13;
of servings your goose will yield.&#13;
APPLE APRICOT STIFFING&#13;
cup butter or bacon tat&#13;
quarts diwd tart apples&#13;
cup brown sugar&#13;
tsp. cinnamon&#13;
Heat butter or bacon fat&#13;
1 tb*p. grated lemon rind&#13;
4 cups diced bread cubes&#13;
2 cups apricots (No. •}* 2 can),&#13;
drained and chopped&#13;
in a large skillet, add diced apples.&#13;
brown sugar, cinnamon and lemon rind. Stir over low heat until&#13;
apples aro tender, not mushy. Add bread cubes and apricots,&#13;
tossing together lightly. Make enough for a 10 to 12 pound goose.&#13;
When goose is stuffed roast promptly. Miss Desmond advises.&#13;
Place bird breast up on rack in a shallow, uncovered pan. Insert&#13;
meat thermometer either between the first and second rib until&#13;
tip is in center of the stuffing or in the center of the inside&#13;
thigh muscle. Roast at 325 F. until thermometer registers 180 F.&#13;
in stuffing or 190 F. in the leg. Don't add water or fat. During&#13;
roasting fat should be spooned off as it accumulates.&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SMVICE&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
America's farmers have twice as&#13;
much invested in machinery as the&#13;
steel industry and live times as&#13;
much as the automobile industry.&#13;
The order in which a dairyman&#13;
does his chores may influence mastitis&#13;
in the herd says a Michigan&#13;
State University veterinarian.&#13;
There is no known cure f o r&#13;
brucellosis or "Bang's Disease" in&#13;
livestock, according to MSU veter&#13;
inarians.&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain s«ws %r\d lawn mow^s repaired and sharpen-&#13;
Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
Water pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
•nd used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
debt management licensee must&#13;
show financial responsibility, e x -&#13;
perience, character and general fitness&#13;
to warrant belief that the business&#13;
will be operated fairly a n d&#13;
honestly," Clevenger said.&#13;
Insurance of payment relays is&#13;
provided in the law through a requirement&#13;
that licenses keep a separate&#13;
bank account for the benefit&#13;
of creditors and a 15-day t i m e&#13;
limit is imposed on the remission&#13;
of funds to creditors.&#13;
Cm you answer these questions a t a t t)»e \hter Vfoideriand State?&#13;
1-W0W MANY ACRES OF PUBLIC&#13;
HUNTING LANDS ARE THERE IN&#13;
MICHIGAN? 2- THE UNUSUAL SASSAFRAS TREE&#13;
GETS A SECOND LOOK FROM VISITORS&#13;
TO MICHIGAN'S RICH-COLORED&#13;
AUTUMN WOODS. CAN YOU IDENTIFY&#13;
ITS LEAF ABOVE ?(A-B-C)&#13;
Legislative apportionment, a possible&#13;
Achilles* heel for Michigan's&#13;
Constitutional Convention, may not&#13;
be as tough a problem as it has&#13;
been considered.&#13;
A plan presented to a con-con&#13;
committee during its early sessions&#13;
apparently has gained bi-partisan&#13;
support outside the convention hall.&#13;
The proposal was first voiced&#13;
some years ago by former Democratic&#13;
State Chairman Neil Stabler.&#13;
It was presented to the Con-&#13;
Con committee by present Republican&#13;
Chairman George Van Peursem.&#13;
It called for a skeleton of State&#13;
Senate apportionment with an automatic&#13;
revision clause for each 10-&#13;
year census. This seemed to fit&#13;
what authorities say should be in a&#13;
state's constitution: just framework.&#13;
The plan called for a 35-member&#13;
Senate elected from districts to be&#13;
spelled out in the Constitution.&#13;
Each district would have seven&#13;
members in the Senate. The representational&#13;
units within each district&#13;
would, or could, be changed&#13;
every 10 years as necessary to adjust&#13;
to population changes.&#13;
Although not a final solution,&#13;
because apportionment of the Senate&#13;
seats themselves would be left&#13;
up to the legislature every 10 years,&#13;
the proposal seemed to have a good '&#13;
chance to take some of the sting&#13;
from the apportionment problem.&#13;
3-WHAT MICHIGAN CUV IS CALLED&#13;
THE "FURNITURE CAPITAL* OF THE&#13;
WORLD?&#13;
4 - A FAMOUS FLYER-WHOSE NAME&#13;
IS SYNONYMOUS WITH AVIATIONHAILEO&#13;
FROM MICHIGAN.&#13;
y/HO IS HE?&#13;
r QOIZ0OWN ANSWERS''&#13;
2061 u( WPQ u! "ioq't{$iaqpuii'V &amp;\MQ*} sputy puag -£&#13;
aa4 awes aifl. uo MOJ? S9/\eai aauft u\/ -&lt;; 6SZ 'tSO'9 -I&#13;
MICH/CAN QOZDCM &amp;№ p*fivedby MICHIGAN 7OU/VST COUWL... M&gt;. 34&#13;
AnL -&#13;
relatively mino r employe appoint -&#13;
ment s so party suppor t of proposal s&#13;
will probabl y be a prim e factor in&#13;
their success.&#13;
If Staebler , still a stron g voice&#13;
althoug h no longer chairma n of his&#13;
party, and Van Peurse m can agree&#13;
on a solution it would appea r the&#13;
Con-Co n delegates have a g o o d&#13;
chanc e of finding an answer.&#13;
Ther e can be little doubt t h a t&#13;
agreemen t on apportionmen t would&#13;
make the job oi selling the C o nvention'&#13;
s produc t to the people&#13;
muc h easier.&#13;
Full-size, family-siz e&#13;
Savoy 2-doo r sedan&#13;
NEW STYLING BETS AWARD!&#13;
New Forward Flair Design&#13;
brings a completel y new look&#13;
to the low-pric e field.&#13;
BEST ECONOM Y IN HISTORY!&#13;
You get up to 7% bette r gas&#13;
mileage than last year's&#13;
Mobilgas Economy Run class&#13;
champion .&#13;
• M S M on&#13;
CfctvroM Bflcaya t mi Fort total*&#13;
QUICKEST PLYMOUTH EVER!&#13;
Plymouth' s up to 10%&#13;
quicker than last year. Unbelievably&#13;
smooth ride. Sensational&#13;
handling ease.&#13;
TOP QUALITY OF ALL TIME !&#13;
Quality-engineere d by Chrysler&#13;
Corporatio n as never before&#13;
. New, toughe r Unibody.&#13;
Prieot for tlM iowwt-prie t avaitoM t&#13;
optional M Ptymoirtl i and Fort, rtaaiirt on Ciwvrofct. DostMati m&#13;
AND MOST SURPRISING OF&#13;
ALL, THE FULL-SIZE PLYMOUTH&#13;
IS NOW PRICED FROM $11 8 TO&#13;
$17 2 LESS THAN FULL-SIZE&#13;
CHEVROLET AND FORD! *&#13;
GREATEST SAVINGS EVER! SEE&#13;
YOUR PLYMOUT H DEALER!&#13;
DRIVE IT AND YOU'LL BUY IT.. . PLYMOUTH!&#13;
VAN'S MOTO R SALES&#13;
FOR RENT or for sale: Small&#13;
truck farm with orchard. $60 mo.&#13;
Also 5 rm. house with hath and&#13;
garage. $50. mo. UP 8-3260. 49tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
WILL CARE for children in my&#13;
home at Rush Lake - licensed. Mrs.&#13;
Violet Eason, 3468 Rush Lake Rd.,&#13;
UP 8-3220. 49-51 p&#13;
FOR SALE: House. 5 room and&#13;
hath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
49tfp&#13;
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom r u r a l&#13;
home. Call UP 8-3219 evening*.&#13;
49tfc&#13;
BABY SITTING, by day, hour, or&#13;
week at my home. Wilma Darrow,&#13;
9525 Cedar Lake Rd., Pinckney.&#13;
49-52&#13;
FOR SALE: Black northern seal&#13;
fur coat, size 16, like new, $25.&#13;
808 E. Main Street. 49c&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay c a s h o r&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
C.UI.F OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;.&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter.&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two Jots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-311 1.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Locust fence posts. T&#13;
line: 8' corner. Also fire place&#13;
wood. Emery Hnjmil. 124 Tiplady&#13;
Rd.. Phone UP 8-9924. 49-50p&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
FOR SALE: 1956 Great Lakes&#13;
house trailer. 35 feet long. UP 8-&#13;
6648. 47-48p&#13;
FOR RENT: two sleeping rooms,&#13;
nicely furnished. 6310 Buckshore&#13;
Drive, Hamburg. 48-49c&#13;
WANTED: House work and baby&#13;
sitting. UP 8-3500.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
WANTED — Your deer hide to&#13;
tan and make into gloves and jackets.&#13;
Deer heads mounted true to&#13;
tile. Prices reasonable. Guntzviller&#13;
Taxidermy, Northville, Mich. Takej&#13;
10 mile, 8 miles east of South Lyon.&#13;
Open Sundays. F! 9-2555.&#13;
47-52d&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilj&#13;
oil. Pinckney district mana-l&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPlownJ&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
WANTED: Baby sitting, evenings&#13;
tnd week ends; graduate and junior&#13;
student available. Call UP&#13;
8-3377. 49-51 c&#13;
FOR RENT: three room apt. on&#13;
ground floor; 2 bedrooms and&#13;
hath. Near Pinckney. 3410 W. M-&#13;
36. 49-50p&#13;
FOR RENT: modern, six rooms&#13;
and bath. 3 bedrooms, furnished or&#13;
unfurnished. Call Mrs. Oscar Beck,&#13;
UP 8-3434 or UP 8-3524.&#13;
FOR SALE: Men's size 11 hockey&#13;
skates. Reasonable. UP 8-3469&#13;
49c&#13;
FOR SALE: Feeder pigs, average&#13;
weight, 120 pounds. 7700 Gawley&#13;
Road. Pinckney, Call after 7 p.m.&#13;
UP 8-3298; or all day Sunday or&#13;
Monday. 49-50p&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
Home from our wonderful week&#13;
in Florida we can only say thank&#13;
you, again and again, to everyone&#13;
connected with the Howell Melon&#13;
Festival and the Howell Area&#13;
C ham be r of Co m merce, who made&#13;
Delegate Thomas Sharpe's&#13;
Weekly Con-Con Report&#13;
We are beginning our third&#13;
month of the Michigan/Constitutional&#13;
Convention and 1/would like&#13;
to express to you someyf my personal&#13;
experiences thus far.&#13;
I will always feel in debt to the&#13;
people of my district for affording&#13;
me the great privilege of serving&#13;
them in this capacity as delegate to&#13;
the Constitutional Convention. 1&#13;
have taken advantage of every possible&#13;
activity that would lead to&#13;
the broadening of my education in&#13;
governmental affairs and I sincerely&#13;
have received a wealth of&#13;
knowledge so far, and I realize that&#13;
we have just begun a real educational&#13;
phase of writing a great constitution&#13;
for our state.&#13;
I have been pleased with the letters&#13;
and cards received from the&#13;
many people living in Livingston&#13;
and Shiawassee Counties. This is&#13;
encouraging to know that there is&#13;
an increase in the interest and concern&#13;
of our state government. This&#13;
concern is something we must all&#13;
indulge in to make certain we supply&#13;
our grandchildren with the type&#13;
of government that our forefathers&#13;
supplied us with. With the threat&#13;
of Communism hovering over our&#13;
country like a dark cloud, we&#13;
should&#13;
joyed.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Al&#13;
Fredenburg&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
My heartfelt thanks are expressed&#13;
here for all the prayers offered&#13;
for my recovery, the personal&#13;
visits, cards, letters, flowers and&#13;
other gifts during my stay in the&#13;
hospital and since my return home.&#13;
Your expressions of love and kindness&#13;
will never be forgotten.&#13;
Mrs. James Boyd&#13;
Flowers for&#13;
Me, Please!&#13;
The old - fashioned custom ot&#13;
sending flowers to funeral, increasingly&#13;
supplanted by a terse "Please&#13;
Omit Flowers" in a death notice,&#13;
is something worth preserving&#13;
thinks Rev. W. Carter Merbeirer,&#13;
34, of St. Matthews Lutheran&#13;
Church in Philadelphia.&#13;
In this month's pastoral letter to&#13;
his flock, he pleaded eloquently&#13;
for flowers — at his own funeral,&#13;
in any case.&#13;
"Don't paste my casket with certificates&#13;
for charities, and professional&#13;
chair endowments, and the&#13;
hundred-and-one do-gooder agencies&#13;
goulishiy squeezing through&#13;
the door of the funeral parlor for&#13;
a handout.&#13;
"If you are going to be bighearted,&#13;
do it on your own time&#13;
. . . and don't wait for death to&#13;
open up your heart to the needy&#13;
and the sick.&#13;
"I believe flowers are proper&#13;
and right at the time of death,&#13;
beautifully symbolic of the brief&#13;
human life, grown by God and&#13;
thereby so precious to Him, even&#13;
at its fading.&#13;
"So, no matter what others may&#13;
say, send ME flowers. And don't&#13;
use my last mortal remains as a&#13;
charity income tax deduction."&#13;
NEW NYLONS&#13;
Nylons now are featured in •&#13;
box with the same dimensions as&#13;
a cigaret flip-top box. The pursesized&#13;
stockings can be' tucked&#13;
away for emergency replacement.&#13;
THE 'GREAT SEAL*&#13;
One of the actions of Michigan*&#13;
first Constitutional Convention in&#13;
1S3S was to adopt the "Great Seal&#13;
of the State «f Michigan." Although&#13;
several changes were madel&#13;
gas, Mobiloil, the world's iargest|to the decorations of the seal, ill&#13;
has remained essential!, as orig-l&#13;
totally draw* by Lewis Cats, fov-l^&#13;
emor trf tfct Midrigaa Territory&#13;
taining the greatest free country in&#13;
the world. If we concern ourselves&#13;
more with our governmental affairs&#13;
and not take the attitude of&#13;
let someone else do it", this type&#13;
of apathy is dangerous to our form&#13;
of government and freedom.&#13;
The Committee on Finance and&#13;
Taxation will hold a public hearing&#13;
December 6 at 7:30 P. M. in&#13;
Room B at the Civic Center in&#13;
Lansing. This hearing will be for&#13;
taxpayers, both state and local&#13;
levels, who wish to be heard on&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
PINCKNEY MEN'S&#13;
"A" BOWLING&#13;
Velvet Eez&#13;
Jim's Gulf&#13;
Read Lumber&#13;
Van's Motors&#13;
Lee's Standard&#13;
Kiwanis&#13;
Integral&#13;
Lavey Hardware&#13;
Pinckney Plastics&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Altes Beer&#13;
34'/:&#13;
33&#13;
MM •&#13;
28 Vz&#13;
28&#13;
26l/2&#13;
26&#13;
24&#13;
24&#13;
23&#13;
16&#13;
13&#13;
1 7' /2&#13;
15&#13;
2 1 '/2&#13;
231*&#13;
20&#13;
25'/:&#13;
26&#13;
28&#13;
28&#13;
29&#13;
36&#13;
39&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT MEN'S&#13;
Joe's&#13;
Blatz&#13;
Stroh's&#13;
Boyd's&#13;
Pfeiffers&#13;
Falstaff&#13;
26&#13;
25 Vz&#13;
25&#13;
23 V*&#13;
mm aw&#13;
18&#13;
22&#13;
18&gt;/2&#13;
23&#13;
24 V*&#13;
26&#13;
26&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT LADIES&#13;
Pinckney General&#13;
La Rosa Bowl&#13;
Jerry's Drug&#13;
30&#13;
26&#13;
25&#13;
Davis Crop Dusting 23&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
21&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
22&#13;
23&#13;
25&#13;
27&#13;
30&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED LEAGUE&#13;
Checkmates&#13;
Toppers&#13;
Hee Haws&#13;
Double Dees&#13;
Sod busters&#13;
Sharpies&#13;
Bombers&#13;
Pinckney Polkats&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
Patterson Lake 4&#13;
Bee Bee's&#13;
Bill Posters&#13;
33 V2&#13;
32&#13;
30&#13;
30&#13;
2HV2&#13;
28&#13;
2VA&#13;
24&#13;
251*&#13;
21&#13;
19&#13;
9&#13;
I8'/2&#13;
20&#13;
22&#13;
23 Vz&#13;
24&#13;
24'/2&#13;
24&#13;
26«/2&#13;
31&#13;
33&#13;
39&#13;
PINCKNEY D I S P A T C H "&#13;
Wednesday, December 6, 1961&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell&#13;
spent Sunday with Mrs. Campbell's&#13;
father. Mr. and Mrs. L. C.&#13;
Gorham in Birmingham. The oc&#13;
i l i u m ' s 86th&#13;
birthday.&#13;
anything that should or should not&#13;
go into the constitution with reference&#13;
to taxation.&#13;
The Committee on Legislative&#13;
Organization held an open hearing&#13;
last night whith was well represented&#13;
by people who testified on&#13;
their views as to reapportionment.&#13;
This meeting was well attended by&#13;
the public.&#13;
Yesterday, Honorable Don R.&#13;
Pears, speaker of the House, and&#13;
Honorable Paul C. Younger, member&#13;
of the Senate, testified in this&#13;
same committee in support of the&#13;
state legislature's efforts over the&#13;
years in the fields of Education,&#13;
Mental Health, Welfare Aid and&#13;
other areas of legislative responsibility.&#13;
These men presented substantial&#13;
evidence to refute the&#13;
claims of Detroit and Wayne&#13;
County spokesmen that heavy populated&#13;
Southeastern Michigan is being&#13;
deprived by Michigan legislators&#13;
in its fair share of state funds.&#13;
Detailed charts were made available,&#13;
showing that the state, in the&#13;
last fiscal year, paid 66.07r/£ of&#13;
Detroit's direct relief welfare costs,&#13;
despite the fact that Detroit's&#13;
monthly case load averaged only&#13;
33 V2c/c of the total case load picture.&#13;
This hearing also_ was_ well&#13;
the next ten days. It is likely there&#13;
may be at least one public hearing&#13;
held somewhere in rural Michigan&#13;
for the benefit of those who are not&#13;
able to come to Lansing. However,&#13;
1 would like to remind you again&#13;
that all hearings and all meetings&#13;
are open to the public and that you&#13;
are welcome to attend at any time.&#13;
It is gratifying to see someone&#13;
from the Shiawassee District attend&#13;
the Convention nearly everyday.&#13;
I would like to also impress&#13;
upon you that there has been over&#13;
400 proposals for constitutional&#13;
changes, but a great many of these&#13;
proposals deal entirely with legislative&#13;
matters and 1 believe the&#13;
finished product will contain a very&#13;
small percentage of change from&#13;
our present document.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe&#13;
Library News&#13;
We wish to thank Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Ray Williams for a new bookcase&#13;
and Mr. G'Dell for books.&#13;
Mr. C. F. Hewlett o^Victoria,&#13;
not&#13;
Texas, has donated two books to&#13;
the library which he urges everyone&#13;
to read so they may better understand&#13;
the communist threat to&#13;
America, and our Foreign Aid&#13;
policy: "Communist A m e r i c a ,&#13;
must it be?" by Hurgis and "The&#13;
Great Giveaway" by Castle.&#13;
We are very anxious to s&#13;
delegates as well.&#13;
Today. Delegate James Pollock,&#13;
also testified, concerning the same&#13;
subject of reapportionment. and&#13;
submitted a plan that would be&#13;
within the traditional mold of the&#13;
bicameral system. However, Dr.&#13;
Pollock stated that perhaps a unicameral&#13;
legislature, elected by proportional&#13;
representation would give&#13;
Michigan an ideal system ot representation,&#13;
but at the moment, he&#13;
thought it did not appear to be&#13;
feasible. Dr. Pollock recommended&#13;
that we increase the size of the&#13;
Senate to 39 in order to avoid the&#13;
prospects of a tie vote and to allow&#13;
the legislature greater flexibility&#13;
in drawing new district lines and&#13;
to eliminate existing inadequacies.&#13;
The 5 new seats should be assigned&#13;
for the first 10 scar period, after&#13;
the ratification of the constitution&#13;
as follows: Two additional seats for&#13;
Oakland County, one additional&#13;
seat. each, tor Gencsee. Macomb,&#13;
and Wayne County. This would&#13;
only involve the Convention in providing&#13;
for new district lines tor&#13;
these four counties. For the future,&#13;
provide that the legislature should&#13;
reapportion the boundtmes o\ the&#13;
senatorial district by the end ot&#13;
the calendar year, following the&#13;
year in which a federal decennial&#13;
census is taken. Dr. Pollock further&#13;
stated, so far as the House of&#13;
Representatives was concerned.&#13;
only minor improvements werj&#13;
needed. He also stated that his plan&#13;
was far from what he considered&#13;
the ideal plan. As an observer, I&#13;
would like to state that this is one&#13;
of many plans that have been submitted&#13;
to the committee for consideration.&#13;
At the close of the meeting today,&#13;
the committee voted to hold&#13;
a public hearing in Detroit within&#13;
needs of the uHTercm OJgumptions&#13;
in Pinckney, such as Girl&#13;
Scouts. Boy Scouts, 4-H, etc. We&#13;
wish that every group leader will&#13;
send us in writing before the first&#13;
of the year the name, author and&#13;
publisher of books they feel will&#13;
help their groups.&#13;
We welcome suggestions for&#13;
new books from all.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 6. 1961&#13;
For Sale&#13;
2 bedroom home on Vi\&#13;
acre of land, new well; between&#13;
Howell and Pinckney,|&#13;
$3,000. Small d. p.&#13;
2 bedroom home on \ i&#13;
acre, picture windows, permastone&#13;
front in Pinckney. $10,-&#13;
000. Terms.&#13;
2 bedroom home on approximately&#13;
2 acres; full basement,&#13;
2 car garage, near Dexter.&#13;
$10,900. Terms.&#13;
For Rent: 1, 2 and 4 bedroom&#13;
houses.&#13;
ACREAGE NEEDED;&#13;
Have Buyers waiting.&#13;
Henry Krahn&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
117 E. MAIN&#13;
Pinckney UP 8-3380&#13;
GREENINGS&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
Per Bushel&#13;
Per Bushel&#13;
Michigan Mirror&#13;
MONEY IS BIG PROBLEM&#13;
FACING LAWMAKERS&#13;
Money to operate state govern*&#13;
ment, where and whom it will&#13;
come from, stilt looms as t h e&#13;
largest problem facing Michigan&#13;
lawmakers.&#13;
The problem reached its peak&#13;
during the year-long 1959 session&#13;
of the legislature when state employes&#13;
faced one payless payday&#13;
and were threatened with others.&#13;
A $71.5 million deficit was on&#13;
the books at the end of th fiscal&#13;
year in July and there is no sure&#13;
sign that the financial picture has&#13;
improved since then.&#13;
Legislators this year will be hard&#13;
pressed to find new sources of revenue&#13;
to meet the demands for&#13;
governmental services.&#13;
In the 1961 budget-writing process,&#13;
the Democratic administration&#13;
and the Republican legislature&#13;
were far apart on estimates&#13;
of how much was needed and the&#13;
amount which would be available&#13;
for operations.&#13;
It is still a matter of conjecture&#13;
as to which was right, but the&#13;
two sides now appear to be closer&#13;
together on at least one point:&#13;
that more money is needed than&#13;
brought forth general agreement&#13;
that Michigan's citizens want services&#13;
not now available under the&#13;
present revenue pattern.&#13;
If new money is to be forthcoming,&#13;
the only unanswered&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
S^-JUDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 330&#13;
question remaining is to find the&#13;
most equitable means to tax Michigan&#13;
citizens to provide it.&#13;
Some Republicans feel minimal&#13;
opposition; to the nuisance t a x e s&#13;
which were allowed to expire last&#13;
July indicated these might be desirable&#13;
areas to impose new, permanent&#13;
levies.&#13;
The beer and liquor, telephone&#13;
and telegraph, and cigarette and&#13;
tobacco interests, of course, contend&#13;
their products and services are&#13;
already taxed beyond reasonable&#13;
limits. And there is some justification&#13;
for their stand.&#13;
Pessimists predicted last year&#13;
that if the four per cent sales tax&#13;
were approved, it would soon be&#13;
boosted again and again and again.&#13;
There were no indications from&#13;
any quarters that this was being&#13;
considered.&#13;
The business community n o w&#13;
complains loudly and with agreement&#13;
in both parties that its taxes&#13;
are already too high.&#13;
Many Republican lawmakers&#13;
have been heard in recent weeks&#13;
to say an income tax might be&#13;
the lesser of the several undesirproposed&#13;
this method to the 1961&#13;
legislature as part of his fiscal reform&#13;
program, said he welcomed&#13;
this stand by some members of the&#13;
opposition party.&#13;
"We haven't seen their votes on&#13;
the board yet, however," he said.&#13;
"Speeches sometimes are n o t&#13;
bucked up when the voting buttons&#13;
are pushed."&#13;
Swainson is sticking to his position&#13;
that he will not approve an&#13;
income tax alone, however.&#13;
This would not be the answer,"&#13;
he said. The total picture of our&#13;
tax structure must be taken into&#13;
account."&#13;
Recognition by both parties&#13;
could mean they are ready to sit&#13;
down and seriously discuss how&#13;
to put Michigan back on the black&#13;
side of the ledger.&#13;
MICHIGAN'S FREEWAY SYSTEM&#13;
OPEN • • • U N D E R CONSTRUCTION&#13;
Mane&#13;
O&#13;
Grayling O&#13;
Clare&#13;
Mustegon&#13;
GRAND FLINT&#13;
APIDS&#13;
3i5|LAMSI&#13;
lanazoo&#13;
DETROIT&#13;
To Chicago Toledo&#13;
Attractive Chairman&#13;
MICHIGAN MOTORISTS are now driving on more than&#13;
800 miles of freeways that link a dozen of the state's major&#13;
cities and penetrate its northern resort areas. A record 238&#13;
miles of freeway were opened during 1961. Map shows divided&#13;
four-lane routes—most of them built to freeway&#13;
standards—now open or under construction.&#13;
Christmas Seal time is here&#13;
again and Mrs. Alice Swainson,&#13;
wife of Governor John B.&#13;
Swainson, i s honorary state&#13;
chairman of this year's campaign.&#13;
She urges you to mail&#13;
your Christmas Seal contribution&#13;
now if you have not already&#13;
done so. Funds are used&#13;
to finance the fight against&#13;
tuberculosis a n d respiratory&#13;
diseases. __&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January J_0,_l?62&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger I. Can Agency! FUNERAL HOME&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE D o H C . S W d l l l l O U t&#13;
Agon*&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Strt#t&#13;
Pinckn.y, Mich. Phont UP 3-3933&#13;
Modtrn Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phono UP 83)72&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portog* Lofc« Road Ttl. (fexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main StrMt, Pincfcswy Ttl.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lok*&#13;
Cholioa Td. GR 5-3241&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 Wtst M-36 Pinckncy&#13;
Phono UP 4-555*&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, MJ).&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
1140 A * , to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
Ont of Michigan's lows*&#13;
OiSp/o/I Ol MoflUffMflff&#13;
NORTHVIUE. MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Worb&#13;
PHONE PI 94770&#13;
,&#13;
7 I 0 0 to 840 P.M.&#13;
L J. Swftrtbont&#13;
MMMNG 4 CONTRACTING&#13;
UP 84234&#13;
Lee Uwtf&#13;
(XNfefcAl NSUMMCE&#13;
UPU22I&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff, Sr,&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 Won Grand tfctr&#13;
Any solution, however, must be&#13;
designed to cover more than a&#13;
single fiscal year. It must be a program&#13;
which will keep Michigan's&#13;
income growing along with i t s&#13;
population and demand for services.&#13;
State personnel director Franklin&#13;
D. DeWald would like to dispel&#13;
the common belief that civil&#13;
service provisions prevent the discharge&#13;
of incapable employes.&#13;
In a recent 12-month period,&#13;
220 state civil service workers&#13;
were fired, DeWald said.&#13;
"This record showed state agencies&#13;
can and do fire undesirable employes,&#13;
1' he said. "And this number&#13;
of dismissals is only a small&#13;
percentage of the number allowed&#13;
to resign when faced with removal&#13;
proceedings."&#13;
There are many who believe,&#13;
however, that the civil service set&#13;
up leaves administrators without&#13;
proper authority to operate as efficiently&#13;
as otherwise and that&#13;
when a supervisor lodges a complaint&#13;
about a subordinate, it is he&#13;
rather than the employe who goes&#13;
"on trial."&#13;
The state's civil service work&#13;
force of about 32,000 undergoes a&#13;
turnover of about 10 per cent&#13;
annually, a civil service commission&#13;
research report shows.&#13;
The study showed that a total&#13;
of 6,735 state employes have been&#13;
fired since Michigan's civil service&#13;
system was established by&#13;
constitutional amendment in 1941.&#13;
"State employes are subject to&#13;
annual service ratings by their&#13;
supervisors or an interim service&#13;
rating may be given at any time/*&#13;
said DeWald. "Commission rules&#13;
provide an employe who receives&#13;
a conditional rating for one period&#13;
and fails to achieve a satisfactory&#13;
rating for a subsequent period, or&#13;
an employe who receives an unsatisfactory&#13;
rating may be dismissed."&#13;
The National Safety Council says:&#13;
"Have good tire*—mow tirei if&#13;
you prefer—and use reinforced tire&#13;
chains for very slippery and severe&#13;
conditions. With snow tires, or even&#13;
with the much greater help of reinforced&#13;
tire chains, slower-than-normal&#13;
speeds are a 'must' on snow&#13;
and ice.1* Avoid skid-wrecks and&#13;
don't block vital traffic this winter.&#13;
Member&#13;
DEXTER. MICHIGAN&#13;
v*=^S^,^; 1&#13;
358 413&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
UBI TISi Gerald&#13;
be a&#13;
It's kind of silly not tcrget some firsthand&#13;
102 W Ms*&#13;
Uhmm 44S64&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
I would like to take this opportunity&#13;
to thank Lomtte and Edith&#13;
Van Slambrook and Barbara Clark&#13;
for the lovely party they gave me]&#13;
on my eightieth birthday and also&#13;
to thank afl of you who ?ent cards&#13;
and for all the nice gifts I received.&#13;
May the Lord blest you all.&#13;
Minnie Van Slambrook&#13;
experience about our own state's famous winter sports&#13;
centers-especially when we've got some of the best&#13;
skiing to be found anywhere in the country.&#13;
Try it! Ski, skate, toboggan, hunt, fish,&#13;
or just loaf in Michigan this winter.&#13;
For &amp;poetoi information, wrtto&#13;
MHchhQtn Tovriot Council, Room $. H*9O* Btdg.&#13;
UntingU,*Hc*.&#13;
WINTER WONDERLAND&#13;
ALTERATIONS, sewing, mending,&#13;
costume jewelry repair, leather&#13;
work. Connie's, 642 Hamburg&#13;
St., 10:30 a. m. to 6:00 p.m. daily&#13;
except Friday. UP 8-3569.&#13;
LOST: CLAPPER, with bell rope&#13;
attached, from school bell-cart Friday&#13;
about 3:30 o'clock at corner&#13;
of Patterson Lake Rd. and Toma&#13;
Rd. Finder please call High&#13;
School, UP 8-3161. Thanks.&#13;
51-52c&#13;
PART TIME employment f o r&#13;
men; Parkc, Davis and Co., Ann&#13;
Arbor; duty involves feeding of&#13;
laboratory animals; 20-25 h o u r s&#13;
weekly. Experience with farm animals&#13;
helpful. Apply in person, 9&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m., Mon. - Friday;&#13;
2800 Plymouth Rd., Ann Arbor.&#13;
1—2c&#13;
FOR RENT: Five room house&#13;
with bath and garage. Call UP&#13;
8-3260. 51tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
""bath", and&#13;
Terras; -l.tt&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. . 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney district manager,&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone Uptown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
FOR SALE: Stove (Philgas), refrigerator&#13;
(Servel Philgas); tractor,&#13;
Cub International at 5325 Patterson&#13;
Lk. Rd., Patterson L a k e ,&#13;
Pinckney 2—3p&#13;
FOR SALE: '50 Plymouth, $50;&#13;
*53 Ford, $90; '56 Ford, $275;&#13;
'57 Ford, $450; '58 Ford $550.&#13;
New snow tires, 7:50 x 14,&#13;
$19.00; 6:50 x 16, $21.00; tax included.&#13;
Used snow and regular&#13;
-Used-Xars&#13;
and Parts, 6270 Whitmore Lake&#13;
49tfp&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting 9cxxls»&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Alters Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Roasting chickens,&#13;
six pounds and up, alive or dressed.&#13;
UP 8-3353, Hulls. 52-lc&#13;
PHS Menu&#13;
For Week of&#13;
January 15&#13;
Week of Jan. 15&#13;
Supplied bv School Lunch Officfarf&#13;
MONDAY, JAN. 15&#13;
Sloppy-Jo, vegetable, cherry&#13;
cake with sauce, milk&#13;
TUESDAY, JAN. 16&#13;
Suey, sandwiches, Jello,&#13;
milk.&#13;
WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17&#13;
Baked Beans, meat sandwiches,&#13;
johnny cake with butter, fruit,&#13;
milk.&#13;
THURSDAY, JAN. IS&#13;
Hot turkey sandwiches, vegetable,&#13;
fruit, milk.&#13;
FWDAY, JAN. 19&#13;
Tuna fish and noodles, vegetables,&#13;
sandwiches, fruit, milk.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 10, 1962&#13;
FOR SALE: Fish house. Call UP&#13;
8-9991. 3c&#13;
FOR RENT: In village, 2 bedroom&#13;
furnished home. Herndon,&#13;
UP 8-5569. 3c&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 10, 1962&#13;
TRAILER SAILORS&#13;
NAME OFFICERS&#13;
The Livingston Trailer Sailors&#13;
Boat Club met at the Colonnade&#13;
for a pot luck supper Thursday&#13;
evening, January 4, with hosts,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Schultz, who&#13;
furnished fried chicken, biscuits&#13;
and coffee. Harry Sloan presided&#13;
at the business meeting where new&#13;
officers were elected. They are as&#13;
follows:&#13;
Harry Sloan, Commodore; Bud&#13;
Schmidt, Vice Commodore; Betty&#13;
Schmidt, Secretary; Bill Schultz,&#13;
Treasurer; Leon Robb, Publicity&#13;
Director; Charles Stark, Entertainment.&#13;
Regular meetings are scheduled&#13;
for* the last Thursday of each&#13;
month starting March 29, 1962.&#13;
Anyone wishing to join the club&#13;
may call Harry Sloan, Brighton,&#13;
AC 7-5961.&#13;
YOUNG CAGERS&#13;
UNDAUNTED BY WINTER&#13;
Ice and sleet that usually curtails&#13;
the activities planned by&#13;
adults did not stop the Little&#13;
League cagers from turning out&#13;
for their game Saturday morning&#13;
at the high school gym. The Playland&#13;
team out-distanced Pinckney&#13;
Pilgrims, 28-17, with Robert Umstead&#13;
caging 15 points for the victors—&#13;
Robert- Seefeld-was~bighwith&#13;
eight points for the opponents.&#13;
31-9. Maurice Scherrens was high&#13;
scorer in this game with 15 points.&#13;
Jeff Davis made four of the Merchants&#13;
nine.&#13;
Bruce Henry and Bill Light&#13;
were the officials. Two more&#13;
games are scheduled for next Saturday&#13;
morning starting at 9:30&#13;
at the gym. Parents and public&#13;
are invited to see the contests.&#13;
Chronology&#13;
(Cflnfhmcd from Page 1)&#13;
third annual auction sale. Two&#13;
new trustees are elected for four&#13;
year terms to school board; George&#13;
Roth and Tom Line win over&#13;
Basydlo and Baughn. Gerald Reason,&#13;
local realtor, completes&#13;
months of work securing oil leases&#13;
for Parila Oil Company. Oil rig&#13;
being erected on drilling site on&#13;
Dwight Wagner farm. All P.H.S.&#13;
lettermen honored at dinner by&#13;
Library News&#13;
We have two new books this&#13;
week. Peter Freuchen's "Book of&#13;
the Seven Seas" will appeal to&#13;
both adults and young people.&#13;
This book tells all about the seas&#13;
— the monsters which inhabit&#13;
them; man's adventures on the&#13;
seas from prehistoric times to the&#13;
present; great naval battles including&#13;
that of Leyte Gulf; and the&#13;
great treasures of the sea — food,&#13;
jewels, oils and minerals. It is&#13;
fascinating reading.&#13;
The other, Gladys Harty Carroll's&#13;
"Come With Me Home" i?&#13;
the story of Miss Rosamond Lacey;&#13;
how she influenced the lives&#13;
of those who knew her and how&#13;
lhey_infhifinced her life, in&#13;
small New England town. Her&#13;
jnauire^philosophy of&#13;
Is: "&#13;
like a good book will love this&#13;
one.&#13;
We wish to thank Mrs. Andrew&#13;
Nesbit; Mrs. Fugate and Mrs. La&#13;
Rosa for books.&#13;
Several patrons have asked us&#13;
to print our library hours in the&#13;
paper. The library is open Mon&#13;
day 4-8; Tuesday 12-5 and Sat&#13;
urday 10-5.&#13;
Kiwanis Club.&#13;
JUNE 21st—&#13;
Tom Read, son of Mrs. Howard&#13;
Read leaves for 2 months stay in&#13;
Europe under the "Youth F o r&#13;
Understanding*' teen-age program;&#13;
he will live with a German family&#13;
at Eschweiler. School board holds&#13;
post-election meeting, names John&#13;
Walton, pres.; Jack Young, secretary;&#13;
Lyle Kinsey, treasurer. The&#13;
Pinckney General Store observes&#13;
15th anniversary in business here.&#13;
Engagement of Carol Marie&#13;
Yoches and Richard Miller told;&#13;
also, engagement of Judy R o o t&#13;
and Robert Hollister. Pirates receive&#13;
beautiful trophy for co-title&#13;
in Saline Dual Meet for 1961. Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Henry Shirey observe&#13;
silver wedding anniversary. Daughters&#13;
born to Joe Plummers and&#13;
to Paul Cornwells this week. Aco,&#13;
Inc., hosts annual picnic for employees&#13;
at Livingston C o u n t y&#13;
Wildlife and Conservation Club.&#13;
JUNE 28th—&#13;
Village Council will sponsor a&#13;
fireworks display here on July 4th.&#13;
Drilling of a "wild-cat" oil well&#13;
on Dwight Wegener farm begins&#13;
this week. Huron-Portage Yacht&#13;
club opens sailing season; will&#13;
hold races on Big Portage every&#13;
Sunday and an Invitational Regatta&#13;
for boats from many states in Aug*&#13;
ust. Errol Schuman enlists in Air&#13;
- rSnckney ^&#13;
Library" o^serwf^M&#13;
this week. A. M. Roche, former&#13;
Pinckneyite and well-known Lansing&#13;
insurance man dies at age&#13;
of 75. The evening Bible School&#13;
sessions at Calvary Mennonite&#13;
church attract record enrollment.&#13;
Mrs. James Popp, the former June&#13;
Lamb, age 42, dies at her home in&#13;
Plymouth following long illness.&#13;
HERE IS EASIEST WAY TO PUT ON TIRE CHAINS&#13;
It can be done In six minutes, and without a Jack I&#13;
1. W. B. (Walt) Laahar, Jr., chairman of National Safety&#13;
Council test committee, shows Marion Olund, Clintonville,&#13;
Wis., the first step. Spread chains on the ground to remove&#13;
tangles. Reinforced chains are best, and the projecting teeth&#13;
or cleats should be up.&#13;
2. Then put end links of side chains on loops of "applier"&#13;
and push onto tire as shown. No jack is needed.&#13;
3. It is wise to gather the cross chains up close in back of&#13;
tire on some cars, so chains won't catch on back of fender&#13;
when car is moved forward to encircle the rear wheels.&#13;
4. Now drive ahead one wheel revolution, until side chain&#13;
fastener is near fender. Remove the spring steel wire "applier9'&#13;
and fasten the inside hook. Lashar shows Marion&#13;
that the usually difficult inside hook can be fastened by&#13;
"feel" (without getting under car) after you practice it&#13;
once and learn how.&#13;
5. Marion has now learned how to put&#13;
chains in six my""***, the easy way. She&#13;
Joan Kkmp, Clintonville, the Goal&#13;
outside hook.&#13;
a pair of tire&#13;
showinf&#13;
simple&#13;
6 . Laihar congratulates the girls on their aptitude and&#13;
reads them Council** tins for safe winter driving, one of&#13;
which is "always carry reinforced chains and use them for&#13;
•evere mow or ice conditions to help avoid traffic blockades&#13;
4 accidents,"</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 10, 1962</text>
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                <text>January 10, 1962 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27626">
                <text>1962-01-10</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>— No, I — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinclcney, Michigan — Wednesday, January 3, 1962 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
Chronology of 1961 Records Busy&#13;
Year for Local, Area Residents&#13;
A chronological list of events&#13;
that "made news" in this area in&#13;
the past year starts in this first&#13;
issue of 1962 and will be completed&#13;
this month.&#13;
JANUARY 4, 1961 — T a x -&#13;
payers in Putnam township were&#13;
spared the dubious joy of finding&#13;
their tax bills in with their Christmas&#13;
mail. The bills were delayed&#13;
this year by a break-down in new&#13;
billing machinery at the County&#13;
Treasurer's Office in Howell. The&#13;
Honorable Judge Francis F, Barron&#13;
was inaugurated as Judge of&#13;
Probate of Livingston County- in&#13;
"X*6urthbuse. Two local rural mail&#13;
carriers, Gorman Kelly and Harry&#13;
Murphy were honored with Safe&#13;
Driving awards this week by the&#13;
National Safety Council. These&#13;
are the 16th and 13th annual&#13;
awards for Kelly and Murphy, respectively.&#13;
JANUARY 11th — Don Gibson&#13;
was inaugurated as president&#13;
of the Piriekney Kiwanis Club for&#13;
1 9 6 I . M a r y L e e Aschenbrenner,&#13;
sophomore, was Cherry Pie Baking&#13;
contest winner at P.H.S.; Jan Patterson,&#13;
runner-up. Pirate cagers&#13;
lost 4th game of season to Chelsea,&#13;
78-43.&#13;
JANUARY 18th — Pirates lose&#13;
another basketball game, 78-50, to&#13;
Dexter. Barbara McAfee is initiated&#13;
into Alpha Chapter of Sigma&#13;
Nu Phi Sorority at EMU. Edgur&#13;
Presley, 87, dies at Hi-Land Lake&#13;
home. Sharon Gallup and Patricia&#13;
Borovsky installed at head officers&#13;
of Rainbow Girls.&#13;
JANUARY 25th — Vandals&#13;
paint swaztikas on school buses.&#13;
Barbara Spraguc and David Taylor&#13;
married at Howell church. Sons&#13;
born to Mr. and Mrs. John Paul&#13;
Ware, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Higgs&#13;
and a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Louis Swarthout.&#13;
FEBRUARY 1st — Local Teenagers&#13;
who are working hard&#13;
towards a $600 goal in the March&#13;
of Dimes campaign have scheduled&#13;
a dance to put drive over top.&#13;
Ray Stillwells (Pat Thayer) move&#13;
to McChord Air Base, T a c o m a ,&#13;
Washington. Huron - P o r t a g e&#13;
Yacht club members elected new&#13;
officers at annual meeting; Dr.&#13;
John Bartlett of Detroit will serve&#13;
as Commodore for 1961 sailing&#13;
season.&#13;
FEBRUARY 8th — School&#13;
board joins health officials in issuing&#13;
warnings of possible hepatitis&#13;
epidemic in area. Mark G. White,&#13;
son of Hollis Whites, wins honor&#13;
medal at Lackland Air Base, in&#13;
Texas. Herbert "Bert" Davis, 79.&#13;
dies. Kitty St. Pierre* and William&#13;
Campbell married at St. John's&#13;
Church, Ypsilanti. Rachel Nash&#13;
wins Kiwanis award for 1st weeks'&#13;
markings.&#13;
FEBRUARY 15th — Pirates&#13;
win first victory of current basketball&#13;
season, beat Ypsilanti - Roosevelt&#13;
63-62. Orm Marlow home&#13;
Portage Lake destroyed^ by&#13;
of undetermined origin,&#13;
of newly remodeled sanctuary&#13;
Community Congregational&#13;
held Sunday. Reverend S a m u e l&#13;
Noble Oliver D.D., is speaker.&#13;
Pinckney welcomes Reverend and&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Murphy and family&#13;
of Detroit as new residents of&#13;
People's church parsonage. More&#13;
than 200 attend gala Friendship&#13;
Night of O.E.S. in Hawaii theme.&#13;
FEBRUARY 22 — Mrs. Frances&#13;
Kevenaugh, 80. former resident&#13;
dies in Jackson. Mrs. Jane Tasch's&#13;
6th grade writes play that is to be&#13;
taped for T.V. "Courtesy and Mrs.&#13;
Appleby" will be televised by&#13;
channel 10, Lansing. Albert&#13;
4 5 ~ ~ ™ ~ " " • • '&#13;
church where&#13;
of Toma road,' dies after long illness.&#13;
MARCH 1st — More than 100&#13;
attend Blue and Gold banquet, annual&#13;
Cub Scout affair, at cl«mentary&#13;
school. Local high school stu&#13;
dents collected a half ton of good&#13;
used clothing for "Save the Children&#13;
Federation" at a benefit dance.&#13;
St. Mary's announces plans for annual&#13;
St. Patrick's Day dinner on&#13;
March 19. Mrs. Nelson J. Buzzard&#13;
dies after lengthy illness. Mrs.&#13;
Lottie Bobon dies suddenly. Karl&#13;
W. Reinhart, 70, passes away at&#13;
Arizona vacation spot. He was&#13;
resident of Base Lake.&#13;
MARCH 8th — Ice Knights of&#13;
Michigan meet at Silver Lake for&#13;
diving activities and contest. E.&#13;
Allen Rose home on 25-day leave&#13;
from Army duties in Panama&#13;
Canal Zone. Four seniors of P.H.S.&#13;
enlist in Marine Corps — will&#13;
leave for duty after graduation;&#13;
Tom Kennedy, James Wylie, J.&#13;
Wetherbec and Mike Rooke in&#13;
"Buddy" program.&#13;
MARCH 15th — Local writers&#13;
have organized a Writers Club;&#13;
named Mrs. Richard Randall pres&#13;
ident. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Speake&#13;
welcome new daughter, Virginia,&#13;
at McPherson Health Center. Rev.&#13;
J. W. Winger of Community Congregational&#13;
church announces resignation&#13;
to be effective June II.&#13;
Martha Nash wins elementary&#13;
school spelling-bee; Linda Latimer&#13;
is runner-up. E. Wray Hincklcy,&#13;
father of Mrs. Clifford Van Horn&#13;
dies.&#13;
MARCH 22nd — All Pinckney&#13;
Village Officers were re-elected in&#13;
election this week; only 57 of 360&#13;
registered voters go to polls. Barbara&#13;
Bennett and DeLos Cofley&#13;
are married in Howell church wedding.&#13;
Burglars made a second attempt&#13;
to remove large safe from&#13;
Jim's Gulf Service station.&#13;
MARCH 29th — Ronald&#13;
Marsh, 28. and Keith Metty. 19,&#13;
of Ann Arbor are apprehended for&#13;
local robberies. O.E.S. dinner and&#13;
reception here honor Mrs. Eva&#13;
Engquist. Grand Representative of&#13;
Nebraska in Michigan; twentythree&#13;
grand officers attend. Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. James Meyer, parents of&#13;
son, born at St. Joseph hospital.&#13;
Carol Miller, senior, is winner of&#13;
Kiwanis honor certificate for&#13;
scholastic achievement N a n c y&#13;
; local DAR honor winin&#13;
St.&#13;
Lee promoted to&#13;
4th dan on Okinawa&#13;
he is stationed&#13;
of E. M-36 have announced t h e&#13;
engagement of their daughter.&#13;
Barbara Jean, to Peter Bobon, Jr.,&#13;
son of the late Peter and Lottie&#13;
Bobon.&#13;
Both are 1960 graduates of&#13;
Pinckney High School. They have&#13;
set May 12 as their wedding date.&#13;
O.E.S. Party&#13;
Held Friday A Christmas party for members&#13;
of the local O.E.S. Chapter a n d&#13;
families was held at the Masonic&#13;
hall Friday evening with about 60&#13;
in attendance. Mrs. Edna Ward,&#13;
Worthy Matron, was assisted by refreshment&#13;
chairman, Mrs. Arline&#13;
Sidler in hostessing the affair; Mrs.&#13;
Jean Koch and and Mrs. Lucille&#13;
Wylie were also on the refreshment&#13;
committee.&#13;
A special program for the&#13;
younger children and teen-agers&#13;
was under the direction of M r s .&#13;
Doris Skinner and Miss Pat Borovsky.&#13;
The adults enjoyed games&#13;
for which numerous prizes w e r e&#13;
awarded.&#13;
Santa Claus arrived before t h e&#13;
evening was over bringing joy to&#13;
the young and old.&#13;
APPROVE RAIL SIGNAL&#13;
FOR W. M-36 HERE&#13;
The State Administrative&#13;
Board week&#13;
the awarding of&#13;
contract for an&#13;
approved&#13;
a $6,157&#13;
automatic&#13;
flasher lfeht on M-36 at the&#13;
Grand Truck We*eni rafl&#13;
road crowing&#13;
here*&#13;
Unmarked&#13;
this area, as&#13;
west of|&#13;
other parts&#13;
MfcMgm, nave been the&#13;
tragedy more aad&#13;
more frequently since auto&#13;
traffic hai iacfaawd MM&#13;
nave become |I Two local people w e r e&#13;
Ike Meat rtcthaa of a tnaacar&#13;
craaa at the M-36 crowing&#13;
when the car driven by&#13;
Ed WakefithJ, 21, of Main&#13;
two-year-old Teddy Slacki&#13;
at the&#13;
Chest X-Ray To Be Available&#13;
For Residents Over 30 Years Old Residents of Livingston County&#13;
30 years old and over will be given&#13;
the opportunity to have a chest&#13;
x-ray in February, when the Michigan&#13;
Department of Health mobile&#13;
x-ray unit visits the county. This&#13;
announcement was made today by&#13;
Dorothy Dinkel, R.N. Mrs. Dinkel&#13;
Elks Lodge&#13;
Exalted Ruler Milton Higgins today&#13;
announced that Howell Lodge&#13;
No. 2168, B.P.O. Elks, is receiving&#13;
scholarship applications in the&#13;
Elks National Foundation 29th Annual&#13;
Most Valuable Student Competition.&#13;
Exalted Ruler Higgins&#13;
said that Gene Burroughs is chairman&#13;
of this committee, with Robert&#13;
White and Ford Eager working&#13;
with him on it.&#13;
Mr. Burroughs said that the&#13;
Foundation, National Charitable&#13;
Trust of the Benevolent and Protective&#13;
Order of Elks, is offering&#13;
142 scholarships valued at $110,-&#13;
000 for the 1962 college year. Ths&#13;
Scholarships range from 100 valued&#13;
at $700 to two grand scholarships&#13;
valued at $1,500, and are&#13;
valid in any recognized college or&#13;
university chosen by the winners.&#13;
Following are the awards, identical&#13;
for boys and girls-in separate&#13;
competition: First, $1,500; second&#13;
$1,400; third, $1,300; fourth, $1,-&#13;
200; fifth. $1,100; Sixth $1,000,&#13;
seventh, five at $900.00; Ten at&#13;
$800, and fifty at $700 each.&#13;
Announcement of winners will&#13;
be made at the Elks 98th Grand&#13;
Lodge convention in Chicago in&#13;
July of 1962.&#13;
These scholarships are open to&#13;
all High School seniors and college&#13;
students below the grade of senior&#13;
who are United States citizens. Th»&#13;
Most Valuable Student Competition&#13;
in intended to assist the nations&#13;
best students in furthering&#13;
their education.&#13;
Chairman Burroughs said t h a t&#13;
the competition emphasizes scholastic&#13;
achievement, citizenship, personality,&#13;
leadership, perseverance,&#13;
resourcefulness, patriotism, general&#13;
worthiness and financial need. To&#13;
make this years contest more interesting&#13;
the Howell Elks Lodge is&#13;
going to award to the best application&#13;
they received from a boy and&#13;
a girl a $25.00 Savings Bond before&#13;
forwarding them on to the&#13;
State Elks Association.&#13;
In order to qualify for the National&#13;
finals, applicants must have&#13;
a scholarship average of 90% or&#13;
better and be in the upper 5% of&#13;
their class.&#13;
All area students interested in&#13;
entering the competition should&#13;
contact their High School Principal.&#13;
The High School Principals&#13;
in the Brighton, Fowlerville, Hartland,&#13;
Pinckney and Howell High&#13;
Schools have all been notified an&#13;
have the necessary applicati&#13;
blanks. Further details may&#13;
obtained from Chairman G e n&#13;
Burroughs, 2607 East O r a n&#13;
River, Howell.&#13;
is ebing employed by the Michigan&#13;
Department of Health as&#13;
Chest X-ray Coordinator for this&#13;
survey.&#13;
"A chest x-ray", Mrs. Dinkel&#13;
said, "will protect the life of the&#13;
individual, his family and his&#13;
friends by detecting unsuspected&#13;
tuberculosis, heart disease, cancer,&#13;
and other chest abnormalities."&#13;
The truth about TB is that it&#13;
is still a problem. Tuberculosis&#13;
causes more deaths in Michigan&#13;
than all other communicable diseases&#13;
combined. Last year, TB&#13;
Most~TET - -•*• -»••* = J 5 ,&#13;
in"&#13;
advanced stages when first discovered.&#13;
TB usually can be treated successfully&#13;
if it is found early. And&#13;
ta its early stages, TB often shows&#13;
no outward symptoms, so one way&#13;
to find the disease early is with&#13;
the chest x-ray.&#13;
Older persons as well as young,&#13;
particuarly older men, need chest&#13;
x-rays every year to check on&#13;
tuberculosis, and other chest diseases&#13;
as well. The Livingston&#13;
County chest x-ray survey is designed&#13;
especially to provide an&#13;
^asy way-for adults to have a routine&#13;
check-up tor tuberculosis, luns&#13;
cancer, and some heart conditions.&#13;
It takes only a few minutes, and&#13;
no undressing is required. A few&#13;
minutes' time can sometimes SHVJ&#13;
months — or a life!&#13;
The chest x-ray mehile unit will&#13;
visit various locatjgfts throughout&#13;
the county, between the dates of&#13;
February 6 and March 2, 1962.&#13;
All adults over 30 are urged u&#13;
take advantage of this opportunity&#13;
to have a chest x-ray without&#13;
charge.&#13;
Sponsors of the program are th:&#13;
Livingston County Health Department,&#13;
Michigan Department of&#13;
Health, and Michigan Tuberculosis&#13;
Association.&#13;
United Fund&#13;
Campaign&#13;
Hears Finch&#13;
The Hamburg - Putnam Community&#13;
Chest fund drive which was&#13;
launched here on December 11&#13;
may continue on through January&#13;
15 according to a member of the&#13;
board of directors.&#13;
The drive started late in the season&#13;
because of delays in organization&#13;
ran into a slump during the&#13;
holiday season. Both workers and&#13;
donors being busy with various&#13;
activities and money going in many&#13;
directions made it seemingly difficult&#13;
to conclude the drive in the&#13;
originally planned one week. Many&#13;
workers report having "call backs"&#13;
to complete.&#13;
L k &gt; v d ^ ^ Hendee, chairman of the h o ^ ^ o f ^ d r i v e&#13;
reaching its goal of $5,000. While&#13;
y o f f | d a l f ^ m a v a f l a N e&#13;
u i e d for ^ weekf hTreports colto&#13;
^ favorahte ^ ^&#13;
y a r e a residents are very much&#13;
0&#13;
G&#13;
We adjourned on the Thursday&#13;
before Christmas after a three hour&#13;
debate on a matter of proposed&#13;
single operating fund for all state&#13;
money including constitutional earmarked&#13;
funds from which all stats&#13;
bills would be paid.&#13;
We were worried over the fate&#13;
of earmarked funds. No one was&#13;
opposed to the single fund concept,&#13;
oniy its effect on school and&#13;
highway monies. In the end, we&#13;
had to send the proposal back to&#13;
the Committee on Finance and&#13;
Taxation for reconsideration because&#13;
as the debate went on it became&#13;
clearer that here was a real&#13;
tough problem.&#13;
A bipartisan proposal as explained&#13;
by Chairman D. H a l e&#13;
Brake, (R) of Santon, and V i c e-&#13;
Chairman Richard H. Austin, (D)&#13;
from Detroit, was aimed at allowing&#13;
the state treasurer more&#13;
flexibility to prevent a possible&#13;
cash crisis. This would also be a&#13;
help to the state to pay its bills&#13;
on time, eliminating the need for&#13;
creditors (including school d i s -&#13;
tricts) to borrow against anticipated&#13;
but frequent tardy funds. My&#13;
chief concern boils down to this,&#13;
would the earmarked funds ha&#13;
preserved? What would happen to&#13;
earmarked money under a single&#13;
operating fund set up? Unquestionably,&#13;
it would be spent for&#13;
other purposes, but the big question&#13;
is WOULD IT BE REPLACED?&#13;
This question will get a great deal&#13;
When it's a&#13;
matter of&#13;
» IM inV u«&#13;
' » •&#13;
'«&amp;&#13;
When it comes to devising a form (or&#13;
forms) to expedite your office operations,&#13;
see us. We have the "know&#13;
how" to come up with suggestions&#13;
that will save time and money. You'll&#13;
like the quality and speed of our work&#13;
. . . and our prices!&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Let us quote on&#13;
your next job/&#13;
U. S. Choice - Blade Cut&#13;
BEEF POT ROAST&#13;
Lean, Meaty&#13;
SPARE RIBS&#13;
Tender Lean&#13;
PORK STEAK&#13;
ROMAN&#13;
CLEANSER&#13;
Domino CANE&#13;
SUGAR 51b,&#13;
With&#13;
3.00&#13;
Purchase&#13;
of thought and discussion both in&#13;
committee and on the convention&#13;
floor.&#13;
If you have a constructive idea&#13;
on this single operative fund plan.&#13;
I would be happy to hear from&#13;
you. The obvious solution Would ba&#13;
to keep earmarked fund money&#13;
separate, but Brake said that this&#13;
would make the plan useless because&#13;
so much state money is now&#13;
earmarked and that there would&#13;
not be enough left to go around.&#13;
On the last day of public hearing&#13;
of my Committee on Local&#13;
Government, I listened to the testimony&#13;
of a half of dozen bosses&#13;
of the various utility companies&#13;
ncluding Detroit Edison and Consumers&#13;
Power. It was amusing to&#13;
hear the Chairman of th; Board&#13;
of Consumers Power say that th:&#13;
publicly owned utilities did not pay&#13;
taxes; therefore, are able to supply&#13;
their customers at lower rates. But&#13;
the publicly owned utility executives&#13;
said that Lansing, which has&#13;
the largest publicly owned utility&#13;
in the state receives free street&#13;
lighting worth $900,000 a year.&#13;
The old constitution calls for&#13;
utilities to have 30 year franchises,&#13;
but I understood from ths testimony&#13;
when they expire some of&#13;
the utilities had not bothered to&#13;
apply -for renewal, they just go&#13;
along from day to day. This de-&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
230 Dexter Sir—,t ESTABLISHED IN 1883 Pinduwy, M_f_c_hi_ge*&#13;
Published Every Wednesday by C. M. Lavey and L. W. Doyle. Ownert 1 P&gt;*bli»her»&#13;
IUZA18TH A. COLONE, Editor&#13;
Second d—» postage paid at Pincfcney,, Michigan&#13;
The columns of this paper ere an open forum where available spec*, grammatical,&#13;
legal and ethical considerations are the only restriction*.&#13;
SuBwriptlon rates, $2.00 pt year in advance in Michigan; $2.90 in other states and&#13;
U.S. Possessions. $4.00 to foreign countries. Six months ratest $1.30 in Michigan;&#13;
$1.^3 in other states and U. S. possessions; $3.00 to foreign countries. Military&#13;
n*4onne) $2.30 per year. No mail subscriptions taken for less than six months.&#13;
»rtising rates upon application.&#13;
PUTNAM TOWNSHIP&#13;
OFFICIAL MINUTES&#13;
Regular meeting of the Putnam&#13;
Township board, held at the town&#13;
hall Wednesday, December 20,&#13;
1961 at 8 p.m. All board members&#13;
present. Hendee, Wylie, Reynolds,&#13;
White and Kennedy.&#13;
Meeting called to order by&#13;
Supervisor Hendee. There being&#13;
no old business to transact.&#13;
Minutes of the meeting of November&#13;
22, 1961 read and approved.&#13;
Motion by White, supported by&#13;
Kennedy that the board approve of&#13;
a S.D.M. and a S.D.D. license to&#13;
Wilfred K. Campbell and Lillian&#13;
W. Campbell, his wife, of 11950&#13;
Do away with the requirements for&#13;
a franchise entirely or make i:&#13;
tougher to operate without one.&#13;
One thing about this Convention,&#13;
it is really stirring up the problems.&#13;
We are going to have to do a lot&#13;
of thinking and work to do the&#13;
good job that I am sure we will&#13;
accomplish.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe.&#13;
December 29, 1961.&#13;
NOTICE OF MEETING&#13;
Livingston County Soil Conservation&#13;
District Annual meeting,&#13;
Jan 4, 7:30 p.m. Gregory Elementary&#13;
school. Banquet, election of&#13;
directors, entertainment.&#13;
Robert Ruttman, chairman&#13;
fevfngstdrt O u n t y r t o t(J2\9 Finckney&#13;
- Dexter Rd. Unanimously&#13;
approved by all board members.&#13;
Motion by White, supported by&#13;
Wylie to pay the following bills&#13;
as read. Motion carried.&#13;
Lloyd Hardin - Bulldozing&#13;
twp. dump $20.00&#13;
Pinckney Fire Dept., fire runs&#13;
Dec. I960 thru Nov.&#13;
1961 904.00&#13;
Clifford Miller - Fire&#13;
Chief Salary 300.00&#13;
Norman Van Blaricum -&#13;
Ass't Fire Chief 150.00&#13;
John Burg - Sec. and Treasurer&#13;
Fire Dept. 50.00&#13;
Pinckney Postmaster - envelopes&#13;
for treasurer 96.60&#13;
Florence Preuss - Nov.&#13;
Librarian 25.00&#13;
Pinckney Community Schools -&#13;
Oct. Del. Tax 555.18&#13;
Livingston Office Equipment&#13;
Co. - adding machine 295.00&#13;
Michigan Bell Telephone - five&#13;
(5) unit fire phone — phones&#13;
in town hall &amp; fire hall 45.29&#13;
Farmers Feed &amp; Supply Co.,&#13;
on acc't. 9.90&#13;
Lavey Hardware - on acc't. 17.30&#13;
The Ohio Oil Co., fuel oil&#13;
for town hall&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch - Nov.&#13;
minutes&#13;
Dorothy DeBarr&#13;
Mich. State Association of&#13;
Supervisors - 1962 dues&#13;
He le n Reynolds "- Part&#13;
J00.Q0&#13;
49.03&#13;
4.00&#13;
20.00&#13;
20.00 _ __!&#13;
custodian at dump 15.00&#13;
Cecil Murphy - Nov.&#13;
custodian at dump 15.00&#13;
Motion by White, supported by&#13;
Wylie to adjourn. Motion carried.&#13;
Murray J. Kennedy&#13;
Putnam Twp. Clerk&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The final meeting for citizens of&#13;
the Village to discuss the proposed&#13;
Village Zoning Ordinance will b:&#13;
held at 8 p.m., January 18. at the&#13;
high school. All interested property&#13;
owners should plan to attend&#13;
this meeting.&#13;
— The Village Council&#13;
P I N C K N E Y I M S P A T C H&#13;
Wednesday, January 3, 1962&#13;
BAKE - RITE&#13;
SHORTENING - 3 Ib. can&#13;
C l Campbell's Chicken&#13;
NOODLE SOUP&#13;
Smith Bros. Fruit&#13;
COUGH DROPS 3 pks. for&#13;
Hi-C Orange or&#13;
GRAPE DRINK&#13;
D - LITE&#13;
APPLESAUCE&#13;
12 Oz.&#13;
Cans&#13;
303 Cans&#13;
Open Evenings '¥t 9:00 — Sunday. 9:00 a.m. to I:3CI p&#13;
Telephone Fmckney UPfown 8-9721 Pinckney. Michigan RAL STOR PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
Wednesday, January 3 thru Sat., Jan. 6th&#13;
Michigan Is Top Highway Builder&#13;
In 1%1; Texas Is Second&#13;
Michigan and Texas, which led!&#13;
the nation in interstate highway!&#13;
construction during 1960, w e r e&#13;
m the one-two positions again in&#13;
1961, the U.S. Bureau of Public&#13;
Roads (BPR) reports.&#13;
The latest BPR report shows&#13;
Michigan awarded contracts ft&gt; r&#13;
construction on 169 miles of Interstate&#13;
freeways during the first&#13;
10 months of 1961 to lead all&#13;
states.&#13;
Texas was second with 96 miles.&#13;
Michigan led the nation in Interstate&#13;
construction during 1960&#13;
when it awarded contracts for 126&#13;
miles.&#13;
Texas was second with 124&#13;
miles.&#13;
The Interstate freeway projects&#13;
placed under contract by Michigan&#13;
between Jan. 1 and Oct. 31 of&#13;
1961 totaled nearly $102 million,&#13;
the BPR reports. ^&#13;
During the same period, the&#13;
BPR said, Michigan awarded contracts&#13;
for projects on other highways&#13;
totaling nearly $90 million&#13;
for a total of $191 million.&#13;
Only two other states — California&#13;
and New York — had larger&#13;
dollar volumes of work placed&#13;
under contract during the same&#13;
period, the report said.&#13;
19*1&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.I&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
DEXTER, MICHIGAN&#13;
A letter from the Albert Shirleys&#13;
in Stuart, Florida, brings out&#13;
a touch of envy in those of us&#13;
braving the "miserable" conditions&#13;
of r&lt;jads here. They report a beautiful,&#13;
sunny, 85 degree temperature&#13;
daily at Stuart and tell of a visit&#13;
to the flower farms with hundreds&#13;
of acres of flowers in bloom. The&#13;
note contains a hint of spring, too,&#13;
Easter lilies are growing f a s t&#13;
down there and will soon be shipped&#13;
North. And, of course, Albert&#13;
is enjoying some good fishing.&#13;
Income Tax&#13;
Service&#13;
Jim Vasher&#13;
Phone for&#13;
Appointment&#13;
AC 9-2972&#13;
10514 Hamburg Rd.&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger I. Can Agency&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agtnt&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
Pmcfcney, Midi. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage Lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel,&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, MJ&gt;.&#13;
Pinckmy, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11.00 AM. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Mon.r Tue*-, Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
L I. Swarthont&#13;
MNIDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
1292 Darwin Hood,&#13;
Pfcoae UP 8-3234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENERAL INSURANCE&#13;
M e a t OP 84221&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 8-3172&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 Wast M-34 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5553&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
On* of Michigan's largest&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff, Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 W « t Grand Hvw&#13;
Howell* MicJiiQon&#13;
MOM 350 KMMMM* 413&#13;
Real Ertate&#13;
HoiMOf# Lose Property&#13;
I la* **&#13;
U N I (Mr Gerald Reason&#13;
t r o W 102 W Main Street&#13;
UPfmm $-2564&#13;
ON A KING SIZED APOTHECARY SCALE the new&#13;
Chrysler Corporation automotive gas turbine engine (left) is&#13;
revealed to be lighter than a reciprocating piston engine.&#13;
The comparable weights involved here are: the turbine, 450&#13;
jMMHft&amp;Hr 4^v^^Vexnjt-Xayne^ 116 pounds, and the V-8 piston&#13;
_ _ r__ ~.~ _ _ . " 1 \ ' Z _ " iwi.ei.ul&#13;
1962 Dodie^TiirBo^Barf on a&#13;
York to Los Angeles.&#13;
WHAT PRICE&#13;
POTENT PILLS?&#13;
One of the most frequent sources&#13;
of complain from victims of&#13;
food and drug promotion schemes&#13;
is that of the wonder pill which&#13;
will make its taker young, strong&#13;
and irresistible. Many of the promoters&#13;
of these curealls advertise&#13;
in nationally circulated f a m i l y&#13;
magazines in such a way that they&#13;
are beyond the legal reach of state&#13;
law enforcement officers.&#13;
If you are tempted to solve all&#13;
of your nutritional and medical&#13;
problems by a short course of&#13;
wonder pills ordered by mail, you&#13;
will be well advised to check th?&#13;
nutritional claims with a doctor&#13;
and with the local representative of&#13;
the United States Food and Drug&#13;
Administration. You are also advised&#13;
to check closely on the price.&#13;
Michigan residents are complaining&#13;
to my office not only concerning&#13;
the nutritional claims of som;&#13;
of these bottle-pushers, but a l s o&#13;
concerning 'misrepresentation of&#13;
price. For example, one "monthly&#13;
plan" advertised at $1.47 p!us&#13;
mailing resulted in a buyer receiving&#13;
a bill for $5.88 plus 32 c^nts&#13;
mailing for a month's supply.&#13;
I suggest that you watch both&#13;
your health and your pockcthook&#13;
in judging these nutritional "Fountain&#13;
of Youth" plans, and that you&#13;
report any misrepresentation in thY&#13;
State Voters Praised For&#13;
Selection of Con-Con Voters in the state are s o m etimes&#13;
criticized for their lack of&#13;
interest in local and state elections,&#13;
and frequently their decision on&#13;
public officials are viewed as less&#13;
than educated, at least by some.&#13;
In Michigan's most recent state&#13;
election, however, voters who turned&#13;
out have much for which to&#13;
be proud. The delegates elected by&#13;
the people last September to the&#13;
Constitutional Convention are gaining&#13;
high praise in all quarters.&#13;
The Citizens Research Council,&#13;
a non-partisan organization, h a s&#13;
lauded the convention as having&#13;
several evident indications that it&#13;
is "something special."&#13;
"There is, first, the indefinable&#13;
sense of awareness on the part of&#13;
the delegate that his are special&#13;
powers; his, a special mission," a&#13;
council report said. "One cannot&#13;
help but be struck with the zealousness&#13;
of these delegates.14&#13;
State legislators often are criticized&#13;
for their inactivity. The&#13;
council says this criticism cannot&#13;
be imposed on convention d e l e -&#13;
gates. "Frequently a delegate on&#13;
more than one substantive committee&#13;
finds himself attending meetings&#13;
from 8:30 a.m. until early afternoon&#13;
before the mid-week general&#13;
sessions."&#13;
Some would contend the $1,000&#13;
a-month salary induced the high&#13;
degree of interest in the work the&#13;
delegates doing. This, according&#13;
to many, does not follow.&#13;
The major occupational group&#13;
in the convention membership is&#13;
the law profession. According to&#13;
some sources* a good attorney with&#13;
his own practice or in a partnership&#13;
loses $100 in wages and overhead&#13;
costs every day he is away from&#13;
his office. This would put the&#13;
lawyer delegate at quite a loss&#13;
financially.&#13;
the Crifted S&#13;
Administration.&#13;
Tood&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
HOWELL WtCKNGAN&#13;
From all appearances the voters,&#13;
and not the high salary, can he&#13;
credited for sending to Lansing&#13;
highly-qualified and interested delegates&#13;
to Michigan's Constitutional&#13;
Convention.&#13;
Michigan's weather variations&#13;
are often the subject of complaintfilled&#13;
conversations, but the State&#13;
Highway Department is one of ths&#13;
few groups which says the element&#13;
changes here are something to&#13;
boast about.&#13;
Department officials have high&#13;
hopes the great variety of weather&#13;
in the state will have a favorable&#13;
effect on federal consideration of&#13;
Michigan as a place to build an&#13;
electronic highway.&#13;
Michigan is one of several states&#13;
being considered in Washington for&#13;
the placement of a pilot project on&#13;
electronic roadways.&#13;
"An electronic highway in Michigan&#13;
would be tested in many different&#13;
kinds of weather," said Commissioner&#13;
John C. Mackie. "The&#13;
results of this testing then would&#13;
be applicable to far more states&#13;
than if the test were undertaken in&#13;
a state where the seasonal weather&#13;
changes arc slight.M&#13;
The department also views th:&#13;
project, where cars would travel&#13;
at great speed under automatic&#13;
controls, as an immense tourist attraction.&#13;
"If we get it, it could be expected&#13;
to bring observers from all over&#13;
the world here," Mackie said.&#13;
MONEY OR THE LACK of it&#13;
has plagued Michigan's lawmakers&#13;
for three years running. There is&#13;
nmmnnmiri&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
Pouring&#13;
BILL KLAVE TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNERS SERVED&#13;
FRIDRYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
little sign of relief from this problem.&#13;
Since 1959 the general lack of&#13;
money, which built up a $71.5&#13;
million deficit to the end of the&#13;
last fiscal year, has bejn noted so&#13;
often it has overshadowed t h e&#13;
voices which so frequently said.&#13;
"We need it most."&#13;
Among the loudest in the chorus&#13;
of money seekers have been th:&#13;
spokesmen for higher education.&#13;
and perhaps justifiably so.&#13;
The Michigan Council of StaU&#13;
College Presidents has in recent&#13;
years become the spokesman for&#13;
the nine state-supported institutions&#13;
of higher learning.&#13;
One of their arguments that colleges&#13;
and universities have priority&#13;
right to Michigan tax revenues i&gt;&#13;
based on a survey that shows SO&#13;
per cent of all Michigan college&#13;
students are in public institutions.&#13;
In the neighboring states of&#13;
Ohio. Indiana ami Illinois, the percentage&#13;
is 50 and it averages lower&#13;
in Jhe northeastern states, according&#13;
to M. M. Chambers, t h e&#13;
Council's executive director.&#13;
Because more Michigan students&#13;
seem to prefer public institutions.&#13;
the Council contends funds must&#13;
be made available.&#13;
HOW ELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
lowell Phone I769J&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri.,&#13;
Jan. 3 4 5&#13;
WHITE •&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
Sun., Mdn., Tues.&#13;
Jan. 7—8—9&#13;
|Matinee Sunday at 2:30 P.M.&#13;
Continuous.&#13;
Wed« Thanu FrL, Sat&#13;
ti SM Hi MikL^ jam&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservations Cafl&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
Second Heart, Grafted in Dog,&#13;
Sets New Record at Wayne State&#13;
Dr. Chiba (left) and Dr. Athenasios Chryaohou, research associate&#13;
in medicine, check the outcome of tests on the dog with&#13;
two hearts.&#13;
DETROIT —Dr. Chiyo Chiba,&#13;
heart surgeon from Woman's&#13;
Medical College of Tokyo, presently&#13;
a research fellow in&#13;
Wayne State's department of&#13;
medicine, has performed a graft&#13;
operation which set a record.&#13;
Dr. Chiba t r a n s p l a n t e d a&#13;
second heart into a dog so skillfully&#13;
that it hardly missed a&#13;
beat, and life in this second organ&#13;
was preserved for two&#13;
weeks to achieve a new longevity&#13;
record.&#13;
p -of a jjoint&#13;
Hospital, in which possibilities&#13;
of organ transplantation and&#13;
other related factors arc being&#13;
studied. It is supported by a&#13;
grant of $226,041 for a threeyear&#13;
study from the John A.&#13;
Hartford Foundation, of New&#13;
York City.&#13;
Prof. Richard J. Bing, chairman&#13;
of the department of medicine&#13;
at WSU, is project director.&#13;
In the test dog the coronary&#13;
artery and coronary vein of the&#13;
donor heart were connected to&#13;
the artery and vein of the receiving&#13;
animal so that the&#13;
second heart continued to beat&#13;
and received a normal blood&#13;
supply.&#13;
Even though the mechanical&#13;
techniques of orgaTrtranspIantapermanently&#13;
except between&#13;
identical twins because the body&#13;
rejects tissue from another individual,&#13;
Dr. Bing points out.&#13;
Various means of preventing&#13;
• his rejection are being sought.&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
Mrs. Donald Dcaring for many&#13;
years librarian at Hartlund d i e d&#13;
last week at University Hospital.&#13;
Santa Claus visited the cafeteria&#13;
of the Citizens' Mutual Auto Insurance&#13;
company in Howell last&#13;
Friday noon with gifts tor the 21&#13;
children of the Rickett School wru&#13;
were luncheon guesN there.&#13;
Robert E. Rich, 19, of Fowlerville&#13;
was killed last week when th:&#13;
car in which he was a passenger,&#13;
went out of control on icy roads.&#13;
The 19 year old boy who was driving&#13;
the car suffered minor injuries.&#13;
Will Shchan of Schaefcr r o a d&#13;
was honored at a party at his&#13;
home ox\ £hmtrms Eve when&#13;
many relatives and friends joined&#13;
him in observing his 90th birthday.&#13;
Mr. Shehan has been a resident&#13;
of this community all his life.&#13;
REWARD&#13;
for Information leading!&#13;
|to arrest and convictioi&#13;
&gt;f vandals who destroy*&#13;
Cerberies statute am&#13;
imashed plate glass winlows&#13;
at Play land.&#13;
Write or Call&#13;
Mel Reinhari&#13;
UP 8-9915&#13;
The Board of Education of the&#13;
Stock bridge Community schools&#13;
has set February 13 as the day of&#13;
a special election asking voters to&#13;
approve the Citizens Committee&#13;
recommendations for a $550,000&#13;
bond issue.&#13;
Chelsea High school has named&#13;
Joanne Wojciehowski, as the DAR&#13;
"Good Citizen" of the class of '62.&#13;
Birthday greetings are in order&#13;
today for Mrs. Sadie Read. Larry&#13;
Van Slamhrook and Josh Eisenhardt.&#13;
Tomorrow, Kevin McMacken.&#13;
I via Hollis and Connie Slagle;&#13;
Friday, Bill Light; Saturday, David&#13;
Clarke, Judy Lynn Winslow and&#13;
Shirley Mae Czerwinski. On Sunday,&#13;
January 7, Catherine Hutchings,&#13;
Glenn Ford and Earl Fisher&#13;
will be cutting birthday cakes; on&#13;
Monday, Jan. 8, Linda Jones and&#13;
Ernie Fulkerson; on Tuesday, Deborah&#13;
Ann Donahue and Martha&#13;
La Rosa.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 3, 1962&#13;
M A E ' S&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
THE VERY BEST&#13;
FOR LESS&#13;
UP 8-9726&#13;
10544 Whiteweod Road&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
DEUOOUS-^ONATHON-MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS -mm WITH TNI puvor W . M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
Pinckneyites confined to Me-&#13;
Pherson Heath Center recently include&#13;
Ann Cavin, John Jeffreys,&#13;
Donald Endres, Roy Mester, Dorothy&#13;
Wetherbee and Mrs. Clayton&#13;
Bekkering.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Cavin are&#13;
the parents of a daughter born on&#13;
Christmas Day at McPherson&#13;
Health Center.&#13;
Miss Linda DeKett of Flint was&#13;
the house guest of her aunt and&#13;
uncle, the Clarence DeKetts, of&#13;
Mower road, during her holiday&#13;
vacation.&#13;
The Max Reynolds family were&#13;
New Years Eve guests at the William&#13;
Brady home in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Airmen Paul Berto of W. Covina,&#13;
Calif., James Drummond of&#13;
Englewood, Colorado, and Bill&#13;
Detchell of New York City, all&#13;
based at Chanute Air Force Base,&#13;
Illinois, were among the holiday&#13;
guests entertained at the home of&#13;
Mrs. Alma Utley and children.&#13;
On Christmas Day, Mrs. Utley,&#13;
Larry and Florence were d i n n e r&#13;
guests at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Robert La Vanseler, of&#13;
South Lyon.&#13;
The George Van Normans&#13;
were hosts at a family brunch on&#13;
morniag'—fer 7 z&#13;
Mrs. Edith Van Norman reports&#13;
a most enjoyable Yuletitb&#13;
gathering in her home with all her&#13;
children and grandchildren present&#13;
It was 3-month old Paul Thomas'&#13;
first visit to his grandmother's&#13;
home. Paul came with his parents,&#13;
the Richard Thomas' and two sisters&#13;
from Grand Rapids. Also here&#13;
for the holidays were Prof, and&#13;
Mrs. Herbert T. Cortin and family&#13;
of Champaign, Illinois.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Clinton&#13;
spent Christmas Day with the&#13;
Ralph Clinton family in Lincoln&#13;
Park.&#13;
IITHII IAPTIST CHUI&#13;
4040 SwvtHwft UU&#13;
MOWIU, MICHIOAM&#13;
i i h i f t M. Ttyltr, Jjfiat&#13;
S«rvictf:&#13;
Sunday School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worthip 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Danitl'i Band, Young Ptoplt't&#13;
Group • Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evtning Worship • Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bibla Study, Praytr Mating&#13;
Wadnatday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Wedding anniversary congratulations&#13;
are extended to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Elwin Breniser on Jan. 4;&#13;
to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thumm on&#13;
Jan. 7, and to Mr. and Mrs. Ronald&#13;
La Mirand on Jan. 9.&#13;
Master Sgt. and Mrs. David Kitchen&#13;
(Ruth Pardon) and children&#13;
left to December 26 for their new&#13;
home in St. Louis, Missouri. He&#13;
is an Army Recruiter and expects&#13;
to be stationed at St. Louis for several&#13;
years.&#13;
Resolution&#13;
Resolved that the Livingston&#13;
County Board of Supervisors authorize&#13;
the Agriculture Committee&#13;
to solicit bids for one pick-up&#13;
truck for the Livingston County&#13;
Dog Warden equipped as follows:&#13;
One six cylinder standard shift&#13;
six foot box with heater and&#13;
outside rear view mirror.&#13;
Two mud and snow rear tires.&#13;
These bids are to be filed with&#13;
the Livingston County Clerk before&#13;
January fifth at 5:00 P. M.,&#13;
1962.&#13;
Board of Supervisors&#13;
%'iXl"twtt***I f V i r&#13;
COMMUNITY CONOttOATIONAl&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
Itv, Wn. HaifHwortti&#13;
Morning Worship 10:45 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Choir rehearsal Wednesday evening 7:30&#13;
THI PfOPU'S CHURCH&#13;
vF^V^M^S »S^^W R^fl Bw *^PW 9w&#13;
Rev. Themes Murphy, Patter&#13;
M 4 t Wett between Uneelille a*4 Main&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Vouth Choir 6 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 7 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday senior choir practice 8 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. mid*week prayer service 8:00 p.m.i&#13;
Sunday School ~ 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 t.m.&#13;
Youth fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wadnttday night praytr strvic* 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Evtning Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
IT. MAIY'S CATMOUC CMUtCM&#13;
8:00, 10:00, 11:30&#13;
8:00 a.m.&#13;
honor of Our&#13;
Sunday Messet:&#13;
Weefcdey Mess&#13;
Klovena devotions in&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 5:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
HIAWATHA StACH CMUftCM&#13;
R*v. ChaHaa Michael, Pi&#13;
Bible School 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Young People 6:445 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 8:00 p.m.'&#13;
toys Brigade (12-18 yn.)t Men. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise 4 Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST. FAUH UfTMflAN CNUtCN&#13;
L&#13;
letter&#13;
9S4T N. Mete&#13;
Malm* . t:4S t.m&#13;
Sunday School and ftibfe C I * f t : 4 4 S p.*.&#13;
Liturgy, with trwton 11 IOO a.m.&#13;
i#s9 Sunoay off owry Monan.&#13;
ACidamy M S » or Wdtory f-70»1&#13;
au¥Atr&#13;
PINCKNEY SCHOOLS LUNCH&#13;
MENU FOR WEEK OF&#13;
JANUARY 7th&#13;
(Submitted by School Lunch&#13;
Official)&#13;
Monday — Chili or chicken&#13;
noodle soup. Crackers and sandwiches,&#13;
fruit and milk.&#13;
Tuesday — Spanish Rice, vegetable,&#13;
sandwiches, fruit and milk.&#13;
Wednesday — Mashed potatoes&#13;
with butter, fried chicken, cranberries,&#13;
rolls and butter, fruit and&#13;
milk.&#13;
Thursday — Hot dog on buns,&#13;
vegetable, applesauce and milk.&#13;
Friday — Macaroni with cheese,&#13;
vegetable, sandwiches. Fruit and&#13;
milk.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
Because issues of the first two&#13;
weeks of January, 1937, are missing&#13;
from our files this column&#13;
will not appear until our January&#13;
17 issue.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
48 Years Ago&#13;
While a great majority of the&#13;
local population was attending the&#13;
Monday night entertainment at the&#13;
Opera House two stores w e r e&#13;
robbed by burglars, Smith's meat&#13;
market and the Murphy and Jackson&#13;
general store were minus a&#13;
large amount of cash Tuesday&#13;
morning.&#13;
Friday evening Clyde Bennett&#13;
was very pleasantly surprised by&#13;
the Tri-Mee class who feted him&#13;
on the occasion of his birthday Friday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Rex Read of New York City&#13;
spent the holidays with his parents,&#13;
the Thomas Reads.&#13;
The new dance sensation now&#13;
is called the "hesitation waltz."&#13;
The Pinckney Hotel is without&#13;
a proprietor again. A. G. Cushmftft-&#13;
kft«decided4&amp;&#13;
10i00 ajN.&#13;
IIJOO&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 3, 1962&#13;
" ^™^" ^ H H V ^^mtm ^^^m ^^mm ^ q p % SET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,!&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
The Michigan Bell Telephone&#13;
Company expended $87,500,000&#13;
for expansion and improvement of&#13;
its facilities during 1961 — t h e&#13;
fourth largest construction p r o -&#13;
gram in the company's history.&#13;
Viruses and Cancer&#13;
Most human cancers are probably&#13;
due to viruses and treatment&#13;
may c o m e eventually&#13;
through a variety of chemical&#13;
agents, says Dr. I. S. Ravdin of&#13;
the University of Pennsylvania&#13;
Hospital. He heads a group&#13;
named by the National Cancer&#13;
Institute to study the 175 drugs&#13;
being tested to control cancer.&#13;
• « •&#13;
Dangerous Bugs&#13;
Stings from bees, wasps and&#13;
other such insects cause more&#13;
deaths in the U.S. than poisonous&#13;
snake bites.&#13;
TREE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
TV ANTENNA&#13;
REPAIR&#13;
BOBVEDDER&#13;
UP 8-3452&#13;
VERY REASONABLE&#13;
^^•^•^i^"^»^^»^R^i^"^R^i^R^R»BMPB^BHB^B^BlB^B^B^BHB^B^B^BJ|&#13;
140 Livingston St. Phone UP 8-3149&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain saws and lawn mowers repaired and sharpened.&#13;
Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
Water pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
and used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
^—-^ I&#13;
&lt;• r a n F fTHT i v ' n r \ \ r i&#13;
M a ! I t '&#13;
&lt;H i J &lt; , [ . ! I M M H ) \'\ \&#13;
H-p&#13;
\n\&#13;
CITIZENS FINANCE CO&#13;
7""&lt;-~ « :&lt;•""«•.•- /&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG Jerry DeWolf, son of the Walt&#13;
DeWolfs of Hamburg, is enlisted&#13;
in the Naval Air Reserve. Last&#13;
week Jerry was a passenger on a&#13;
flight from the Grosse Isle Base to&#13;
El Paso, Texas for a three day tour&#13;
of the El Paso base. While there&#13;
they also went to the Busby Air&#13;
Base in Douglas, Arizona Jerry&#13;
had the opportunity of c ig on&#13;
his aunt, Mrs. Carl Frh v who&#13;
resident in Douglas. She is a former&#13;
Hamburg resident.&#13;
Bob Haarer, a student of Eastern&#13;
New Mexico University returned&#13;
to his home last week to&#13;
spend the holidays with his parents&#13;
the Harold Haarers of Silver&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Jacobs&#13;
(Janet Smith) of Bitoxie. Miss.,&#13;
spent the Christmas holiday with&#13;
their parents, the Robert Jacobs of&#13;
Dexter and the Douglas Smiths of&#13;
Pettysville Road. They returned to&#13;
Lincoln, Nebraska Wednesday. He&#13;
is in the Air Force.&#13;
A 2/ c Mark White is home with&#13;
his parents, the Hollis Whites for&#13;
~L_-^Jfrjg'. holiday&amp;_ Mark jg at jta^ March&#13;
Claudelle Pick of Knox. Indiana,&#13;
is a guest of the Whites, also. Other&#13;
Christmas week guests were&#13;
Dale Murray, who is serving h i s&#13;
basic training in the Army and is&#13;
stationed at Ft. Leonard W o o d,&#13;
Missouri, and Dannie Krul of Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Anderson&#13;
of Davisburg were Christmas&#13;
day guests of the Milo Cases.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rady of&#13;
^etoskey were Christmas guests of&#13;
the Howard Riopclles of Rush&#13;
Take. On Christmas day they all&#13;
were guests of the Howard Riopelles&#13;
Jr. of Taylor.&#13;
Mrs. Harry Daley of lakeland&#13;
returned home from McPherson&#13;
Community Health Center on&#13;
Christmas day. She had been in the&#13;
hospital about two weeks.&#13;
Miss I.inda (iaragiola of Western&#13;
Michigan University and&#13;
home in Detroit for the holidays&#13;
with her parents, the Joe Garagiolas,&#13;
and her fiance Jim Heineke of&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, were&#13;
Friday evening guests of the Duane&#13;
Waterburys of Pettysville Road.&#13;
Christmas day guests of the Pat&#13;
Burkes of Rush Lake were his sis*&#13;
ter and her family, the Bill Burns&#13;
of Detroit, and the John MacLeod&#13;
family, also of Detroit.&#13;
The Orland Winslows of Lakeland&#13;
are proud to announce the&#13;
birth of Darel Wayne who was&#13;
bom on December 27th, weighing&#13;
nine pounds, six ounces. Darel&#13;
Wayne was born at St. Joseph&#13;
Mercy hospital in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Lester McAfee, daughter&#13;
Leslie and Dick Coy of Dexter&#13;
were guests of the Phillip Hudsons&#13;
in Detroit on Thursday evening.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. James Tepatti of&#13;
Shangrila returned home Tuesday&#13;
after spending Christmas with son&#13;
Martin and his family at Ft. Camp&#13;
bell, Kentucky.&#13;
CELEBRATE 25TH&#13;
WEDDING ANNIVERSARY&#13;
m An/1 rs, Louis&#13;
versary December 28th. The&#13;
couple attended a High Mass of&#13;
Thanksgiving at eleven a.m., Father&#13;
Brendon K. Ledwidge officiating&#13;
at St. Mary's church here. Following&#13;
the Mass, the jubilarians knelt&#13;
at the foot of the altar and renewed&#13;
their nuptial vows.&#13;
After the ceremony the Stackables,&#13;
accompanied hy some thirty&#13;
relatives who had gathered for the&#13;
occasion, adjourned to St. Mary's&#13;
school hall where a delicious luncheon&#13;
was served by St. Theresa's&#13;
Guild.&#13;
Guests present were from Lansing,&#13;
Owosso, Birmingham, Detroit&#13;
and Pinckney.&#13;
Mrs. Leola Lavey of Lansing&#13;
and Mrs. Clare McMacken of&#13;
Pinckney were co-hostesses.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 3, 1962&#13;
Wintertime Peril&#13;
Reckles s Driver s Play 'American '&#13;
Roulett e On Nation' s Highway s&#13;
"American" roulette, a deadly&#13;
game played by reckless automobile&#13;
drivers, is a losing gamble&#13;
any time — especially in&#13;
winter when motorists face the&#13;
added hazards of snow and ice.&#13;
"A driver who ignores simple&#13;
precautions is as dangerous as&#13;
a hunter who never checks the&#13;
safety latch on his gun," says&#13;
Ronald Lovatt, a snow and ice&#13;
control expert for the Solvay&#13;
P r o c e s s Division of Allied&#13;
C h e m i c al Corporation. "Too&#13;
many of us think accidents always&#13;
happen to other people . . .&#13;
to friends, celebrities or athletes.&#13;
Accidents, however, don't&#13;
play favorites. All of us are&#13;
potential victims."&#13;
Motor v e h i'&#13;
cle accidents in&#13;
1960 killed 38,-&#13;
200 Americans,&#13;
disabled 1,400, -&#13;
000 others and&#13;
cost us $6.5 billion&#13;
in personal&#13;
injuries, insurance&#13;
claims and&#13;
property damage.&#13;
Records show that about&#13;
1 out of 10 of these accidents&#13;
happened on ice-covered roads&#13;
and streets.&#13;
Lovatt recommends motorists&#13;
take these safety steps during&#13;
the snowbal and sledding&#13;
season:&#13;
1. Have good tires and use&#13;
reinforced tire chains when&#13;
traveling on very slippery roads.&#13;
Snow tires are ideal under these&#13;
conditions especially since slower&#13;
speeds are necessary on snow&#13;
and ice.&#13;
2. Snow and ice must be removed&#13;
from windshield and windows.&#13;
Wiper blades, heater and&#13;
defroster should be in working&#13;
order, It's important that others&#13;
see you, so turn on your headlights&#13;
during daytime snow&#13;
storms.&#13;
3. Adjust your speed to the&#13;
.slickness of the&#13;
ice and s n o w&#13;
so you can control&#13;
the car at&#13;
all times. Thin&#13;
sheets of sleet&#13;
or glare-ice arc&#13;
doubly dangerous.&#13;
Progressive&#13;
state, city and&#13;
county highway&#13;
departments melt sleet or glareice&#13;
with Solvay flake calcium&#13;
chloride alone or mixed with&#13;
salt. This remarkabl e chemical&#13;
quickly honeycombs and loosens&#13;
ice. But there are still some&#13;
areas where a driver must depend&#13;
on his own driving skill&#13;
and equipment.&#13;
4. Stay a good distance behind&#13;
the vehicle ahead so you&#13;
will have enough room to stop.&#13;
A car takes 3 to 12 times more&#13;
distance to stop on snow and&#13;
ice than on dry pavement.&#13;
5. Reduce your speed well&#13;
before you come into a turn, icy&#13;
intersection or slippery grade.&#13;
This prevents front end skids&#13;
on turns, rear end skids on&#13;
curves, slides at intersections,&#13;
and loss of control on hills.&#13;
6. Pump your brakes to maintain&#13;
best steering&#13;
c o n t r o l&#13;
w h en braking&#13;
on ice or slippery&#13;
snow.&#13;
"Snow and ice&#13;
can drive you&#13;
to a cold grave&#13;
this winter if&#13;
you cold shoulder&#13;
basic safety&#13;
rules," Lovatt concludes. "A&#13;
'Who needs it?' attitude has&#13;
been proven 'd«ad' wrong thousands&#13;
of-times."&#13;
Obituarie s&#13;
MRS. EUGENE TOWNE*&#13;
Mrs. Wandajean Park s Towne r&#13;
52, died on Decembe r 24 at St.&#13;
Joseph Merc y Hospita l following&#13;
an illness of five days. She was&#13;
the wife of Eugen e Towner , a&#13;
proprieto r of the Pinckne y Genera l&#13;
Store . Th e coupl e lived at 1020&#13;
Lincol n Avenue', Ann Arbor.&#13;
Mrs. Towne r was the daughte r&#13;
of Mrs . Stella Park s of Lansin g&#13;
and th e late Ed Parks .&#13;
Surviving, in additio n to h e r&#13;
husban d and mother , are t w o&#13;
brothers , Ray Park s of Ann Arbor&#13;
and Harr y Park s of Pinckney ; two&#13;
sisters, Mrs . Leon a Edgar and Mrs.&#13;
Mami e Gaus s of Lansing ; two&#13;
nephews . Gen e Edgar of Pinckne y&#13;
and Vern Park s of Ann Arbor,&#13;
and on e niece, Vicki Parks, also&#13;
of Ann Arbor.&#13;
Funera l services were held at&#13;
the Muehli g Funera l Chapel , Ann&#13;
Arbor, on Decembe r 27, at 3&#13;
o'cloc k in the afternoon . En -&#13;
tombmen t was in a mausoleu m in&#13;
Washtenon g Memoria l Park .&#13;
SAMUEL ST. PIERRE&#13;
Samue l H . St. Pierre , 61, of&#13;
Lakeland , died suddenl y Thursda y&#13;
mornin g in St. Joseph Merc y Hos -&#13;
pital, Ann Arbor, where he was&#13;
admitte d Wednesday night .&#13;
in Canada.&#13;
Library News We have a new book which w^&#13;
are sure everyone will enjoy —&#13;
there is already a waiting list for&#13;
it: "Aunt Jane McPhipps and Her&#13;
Baby Blue Chips" by Rummell.&#13;
This is a story of bright and magical&#13;
fun about a charming widow&#13;
who invades the stock market and&#13;
discovers the profits and profiles&#13;
of investment in money and love.&#13;
The reader may even be able to&#13;
profit by her experiences in the&#13;
stock market.&#13;
Also for adults are two n e w&#13;
mysteries: "Deaf, Dumb a nd&#13;
Blonde" by Morton and "Murder&#13;
Has Its Points" by Lockridge.&#13;
New books for boys and girls in-&#13;
On August 27, 1937, he was&#13;
married in Detroit to Angelina Szumigaj.&#13;
She survives.&#13;
He was a retired excavating contractor,&#13;
and had operated businesses&#13;
in Brighton, Lakeland and Detroit.&#13;
Surviving besides his wife are a&#13;
son, John, at home; a daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Catherine Campbel of Ypsilahti;&#13;
and one grandchild.&#13;
Funeral service were at 10 a.m.&#13;
Saturday in the Swarthout Funeral&#13;
Home, the Rev. George Horkan officiating.&#13;
m Olivet Cemetery^&#13;
UcllCHt—&#13;
dude Person, "Sedge-Hill Setter"&#13;
a dog story and Montgomery, "In&#13;
Happy Hollow,'* and an animal&#13;
story, by Gault, "This is the Desert'*,&#13;
Keene, "The Haunted Showboat**&#13;
and Podendorf, "The True&#13;
Book of Space.**&#13;
We wish to thank Mrs. Leonard&#13;
Davis for three delightful children's&#13;
books and the unknown donor&#13;
who left several good books, including&#13;
mysteries in our drop-box.&#13;
The Library Board and M i s s&#13;
Preuss wish to thank the Putnam&#13;
Township Board, in particular, for&#13;
their whole-hearted cooperation, for&#13;
all they have done for us and th?&#13;
community this year and for a&#13;
bright promise of a good reading&#13;
future.&#13;
The writers club will meet in the&#13;
library at 8 p.m. Monday, January&#13;
8. All library patrons and&#13;
those interested in writing are invited&#13;
to attend.&#13;
Florence Preuss, Librarian&#13;
Post-card questionnaires will be&#13;
mailed to a random sample of the&#13;
Michigan fishermen this winter or&#13;
early in the spring to get their&#13;
views on the Conservation Department's&#13;
trout planting program.&#13;
The fishermen opinion p o l l,&#13;
first of its kind in Michigan, is&#13;
prompted by growing interest, pro&#13;
and con, over the program's costs&#13;
Have More Cash&#13;
for Christinas&#13;
Next Year.. .&#13;
JOIN OUR&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
SAYINGS CLUB&#13;
, * v * &lt;&#13;
• • *&#13;
\ ; ;&#13;
PAY FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
A LITTLE AT A TIME !&#13;
If you find it difficult to pay for all your&#13;
Christmas shopping in two or three&#13;
months, join our 1962 Christmas Savings&#13;
Club. You decide how much to save;&#13;
divide the amount by 12 months, put&#13;
away that much cash regularly here in&#13;
a Club Account . . . this time next year&#13;
you'll have all the cash you need.&#13;
IT'S EASY! IT'S SMART! JOIN TODAY!&#13;
JUS T DEPOSI T BEFORE CHRISTMAS&#13;
WEEKLY 1962 YOU RECEIVE&#13;
50c $ 25.00&#13;
$ 1.00 $ 50.00&#13;
$ 2.00 $100.00&#13;
$ 3.00 S150.00&#13;
$ 5.00 $250.00&#13;
$10.00 $500.00&#13;
SERVING&#13;
ALLYO№&#13;
BANKING&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK&#13;
HOWELL—PINCKNEY&#13;
"Serving Since 1865s9&#13;
FOR RENT: Five room house&#13;
with bath and garage. Call UP&#13;
8-3260. 5Ufc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
bath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
49tfp&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
PH. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6*4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Roasting chickens,&#13;
six pounds and up, alive or dressed.&#13;
UP 8-3353, Hulls. 52-lc&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
FRIDAY NIGHT&#13;
MIXED DOUBLE&#13;
Toppers 44&#13;
Checkmates 4P/2&#13;
Bombers 36'/2&#13;
Hee Haws 36&#13;
Double D's 36&#13;
Sharpies 35 Vz&#13;
Pinckney Polkats 34'/2&#13;
Sod busters 33'/2&#13;
Untouchables 3P/2&#13;
Patterson Lake 4 29&#13;
Bee Bee's 28&#13;
\\\\ Posters 18&#13;
24&#13;
26l/2&#13;
31V*&#13;
28&#13;
32&#13;
32V4&#13;
33 V*&#13;
34 &gt;/2&#13;
39&#13;
40&#13;
50&#13;
MEN'S "XT&#13;
December&#13;
Jim's Gulf&#13;
Lee's Standard&#13;
Kiwanis&#13;
Integral Corp.&#13;
Van's Motors&#13;
Read Lumber&#13;
Plastics&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
Lavey Hardware&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Altes Beer&#13;
BOWLING&#13;
27, 1961&#13;
45 23&#13;
44 24&#13;
35 Vz 3214&#13;
35 33&#13;
341/2 33 Vz&#13;
34'/2 33 Vi&#13;
34 34&#13;
32 36&#13;
26&#13;
21&#13;
20&#13;
42&#13;
47&#13;
48&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, January 3, 1962&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
MFMCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY aod&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigw Ave,&#13;
HOWELL PH. 3301&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
FOR RENT: modern, six rooms&#13;
and bath, 3 bedrooms, furnished or&#13;
unfurnished. Call Mrs. Oscar Beck,&#13;
UP 8-3434 or UP 8-3524.&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney district manager,&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
PART TIME employment f o r&#13;
men; Parke, Davis and Co., Ann&#13;
Arbor;, duty involves feeding of&#13;
laboratory animals; 20-25 h o u r s&#13;
weekly. Experience with farm animals&#13;
helpful. Apply in person, 9&#13;
a.m. to 3 p.m., Mon. - Friday;&#13;
2800 Plymouth Rd., Ann Arbor.&#13;
1—2c&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA (Too Late for Last Week)&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Robeson&#13;
and family enjoyed a family&#13;
Christmas spent Sunday with Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Orel Whitfield of Ypsilanti;&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Grant returned&#13;
home with them.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Max Cosgray and&#13;
daughters, Mrs. Joseph Dyer and&#13;
the, Livermore Family were supper&#13;
guests at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Charles Weidman and sons&#13;
Christmas Eve.&#13;
The students of Gregory school,&#13;
had their annual Christmas party&#13;
and gift exchange Thursday of last&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Patricia Livermore attended&#13;
the Christmas dinner party on&#13;
Saturday at the Elms given for the&#13;
employees of the Fowlerville Review.&#13;
O.E.S. CALENDAR&#13;
January 5 — Regular meeting,&#13;
8 p.m. No formats.&#13;
Jan. 9 — Friendship Night at&#13;
Brighton.&#13;
January 29 — School of I n -&#13;
struction, 7:30 p.m. Masonic Hall.&#13;
The children of Mr. and Mrs. H.&#13;
E. Marshall gathered at their home&#13;
Monday for the holidays.&#13;
For news items to be printed in&#13;
the Gregory column of the Pinckney&#13;
Dispatch, you must either call&#13;
or give your items to the correspondent&#13;
early Sunday afternoon or&#13;
evening before nine p.m. Thank&#13;
you.&#13;
(Mrs. Pat Livermore is the Gregory&#13;
correspondent for the Dispatch).&#13;
Specializing in Fin*&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wf lUttn COMPtfTf&#13;
HOMES A OAKAOiS&#13;
Carpenter Work of All Kinds&#13;
Claude Swarthoirf&#13;
10007 DexfefPiitduiey&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
RESOLUTION&#13;
Resolved that the Livingston&#13;
County Board of Supervisors authorize&#13;
the Detention Home Committee&#13;
to solicit bids for new cars&#13;
for the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
Department, as below:&#13;
1. Two cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
2. One car without trade-in.&#13;
3. Three cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
These bids to be made on cars&#13;
that will meet specifications filed&#13;
at the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
office.&#13;
These bids to be filed with ths&#13;
Livingston County Clerk by January&#13;
10, 1962, 4 p. m.&#13;
Signed:&#13;
Livingston County&#13;
Board of Supervisors&#13;
Detention Home Committee&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SIRVICE&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney!&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Michigan&#13;
people&#13;
mean&#13;
business!&#13;
,&#13;
MICHIGAN IS EVERYTHING FOR INDUSTRY&#13;
The people of Michigan are proud of their state's&#13;
industrial accomplishments. Its manufacturing&#13;
plants produce everything from automobiles to&#13;
xylophones. One reason is that Michigan has so&#13;
much of what industry needs.&#13;
Michigan has abundant sources of both raw and&#13;
semi-finished materials. Michigan possesses unmatched&#13;
production know-how in both management&#13;
and labor. Michigan has great market advantages.&#13;
Michigan has livability! Water? Michigan&#13;
is rightly named the Water Wonderland.&#13;
This is the first in a series of advertisements to&#13;
be printed as a public service by this newspaper,&#13;
each advertisement to describe one of Michigan's&#13;
advantages for industry. The series will show&#13;
the attractions our state offers, what it personifies&#13;
for industry; in reality, what MICHIGAN IS.&#13;
Help carry Michigan's message to the nation. Clip&#13;
these ads and mail them to people in other states&#13;
with your own comment. Let's talk up Michigan&#13;
and its advantages for industry. Together, we&#13;
can assure a greater future for all of us.&#13;
Tkk o4 ii oo* of a fri*s pvblitM at a public s#rvic# fry ttut&#13;
*th ffo Michigan fV#« Attociofiom 9*d tlm Mickijom Eco*omi&lt;&#13;
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch January 03, 1962</text>
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                <text>January 03, 1962 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1962-01-03</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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      <name>Text</name>
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              <text>VoL 78 — No. 52 — Ph.UPB-3lll Pinckney, Michigan — Wednesday, December 27, 1961 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
DOWN WITH THE OLD — ON WITH THE NEW: A&#13;
new parking lot for the LaRosa Tavern and Bowling Alley will re-&#13;
ViBage/ wifl be complefely n^^. OwtteTs ftfft'--"^&#13;
Meyer recently sold the building to Vlnce LaRosa. It is located immediately&#13;
west of the LaRosa property. The front section of the&#13;
building which was much taller than the remaining rear section was&#13;
torn down last week by workmen. Before the building was purchased&#13;
for use as a creamery it was occupied by the village undertaker,&#13;
Mr. Plympton. Caskets were stored in the west loom of&#13;
the apartment at the left. It has been vacant since the Rebel&#13;
Creamery closed in the late 30*s.&#13;
First Ice Storm Uses&#13;
43 Tons Salt, Sand&#13;
The first ice storm of the 1961 -&#13;
62 winter season required extensive&#13;
salting and sanding operations&#13;
.by Livingston County Road Commission&#13;
crews. Over the past week&#13;
end, more than 35 tons of salt and&#13;
18 tons of sand were applied to&#13;
dangerous intersections, hills and&#13;
curves, according to Walter J.&#13;
Clink, superintendent • manager.&#13;
Livingston County Road Commission.&#13;
Sanding operations, said Clink,&#13;
were continued on Monday at&#13;
various snots throughout the county&#13;
where slippery conditions were&#13;
considered to he the worst.&#13;
Similar ice storms during th?&#13;
1960-61 season required the application&#13;
of 130 tons of salt by&#13;
Livingston County Road Commission&#13;
crews.&#13;
Pinckncyites who have been patients&#13;
at McPherson Health Center&#13;
in the past weeks include Shirley&#13;
Divine. Sandra Allen. James Conrad,&#13;
Dorothy Wcthcrbee. Mrs. Oscar&#13;
Beck and Jerry Nichols.&#13;
Mrs. G. W. Pearson of Bellcfountainc,&#13;
Ohio, is the holiday&#13;
week guest at the Harold Henry&#13;
home. The Henrys and Mrs. Pearson&#13;
were among the Christmas dinner&#13;
guests at the George Henry&#13;
home in Ann Arbor.&#13;
Con-Con Delegate Makes I Oth Report&#13;
This week we have completed&#13;
our public hearings. I am convinced&#13;
we will be able to get into thj&#13;
second phase of our work (the&#13;
drafting of a new constitution) immediately&#13;
upon return to Lansing&#13;
on January 3.&#13;
For the past ten days we have&#13;
listened to representatives from&#13;
counties, townships, cities, Justice&#13;
of the Peace Association, constables,&#13;
drain commissioners, county&#13;
clerks, register of deeds, the&#13;
t Michigan Municipal League, Michigan&#13;
Department of Public Health&#13;
plus a host of people whom arc&#13;
interested in local government&#13;
from various points or parts of&#13;
Michigan. From this testimony&#13;
the committee has received many&#13;
valuable points of information.&#13;
Appearing before our committee&#13;
this week was David Morris, attorney&#13;
from Saginaw, who stated&#13;
that time is past due when functions&#13;
of townships should be adjoined&#13;
by county or urban towns&#13;
or should be consumed by cities&#13;
even if it took a force action. Mr.&#13;
Nash, city attorney from Saginaw,&#13;
stated that annexation should be&#13;
done by an impartial body, which&#13;
would involve the removal of the&#13;
people's right to vote on specific&#13;
issues in regard to annexing sections&#13;
of townships to obtain their&#13;
tax base regardless of services&#13;
they could render the people. Mr.&#13;
Welch. Mayor of los*. agreed&#13;
that he was in favor of limiting&#13;
township form of government.&#13;
When I asked him if his County&#13;
Board of Supervisors would be in&#13;
agreement with him, he had to admit&#13;
that they would not favor this&#13;
plan.&#13;
Mr. Moltcr, Chairman of the&#13;
Board of Supervisors for Washtcnaw&#13;
County, favored permissive&#13;
home rule but answered with an&#13;
emphatic no to the question of&#13;
would his Board of Supervisors&#13;
agree on the abolition of townships.&#13;
Al Champion, a Wayne&#13;
County tax expert, told us we&#13;
should set up assessing districts&#13;
m a n n e d by assessing experts&#13;
throughout the state. This I believe&#13;
deprives the property owner the&#13;
right to deal directly with the tax&#13;
assessor. I believe a trend of&#13;
thinking in the Local Government&#13;
Committee favors a permissive&#13;
strong home rule form of government&#13;
for our townships and counties.&#13;
The Committee on Legislative&#13;
Organization held an open hearing&#13;
in Detroit, one in the afternoon&#13;
and one in the evening, and according&#13;
to the Chairman of the&#13;
committee, there were fewer than&#13;
100 people at either meeting. By&#13;
contrast, a like meeting was held&#13;
m Berrien Springs December 20&#13;
and there were over 700 citizens&#13;
attending This indicates that the&#13;
outstate people are certainly interested&#13;
and are keeping dose contact&#13;
with the Convention&#13;
Final Ordinance&#13;
Meeting Set&#13;
The village council has set January&#13;
18, 8 p. m. as the date of&#13;
the final meeting for citizens to&#13;
discuss the proposed Zoning Ordinance&#13;
for the Village before it is&#13;
put into effect.&#13;
Last fall only seven interested&#13;
residents of the village turned out&#13;
for the preliminary meeting at the&#13;
high school.&#13;
The place of the January meeting&#13;
has not been definitely decided&#13;
but will be reported soon.&#13;
County Health&#13;
After two and one-half years of&#13;
serving at Public Health Nurse for&#13;
Livingston County, Judith Hubbjl&#13;
has resigned from her position&#13;
with the Livingston County Health&#13;
Department. The health committee&#13;
is looking for a public health&#13;
nurse to replace Mrs. Hubbel but&#13;
as yet has not hired a successor.&#13;
Nursing activities of the health&#13;
department will naturally be cut&#13;
to a minimum until a replacement&#13;
is obtained. The hearing and vision&#13;
screening programs in the schools&#13;
will continue. Mrs. Helen Lucas.&#13;
R.N., Vision and Hearing Technician,&#13;
will be doing the follow-up&#13;
after all screening is completed.&#13;
Mrs. Dorothy Dinkel. R. N., of&#13;
Pinckney, has bjen hired by thj&#13;
state to do the local planning and&#13;
follow-up in connection with a mobile&#13;
chest X-ray survey to be held&#13;
February 6 to March 2 throughout&#13;
the county.&#13;
Supervisors Honor&#13;
Thomas Howlett&#13;
At the December 19th, 1961&#13;
meeting of the Livingston County&#13;
Board of Supervisors moved by&#13;
Supvr. Miller, seconded by Supvr.&#13;
Lavan, and carried that copies of&#13;
the resolution passed on November&#13;
30th, 1961, regarding Thomas&#13;
Howlett be sent to the Pinckney&#13;
Dispatch:&#13;
WHEREAS: Thomas Howlett&#13;
has served as a member of the&#13;
Livingston County Welfare Board&#13;
since 1949, and,&#13;
WHEREAS: Thomas Howlett&#13;
has given unstintingly of his time&#13;
and talents for the purpose of aid&#13;
ing and comforting many of the&#13;
citizens of this County less fortu&#13;
nate than himself, and in so do&#13;
ing has added to the good name of&#13;
the County and himself, and&#13;
WHEREAS: Thomas Howlett&#13;
has by these acts of service to his&#13;
fellow citizens demonstrated representative&#13;
government at its best&#13;
NOW THEREFORE: We. the&#13;
Board of Supervisors of the Coun&#13;
ty of Livingston, do hereby com&#13;
mend Thomas Howlett for his past&#13;
service and wish him a long,&#13;
healthy and satisfying life.&#13;
WELFARE COMMITTEE:&#13;
Joseph H. Ellis, Chairman&#13;
Harold Armstrong&#13;
Barney Roepcke&#13;
Devie Hammer who has been a&#13;
patient at Veterans Hospital, Arm&#13;
Arbor, for several months has been&#13;
able to leave the hospital for the&#13;
holiday.&#13;
A NEW FACE TO GREET THE NEW YEAR, is what five&#13;
Main Street business places are boasting. The recently completed&#13;
$15,000 exterior remodeling of the Pinckney General Store (at&#13;
right) and the three other stores owned by the General Slore proprietors,&#13;
adds beauty to the Main Street business section which is&#13;
probably one of the most attractive to be found anywhere in the&#13;
area. At the left is the McPherson Bank which "joined" the project&#13;
to be included under the 110 foot canopy covering Ihc miniature&#13;
shopping mall complete with outdoor lighting and stone planters&#13;
holding evergreens. The King Barber Shop, the Alta Mae&#13;
Beauty Shop and one presently vacant shop are in the center.&#13;
Under the canopy old-fashioned signs advertise the various&#13;
departments of the General Store. In the rear" a large btock-topped&#13;
parking lot adds to village shoppers convenience. Above the canopy&#13;
the front is of anodized aluminum, golden in color and very&#13;
striking both day and night when spot lights are turned on.&#13;
Reward Offered For Information&#13;
Leading to Arrest of Vandals&#13;
A cash reward is being offered&#13;
for information leading to the arrest&#13;
of the unknown vandals who&#13;
smashed a statue valued at $500&#13;
and broke two large plate g l a s s&#13;
windows at Playland by throwing&#13;
pieces of the statue through them,&#13;
according to Mel Reinhart, owner&#13;
of the recreation center at Hell. It&#13;
is believed that the same vandals&#13;
are responsible for the break-in&#13;
and the ransacking of the Ranch&#13;
House Grill near Playland.&#13;
The vandalism which probably&#13;
occured sometime in the night of&#13;
December 18 was discovered Tuesday&#13;
afternoon by Mr. Reinhart. Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Al Dewey, the owners&#13;
of the closed Ranch House are&#13;
in Phoenix, Arizona for the winter.&#13;
Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
deputies say that someone apparently&#13;
used a car to batter and knock&#13;
down the six-foot statue of .Cerberus,&#13;
the mythological three-headed&#13;
dog that guards the gate to Hades&#13;
The plaster and concrete statue&#13;
was completed late last summet&#13;
for Mr. Reinhart by Gary MOOR&#13;
of Detroit who is a student in the&#13;
department of sculpture and design]&#13;
not enter Playland but did a very&#13;
thorough job of ransacking the restaurant&#13;
which is closed for t h e&#13;
winter months.&#13;
It has not been determined whether&#13;
entry was gained to the U. S.&#13;
Post Office sub-station which is in&#13;
the same building.&#13;
Hand! - Hammer&#13;
4-H Club Notes&#13;
Everyone is working hard on&#13;
his project and all work is progressing&#13;
on schedule. If the good&#13;
work keeps up there will be no&#13;
problem of finishing in time for&#13;
Spring Achievement.&#13;
There were quite a number of&#13;
absentees this week; proably gone&#13;
Christmas shopping.&#13;
Our business meeting will be&#13;
held the first Thursday in January,&#13;
on the 4th. At this time we&#13;
hope to set the time and complete&#13;
plans for our 4-H AH Club skating&#13;
party.&#13;
at Eastern Michigan. .&#13;
The statue was damaged beyond&#13;
repair. The vandab apparently dkj&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman V a n&#13;
Blatrcum and children were the&#13;
Christmas Day guests at the Henry&#13;
Liverance home m Plymouth.&#13;
Reverend Keith Ledwidge of&#13;
St. Joseph, Jackson, Mrs. Max&#13;
Ledwidge, Mrs. Raymonda Morris&#13;
and daughter, Becky, were Christmas&#13;
Day guests at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stackable&#13;
Specializing in Fine&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wf t l M * COMFlfTi&#13;
HOMIS t 0A1AGIS&#13;
|Carp»n!»r Work of All Kinds&#13;
laude Swarthoufl&#13;
10007 DeHfer-finckfiey tetdl&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
Happy New Year! We hope&#13;
the year ahead will be the&#13;
most successful of many&#13;
and that you'll have great&#13;
happiness. Swarthout&#13;
" FUNERAL HOME"&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
A car driven by Doug Atkins&#13;
left the road on E-M36 Friday afternoon&#13;
near the Webb tree farm&#13;
and tore out a number of guard&#13;
rails. The 1961 Ford was badly&#13;
damaged tnit the driver was unhurt.&#13;
Damage to the car has been&#13;
estimated over $1000.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. T o m Neff and&#13;
son of Dexter were Christmas Eve&#13;
guests at the Robert Ackley home.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Amburgey&#13;
and family and the James Knights&#13;
were Christmas Eve guests at the&#13;
Cliff Miller home.&#13;
Cadet Dick Wylie of West&#13;
Point Military Academy, N. Y., is&#13;
home spending the holidays with&#13;
his parents the K. A. Wylies. The&#13;
Wylies were hosts at dinner at&#13;
their home on Christmas for Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. W. H. Euler, Mrs. Lillian&#13;
Wylie of Dexter and M r and&#13;
Mrs. S, J. Hamilton of Detroit.&#13;
The Lester McAfees spent Monday&#13;
evening at the home of the&#13;
latter's sister, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip&#13;
Hudson, Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Gene Towner of Ann Arbor,&#13;
wife of one of the proprietors&#13;
of Pinckney General Store suffered&#13;
a cerebral hemorrhage- at her&#13;
home last Monday afternoon and&#13;
dU i&#13;
Tn Si. Tosepk hospphnh&#13;
Emergency surgery was considered&#13;
about noon on Saturday according&#13;
to a member of the family.&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
CWmif &amp; UfUllk«&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SMVICE&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Hendee and&#13;
family and Mrs. Lynn Hendee&#13;
spent Christmas day with the Russell&#13;
Nuoffer family in Lansing.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman White&#13;
had as their Christmas Day guests,&#13;
the Ben Whites of Anderson.&#13;
The James Singers, the Robert&#13;
Vedder family, the Don Swarthouts,&#13;
Mrs. Dora Swarthout and&#13;
the Edwin Stapleton family were&#13;
Christmas Day guests at the H. C.&#13;
Vedder home.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Baughn&#13;
were hosts at a Christmas Eve party&#13;
for all the Baughn families.&#13;
There were 32 present.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Line entertained&#13;
at Christmas dinner, the&#13;
Herman Widmayers and the Emmett&#13;
Widmayer family. Thomas&#13;
Line, Jr., is home from Michigan&#13;
Tech, Houghton, for the holiday&#13;
vacation.&#13;
Birthday greetings go to Glenn&#13;
Hardesty today; Lorenzo Murphy,&#13;
Mrs. W. H. Meyer and E a r l&#13;
Suggitt tomorrow. John Rossiter,&#13;
Earl Sprague, A. E. Weinschenk&#13;
and Mrs. Susie Huffman observe&#13;
their birthdays on December 29;&#13;
Max Dettling, Lonnie Huhmnn,&#13;
Don Wiltse and Patricia Holcomb&#13;
•orrSaturday, ENgccnihcr30; foutine:&#13;
Gilbertson have birthdays on Sunday,&#13;
the last day of 1961.&#13;
Joe Tomasik of Dexter road&#13;
starts the New Year, every year,&#13;
by observing his birthday on January&#13;
1. January 2 is the happy occasion&#13;
for Hazel Breniser, Bob&#13;
Haarer, Ruby Brewis and Verner&#13;
Campbell.&#13;
The Merwin Campbells spent&#13;
Christmas at home entertaining&#13;
Mrs. Mae Daller, Mrs. William&#13;
Ketcham and the George Engquists&#13;
on Sunday and the Raymond&#13;
Spencers of Northville and&#13;
the Richard Campbells of Ypsilanti&#13;
on Monday.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
250 D»x*r Strwt ESTABLISHED IN 1983 Pinduwy,&#13;
Publi«h«d Evry Wednesday by C. M. lavy and I. W, DoyU. Owmo 4&#13;
illZAMTH A. COlOm. Editor&#13;
Stand d«$ potttQt paid at Pindwy, Michigan&#13;
Th» columnsof This paper am mn optn forum wharf avaJlaWa tp*ca, grammatical,&#13;
lagal and athklal comidaraliom ara iha only fttrkHofU.&#13;
Subscription ratal, $2.00 par year in advanca in Michigan; $2.50 in oihar states and&#13;
U.S. Possessions. $4.00 to foreign countries. Six months rates: $LJ0 in Michigan;&#13;
$175 in other stales and U. S. possessions; $3.00 to foreign countries. Military&#13;
n».sonnet $2.50 per year. No mail subscriptions taken tor less then six months.&#13;
wtising rates upon anplifatinn&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Max Russell attended&#13;
the wedding of Miss Judy&#13;
Hauer to Arnold Beyer in Lansing&#13;
Saturday evening and were&#13;
among the 600 guests at the reception&#13;
and the buffet following&#13;
the reception at the Poplars.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harding&#13;
were Christmas Eve guests at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Raymonda Morris&#13;
and Becky.&#13;
US'&#13;
To our many friends everywhere&#13;
we send the warmest&#13;
of greetings for the New&#13;
Year. Best of luck always.&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
— CLEANERS&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Meyer entertained&#13;
all their children and&#13;
grandchildren on Christmas except&#13;
the Cyrus AtLees (Megan) of&#13;
Gladwin who are in Florida this&#13;
winter and the Garth Meyers of&#13;
Houghton Lake who were unable&#13;
to attend because Garth was on&#13;
duty Christmas Day with the State&#13;
Police.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 27, 1961&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
NEW I YEA?&#13;
We hope 1962 will be&#13;
a happy and prosper'&#13;
ous year for all of our&#13;
many friends and good&#13;
neighbors.&#13;
Read's Lumber&#13;
Farmer Peets&#13;
CANNED HAMS&#13;
Peters&#13;
SKINLESS FRANKS&#13;
Lean Fresh&#13;
GROUND BEEF&#13;
Super- Pac&#13;
PAPER PLATES&#13;
Van Camps&#13;
PORK &amp; BEANS&#13;
10 LB.&#13;
AVG.&#13;
Campbell's&#13;
TOMATO SOUP&#13;
Diamond Crystal&#13;
IODIZED SALT&#13;
CAN&#13;
26 OZ.&#13;
PKG.&#13;
2 9 1 Faygo KING&#13;
SIZE&#13;
LBS.&#13;
PKG.&#13;
OF 40&#13;
UPTOWN&#13;
Upton's&#13;
TEA BAGS&#13;
FOR&#13;
PKG.&#13;
OF 64&#13;
I LB.&#13;
CANS&#13;
PINCKNEY GENERAL STO Evenings 'til 9s00 — Sunday. 9 * 0 a.m. to I:3CI p.m.&#13;
TewSnTpSckney UPtown 8-9721 Pinckney, - ^&#13;
PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
Wednesday, December 27 thru Saturday, December 30&#13;
To our friends we&#13;
send greetings for&#13;
A • • •&#13;
HAMBURG DAIRY&#13;
Designate New |High School&#13;
Centennial onor Roll The farm owned by Joseph Me-1 GRADE 9—&#13;
Cteer of Rt. No. 2, Gregory, Michigan,&#13;
has recently been designated&#13;
as a centennial farm by the Michigan&#13;
Historical Commission. Thisfarm,&#13;
located in the township of&#13;
Unadilla, county of Livingston has&#13;
been in the possession of the family&#13;
since 1835. It was originally&#13;
purchased in the year by James&#13;
McCleer, Great-Grandfather of the&#13;
present owner, from Government.&#13;
The Michigan Historical Commission&#13;
established its centennial&#13;
A: Barbara Ludwig; A — : Shirley&#13;
Hiliman, Rachelle Randall,&#13;
Judy Reynolds; B + : L a r r y&#13;
Baughn,, Joyce Cocanower, Joan&#13;
Eichman, Terri Jernigan, Stanley&#13;
Kourt, Pam Seefeld, Kathee Shettleroe,&#13;
Alice Suter, John Walton,&#13;
Ann Marie Young; B: Joe Basydlo,&#13;
Rose Belcher, Niane Bowlin, Mary&#13;
Cosgray, James Eason, Kenneth&#13;
Garr, Paul Gray, Larry McKenna,&#13;
Karen Preston, Kathy Ruggles,&#13;
Tom Trumbull, Rose Marie Vedfarm&#13;
recognition program in 1948, |der, Mary Wylie, Kathy Yeoman,&#13;
and since that year has awarded |GRADE 10:&#13;
A—: Barbara Johnson, G a r y&#13;
Warner; B: Pat Borovsky, Duane&#13;
certificates and metal markers to&#13;
some sixteen hundred Michigan&#13;
farms. The program is administered&#13;
by the State Historical Museum,&#13;
Lansing, Michigan; and the markers&#13;
have been provided through the&#13;
courtesy of the Detroit Edison&#13;
Company and the Consumers Power&#13;
Company.&#13;
Kaye Wylie.&#13;
Time runs out on the&#13;
old year as it must,&#13;
but we take the time&#13;
to wish you well in&#13;
the year ahead.&#13;
Van's Motor Sales&#13;
W E hope the New Year&#13;
brings you and yours all&#13;
the good things of our&#13;
wonderful world.&#13;
Lavey Hardware &amp; Insurance&#13;
Knapp, Florence Mrofka, Elma&#13;
Shugg.&#13;
GRADE 11:&#13;
A — : Mary Aschenbrenner, Shirley&#13;
Czerwinski, Gerald Pike; B:&#13;
Joan Endres, Kathy Gustafson,&#13;
Dwight Matteson, Jesse Petty,&#13;
Marie Rawden, Nancy Read,&#13;
Rubeelee Thorton; B: Pat Bays,&#13;
Camille Buda, Judy Darrow, Charles&#13;
DeWolf, Bill Light, Sandra Miller,&#13;
Rebecca Morris.&#13;
GRADE 12:&#13;
A: Rachel Nash; B + : D e n i s e&#13;
Mowers, Barbara Baughn, Neil&#13;
Hall, Bruce Henry, Dick Line,&#13;
Peter Chamberlain, a sophomore&#13;
at Michigan Tech, Sault Ste.&#13;
Marie branch, is spending a two&#13;
week holiday with his parents, the&#13;
Franklin C. Chamberlains.&#13;
Holtbag&#13;
CSmtittga&#13;
Clark's Grocery&#13;
PINCKNEY'S&#13;
FINEST FOOD STORE&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
MEN'S LEAGUE&#13;
Joe's 36 24&#13;
Blatz 35 V* 2O'/2&#13;
Strohs 31 29&#13;
Boyds 27 V4 32 V4&#13;
Pfeiffers 27 33&#13;
Falstaff 19' 37&#13;
MEN'S "A" BOWLING&#13;
Lee's Standard&#13;
Velvet Eez Shoes&#13;
Jim's Gulf&#13;
Van's Motors&#13;
Read Lumber&#13;
Integral Corp&#13;
Kiwanis&#13;
Plastics&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
Lavey Hardware&#13;
Altes Beer&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
44&#13;
43 V2&#13;
41&#13;
34 V*&#13;
341/2&#13;
34&#13;
32 Vi&#13;
31&#13;
28&#13;
25&#13;
19&#13;
17&#13;
20&#13;
20V*&#13;
23&#13;
29 V*&#13;
29«/2&#13;
30&#13;
31V*&#13;
33&#13;
36&#13;
39&#13;
45&#13;
47&#13;
Herman Widmayer suffered a&#13;
broken wrist while doing early&#13;
morning chores on his farm Friday.&#13;
A cow, apparently fearful&#13;
that he would touch her new calf,&#13;
butted Mr. Widmayer with her&#13;
head striking his wrist sharply&#13;
against a steel stantion.&#13;
rvmnm.&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 84621&#13;
Pinekney, Michigan&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"FRUIT WITH THE FLAVOR" 4880 W. M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
• •&#13;
• «&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• •&#13;
• »&#13;
• *&#13;
• •&#13;
• • •&#13;
• * • • •&#13;
• • •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• • • •&#13;
• • •&#13;
• • • • • • •&#13;
• • • • • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • t •&#13;
• § • • • • » • • « • • • • » » • • • •&#13;
» • t t &gt; t • • • • • • • • • • &gt; • •&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • •&#13;
• • • . ! • • • • • •&#13;
• • • &gt; • • • « • ! • • • • • • •&#13;
• • • t « i « t « t t f ~ ~&#13;
• • • • • • &lt; • t i t * . . .&#13;
• &lt; * • • • • • • • • • • • • .&#13;
• • • • • • • • • • • i&#13;
1-lAppy&#13;
New&#13;
1962 YEAR&#13;
The bells are ringing&#13;
in the New Year. May&#13;
you find great joy in&#13;
the days ahead. Thank&#13;
you for youc support&#13;
during the past year.&#13;
Hickory KI&#13;
Stockbridge, Mich.&#13;
Farm Dairy&#13;
Phone 851-3000&#13;
Conservation&#13;
Notes&#13;
Don't blame it on the holiday&#13;
highball if you see a red Canada&#13;
goose or two in Michigan during&#13;
the next few weeks.&#13;
You may spot some of these&#13;
colored honkers any lime during&#13;
the winter, as a matter of fact. If&#13;
so, the Conservation Department&#13;
would like to know when and&#13;
where your sightings were made.&#13;
BEST WISHES&#13;
Your patronage during&#13;
the past year was apthe&#13;
new year we hope&#13;
you will remember us.&#13;
Bev's Restaurant&#13;
It's all part of an effort among&#13;
Mississippi Flyway states and&#13;
provinces to study goose movements&#13;
during this season of the&#13;
year.&#13;
The wings o fabout 80 livetrapped&#13;
geese were recently dipped&#13;
in red dye at the Department's&#13;
Swan Creek wildlife experiment&#13;
station. The birds have been&#13;
turned loose and their undersides&#13;
also may have taken on a reddish&#13;
or pinkish hue from preening.&#13;
Different colors are being used&#13;
to identify birds released in other&#13;
Mississippi Flyway states.&#13;
Mrs. Clayton Bekkering and&#13;
daughter, Judy, entertained Saturday&#13;
evening at their home at a&#13;
family dinner party for thirty&#13;
guests&#13;
Season's&#13;
Greetings&#13;
FROM&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
imw&#13;
HOWELL,&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
State Police to Increase Patrols&#13;
Emphasizing that the increased&#13;
drinking and fatigue which accompany&#13;
New Year's partying add to&#13;
traffic dangers, the State Police in&#13;
preparing for the holiday patrol&#13;
urge motorists and pedestrians to&#13;
take extra precautions during the&#13;
78-hour weekend.&#13;
"The New Year is an appropriate&#13;
time to resolve that, whenever&#13;
you drive or walk, you will do all&#13;
that you can to avoid being involved&#13;
in an accident," said Commissioner&#13;
Joseph A. Childs. "Full&#13;
attention to the safety rules, in cooperation&#13;
with law enforcement&#13;
patrols, can help hold the line on&#13;
the holiday toll."&#13;
The State Police will operate increased&#13;
patrols from noon Friday&#13;
December 29 to midnight Monday&#13;
January 1, assisted during part of&#13;
that time by 106 members of the&#13;
National Guard.&#13;
Maximum patrol coverage will&#13;
be in effect from 1 p.m. Sunday&#13;
December 31 to 6:30 a. m. New&#13;
Year's day, the hours when most&#13;
year-end celebrating is being done.&#13;
Seventeen persons were killed&#13;
Library News&#13;
The Pinckney Community Library&#13;
wishes all its patrons a Happy&#13;
New Year and good reading in&#13;
the New Year. Resolve to read&#13;
more!"We can promise you many&#13;
you inform us as to your preferences&#13;
in reading.&#13;
New books this week for young&#13;
people are Reeder, "The Story of&#13;
the Civil War"; Joy, "Getting to&#13;
Know the Two Chinas" and&#13;
Spencer, "Hand of the Chinese&#13;
People."&#13;
Notes of&#13;
48 Years Ago&#13;
Dr. Mart Clinton, Stella and&#13;
Casimer Clinton of Detroit and&#13;
Mable Clinton of Paw Paw are&#13;
spending the holidays with their&#13;
parents, the R. Clintons here.&#13;
William Doyle entertained for&#13;
Christmas James Spears, §SrM John&#13;
Spears and Mr. and Mrs. George&#13;
Erwin of Owosso.&#13;
Caroline, Mark and Edward&#13;
Ayres of Detroit are holiday&#13;
guests of their grandmother, Mrs.&#13;
Sarah Nash.&#13;
Christmas tree and program at the&#13;
Wilson school Friday night,&#13;
A large crowd attended the&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. William Hill and&#13;
the former's mother, Mrs. W. Hill&#13;
were Christmas Day guests at th?&#13;
L. Cameron home on Brighton.&#13;
The hourglass turns on&#13;
another year and it's&#13;
time to extend best&#13;
wishes for the coming&#13;
year. Rodger J. Carr&#13;
Insurance Agency&#13;
in traffic mishaps in the 78-hour&#13;
New Year's period a year ago, an&#13;
average of one death every four&#13;
hours and 35 minutes.&#13;
RESOLUTION&#13;
Resolved that the Livingston&#13;
County Board of Supervisors authorize&#13;
the Detention Home Committee&#13;
to solicit bids for new cars&#13;
for the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
Department, as below:&#13;
1. Two cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
2. One car without trade-in.&#13;
3. Three cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
These bids to be made on cars&#13;
that will meet specifications filed&#13;
at the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
office.&#13;
These bids to be filed with the&#13;
Livingston County Clerk by January&#13;
10, 1962, 4 p. m.&#13;
Signed:&#13;
Livingston County&#13;
Board of Supervisors&#13;
Detention Home Committee&#13;
Here's to the New Year&#13;
and friends who gave&#13;
us their loyal support&#13;
during 1961 Happy&#13;
New Year to all.&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
RADIO &amp; T.V.&#13;
1962-&#13;
Thanks for ,#&#13;
your patronage&#13;
during the&#13;
past year.&#13;
LaRose Bowl &amp;&#13;
Tavern&#13;
We're celebrating the&#13;
New Year by thanking&#13;
you for your friendship;&#13;
WAGNER'S GROCERY&#13;
me?&#13;
Cheeriest&#13;
New Year&#13;
greetings&#13;
to you all.&#13;
FROZEN FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
The Stockbridge Brief - Sun has&#13;
adopted a new look; a change in&#13;
format to a tabloid size front and&#13;
back page which makes it easier&#13;
to handle than the large size page.&#13;
The Fowlervillc Review has also&#13;
made the change.&#13;
The Dexter Dreadnaughts are&#13;
now in second place in the Washtenaw&#13;
Conference b a s k e t b a l&#13;
standings after defeating the Chelsea&#13;
Bulldogs 78-42 Friday night&#13;
(Chelsea will come to P.H.S. on&#13;
Friday, Jan. 5.)&#13;
Donors gave 141 pints of blood&#13;
at the recent Chelsea Community&#13;
Blood Bank as compared to 117&#13;
given last year. Following the&#13;
clinic the Blood Bank chairman,&#13;
Howell Church has&#13;
Phon-A-Devotion&#13;
A new service has been added&#13;
to the usual time and weather report&#13;
service for Livingston county&#13;
phone users.&#13;
By calling Howell 3080 at any&#13;
time of day or night Livingston&#13;
county residents can listen to a&#13;
special one-minute devotional and&#13;
prayer pre-recorded by the Reverend&#13;
Charles Kolb of Emanuel&#13;
Church in Howell.&#13;
Reverend Kolb calls his service&#13;
"Phm-A-Devotion." He offers a&#13;
reads them into the automatic&#13;
telephone answering machine in&#13;
his office. "It is my hope that this&#13;
service will help to broaden th?&#13;
devotional life of the people," he&#13;
states.&#13;
He suggests that Phon-A-Deyotions&#13;
callers wait a minute and repeat&#13;
their calls if the line is busy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Wiltse&#13;
were Christmas dinner guests of&#13;
the Don Wiltses.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Ona Campbell&#13;
are spending the Christmas holidays&#13;
with the Carl Lentz family&#13;
in Lansing where their four grandchildren&#13;
awaited them and before&#13;
returning home will visit at the&#13;
Paul Strawhecker home in Grand&#13;
Rapids. The Campbell's plans for&#13;
the first week of the New Year include&#13;
a trip to Florida.&#13;
appy&#13;
ear&#13;
With father time&#13;
we wish you good&#13;
hick and good&#13;
health&#13;
s Bank&#13;
Mrs. Dudley Holmes announced&#13;
that four Chelsea members were&#13;
honored as new members of the&#13;
"Gallon Club'* a designation going&#13;
to those who at various clinics&#13;
have given one gallon or more of&#13;
their blood.&#13;
The members of Whitmore Lake&#13;
Senior Citizens club were the&#13;
guests of the Whitmore Lake Kiwanis&#13;
Club at an annual Christmas&#13;
dinner this year.&#13;
Obituary&#13;
MRS. ANN PARSONS&#13;
Mrs. Ann E. Parsons, 53, died&#13;
last Thursday morning at h»r&#13;
ome, 9343 Shannon Drive, Hamburg&#13;
township, following several&#13;
month's illness.&#13;
She was a native of Ann Arbor,&#13;
born January 21, 1908, the daughter&#13;
of John and Anna C. Knorr&#13;
Biederman.&#13;
She was married to Oscar A.&#13;
Parsons who died on July 26,&#13;
1948.&#13;
Mrs. Parsons was a member of&#13;
the St. George Lutheran church,&#13;
Brighton, and the Ladies Arbeiter&#13;
Society of Manchester.&#13;
She is survived by her sister&#13;
Mrs. Richard (Sophie) L. Camp&#13;
with whom she made her home on&#13;
Shannon road for the past four&#13;
years and a brother, Fred W. Bied-&#13;
HAPPY&#13;
sister Have precedecTTfer&#13;
in death.&#13;
Funeral services were held Saturday&#13;
at the Muehlig Chapel in&#13;
Ann Arbor with the Rev. Robert&#13;
E. Spieler officiating. Burial was&#13;
in Bethlehem cemetery there.&#13;
Ring in the new! Ring out the old!&#13;
We hope you all have a great&#13;
1962. And thanks for your&#13;
fine support this past year.&#13;
JIM'S GULF SERVICE&#13;
TO OU"&#13;
FRIENDS!&#13;
JERRY'S RESTAURANT &amp; SODA BAR&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Roasting chickens,&#13;
six pounds and up, alive or dressed.&#13;
UP 8-3353, Hulls. 52-lc&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two nearly new&#13;
house jacks; 2 floor lamps, fireplace&#13;
screen and tools, coffee table&#13;
and rocking chair, bridesmaid&#13;
dress, pale blue, size 12, worn&#13;
once. Call UP 8-6617 evenings.&#13;
52c&#13;
To each of you&#13;
we say good&#13;
luck every day&#13;
t h r o u g h o u t&#13;
the year.&#13;
LEE'S STANDARD SERVICE&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agen&lt;&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agtnt&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage Lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 83172&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, M.D.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 A.M. to 2:00 PM.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Mon., Tues., Fri., and Sot.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's Largest&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
BUILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
Horn**, Cottages, Garages&#13;
1292 Darwin Road, Pincknmy&#13;
UP 8-nu&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
OENEtAl ^KOHANCT&#13;
M O M UP 8-3221&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff, Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
Howell Michigan&#13;
Phone 358 Residence 613&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Farms, Homes, Lake Property&#13;
Business Opportunitm*&#13;
List Your Property with Gerald Reason&#13;
Broker 102 W Mo in Street&#13;
Phone UPfown 8-3564&#13;
FOR RENT: modern, six rooms&#13;
and bath, 3 bedrooms, furnished or&#13;
unfurnished. Call Mrs. Oscar Beck,&#13;
UP 8-3434 or UP 8-3524.&#13;
FOR SALE: Wringer type washing&#13;
machine, large size. Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Ketcham, UP 8-3185. 52c&#13;
LOST: two female beagles, 2&#13;
years old, in vicinity of Monks &amp;&#13;
Cedar Lake Rds. Call Wyandotte&#13;
AV 4-7429. Reward. 52p&#13;
FOR RENT: Three room apartment,&#13;
ground floor, 2 bedrooms&#13;
and bath, hot and cold water. $35&#13;
per month. Near Pinckney. 3410&#13;
W. M-36, Fred Kulbicki. 51-52&#13;
FOR RENT: Five room house&#13;
with bath and garage. Call UP&#13;
8-3260. 51tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
WANTED — Your deer hide to&#13;
tan and make into gloves and jackets.&#13;
Deer heads mounted true to&#13;
life. Prices reasonable. Guntzviller&#13;
Taxidermy, Northville, Mich. Take&#13;
10 mile, 8 miles east of South Lyon.&#13;
Open Sundays. FI 9-2555.&#13;
47-52c&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
bath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
4?tfp&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASHMVe"pay'~c7sh~or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
M A E ' S&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
THE VERY BEST&#13;
FOR LESS&#13;
UP 8-9726&#13;
10544 Whitewood Road&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
As we start the New Year we&#13;
pray you will be one of the&#13;
many new friends we hope&#13;
to acquire during the year.&#13;
And to our many old friends,&#13;
we send the season's greetings.&#13;
Jack Hannett&#13;
WATK1NS PRODUCTS&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney district manager,&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartmen!, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 27, 1961&#13;
Thank you for your&#13;
many kind expressions&#13;
of confidence&#13;
during 1961- It's been&#13;
a pleasure to have&#13;
you as one of our&#13;
valued patrons.&#13;
GERALD REASON&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Luman A. Seanan,&#13;
8487 Thurston road, are lookng&#13;
forward to moving into their&#13;
lew Sun Park home at Hemet,&#13;
California, shortly after Christmas.&#13;
Vfr. Seaman having retired the&#13;
x&gt;uple is moving to the coast permanently^&#13;
_^&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 330&#13;
We hope the Hew Year&#13;
will shine for you with&#13;
lovely beauty, like a&#13;
candle in a darkened&#13;
room.. bright and golden&#13;
and warm.&#13;
Darrow's&#13;
BARBER SHOP&#13;
Let's celebrate the arrival of&#13;
the New Year with best wisher&#13;
to our many hometown friends.&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
(Too hie for tart week)&#13;
The Gregory P. T. O. met at&#13;
the school Monday night, December&#13;
18th, for their regular monthly&#13;
meeting.&#13;
Thursday of this week the children&#13;
of the Gregory school will&#13;
have their Christmas parties, and&#13;
gift exchange.&#13;
NEW&#13;
YEAR&#13;
been a kind year to this&#13;
community.Mow,asaHew&#13;
Year dawns, leVs hope we&#13;
have the courage to meet&#13;
the challenge of tomorrow.&#13;
-RAY M.DUFFY, M.D.-&#13;
Mr, and Mrs. John Livermore&#13;
attended a silver wedding anniversary&#13;
party held Sunday in honor&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor.&#13;
The primary dept of the Gregory&#13;
Baptist church held their practice,&#13;
and Christmas party, Saturday&#13;
afternoon in the church annex.&#13;
Miss Carolyn Robeson of Muskegon&#13;
is home for the holidays.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Marshall&#13;
and family had Sunday Christmas&#13;
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth&#13;
Zentmeyer in Eaton Rapids.&#13;
The Woman's Missionary Society&#13;
met last Wednesday at tte&#13;
home of Miss Beatrice Lam born.&#13;
Irene Marshall and Nell Demon&#13;
told of their trip and visit to New&#13;
Mexico. Refreshments of oldfashioned&#13;
English steamed pudding&#13;
and coffee were served by the&#13;
hostess.&#13;
REWARD&#13;
for Information leadim&#13;
to arrest and convictioi&#13;
Cer&amp;erTes $tatute~an&lt;&#13;
•mashed plate glass winlows&#13;
at Playland.&#13;
Write or Call&#13;
Mel Reinhart&#13;
UP 8-9915&#13;
join you in welcoming the New Year.&#13;
To all our friends we send greetings and&#13;
our thanks for your patronage. Best wishes&#13;
everyone for the New Year.&#13;
JACK REASON&#13;
McPherson Oil Distributor for Pinckney&#13;
Cheers For 62&#13;
Our toast to you for '62 . . .&#13;
good cheer, good health,&#13;
good friends, good fortune!&#13;
Hank's B-L'ne Bar&#13;
The Gregory Congregation of&#13;
Jehovah's Witnesses received an invitation&#13;
this week to attend a three&#13;
day training program in Jackson,&#13;
Michigan, January 12-14.&#13;
The 1300 ministers from 19&#13;
Congregations in Southern Michigan&#13;
will meet at the County Building&#13;
Auditorium in downtown Jackson.&#13;
Mr. Warner Miller, the presiding&#13;
minister, in discussing the arrangements&#13;
with the congregation&#13;
said, "The theme of the gathering&#13;
will be 'Assist One Another to Do&#13;
God's Will?."&#13;
The Congregation plans to attend&#13;
all three days of the training&#13;
program.&#13;
Open House for&#13;
Mrs. Van Slambrook&#13;
Mrs. Minnie VanSlambrook of&#13;
1275 Darwin road who will observe&#13;
her 80th birthday this week&#13;
will be the guest of honor at an&#13;
open house given for her by her&#13;
THE "BEST TO&#13;
What's for Lunch?&#13;
Lunch Menu Beginning Jan. 2&#13;
Submitted by school lunch official&#13;
TUESDAY:&#13;
Spaghetti with cheese wedges.&#13;
Peanut butter and butter sandwiches.&#13;
Fruit and milk.&#13;
WEDNESDAY:&#13;
Hamburger on bun. Hot vegetable.&#13;
Fruit and milk.&#13;
THURSDAY:&#13;
Stew. Peanut butter and butter&#13;
sandwiches. Fruit and milk.&#13;
FRIDAY:&#13;
Tuna fish &amp; noodles. Vegetable.&#13;
Peanut butter and butter sandwiches.&#13;
Fruit and milk.&#13;
son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Lonnie VanSlambrook at&#13;
their home in Gregory on Sunday,&#13;
December 31. They live at 106&#13;
Cass street there.&#13;
Mrs. VanSlambrook will receive&#13;
her guests from 2 to 6 p. m.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 27, 1961&#13;
MEETING&#13;
Tuesday evening, January 2nd.&#13;
at 7:45. The Livingston County&#13;
Holiness Association will hold&#13;
their monthly meeting in The&#13;
Wright's Corners Church of God&#13;
where the Rev. Allan Hancock&#13;
is the pastor.&#13;
The speaker for this month will&#13;
be the Rev. Bruce L. Srigley, pastor&#13;
of the Haller's Corners Free&#13;
Methodist Church.&#13;
There will be special music and&#13;
the public is welcome.&#13;
To the chorus of good&#13;
wishes from your many&#13;
friends we would add&#13;
our best wishes for&#13;
the coming year.&#13;
Beverage Distributor —&#13;
from Pinckney, Mich.&#13;
As we launch \96i we say&#13;
thank you for your valued&#13;
patronage and support during&#13;
the past year, and to&#13;
STANLEY DINKEL&#13;
TREE&#13;
TRIMMING&#13;
TV ANTENNA&#13;
REPAIR&#13;
BOB VEDDER&#13;
UP 8-3452&#13;
VERY REASONABLE&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
[OH ell Phone 1769|&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Dec. 27-28-29-30&#13;
To all we have served&#13;
during the past year&#13;
and all those we hope&#13;
to serve in the coming&#13;
year we extend our best&#13;
wishes&#13;
Wiltse Electric&#13;
Surt., Mon., TuesM&#13;
Dec. 31, Jan. 1-2&#13;
Matinee Sunday and New&#13;
Year's Day at 2:30 p. m.&#13;
Continuous&#13;
•/.•i&#13;
We'd like to join Father&#13;
Time in wishing you a&#13;
happy, healthy, and&#13;
successful New Year!&#13;
We're looking forward&#13;
to seeing you often and&#13;
serving you well during&#13;
the year to come!&#13;
Norman&#13;
Van Blaircum&#13;
Painting &amp; Decorating&#13;
UP 8-3426&#13;
Hail&#13;
1962&#13;
Wed., Iliurs., Fri, Sat.&#13;
Jan. 3-4-5-6&#13;
V I R A E i L l N&#13;
There isn't a horn big enough or loud enough to&#13;
blast out our best wishes to ail of our good&#13;
friends. May the sounds of happiness fill your&#13;
home all through the coming year and fill your&#13;
heart with peace, love, contentment.&#13;
QUALITY CHEVROLET&#13;
HOWEU. MICHIGAN&#13;
Hamburg Township&#13;
Official Minutes&#13;
December 18, 1961&#13;
Meeting called to order by F.&#13;
Shehan, Hamburg Supervisor, for&#13;
the transaction of such business as&#13;
might properly come before it.&#13;
Minutes of November 27, 1961&#13;
meeting were read and approved.&#13;
Communication from County&#13;
Extension Service Director of the&#13;
Cooperative Extension Service of&#13;
Michigan State University were&#13;
read and ordered filed.&#13;
Communication from Pinckney&#13;
Community Schools were read&#13;
Respectfully submitted,&#13;
Edward A. Rettinger&#13;
Hamburg Township Clerk&#13;
James A. Boyd&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
and ordered filed.&#13;
The following bills were read:&#13;
F. Shehan, Dec. services $258.00&#13;
E. McAfee, Dec. services 208.00&#13;
E. Rettinger, Dec. services 125.00&#13;
Wm. Backlund, Dec. services 10.00&#13;
M. Bennett, Dec. services 10.00&#13;
C. Radloff, Dec. services 25.00&#13;
F. Vosmik, Liquor enforcement&#13;
and special mileage 59.70&#13;
McPherson Oil, T. H. oil 55.53&#13;
Phillips Pet. Co., T. H. gas 7.68&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch 6.60&#13;
Doubleday Bros. 16.59&#13;
Hamburg Hdwe. 16.27&#13;
Clerical work (books, taxroll)&#13;
183.00&#13;
Extra telephone calls (supvr.) 3.00&#13;
Hamburg Fire Dept. 150.00&#13;
Det. Edison, st. lights 53.83&#13;
D. Moon, legal retainer&#13;
fee &amp; added service 200.00&#13;
Motion by M. Bennett, supported&#13;
by Wm. Backlund, that bills be&#13;
paid. Motion carried.&#13;
Petition from Mr. J. Tepatti, requesting&#13;
a street light be installed&#13;
at the corner of Kress &amp; Shan Gri&#13;
La roads.&#13;
Petition from Mrs. Gladys Lee,&#13;
Lakeland Postmaster, requesting a&#13;
street light be placed near the Post&#13;
office.&#13;
Motion by E. Rettinger, supported&#13;
by Wm. Backlund that petitions&#13;
be approved. Motion carried.&#13;
Moved by Rettinger, suppored&#13;
by McAfee that meeting be adjourned.&#13;
Time: 10:00 P. M. Next&#13;
[ Y W&#13;
Just a brief message wishing&#13;
each and every one of&#13;
you happiness and prosperity&#13;
during the New Year. Clare's&#13;
BARBER SHOP&#13;
CELEBRATE YOUR&#13;
NEW YEAR'S PARTY&#13;
AT THE ANCHOR INN&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
Fun for Everyone—on Evening&#13;
You'll Mever Forgot&#13;
Sunday, December 31st&#13;
STARTING AT 9 P.M.&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 641*3 or HA 6-9181&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
P a t r i c k Murningham, wellknown&#13;
public leader in the county,&#13;
died at Mellus hospital in Brighton.&#13;
He was active in civic work&#13;
and served as deputy under three&#13;
Democratic sheriffs and was slated&#13;
for re-appointment by Sheriffelect&#13;
Irvin Kennedy.-&#13;
Miss Mary Coyle, 86, the last&#13;
of a pioneer family of Northfield&#13;
township died this week. She&#13;
leaves five nephews, Rev. Joseph&#13;
Coyle of Ionia, Louis of Pinckney,&#13;
Thomas of Howell, Alexander and&#13;
Leo of Ann Arbor.&#13;
The Masons and the Stars have&#13;
announced plans for a big New&#13;
Years ball to usher in 1937.&#13;
About $150 was taken in at the&#13;
feather party at St. Mary's Saturday&#13;
night.&#13;
Junior Dinkel is ill with pneumonia.&#13;
The Clarence Stackables have&#13;
moved into the W. W. Barnard&#13;
house they recently bought.&#13;
Miss Mary Jane AtLee of the&#13;
University of Michigan is spending&#13;
the holidays with her parents, the&#13;
W. C. AtLees.&#13;
W. C. Miller and son, Norman,&#13;
sold their supply di furs last week.&#13;
It was one of the largest sales in&#13;
this area, worth $300.&#13;
Mrs. Weltha Vail is spending the&#13;
. TJelen £&gt;rfver in Lanstng.&#13;
Jack Dilloway and Francis Solosan&#13;
have accepted positions wi:h&#13;
the Ford Motor Co. at River&#13;
Rouge.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Swarthout.&#13;
Mrs. Pauline Vedder and children&#13;
attended the Christmas exercises&#13;
directed by Mrs. Don Swarthout&#13;
at the Winans School Friday night.&#13;
A banquet was served by th:&#13;
board following the program.&#13;
There were three weddings of&#13;
interest to local readers in the December&#13;
30, 1936, issue. Miss Germaine&#13;
Ledwidge and Louis Stackable&#13;
«were married at the Church&#13;
of the Visitation in a 6 a. m. ceremony&#13;
on December 28. They were&#13;
attended by Miss Leola Stackabl^&#13;
as bridesmaid and Hubert Ledwidge&#13;
as best man.&#13;
Miss Mildred Jack, daughter of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jack of&#13;
Lakeland, and Robert Ackley of&#13;
Howell were married in Howeil on&#13;
December 26. The bride was attended&#13;
by her twin sister, Madge;&#13;
the best man was Richard Zizka.&#13;
Miss Florine Parkinson became&#13;
the bride of George Hopper oi&#13;
Lansing on Christmas Day. Their&#13;
attendants were Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Max Parkinson of Pinckney.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 27, 1961&#13;
MAY&#13;
BE FULL OF&#13;
We wish you well in&#13;
1962 and hope your&#13;
dreams materialize.&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG Pfc. Walter Pietras, son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. John Pietras, is home on&#13;
leave from Fort Gordon, Georgia,&#13;
for the holidays. He will claim as&#13;
his bride, Miss Sharon Teasdale,&#13;
daughter of the John Teasdales of&#13;
Ypsilanti on Saturday, Dec. 30.&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
MORTGAUl SALE&#13;
Default having been made in the&#13;
conditions of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Russell&#13;
B. Buckner and Dorothy V. Bockner,&#13;
his wife, as mortgagors, to Thurber&#13;
Cornell, as mortgagee, and recorded in&#13;
the office of the Register of Deeds for&#13;
Livingston County, Michigan, April 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber 155 at page 626; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
December 16, 1954, assigned by J. Henry&#13;
Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administrators&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cornell,&#13;
deceased, to Esther D. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in Liber 298 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January 17, 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Athey, by assignment&#13;
recorded on the same date in&#13;
Liber 299 at page 306 thereof;&#13;
Notice is hereby given that said&#13;
mortgage will be foreclosed pursuant to&#13;
power of sale and the premises therein&#13;
described as land in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wit:&#13;
The north half of the southeast quarter&#13;
of Section twenty-six (26), in Township&#13;
4 North, Range 4 east, Michigan,&#13;
corT?dirTnTy "eighty szrsi of land, more&#13;
pr less, excepting the right of way of&#13;
|he Ann Arbor Railroad and also excepting&#13;
easement to Consumers Power&#13;
Company?- recowted--Ja-^ Ubex~ -187 L&#13;
Will be sold at public auction to the&#13;
highest bidder for cash by the Sheriff&#13;
of Livingston County, Michigan, at the&#13;
west front door of the Court Howie in&#13;
the City of Howell, in said County and&#13;
State, on Friday the fifth day of January&#13;
1962, at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
of said day. There is due and payable&#13;
at the date of this notice upon the debt&#13;
secured by said mortgage, the sum of&#13;
Four Thousand two hundred eighty-six&#13;
Dollars and Fifty-three Cents ((4266.53).&#13;
Ruth Cornell Athey,&#13;
Assignee of mortgagee.&#13;
Dated: October ) ) , 1961&#13;
Van Winkle, Van Winkle &amp; Heikkinen,&#13;
Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee.&#13;
Business Address:&#13;
Howeil, Michigan.&#13;
The newlyweds will leave on January&#13;
2 for Fort Rucker, Alabama,&#13;
where he will be on new duty.&#13;
Mrs. Peter Gerycz and Mrs.&#13;
Ben Pietras were co-hostesses at a&#13;
shower last Wednesday evening at&#13;
the Pietras home honoring brideelect&#13;
Sharon Teasdale of Ypsilanti,&#13;
Carl "Bud" Sowers, Jr., a student&#13;
at Concordia College, Milwaukee,&#13;
Wisconsin, is spending the&#13;
holidays with his parents, the Carl&#13;
Sowers, Sr., at Lakeland.&#13;
A large crowd turned out for&#13;
the Community Carol Singing at&#13;
the St. Stephen Episcopal church&#13;
Saturday evening.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Waterbury&#13;
were hosts at Christmas dinner to&#13;
their parents, the Lester McAfees&#13;
and the Ivan Waterburys; Miss&#13;
Leslie McAfee and the William&#13;
Clapper family of Howell.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 27, 1961&#13;
It was a pleasure to&#13;
serve you during the&#13;
past year. To all our&#13;
friends we say happy&#13;
New Year.&#13;
Hockey's Service&#13;
May the New&#13;
Year bring&#13;
you lots of&#13;
happiness!&#13;
Pinckney Body&#13;
140 Livingston St. Phone UP 8-3149&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain saws and lawn mowers repaired and sharpen'&#13;
ed. Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
Water pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
•nd used fractional HP motors for sale.</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>December 27, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1961-12-27</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No. 51 — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinckney. Michigan — Wednesday, December 20, 1961 Sinale 10c&#13;
Peace on earth, good will to all&#13;
at the joyous Christinas season&#13;
"Ye shall find the hahc wrapped in&#13;
swaddling clothes, lying in a manger. And suddenly&#13;
there was with the angel a heavenly host&#13;
praising God and saying, "Glory to God in the&#13;
highest, and on rarth peace, good will toward&#13;
men/ M&#13;
Across the years echo the words of&#13;
the Christmas story, an inspiration, a promise&#13;
and a hlessing to all mankind. At this holy,&#13;
joyous season, we wish to all our friends and&#13;
customers a holiday rich in the spiritual rewards&#13;
of Christinas, and a full portion of all&#13;
th» good things that a happy Yuletide holds.&#13;
Basement Department&#13;
8" Bonnie Doll with Layette ...2.98&#13;
10" Bonnie Doll with Layette ...2.98&#13;
12" Bonnie Doll with Layette .. .4.98&#13;
Miss Muffet Tea Sets&#13;
98c to $2.98&#13;
• • • • • •&#13;
Doctor &amp; Nurse Sets&#13;
.98 to 1.98&#13;
Tootsie Toys&#13;
REMCO LINE&#13;
As Advertised on T.V.&#13;
Ball Turret Gun 12.98&#13;
U.S. Navy Frogman 11.98&#13;
Shark Racer 10.98&#13;
Fighting Lady 12.98&#13;
Empress Intercom Set 7.98&#13;
PLASTIC MODELS&#13;
and KITS&#13;
GAMES and PUZZLES&#13;
.29 to 3.98&#13;
STOCKING STUFFERS&#13;
10c to 1.00&#13;
SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE&#13;
CHRISTMAS CANDLES&#13;
27.25 t© 1.50&#13;
Structo and Tonka&#13;
STEEL TRUCKS&#13;
1.98 to 11.98&#13;
ELECTRIC TRAIN and&#13;
TRACK SET&#13;
".98&#13;
.29 to 2.98&#13;
G U N S&#13;
Cork Rifle 1.29&#13;
Smoke Rifle 2.98&#13;
Gun and Holster Sets 98 to 4.98&#13;
CAVALRY OFFICERS&#13;
COMPLETE SET&#13;
Saddle Rifle — Pistol &amp; Holster&#13;
Canteen&#13;
$5.98&#13;
GIFT WRAPS and&#13;
RIBBONS&#13;
HALLMARK&#13;
Boxed Cards and Personal Cards&#13;
^^^^^^^^^^•^^•^^^^•^^^^•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•^•••^•••••^B^B^B^^^^^^H^MI^BBB^^^^^^^H^^^HBJI&#13;
TREE AND HOME&#13;
DECORATIONS&#13;
Farmer Peel's SHANK&#13;
SMOKED HAM PORTION Ib.&#13;
YOUNG -18 lbs. &amp; up-&#13;
TOM TURKEYS Ib.&#13;
49? WHOLE OR&#13;
BUTT PORTION Ib.&#13;
29* Pillsbury Cake&#13;
MIXES... White - Yellow&#13;
or&#13;
Choc. Fudqe 3 for&#13;
59?&#13;
$100&#13;
Young 4 • 5 Ib. Avg.&#13;
DUCKLINGS Ib.&#13;
Fresh 11b. pkg.&#13;
CRANBERRIES&#13;
Grade A Large&#13;
WHITE EGGS dozen&#13;
19*&#13;
49*&#13;
Iceberg HEAD&#13;
LETTUCE •• 2 large heads&#13;
KRAFT PEANUT&#13;
BRITTLE&#13;
Pillsbury&#13;
13 oz. pkg.&#13;
5Ib.bag 251b. bag&#13;
29* mmmmmmmmmm 39*&#13;
$179&#13;
PINCKNEY Open Evenings 'til 9 * 0 — Sunday,&#13;
Telephone Knckney UPtown 0-972«&#13;
a.m. to 1:30 p.m.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan RAL STORE PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
Wednesday, Dec. 20 thru Sat., Dee. 23&#13;
* s &lt; t "&#13;
JRrrrg&#13;
sm&#13;
i&#13;
May your&#13;
Christmas be&#13;
rich in the&#13;
spiritual /&#13;
joys of the ^ / / .&#13;
season. ^ r&#13;
ABNEY&#13;
FROZEN FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
Items of Interest About Your Friends&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Colone and&#13;
sons and Mrs. J. Aschenbrenner attended&#13;
the benefit auto show in&#13;
Lincoln Park Sunday for Ernest&#13;
Szelesi, builder of the "Comanchi"&#13;
and the "Goldbrick" among other&#13;
famous show cars. Szelesi has recently&#13;
been admitted to Maybury&#13;
San. at Northville. Bobby Darin's&#13;
$125,000 custom car was on display&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Jeantet of&#13;
Bogota, Columbia, South America,&#13;
are holiday guests at the Alfred&#13;
Biery home on Portage Lake. Accompanying&#13;
the couple on their&#13;
trip to Michigan are two little&#13;
Colombian girls, Sonya and Angela,&#13;
who are looking forward to a&#13;
white Christmas; their first snow.&#13;
The visitors were among the guests&#13;
at the football banquet at the high&#13;
school Saturday evening.&#13;
We extend&#13;
to all our&#13;
friends&#13;
greetings&#13;
of the&#13;
season.&#13;
May you&#13;
find true&#13;
happiness.&#13;
y&#13;
Rodger J. Carr&#13;
Insurance Agency&#13;
J'V&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
Accept our wannest&#13;
greeting for this&#13;
Holiday season. And&#13;
thank you for&#13;
your rimy&#13;
courtesies.&#13;
1961&#13;
JIN'S GULF SERVICE&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Raring,&#13;
daughter, Pat, and Henry Gilbertson&#13;
will be the Christmas dinner&#13;
guests at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Herbert Bryan.&#13;
Christmas Eve guests at the John&#13;
Rahrig home will be Dr. and Mrs.&#13;
Ray Duffy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Schenden&#13;
and family attended the General&#13;
Motor's annual Christmas party&#13;
for employees* children at Mil ford.&#13;
Mrs. Sadie Moran will spend&#13;
Christmas holidays in Flint with&#13;
her sister. Mrs. Fannie Bradley.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. James Whitley and&#13;
children attended the G.M. employees&#13;
Christmas party-at Milford&#13;
Saturday afternoon.&#13;
Pmckneyites who were hospitalized&#13;
in the past week at McPherson&#13;
Health Center, Howell, included&#13;
Patricia Cooke, Richard Endres,&#13;
Roy Mester, Jerry Nichols, Mrs.&#13;
Oscar Beck and Walter Pietras.&#13;
Miss Karen Joy Eichman of the&#13;
Mercy School of Nursing is home&#13;
to spend a two-week holiday with&#13;
her parents, Mr. .and Mrs. Gary&#13;
Eichman.&#13;
VILLAGE OF PINCKNEY&#13;
OFFICIAL MINUTES Regular meeting of the Village&#13;
Council called to order by Pres.&#13;
Stanley Dinkel followed by roll call&#13;
of officers. Present: Lee Trplady,&#13;
Roy Clark, Mrs. Marian Russell,&#13;
Don Swarthout and C M . Lavey.&#13;
Absent: Albert Shirley.&#13;
The following resolution was&#13;
moved by Lee Tiplady and supported&#13;
by C. M. Lavey that the request&#13;
from Kevin Ledwidge for a&#13;
new S D M license to be located&#13;
p N a y s r r t &gt; ; Absent:'&#13;
Albert Shirley. Motion carried.&#13;
There was some discussion on&#13;
the Village share, if any, on the&#13;
cost of caring for the Township&#13;
Dump. It was determined by those&#13;
present that the Village shares this&#13;
expense through our Township&#13;
taxes along with other tax payers.&#13;
The Council approved the Statuary&#13;
hearing of The Proposed&#13;
Zoning ordinance to be held at a&#13;
time set by the Committee.&#13;
Motion by Swarthout supported&#13;
by Russell to allow following bills:&#13;
Lee's Standard Service —&#13;
Repairs&#13;
Robert Egeler—&#13;
Marshal's Salary&#13;
Jim's Gulf—&#13;
Misc.&#13;
Christine Dinkel—&#13;
Care Of Flag&#13;
Village Salaries —&#13;
Thos. Read Sons — Misc.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch —&#13;
Printing&#13;
Bennett's Excavating —&#13;
Local St. Work&#13;
Lavey's Hdwe. — Ins.&#13;
and Misc.&#13;
Michigan Vitritied Tile Co.&#13;
—Error in billing and&#13;
final bill 377.66&#13;
Ralph Harris —&#13;
Major St. 80.00&#13;
Robert Vedder and Chas.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20, 1961&#13;
8.00&#13;
125.00&#13;
13.25&#13;
6.00&#13;
505.00&#13;
4.35&#13;
6.25&#13;
170.00&#13;
97.45&#13;
1893—1961&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
50.00&#13;
Hewlett — Labor on&#13;
Christinas Lights&#13;
Motion to adjourn.&#13;
Mildred Ackley, Clerk&#13;
May the peace,&#13;
love and good&#13;
will of that first&#13;
Christmas be&#13;
yours forever.&#13;
Hockey's Service&#13;
: . : • - • • • • '&#13;
Clark's Grocery&#13;
PINCKNEY'S&#13;
FINEST FOOD STORE&#13;
*m#&#13;
FOR all our good&#13;
friends we wish a&#13;
Christmas blessed by&#13;
peace, hope and faith.&#13;
Lavey Hardwire&#13;
&gt; -+j&#13;
4-H NEWS&#13;
December 11, We sang Christmas&#13;
songs until 7:30. Then o u r&#13;
president, Diane Hall, called the&#13;
meeting to order. The secretary's&#13;
and treasurer's report was read.&#13;
The 4-H boys invited us to go&#13;
roller skating with them around&#13;
December 30, 1961. Our leaders&#13;
had a surprise Christmas party&#13;
planned for us. We played games,&#13;
then had refreshments of cake and&#13;
lemonade.&#13;
1961&#13;
o o&#13;
o&#13;
ft&#13;
to be your friend and&#13;
we take this means of&#13;
wishing you and yours&#13;
a merry Christmas.&#13;
King's Barber Shop&#13;
When you are buying a gas appliance,&#13;
ask to see the "Blue Star"&#13;
approval seal of the American Gas&#13;
Association, advise Michigan State&#13;
University home economists. This&#13;
seal assures you that the appliance&#13;
has satisfactorily passed construction,&#13;
safety of operation, dependability&#13;
and performance tests.&#13;
Peace&#13;
ON EARTH&#13;
Lift up your voice in song, lil&#13;
up your hearts and rejoice&#13;
ieace ani good&#13;
reign throughout the Christian&#13;
world. Rejoice!&#13;
-Silver Lake&#13;
Grocery&#13;
Sew-IToiir-Own Smocked Pillows&#13;
Ironing on smocking marks to&#13;
fabric with Multi-Blue Transfer&#13;
M c C a l l ' s Instructions for&#13;
smocking axe easy-to-follow&#13;
Smocked decorator pillows—round, square and bolster are&#13;
arranged on a Victorian sofa&#13;
A new craze in decorating is sweeping the country. Women&#13;
from New York to New Orleans, from San Francisco to Miami&#13;
have taken to sewing-their-own smocked pillows. McCall's pattern&#13;
includes three shapes—round, square and bolster. Fabric&#13;
and color choices are varied&#13;
for your hoymme or to give as&#13;
gifts.&#13;
S i l k , satin and velveteen&#13;
would be lovely and for less&#13;
formality fine corduroy a n d&#13;
soft cottons make pretty pillows.&#13;
Both round and bolster&#13;
pillows require three-quarters&#13;
of a yard of fabric. One to one&#13;
Smocking lines are ironed on&#13;
to the fabric by placing and&#13;
pinning the Multi-Blue transfer&#13;
sheet printed side down to the&#13;
wrong side of the fabric. Then&#13;
press on lines with a warm&#13;
iron. Full instructions for easy&#13;
smocking and completion of the&#13;
pillows are in McCall's pattern&#13;
envelope #2467.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
A note of thanks from the family&#13;
of Grace E. Link to *J11 who contributed&#13;
to the memorial services.&#13;
May God Bless you and Keep You&#13;
In His Care. Maurce I.ink&#13;
Christmas&#13;
W e extend greetings of the Yule to&#13;
all of you whose friendship and lovaltv&#13;
we greatly cherish. As you celebrate&#13;
the holidays our thoughts will be&#13;
with you that this may be the loveliest,&#13;
finest of them all.&#13;
HICKORY RIDGE FARM DAIRY&#13;
STOCKSRIDGE, MICHIGAN PHONE 851-3000&#13;
As you observe Christmas with&#13;
those dear and near to you,&#13;
rejoice anew at the eternal&#13;
glory and beauty of His birth&#13;
and all it means to men everywhere.&#13;
STANLEY Dtf&#13;
Join Now-&#13;
Leave Later-&#13;
The Navy Recruiting Station today&#13;
announced an emergency incentive&#13;
program aimed at procuring&#13;
volunteer enlistees to immediately&#13;
bring the Navy up to manpower&#13;
strength. Alex W. Enesey, ADRC,&#13;
USN, announced that for the remainder&#13;
of 1961 enlistees may request&#13;
and will be granted Christmas&#13;
leave, with pay, to expire at&#13;
the U. S. Navy Recruiting Station,&#13;
Detroit on January 2, 1962.&#13;
All interested men are encouraged&#13;
to contact the recruiter at&#13;
Post JOffice Building, Howeli, as&#13;
soon as possible for further information.&#13;
P1NCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20, 1961&#13;
To all our&#13;
neighbors,&#13;
friends and&#13;
patrons!&#13;
1961&#13;
La Rosa Bowl &amp;&#13;
Tavern&#13;
DELICIOUS-JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"MUIT WITH THC HAVO*" 4880 W. M-36 UP 84756&#13;
* • • * .&#13;
llrrrg&#13;
May your&#13;
Christmas be&#13;
rich in the&#13;
spiritual&#13;
joys of the&#13;
season.&#13;
i&#13;
ABNEY&#13;
FROZEN FOOD&#13;
SERVICE&#13;
Items of Interest About Your Friends&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Cokme and&#13;
sons and Mrs. J. Aschenbrenner attended&#13;
the benefit auto show in&#13;
Lincoln Park Sunday for Ernest&#13;
Szelesi, builder of the "Comanchi"&#13;
and the "Goldbrick" among other&#13;
famous show cars. Szelesi has recently&#13;
been admitted to Maybury&#13;
San. at Northville. Bobby Darin's&#13;
$125,000 custom car was on display&#13;
Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Nick Jeantet of&#13;
Bogota, Columbia, South America,&#13;
are holiday guests at the Alfred&#13;
Biery home on Portage Lake. Accompanying&#13;
the couple on their&#13;
trip to Michigan are two little&#13;
Colombian girls, Sonya and Angela,&#13;
who are looking forward to a&#13;
white Christmas; their first snow.&#13;
The visitors were among the guests&#13;
at the football banquet at the high&#13;
school Saturday evening.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Rahrig,&#13;
daughter, Pat, and Henry Gilbertson&#13;
will be the Christmas dinner&#13;
guests at the home of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Herbert Bryan.&#13;
Christmas Eve guests at the John&#13;
Rahrig home will be Dr. and Mrs.&#13;
Ray Duffy.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Schenden&#13;
and family attended the General&#13;
Motor's annual Christmas party&#13;
for employees* children at Milford.&#13;
Mrs. Sadie Moran will spend&#13;
Christmas holidays in Flint with&#13;
her sister. Mrs. Fannie Bradley.&#13;
We extend&#13;
to all our&#13;
friends&#13;
greetings&#13;
of the&#13;
season.&#13;
May you&#13;
find true&#13;
happiness.&#13;
V.&#13;
I&#13;
Rodger J. Carr&#13;
Insurance Agency&#13;
O/. MERW&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
Accept our warmest&#13;
parting for this&#13;
Holiday season. And&#13;
thank you for&#13;
your many&#13;
courtesies.&#13;
1961&#13;
JIN'S GUtF SERVICE&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. James Whitley and&#13;
children attended the G.M. employees&#13;
Christmas party at Milford&#13;
Saturday afternoon.&#13;
Pinckneyites who were hospitalized&#13;
in the past week at McPherson&#13;
Health Center, Howell, included&#13;
Patricia Cooke, Richard Endres,&#13;
Roy Mester, Jerry Nichols, Mrs.&#13;
Oscar Beck and Walter Pietras.&#13;
Miss Karen Joy Eichman of the&#13;
Mercy School of Nursing is home&#13;
to spend a two-week holiday with&#13;
her parents, Mr. .and Mrs. Gary&#13;
Eichman.&#13;
VILLAGE OF PINCKNEY&#13;
OFFICIAL MINUTES Regular meeting of the Village&#13;
Council called to order by Pres.&#13;
Stanley Dinkel followed by roll call&#13;
of officers. Present: Lee Trplady,&#13;
Roy Clark, Mrs. Marian Russell,&#13;
Don Swarthout and C. M. Lavey.&#13;
Absent: Albert Shirley.&#13;
The following resolution was&#13;
moved by Lee Tiplady and supported&#13;
by C. M. Lavey that the request&#13;
from Kevin Ledwidge for a&#13;
new S D M license to be located&#13;
a t U l Pearl St., Pinckney be.ap-&#13;
Albert y&#13;
There was some discussion on&#13;
the Village share, if any, on the&#13;
cost of caring for the Township&#13;
Dump. It was determined by those&#13;
present that the Village shares this&#13;
expense through our Township&#13;
taxes along with other tax payers.&#13;
The Council approved the Statuary&#13;
hearing of The Proposed&#13;
Zoning ordinance to be held at a&#13;
time set by the Committee.&#13;
Motion by Swarthout supported&#13;
by Russell to allow following bills:&#13;
Lee's Standard Service —&#13;
Repairs 8.00&#13;
Robert Egeler—&#13;
Marshal's Salary 125.00&#13;
Jim's Gulf—&#13;
Misc. 13.25&#13;
Christine Dinkel—&#13;
Care Of Flag 6.00&#13;
Village Salaries — 505.00&#13;
Thos. Read Sons — Misc. 4.35&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch —&#13;
Printing 6.25&#13;
Bennett's Excavating —&#13;
Local St. Work 170.00&#13;
Lavey's Hdwe. — Ins.&#13;
and Misc. 97.45&#13;
Michigan Vitrified Tile Co.&#13;
—Error in billing and&#13;
final bill 377.66&#13;
Ralph Harris —&#13;
Major St. 80.00&#13;
Robert Vedder and Chas.&#13;
PINCKNEY^DISPAfCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20, 1961&#13;
1893—1961&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.I&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
DBCTEft.&#13;
50.00&#13;
Hewlett — Labor on&#13;
Christmas Lights&#13;
Motion to adjourn.&#13;
Mildred Ackley, Clerk&#13;
May the peace,&#13;
love and good&#13;
will of that first&#13;
Christmas be&#13;
yours forever.&#13;
Hockey's Service&#13;
,-#'"• "&amp;T,&#13;
Clark's Grocery&#13;
PINCKNEY'S&#13;
FINEST FOOD STORE&#13;
1961&#13;
W ; . ' • OR all our good x" V friends we wish a&#13;
Christmas blessed by&#13;
peace, hope and faith.&#13;
&amp; Insurance&#13;
4-H NEWS&#13;
December 11, We sang Christmas&#13;
songs until 7:30. Then o u r&#13;
president, Diane Hall, called the&#13;
meeting to order. The secretary'*&#13;
and treasurer's report was read.&#13;
The 4-H boys invited us to go&#13;
roller skating with them around&#13;
December 30, 1961. Our leaders&#13;
had a surprise Christmas party&#13;
planned for us. We played games,&#13;
then had refreshments of cake and&#13;
lemonade.&#13;
1961&#13;
o o&#13;
o&#13;
Jt has made us proud&#13;
we take this means of&#13;
wishing you and yours&#13;
a merry Christmas.&#13;
King's Barber Shop&#13;
When you are buying a gas appliance,&#13;
ask to see the "Blue Star'1&#13;
approval seal of the American Gas&#13;
Association, advise Michigan State&#13;
University home economists. This&#13;
seal assures you that the appliance&#13;
has satisfactorily passed construction,&#13;
safety of operation, dependability&#13;
and performance tests.&#13;
Peace&#13;
ON EARTH&#13;
Lift up your voice in song, Ii1&#13;
up jfotir hearts and rejoice&#13;
with us at this time when&#13;
world. Rejoice!&#13;
Silver Lake&#13;
Grocery&#13;
Sew-four-Own Smocked Pillows&#13;
Ironing on smocking marks to&#13;
fabric with Multi-Blue Transfer&#13;
M c C a l l ' s Instructions for&#13;
smocking are easy-to-follow&#13;
Smocked decorator pillows—round, square and bolster are&#13;
arranged on a Victorian sofa&#13;
A new craze in decorating is .sweeping the country. Women&#13;
from New York to New Orleans, from San Francisco to Miami&#13;
have taken to sewing-their-own smocked pillows. McCall's pattern&#13;
includes three shapes—round, square and bolster. Fabric&#13;
and color choices ~are~ -vuWetland&#13;
the cost is unbelieveably&#13;
low when you sew-it-yourself&#13;
to•- as&#13;
^.*.?F.~.—•===&#13;
S i l k , satin and velveteen&#13;
would be lovely and for less&#13;
formality fine corduroy a n d&#13;
soft cottons make pretty pillows.&#13;
Both round and bolster&#13;
pillows require three-quarters&#13;
of a yard of fabric. One to one&#13;
#&#13;
Join Now-&#13;
Leave Later-&#13;
The Navy Recruiting Station today&#13;
announced an emergency incentive&#13;
program aimed at procuring&#13;
volunteer enlistees to immediately&#13;
bring the Navy up to manpower&#13;
strength. Aiex W. Enesey, ADRC,&#13;
USN, announced that for the remainder&#13;
of 1961 enlistees may request&#13;
and will be granted Christmas&#13;
leave, with pay, to expire at&#13;
the U. S. Navy Recruiting Station,&#13;
Detroit on January 2, 1962.&#13;
All ipterested men are encouraged&#13;
to contact the recruiter at&#13;
Post Office Building, Howell, as&#13;
soon as possible for further information.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20, 1961&#13;
and one quarter yard of fabric&#13;
is needed for the square pillow.&#13;
,. Smocking Jines are ironed on&#13;
pinning the Mu11i-"BtG'e rrrrrsF*?&#13;
sheet printed side down to the&#13;
wrong side of the fabric.-Then&#13;
press on lines with a warm&#13;
iron. Full instructions for easy&#13;
smocking and completion of the&#13;
pillows are in McCall's pattern&#13;
envelope #2467.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
A note of thanks from the famiK&#13;
of Grace E. Link to alt who contributed&#13;
to the memorial services.&#13;
May God Bless you and Keep You&#13;
In His Care. Maurice link&#13;
Christmas&#13;
W e extend greeting* of the Yule to&#13;
all of you whose friendship and lovaltv&#13;
we greatly cherish. As you celebrate&#13;
the holidays our thoughts will be&#13;
with you that this may be the loveliest,&#13;
finest of them all.&#13;
HICKORY RIDGE FARM DAIRY&#13;
STOCKBRIDGE, MICHIGAN PHONE 851-3000&#13;
As you observe Christmas with&#13;
those dear and near to you,&#13;
rejoice anew at the eternal&#13;
glory and beauty of His birth&#13;
and all it means to men everywhere.&#13;
STANLEY W&#13;
neighbors,&#13;
friends and&#13;
patrons!&#13;
La Rosa Bowl &amp;&#13;
Tavern&#13;
: • : •&#13;
DELICIOUS-^JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"FRUIT WITH THi HAVOC W. M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
Highway Department Fights&#13;
Against "Billboard Jungle" An uphill battle looms ahead for&#13;
the State Highway Department in&#13;
its attempt to prevent Michigan's&#13;
roadways from becoming part of&#13;
a billboard jungle.&#13;
Highway Commissioner John C.&#13;
Mackie recently reminded businessmen&#13;
and organizations throughout&#13;
1961&#13;
Our thanks&#13;
best wishe&#13;
all of you&#13;
have been&#13;
patrons during&#13;
the palt year&#13;
May your Yule&#13;
who&#13;
ou&#13;
and brfght.&#13;
Al+a Mae's&#13;
Beauty Salon&#13;
the state that state law and federal&#13;
highway regulations prohibited&#13;
signs on highway right-of-way.&#13;
Legislation to restrict the size,&#13;
number and type of signs which&#13;
could be placed along Interstate&#13;
routes was proposed in the 1961&#13;
session. It failed passage in the&#13;
regular legislature and a special&#13;
session.&#13;
* • *&#13;
An upshot of the proposal was&#13;
an interim committee to study whether&#13;
such legislation was necessary&#13;
or desired. Representatives of garden&#13;
clubs, chambers of commerce&#13;
and individual commercial interests&#13;
testified before the committee.&#13;
General agreement was voiced&#13;
that some control should be imposed&#13;
to keep the quality of signs high,&#13;
the size somewhat uniform and the&#13;
quantity limited. The business interests&#13;
disagreed, however, with&#13;
highway officials and beauty lovers&#13;
on what size was adequate, and&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
Cleaning &amp; ^&#13;
AfSWfIC&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
fme&#13;
what spacing regulations would be&#13;
fair.&#13;
All agreed, however, that thj&#13;
state law prohibiting signs on the&#13;
right-of-way should be rigidly enforced.&#13;
Spot checks of heavilytraveled&#13;
routes throughout the state&#13;
showed large numbers of hand-lettered&#13;
and old, rusted signs near the&#13;
edges of roads.&#13;
• * *&#13;
The hand-lettered signs generally&#13;
publicize a roadside vegetable or&#13;
fruit stand in front of a farmer's&#13;
home. The old, unkempt signs appeared&#13;
as remnants of advertising&#13;
campaigns of years gone by.&#13;
Mackie estimated between 15,-&#13;
000 and 20,000 signs located on&#13;
the right-of-way would be affected&#13;
by the crackdown. The letters requested&#13;
the owners to remove the&#13;
signs, but the law provides f o r&#13;
court action against those who do&#13;
not comply.&#13;
'The response so far has been&#13;
mostly favorable and there is every&#13;
indication that the vast majority of&#13;
sign owners will comply," Mackie&#13;
said.&#13;
# * *&#13;
Another legislative committee,&#13;
however, indicated the department&#13;
might have some trouble enforcing&#13;
the cleanup. A committee studying&#13;
the problems of the tourist industry&#13;
said several businessmen had complained&#13;
about the crackdown within&#13;
hours or days after they received&#13;
the department letter.&#13;
.There .were also signs that those&#13;
their resistance efforts, but it was&#13;
to be seen if this will develop into&#13;
anything effective. If the law is&#13;
clear. Mackie is on sound ground,&#13;
and there is little to do but comply&#13;
either willingly or without enthusiasm.&#13;
License plate sales this year started&#13;
off unusually brisk, but th?&#13;
traditional long lines of vehicle&#13;
owners can still he expected at the&#13;
end of February, Secretary of Stut-1&#13;
James M. Hare said.&#13;
Early in November, when th:&#13;
sales started, many branches reported&#13;
increases up to 300 per ceni&#13;
when compared with the s a m e&#13;
periods of I960.&#13;
The refund of fees imposed for&#13;
reflectorized plates last year, the&#13;
fact that current plates were three&#13;
years old. and a brightening economic&#13;
picture were credited with tho&#13;
upswing in sales.&#13;
Some 13.7 per cent of the first&#13;
1 10.000 persons who bought 1962&#13;
license plates received credits on&#13;
the 35-cent fees paid last year.&#13;
Hare said.&#13;
Red tape in clearing the requests&#13;
for refunds means a slight delay&#13;
will affect the remaining vehicle&#13;
owners. The last-minute buyers this&#13;
year are expected to find no exception&#13;
to the long lines experienced&#13;
previously.&#13;
The long period between the ini-&#13;
W e wish you, your family&#13;
and our many friends the&#13;
traditional joys of an oldfashioned&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Jack Hanne+t&#13;
WATKINS PRODUCTS&#13;
tial sales of new license plates and&#13;
the deadline for using the old ones&#13;
often creates problems for law enforcement&#13;
agencies.&#13;
Secretary of State James M.&#13;
Hare is the first each year to remind&#13;
motorists to take care in disposing&#13;
of old license plates.&#13;
"Often when buyers of n e w&#13;
plates mount them, they fail to&#13;
destroy their discarded license,"&#13;
Hare said. "Criminal elements in&#13;
the community can pick up such&#13;
plates, attach them to a vehicle,&#13;
steal the vehicle, and use it for a&#13;
joy ride or in committing a crime."&#13;
Because the original owner&#13;
doesn't know it is being misused, no&#13;
one reports the "missing number"&#13;
and the police have difficulty in&#13;
apprehending the thieves, or in&#13;
checking out persons who may be&#13;
using someone else's plates on an&#13;
old jalopy for a couple free months&#13;
no no-fee driving.&#13;
Hare suggests that all persons&#13;
keep old plates in their basements&#13;
or another reasonably secure place&#13;
until March 1, when the new ones&#13;
must be used.&#13;
"Another alternative is to tinsnip&#13;
the old plates in half to avoid&#13;
their being used illegally," s a i d&#13;
Hare.&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ORCHID S&#13;
Plants in Bloom&#13;
Ideal for Gifts or&#13;
Beautiful&#13;
CATALYA ORCHID&#13;
CORSAGES&#13;
for your Holidays&#13;
Mrs. Steve&#13;
Oleski&#13;
8979 Rushside Drive&#13;
UP 8-3350&#13;
Start Navy&#13;
Career with&#13;
30-Day Leave Alex W. Enesey. A D R C , USN,&#13;
of the local Navy Recruiting Station&#13;
today announced that he has&#13;
^&gt;een authorized to grant all ex-&#13;
Navy men up to 30 days advance&#13;
leave upon reenlistment.&#13;
The recruiter urges all ex-Navy&#13;
men who have been delaying re-enlistments&#13;
because of the holdidays&#13;
to see him immediately at the Post&#13;
Office Building, Howell. Michigan.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20. 1961&#13;
1961&#13;
w l a d greetings&#13;
and best wishes&#13;
for the Holiday.&#13;
Bev's Restaurant&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agency&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agent&#13;
Edith R. Carr&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage Lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-6188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, M.D&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 A.M. to 2:00 PM.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Mon., Tues., Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
L I. Swarthoui&#13;
BUILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
Homes, Cottages, Garages&#13;
1297 Darwin Rood, Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP ±3234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENERAL INSURANCE&#13;
W S-322!&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 8-3172&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's largest&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
Phone 358 Residence 613&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Farms, Homes, Lake Property&#13;
Butin+ss Opportunities&#13;
List Your Property with Gerald Reason&#13;
+0irVf~Mmtr Street&#13;
Phone UPtown 8-3564&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG A miscellaneous bridal shower&#13;
was given to honor Miss Janet&#13;
Wiseman last Wednesday evening,&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Paul Lenhart&#13;
With all&#13;
our hearts&#13;
we wish&#13;
each of you&#13;
joy this*&#13;
Yule season*&#13;
on E. M-36. Forty guests were&#13;
present for the occasion. Co-hostesses&#13;
for the shower were Mrs.&#13;
Larry DeWolf, Mrs. Jack Terry,&#13;
Mrs. David Hoilenbeck and Mrs.&#13;
Lenhart. Miss Wiseman, daughter&#13;
of the Vance Wisemans of Hamburg,&#13;
will be wed to Allan Santure,&#13;
son of the Ernest Santures of Whitmore&#13;
Lake, an December 30th.&#13;
Larry Chapman, grandson of the&#13;
George Marowskys of Strawberry&#13;
Lake is expected to arrive via&#13;
Metropolitan Airport this week to&#13;
spend the holidays with his gandparents&#13;
and to see his many friends.&#13;
Larry was graduated from Pinckney&#13;
with the 1961 class. He left&#13;
with his mother, Mrs. Georgia&#13;
Chapman for California soon after&#13;
and they are now residing in Gardenia&#13;
in Southern California. He&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN, BOTTLE&#13;
GAS_ DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8*6621&#13;
PInckney, Michigan&#13;
will remain for about ten days.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garagiola&#13;
of Detroit wish to announce the&#13;
engagement of their daughter Linda&#13;
to Jim Heineke of Wisconsin Dells,&#13;
Wisconsin. Linda, a junior at Western&#13;
Michigan, is a major in sociology.&#13;
Her fiance is a senior at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, a bacteriologist&#13;
major. He is a member&#13;
of Sigma Chi fraternity. A late&#13;
summer wedding is planned. The&#13;
Garagiolas are summer residents&#13;
of Rush Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Midge Hammel of Darwin&#13;
Road was hostess to the Pinochle&#13;
Club last Wednesday. Mrs. Mary&#13;
Burke will entertain the group for&#13;
the Christmas party which will take&#13;
place on the Wednesday after&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Mrs. George Marowsky will entertain&#13;
the GOG. Club on Tuesday.&#13;
Luncheon will be served at&#13;
noon after which the guests will&#13;
open gifts and reveal their secret&#13;
pals. Cards will be the game of tha&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Waterbury&#13;
attended the Christmas dance Saturday&#13;
for the Bendix Corporation&#13;
employees which was held in the&#13;
Naval Armory in Ypsilanti.&#13;
The Misses Chris Schroeder,&#13;
Linda Nash and Lynn Howd, students&#13;
of Eastern Michigan University&#13;
returned to their homes Friday&#13;
to spend the holidays with their&#13;
families. Nancy Na sfTo f "fcfichigan&#13;
State University also returned&#13;
with&#13;
The Arthur Breningstalls of&#13;
Rush Lake plan to leave this week&#13;
for their annual Christmas visit&#13;
with her mother in Pennsylvania.&#13;
Christmas Blessings and all Good&#13;
Wishes for Happiness in the New&#13;
Year is wished for one and all.&#13;
W e extend our sincerest greeting for&#13;
/J a happy and lovely Christmas holiday.&#13;
HOWELL CREDIT BUREAU&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN 119% W G T M *&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
Birthday greetings today to Helen&#13;
DeWolf, Khstine Hoeft a n d&#13;
Marie Murray and to Mrs. Cassie&#13;
Tomasik on Thursday. Birthdays&#13;
will be observed on Friday by Von&#13;
La Tour and Bill Gray; on Saturday&#13;
by Mary McGuire and Midge&#13;
Higgs; on Sunday by Joyce Waterbury,&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Hall, Bruce&#13;
Henry, Jean McGuire, Avis&#13;
Thumm and Henry Blower. Bryan&#13;
Fulkerson and Mrs. George Van&#13;
Norman share Christmas Days as&#13;
their birthday and Errol Schuman,&#13;
in the U. S. Air Force will observe&#13;
his birthday on December 26.&#13;
Congratulations will be in order&#13;
next Tuesday for Mr. and M r s .&#13;
Robert Ackley who will be observing&#13;
their Silver Wedding anniversary&#13;
then.&#13;
Miss Florence Moore of Detroit&#13;
will be the Christmas week end&#13;
guest at the Otto Schaner home.&#13;
Here*s to the New Year&#13;
and friends who gave&#13;
us their loyal support&#13;
during 1961. Happy&#13;
New Year to all.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Otto Schaner&#13;
Palo-Verdi Farm&#13;
Mrs. Pear) Sheuleroe of Detroit&#13;
will be a holiday guest next week at&#13;
the home of her son and family,&#13;
the Wayne Shettleroes.&#13;
Mrs. Irene Jack entertained at&#13;
a family Christmas Party on Sunday,&#13;
the Robert Ackley family,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Neff and son&#13;
of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin&#13;
Rowe of Detroit and the Ronald&#13;
Hoskin family of Femdale.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Young and&#13;
family, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth&#13;
Frye of Livonia, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
James Burns of Ann Arbor, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Don Conklin and children&#13;
of Grand Rapids, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Robert Darrow of Livonia&#13;
and the Donald Burns of South&#13;
Lyon and the Joseph Burns family&#13;
of Mi)ford and David Young will&#13;
be the Christmas guests at the Ray&#13;
Burns home.&#13;
We spell our greetings&#13;
with many good wishes&#13;
for your happiness and&#13;
good health.&#13;
Abe's&#13;
AUTO PARTS&#13;
Race em Earth, Good Will to Men."&#13;
What a wonderful Cbristmat mestage! May your&#13;
Holiday be filled with this true&#13;
spirit of Christmas amd each of you blessed by it.&#13;
HOWLETT HARDWARE&#13;
GREGORY, MICHIGAN&#13;
Highway Department Fights&#13;
Against "Billboard Jungle" An uphill battle looms ahead for&#13;
the State Highway Department in&#13;
its attempt to prevent Michigan's&#13;
roadways from becoming part of&#13;
a billboard jungle.&#13;
Highway Commissioner John C.&#13;
Mackie recently reminded businessmen&#13;
and organizations throughout&#13;
1961&#13;
Our thanks and&#13;
best wishes to&#13;
all of you who&#13;
have been our&#13;
. pa tro ns_d u r i ng&#13;
the past year.&#13;
Yule&#13;
and bright.&#13;
Alta Mae's&#13;
Beauty Salon&#13;
the state that state law and federal&#13;
highway regulations prohibited&#13;
signs on highway right-of-way.&#13;
Legislation to restrict the size,&#13;
number and type of signs which&#13;
could be placed along Interstate&#13;
routes was proposed in the 1961&#13;
session. It failed passage in the&#13;
regular legislature and a special&#13;
session.&#13;
• » •&#13;
An upshot of the proposal was&#13;
an interim committee to study whether&#13;
such legislation was necessary&#13;
or desired. Representatives of garden&#13;
clubs, chambers of commerce&#13;
and individual commercial interests&#13;
testified before the committee.&#13;
General agreement was voiced&#13;
that some control should be imposed&#13;
to keep the quality of signs high,&#13;
the size somewhat uniform and the&#13;
quantity limited. The business in-l&#13;
terests disagreed, however, with"&#13;
highway officials and beauty lovers&#13;
on what size was adequate, and&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Here s to&#13;
1962!&#13;
Besl of&#13;
luck!&#13;
• • • : • &gt; ( * . ' • • • : • . • • .&#13;
what spacing regulations would be&#13;
fair.&#13;
All agreed, however, that the&#13;
state law prohibiting signs on the&#13;
right-of-way should be rigidly enforced.&#13;
Spot checks of heavilytraveled&#13;
routes throughout the state&#13;
showed large numbers of hand-lettered&#13;
and old, rusted signs near the&#13;
edges of roads.&#13;
* * *&#13;
The hand-lettered signs generally&#13;
publicize a roadside vegetable or&#13;
fruit stand in front of a farmer's&#13;
home. The old, unkempt signs appeared&#13;
as remnants of advertising&#13;
campaigns of years gone by.&#13;
Mackie estimated between 15,-&#13;
000 and 20,000 signs located on&#13;
the right-of-way would be affected&#13;
by the crackdown. The letters requested&#13;
the owners to remove the&#13;
signs, but the law provides f o r&#13;
court action against those who do&#13;
not comply.&#13;
'The response so far has been&#13;
mostly favorable and there is every&#13;
indication that the vast majority of&#13;
sign owners will comply," Mackie&#13;
said.&#13;
• • *&#13;
Another legislative committee,&#13;
however, indicated the department&#13;
might have some trouble enforcing&#13;
the cleanup. A committee studying&#13;
the problems of the tourist industry&#13;
said several businessmen had complained&#13;
about the crackdown within"&#13;
hours" ordays-afterih&#13;
ed the department letter.&#13;
g*N&#13;
against the orders would "organize&#13;
their resistance efforts, but it was&#13;
to be seen if this will develop into&#13;
anything effective. If the law is&#13;
clear, Mackie is on sound ground,&#13;
and there is little to do but comply&#13;
either willingly or without enthusiasm.&#13;
License plate sales this year started&#13;
off unusually brisk, but th?&#13;
traditional long lines of vehicle&#13;
owners can still be expected at the&#13;
end of February, Secretary of Stat:&#13;
James M. Hare said.&#13;
Early in November, when th:&#13;
sales- started, many branches reported&#13;
increases up to 300 per cent&#13;
when compared with the s a m e&#13;
periods of I960.&#13;
The refund of fees imposed for&#13;
reflectorized plates last year, thj&#13;
fact that current plates were three&#13;
years old, and a brightening economic&#13;
picture were credited with tru&#13;
upswing in sales.&#13;
Some 13,7 per cent of the first&#13;
110.000 persons who bought 1962&#13;
license plates received credits on&#13;
the 35-cent fees paid last year.&#13;
Hare said.&#13;
Red tape in clearing the requests&#13;
for refunds means a slight delay&#13;
will affect the remaining vehicle&#13;
owners. The last-minute buyers this&#13;
year are expected to find no exception&#13;
to the long lines experienced&#13;
previously.&#13;
The long period between the initial&#13;
sales of new license plates and&#13;
the deadline for using the old ones&#13;
often creates problems for law enforcement&#13;
agencies.&#13;
Secretary of State James M.&#13;
Hare is the first each year to remind&#13;
motorists to take care in disposing&#13;
of old license plates.&#13;
"Often when buyers of n e w&#13;
plates mount them, they fail to&#13;
destroy their discarded license,"&#13;
Hare said. "Criminal elements in&#13;
the community can pick up such&#13;
plates, attach them to a vehicle,&#13;
steal the vehicle, and use it for a&#13;
joy ride or in committing a crime."&#13;
Because the original owner&#13;
doesn't know it is being misused, no&#13;
one reports the "missing number"&#13;
and the police have difficulty in&#13;
apprehending the thieves, or in&#13;
checking out persons who may be&#13;
using someone else's plates on an&#13;
old jalopy for a couple free months&#13;
no no-fee driving.&#13;
Hare suggests that all persons&#13;
keep old plates in their basements&#13;
or another reasonably secure place&#13;
until March 1, when the new ones&#13;
must be used.&#13;
"Another alternative is to tinsnip&#13;
the old plates in half to avoid&#13;
their being used illegally," s a i d&#13;
Hare.&#13;
W e wish you, your family&#13;
and our many friends the&#13;
traditional joys of an oldfashioned&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Jack Hannett&#13;
WATKtNS PRODUCTS&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
(Homegrown)&#13;
Plants in Bloom&#13;
Ideal for Gifts or&#13;
Beautiful&#13;
CATALYA ORCHID&#13;
CORSAGES&#13;
for your Holidays&#13;
Mrs. Steve&#13;
Oleski&#13;
8979 Rushside Drive&#13;
UP 8-3350&#13;
Start Navy&#13;
Career with&#13;
30-Day Leave Alex W. Enesey. A D R C L'SN,&#13;
of the local Navy Recruiting Station&#13;
today announced that he has&#13;
been authorized to grant all ex-&#13;
Navy men up to 30 days advance&#13;
leave upon reenlistment.&#13;
The recruiter urges all ex-Navy&#13;
men who have been delaying re-enlistments&#13;
because of the holdidays&#13;
to see him immediately at the Post&#13;
Office Building, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 20. 196]&#13;
V-7lad greetings&#13;
and best wishes&#13;
for the Holiday.&#13;
Bev's Restaurant&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agencyj&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agent&#13;
Edith R. Carr&#13;
142 Mil! Street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, M.D.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Mon., Tues., FrL, and Sat.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
BUILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
Homes, Cottages, Garages&#13;
1292 Dorwin Road, Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-3234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENERAL INSURANCE&#13;
Phone UP 13221&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 8-3172&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's Largest&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-0770&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff, Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
Howell/ Michigan&#13;
Phone 358 Residence 67 3&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Farm*, Home*, Lake Prope/ty&#13;
Butineu Opportunities&#13;
Lift Your Property with Gerald Reason&#13;
Broker 102 W Main Street&#13;
Phone UPtown 8-3564&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG A miscellaneous bridal shower&#13;
was given to honor Miss Janet&#13;
Wiseman last Wednesday evening,&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Paul Lenhart&#13;
With all&#13;
our hearts&#13;
we wish&#13;
each of you&#13;
joy fAiV&#13;
Yule season.&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
on E. M-36. Forty guests were&#13;
present for the occasion. Co-hostesses&#13;
for the shower were Mrs.&#13;
Larry DeWolf, Mrs. Jack Terry,&#13;
Mrs. David Hollenbeck and Mrs.&#13;
Lenhart. Miss Wiseman, daughter&#13;
of the Vance Wisemans of Hamburg,&#13;
will be wed to Allan Santure,&#13;
son of the Ernest Santures of Whitmore&#13;
Lake, an December 30th.&#13;
Larry Chapman, grandson of ths&#13;
George Marowskys of Strawberry&#13;
Lake is expected to arrive via&#13;
Metropolitan Airport this week to&#13;
spend the holidays with his gandparents&#13;
and to see his many friends.&#13;
Larry was graduated from Pinckney&#13;
with the 1961 class. He left&#13;
with his mother, Mrs. Georgia&#13;
Chapman for California soon after&#13;
and they are now residing in Gardenia&#13;
in Southern California. He&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
will remain for about ten days.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Garagiol&#13;
of Detroit wish to announce the&#13;
engagement of their daughter Linda&#13;
to Jim Heineke of Wisconsin Dells&#13;
Wisconsin. Linda, a junior at Western&#13;
Michigan, is a major in sociology.&#13;
Her fiance is a senior at&#13;
the University of Wisconsin, a bacteriologist&#13;
major. He is a member&#13;
of Sigma Chi fraternity. A late&#13;
summer wedding is planned. The&#13;
Garagiolas are summer residents&#13;
of Rush Lake.&#13;
Mrs. Midge Hammel of Darwin&#13;
Road was hostess to the Pinochle&#13;
Club last Wednesday. Mrs. Mary&#13;
Burke will entertain the group for&#13;
the Christmas party which will take&#13;
place on the Wednesday after&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
Mrs. George Marowsky will entertain&#13;
the GOG. Club on Tuesday.&#13;
Luncheon will be served at&#13;
noon after which the guests will&#13;
open gifts and reveal their secret&#13;
pals. Cards will be the game of th&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Waterbury&#13;
attended the Christmas dance Sat&#13;
urday for the Bendix Corporation&#13;
employees which was held in the&#13;
Naval Armory in Ypsilanti.&#13;
The Misses Chris Schroeder,&#13;
Linda Nash and Lynn Howd, students&#13;
of Eastern Michigan University&#13;
returned to their homes Friday&#13;
to spend the holidays with their&#13;
fffflTffW N f t n r v NiMthL-oaf&#13;
home to spend the holidays with&#13;
her parents.&#13;
The Arthur Breningstalls of&#13;
Rush Lake plan to leave this week&#13;
for their annual Christmas visit&#13;
with her mother in Pennsylvania.&#13;
Christmas Blessings and all Good&#13;
Wishes for Happiness in the New&#13;
Year is wished for one and all.&#13;
W e extend our sincerest greeting for&#13;
y a happy and lovely Christinas holiday.&#13;
HOWELL CREDIT BUREAU HOWELL, MICHIGAN 119* W. Grand&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
Birthday greetings today to Helen&#13;
DeWolf, Kristine Hoeft a n d&#13;
Marie Murray and to Mrs. Cassie&#13;
Tomasik on Thursday. Birthdays&#13;
will be observed on Friday by Von&#13;
La Tour and Bill Gray; on Saturday&#13;
by Mary McGuire and Midge&#13;
Higgs; on Sunday by Joyce Waterbury,&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Hall, Bruce&#13;
Henry, Jean McGuire, Avis&#13;
Thumm and Henry Blower. Bryan&#13;
Fulkerson and Mrs. George Van&#13;
Norman share Christmas Days as&#13;
their birthday and Errol Schuman,&#13;
in the U. S. Air Force will observe&#13;
his birthday on December 26.&#13;
Congratulations will be in order&#13;
next Tuesday for Mr. and M r s .&#13;
Robert Ackley who will be observing&#13;
their Silver Wedding anniversary&#13;
then.&#13;
Miss Florence Moore of Detroit&#13;
will be the Christmas week end&#13;
guest at the Otto Schaner home.&#13;
Here's to the New Year&#13;
and friends who gave&#13;
us their loyal support&#13;
during |96|. Happy&#13;
New Year to all.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Otto Schcmtr&#13;
Palo-Verdi Farm&#13;
Mrs. Pearl Shettleroe of Detroit&#13;
will be a holiday guest next week at&#13;
the home of her son and family,&#13;
the Wayne Shettleroes.&#13;
Mrs. Irene Jack entertained at&#13;
a family Christmas Party on Sunday,&#13;
the Robert Ackley family,&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Neff and son&#13;
of Dexter, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin&#13;
Rowe of Detroit and the Ronald&#13;
Hoskin family of Ferndale.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Young and&#13;
family, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth&#13;
Frye of Livonia, Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
James Burns of Ann Arbor, Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Don Conklin and children&#13;
of Grand Rapids, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Robert Darrow of Livonia&#13;
and the Donald Burns of South&#13;
Lyon and the Joseph Burns family&#13;
of Milford and David Young will&#13;
be the Christmas guests at the Ray&#13;
Burns home.&#13;
- ; J&#13;
spell our greetings&#13;
with many good wishes&#13;
for your happiness&#13;
good health. Abe's&#13;
AUTO PARTS&#13;
^&#13;
i&#13;
1961&#13;
Race on Earth, Good Will to Men."&#13;
What a wonderful Christinas message! May your&#13;
Holiday be filled with this true&#13;
spirit of Christmas and each of you blessed by it.&#13;
HOWLETJ HARDWARE&#13;
GREGORY,'MICHIGAN&#13;
n+**d*"**W'&#13;
Vol. 78 — No. 51 — Pti. UP 8.3111 Patchwy. Michigan — Wednesday, December 20, 1961 C.OT, Wcf&#13;
Christmas Program Planned&#13;
at Congregational Church&#13;
Friday, December 22nd Prelude: Organists - Mrs. Herman&#13;
Widmayer, Mary Lee Aschenbrenner.&#13;
Senior Choir: "Hills and Vales"&#13;
from "Chorus in the Skies" - Halton;&#13;
"In Bethlehem", Christmas&#13;
Hymn - Roger Wilson.&#13;
Rev. Hainsworth - Original Narrative&#13;
- "The Little Angel Who&#13;
Sang Off Key"&#13;
Offering „ to Retired Minisrers'&#13;
Fund.&#13;
Toby Shettleroe, Frank Zezulka.&#13;
Sunday School - "The Christmas&#13;
Story" in Song and Tableaux. Narrator:&#13;
Doris Shettleroe.&#13;
Nativity Scene: Mary - Nancy&#13;
Goucher; Joseph - Kenny Hall.&#13;
Angels: Nancy Lutimer, Penny&#13;
Goucher, Barbara Zezulka, Jeanette&#13;
Line.&#13;
Shepherds: Terry Haines. Mike&#13;
Scott, Court Geib, Joel Burg.&#13;
The Friendly Beasts: Donkey -&#13;
Becky Amburgey; Cow - Kathy&#13;
l.aszlo; Sheep - Donna Plummer,&#13;
Dow - Debbie Aschenbrenner.&#13;
Wise Men: 5th &amp; 6th Grade&#13;
Boys.&#13;
Songs: "Away in a Manger" -&#13;
Nursery &amp; Kindergarten; "Silent&#13;
Night, Holy Night" - Cherub&#13;
Choir; ''While Shepherds Watched&#13;
Their Flocks by Night" Jr. Choir;&#13;
"We Three Kings of Orient Are,"&#13;
Jr. Choir.&#13;
"The Christmas Rose" : Recitation,&#13;
Mary Plummer.,&#13;
Senior Choir: "Cantique de&#13;
- Adam, Soloist - Marilyyn&#13;
Edgar; "The Chorus in the Skies" -&#13;
Halton.&#13;
Prayer.&#13;
Benediction.&#13;
Pirates Defeat&#13;
The P. H. S. Pirates won their&#13;
first conference basketball game,&#13;
after losing their first two games,&#13;
when they downed Ypsilanti&#13;
Roosevelt 40-27. there, l a s t&#13;
Wednesday night. Ed Guy was&#13;
high scoring man with 18 points.&#13;
Following a non-league contest&#13;
at Whitmore Lake last night the&#13;
Pirates will rest until trie Chelsea&#13;
Bulldogs pay their visit here on&#13;
Friday. January 4. Game time is&#13;
f&gt;:45 when the little Pirates meet&#13;
(he junior Bulldogs in a preliminar\&#13;
izanie.&#13;
Mrs. Kenneth Hoyt and children.&#13;
Brcnda and Gordon, both&#13;
students at Jackson Junior College.&#13;
are home for the holidays at Silver&#13;
Lake. The Hosts have been&#13;
living in Jackson during the semester.&#13;
Ninth Delegate Report Has&#13;
Hopes for Much Work Finished&#13;
Before December 22 Recess&#13;
At a special session Wednesday&#13;
we were privileged to have as our&#13;
guest speaker former President&#13;
Dwight D. Eisenhower. He discussed&#13;
federal-state relation&gt;hips&#13;
and urged the Convention to draft&#13;
a constitution that will serve as an&#13;
example to other states. This indeed&#13;
was a privilege to be able to&#13;
*have this distinguished gentleman&#13;
within our midst. A similar meeting&#13;
is scheduled for sometime in&#13;
January with former President Harry&#13;
S. Truman. We hope that by&#13;
inviting these gentlemen, it will&#13;
have a tendency to arouse the interest&#13;
of the important work that&#13;
this Convention is doing for ths&#13;
people within the State of Michigan.&#13;
The nine substantive committees&#13;
are working hard and long hours&#13;
both in reviewing delegate proposals&#13;
as well as holding public hearings&#13;
for the purpose of formulating&#13;
specific recommendations for&#13;
improvement in our 53 year old&#13;
basic law. It is hopeful that there&#13;
will be a substantial amount of&#13;
work completed before the December&#13;
22 recess.&#13;
This week, the Committee on&#13;
Local Government has been listening&#13;
to testimony from townships&#13;
and county officials such as: Joe&#13;
Parisi, of the Michigan Townships&#13;
Association; Mr. Jack McDonald,&#13;
Supervisor of Redford Township,&#13;
composing of some 73.000 people;&#13;
Deles Hamlin. Chairman of the&#13;
Oakland County Board of Supervisors;&#13;
Edward Purdy, oi ih:&#13;
Wayne County Board of Supervisors,&#13;
plus supervisors from Livingston.&#13;
Shiawassee. Ottawa, Oakland,&#13;
Allegan and Clinton Townships,&#13;
plus Mrs. Muler from the&#13;
League of Women voters and Kenneth&#13;
Weber, an attorney from Livingston&#13;
County who holds the office&#13;
of Justice of the Peace. After&#13;
hearing the testimony from t h e&#13;
people, we must weigh the difference&#13;
between a township of 1,(K)()&#13;
population and its problems against&#13;
a township such as Redford with&#13;
73,000 people. The present township&#13;
and county constitutional law&#13;
is not sufficient.to carry on an effective&#13;
type of government in both&#13;
extremes. Thus, it is my belief, and&#13;
the general thinking of the committee,&#13;
that we must strengthen our&#13;
township and county government.&#13;
I wish to express my appreciation&#13;
for the response to my request&#13;
for people from my district&#13;
to make themselves available at the&#13;
public hearings of our Committee&#13;
on Local Government. Once again&#13;
this proves to me that interest is&#13;
high and that the people back home&#13;
are watching our work at this Convention&#13;
daily.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe,&#13;
December 15, 1961.&#13;
New Officers for&#13;
Altar Society New officers of the Altar-Rosary&#13;
Society of St. Mary's church&#13;
were named at the election meeting&#13;
at the parish hall last Thursday&#13;
evening.&#13;
Serving as president in 1962 will&#13;
be Mrs. Lillian Campbell of Portage&#13;
Lake; vice president. Mrs. Donna&#13;
Donohue; secretary, (re-elected)&#13;
Mrs. Mavis Basydlo and treasurer,&#13;
Mrs. Janet Shehan.&#13;
The Society's annual Christmas&#13;
party followed the meet'ng. A gift&#13;
exchange and holiday refreshments&#13;
highlighted the gathering which uas&#13;
well attended.&#13;
Program at&#13;
Peoples Church "Home for Christmas" is th:&#13;
title of the program to be presented&#13;
by the Sunday School classes of&#13;
the Peoples church tomorrow evening,&#13;
December 21. at 7:30. The&#13;
public is invited to attend. The&#13;
production is under the direction of&#13;
Mrs. Jane Clark.&#13;
O. E. S. CALENDAR&#13;
Christmas Party. Dec. 29, 7:30&#13;
p. m. Officers will please bring&#13;
gifts for prizes.&#13;
Playland Cagers&#13;
Top St. Mary's&#13;
The swift Playland cagers triumphed&#13;
over St. Mary's junior&#13;
basketball team Saturday morning&#13;
at the elementary school. The final&#13;
score was 24-17. Joe Sepulveda&#13;
and Robert Umstead each accounted&#13;
for 10 points of the winning&#13;
score while Maurice Schjrrens&#13;
made 10 for his team.&#13;
The Hamburg Quintet was 19&#13;
points ahead of the Pinckney Merchants.&#13;
24-5. when the coach of&#13;
the latter forfeited the game at&#13;
the end of the third quarter of play.&#13;
Meanwhile. Mike Stevenson made&#13;
10 points for Hamburg and J e f f&#13;
Davis 4 for the Merchants.&#13;
Ed Guy and Mickey Ritter were&#13;
the officials.&#13;
Adult Education&#13;
Registration&#13;
At the last survey of community&#13;
desires for Adult Education, r e -&#13;
quests for typing were most numerous;&#13;
taught by Mrs. Mary Dunn,&#13;
a coursein beginning typing in progress&#13;
for several weeks, has n o w&#13;
been completed. Typing will not be&#13;
repeated this year.&#13;
If sufficient interest is shown in&#13;
further Adult Education, we shall&#13;
once more try to please the public;.&#13;
Any interested reader is urged to&#13;
fill in the coupon published here&#13;
and mail to Mrs. Stackable's office.&#13;
Please do not call the school.&#13;
Name&#13;
Address&#13;
Telephone&#13;
Subject Desired '....!!!!!!&#13;
Unto Us A Gift Is Given: The ever new and wonderous&#13;
Christmas Story is told again. (Above) the creche that has been&#13;
displayed in front of St. Mary's Recton even Christmas for many&#13;
years, brings again that message that started when the Three Wis*&#13;
Men followed the vStar. (Below): Reverend and Mrs. William Hainsworth&#13;
presented this Nativity Scene this &gt;ear to the Congregational&#13;
church to send forth their Christmas Message to all.&#13;
Mrs. Eleanor Ledwidge was the&#13;
guest of honor at a birthday dinner&#13;
party given by her children at&#13;
Caravel House, How ell, Sunday afternoon.&#13;
Those attending were Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Hubert Ledwidge and th:&#13;
Desmond Ledwidges, all of Royal&#13;
Oak; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry L e d -&#13;
widgc, Mr. and Mrs. Keven Ledwidge,&#13;
Mrs. Clare McMacken and&#13;
Mrs. Raymonda Morris. Guests,&#13;
also, were Mr. and Mrs. L o u i s&#13;
Stackable. Following the d i n n e r&#13;
everyone returned to the Kevcn&#13;
Ledwidge home here where they&#13;
were entertained in the evening.&#13;
Football Banquet Honors&#13;
Conference Champions&#13;
One hundred ninety-seven guests&#13;
were served at the football banquet&#13;
at the high school Saturday&#13;
night honoring the Pirates, winners&#13;
of the Washtenaw Conference&#13;
Championship title and trophy this&#13;
season.&#13;
Players had their dads as guests&#13;
for the evening. John Quigley of&#13;
the faculty was the master of ceremonies.&#13;
He introduced Coach&#13;
Wesley Reader, who in turn presented&#13;
each player; 15 seniors who&#13;
have played high school football&#13;
for the last time and seven of the&#13;
nine juniors who will carry on next&#13;
season. Two players were absent.&#13;
Ray Martinez of Eastern Michigan&#13;
University, former football&#13;
coach of the University of New&#13;
Mexico, was the guest speaker and&#13;
entertainer of the evening. After his&#13;
talk Mr. Martinez played a number&#13;
of selections on his guitar and sang&#13;
Spanish, western and popular tunes&#13;
&lt;fto an appreciative audience.&#13;
The high school band performed&#13;
several numbers and John F. Burg&#13;
climaxed the evening with the&#13;
showing of motion pictures-of the&#13;
Pirates* football games with Saline&#13;
and Chelsea.&#13;
The decorations in the dining&#13;
hall were done by the art classes of&#13;
Mrs. Don Swarthout. Large charcoal&#13;
sketches of each player were&#13;
hung on the east wall and red and&#13;
black ribbon streamers ran from&#13;
the portraits to the Washtenaw&#13;
Champions trophy placed on a&#13;
pedestal. An empty easel was&#13;
standing ready to hold a portrait&#13;
of Coach Reader when it was presented&#13;
by the artist Julie Trumbull,&#13;
a senior. The large framed oil was&#13;
a gift to Mr. Reader who concluded&#13;
his remarks on the program,&#13;
"that rumors to the contrary the&#13;
championship title coach does not&#13;
always move on; he will be here to&#13;
coach another top team next season."&#13;
Mr. Reader read a telegram&#13;
sent for the occasion by three California&#13;
men, all former residents of&#13;
Pinckney: Bernard McCluskey,&#13;
Paul Miller and Walter Mowers&#13;
sent their congratulations from Los&#13;
Angeles to the Pirates. Dispatch&#13;
readers, they had followed the Pirates*&#13;
progress throughout the season.&#13;
Christinas Mood Transformed&#13;
A Civil War Camp&#13;
"Peace on earth, good will&#13;
toward men" was the Christmas&#13;
gift most wanted by Civil War&#13;
soldiers on both sides 99 years ago.&#13;
The pre-Christmas mood of a&#13;
Virginia army camp was set down&#13;
by Charles B. Hayderr of Michigan's&#13;
Company I, Second Infantry,&#13;
in his diary entry of Dec. 23.&#13;
1862, now in The University of&#13;
Michigan Historical Collections.&#13;
Hayden observed that Yanks and&#13;
Rebels "seemed determined to be&#13;
together all the time." Picket soldiers&#13;
of the two forces exchanged&#13;
good natured taunts, traded tobacco,&#13;
coffee, newspapers and soldier's&#13;
gripes.&#13;
CELEBRATE YOUR&#13;
THE&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
Fun for Everyone—on Evening&#13;
You'll Never Forget&#13;
STARTING AT 9 P.M.&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
or HA 6-9181&#13;
"Then came an exchange of&#13;
jokes and an argument about the&#13;
war. This morning one of their&#13;
pickets called to one of ours, '1&#13;
say, Yank, what are you fighting&#13;
about?' kI don't know.' 'Say Reb,&#13;
what arc you fighting about?' 'I&#13;
don't know.' 'Let's throw our guns&#13;
into the river and end the d d&#13;
war.'"&#13;
Next day, Heyden writes: 'There&#13;
are no ornaments in our tents but&#13;
swords atnl-ptstoh, bat they gleam&#13;
brightly in the firelight and have,&#13;
as the times go, an eager and useful&#13;
look. There is no conversation&#13;
of friends or cheerful voices. No&#13;
sounds save of bugles or drums or&#13;
the soldiers wrangling over their&#13;
cards.&#13;
"If I knew the exact state of affairs&#13;
around the old fireplace at&#13;
home, I might feel more at ease.&#13;
May Santa Claus tonight fill th?&#13;
stockings of all the little ones as he&#13;
used to fill mine and may "Merry&#13;
Christmas be no idle words but&#13;
full of truth and meaning and good&#13;
health."&#13;
Heyden describes Christmas dinner:&#13;
"We made dinner on beef,&#13;
hardtacks and coffee. I had fortunately&#13;
finished my meal, when&#13;
Moore made a discovery w h i c h&#13;
checked him midway. The hardtacks&#13;
were full of bugs and worms.&#13;
His wry face was the most laugh-&#13;
Hayden, a law student ai trvj&#13;
University of Michigan before the&#13;
war, died of pneumonia on March&#13;
14, 1864.&#13;
Pouring cold water on a hot&#13;
broiler pan may cause it to warp&#13;
or crack, say home economists at&#13;
Michigan State University.&#13;
LATE CHRISTMAS SHOPPERS&#13;
Now is your chance to SAVE!&#13;
Pre-Inventory CLEARANCE SALE&#13;
FIREARMS&#13;
SHAKESPEARE FISHING OUTFITS&#13;
HUNTING CLOTHES&#13;
BEAR ARCHERY PRICE&#13;
12 Ft. Aluminum Boat,&#13;
Ni&#13;
CHRISTMAS TREES 96candup&#13;
SPRUCE ft SCOTCH PINE&#13;
OPEN WEEKDAYS TILL 8 — SUNDAYS TILL 4&#13;
WINTER ICE FISHING BAIT ft.TACKLE&#13;
EVINRUDE Meters — loafs — Hunting Equipment — Trailers ILL CREEKSP0RTIN66&#13;
H M Mate Street DEXTER. MICH. Ph. HA 6-3135&#13;
Local Items It is "Home for Christmas" for&#13;
the children and grandchildren of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Nash who will&#13;
entertain at their home on Sunday.&#13;
Present will be Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth&#13;
Zitl and family of Ann Arbor,&#13;
the Jackie Clark family of Dexter,&#13;
Nancy, from Michigan State University.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bek-&#13;
*ering and children of Howelt. but&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. "David Nash of&#13;
Greenville. S. Carolina, won't be&#13;
traveling home this winter.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. William Brash&#13;
will entertain at a family dinner on&#13;
Christmas Dav; in addition to the&#13;
William Brash. Jr., family, guests&#13;
will include Mr. and Mrs. Ivan&#13;
Richardson.&#13;
The Jr. Pilgrim Fellowship of&#13;
the Congregational church will&#13;
sing Christmas Carols for shut-ins&#13;
in this area.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday. December 20. 1961&#13;
1961&#13;
To all our neighbors and&#13;
man\ friends we extend&#13;
greetings and our prayer&#13;
that this Yule season be&#13;
filled with cheer, love and&#13;
great happiness.&#13;
Your Nationwide&#13;
Insurance Agent Louis A. Rogers&#13;
James A. Boyd&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
Good Tiding*&#13;
May the glory of the first Yule shine&#13;
like the star of Bethlehem in your&#13;
hearts.&#13;
Dexter Savings Bank</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 20, 1961</text>
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                <text>December 20, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27605">
                <text>1961-12-20</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No. 50 — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinekney, Michigan — Wednesday, December 13, 1961 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
Livingston Lodge to Install&#13;
Officers Saturday Evening&#13;
Earl Murray, of 9604 : 'mer&#13;
Dr.. Buck Lake, will be ii,billed&#13;
as Worshipful Master o\ Living ton&#13;
lodge No. 76, F. &amp; A. M., in installation&#13;
services at the Masonic&#13;
Temple Saturday night.&#13;
Stepping into office also ior&#13;
1962 will be Otis Matteson. senior&#13;
warden; George Engquist. junior&#13;
warden; Clifford Miller, treasurer:&#13;
Merwin Campbell, secretary: Dan&#13;
Van Slamhrook. senior deacon:&#13;
Richard Snowgold. junior deacon:&#13;
Alonzo Van Slamhrook. ch iplain:&#13;
Lars Melbv, marshal and Otto&#13;
Poulson. tiler.&#13;
Named stewards for the coming&#13;
year are James Boyd. Sr., Roger&#13;
Ward, Ciilbert Skinner, and Pat&#13;
will he the installing officer in Saturday's&#13;
services. Installing marshal&#13;
will be Orl.ind Winslow. Pas: Master:&#13;
Installing secretary. Lawrence&#13;
Camburn. Past Master: Installing&#13;
chaplain. Ona Campbell. Past Master.&#13;
Mrs. Merwin Campbell. Past&#13;
Matron. Past Cirand Organist will&#13;
play for ihj services.&#13;
Following [he installation program&#13;
there will be refreshments&#13;
seised in the dining room.&#13;
Earl Murray&#13;
Pf RATES LOSE It)&#13;
SALINE LAST FRIDAY NIGHT&#13;
The P.H.S. Pirates tasted defeat&#13;
on the basketball court Friday&#13;
night, their second league loss in&#13;
the season, when they were downed&#13;
by Saline's Defending Champion&#13;
Hornets, 72-43. Terry Rowell led&#13;
the Pirates with 14 points, while&#13;
Jack Young caged 1 I.&#13;
The little Pirates lost to the junior&#13;
varsity Hornets 54-49.&#13;
No Wedding&#13;
Bells in Hell&#13;
A young couple who gave their&#13;
home address as Livonia called on&#13;
Justice of the Peace Bertrand Wylie&#13;
here a week ago Friday evening&#13;
with the request that he perform&#13;
their marriage ceremony in Hell,&#13;
(Mich.)&#13;
When it was learned they had&#13;
no marriage license they stated they&#13;
understood a license could be obtained&#13;
in Hell.&#13;
The disappointed couple departed&#13;
promising to return as soon as&#13;
possible but to this day have not&#13;
been seen.&#13;
COMING&#13;
Con-Con Delegates Makes&#13;
Eighth Progress Report&#13;
The work oi the Convention this&#13;
week is progressing in a routine&#13;
fashion. There has been a tremendous&#13;
overflow of proposals coming&#13;
to the floor from the research&#13;
directors since December I. We&#13;
now have more than N00 proposals&#13;
for revision under consideration&#13;
by the Convention and I feel that&#13;
this could be "a source of contusion"&#13;
to the public as to the Convention's&#13;
work to date. Unfortunately,&#13;
many citizens have interpreted&#13;
these proposals as final&#13;
action, while oihers have been confused&#13;
by conflicting proposals on&#13;
specific issues. These proposals are&#13;
only proposals and not final action.&#13;
Each proposal will be given careful&#13;
study and evaluation. Only those&#13;
deemed valid will be incorporated&#13;
into committee recommendations&#13;
and reported out to the general&#13;
Convention for further study.&#13;
Talking to President Nisbet today,&#13;
in regard to this danger, he&#13;
urged citizens to withhold judgement&#13;
on the issues until the Convention&#13;
had taken final action. Dr.&#13;
Joiner, a co-director of research,&#13;
also backed up Mr. Nisbet's remarks&#13;
and called the public understanding&#13;
"the ultimate key to the&#13;
Convention's success".&#13;
LOCAL GOVERNMENT: Public&#13;
hearings will dominate the committee's&#13;
schedule within the next&#13;
two weeks. Separate hearings have&#13;
been selected to accomodate group&#13;
representatives and public officials&#13;
concerned with the particular area&#13;
of the committee's work — cities,&#13;
counties, townships and so forth.&#13;
The series will be climaxed on&#13;
December 1 and 20 with two evening&#13;
hearings for the general public.&#13;
After that, the way should be&#13;
cleared for the committee to start&#13;
hammering out committee recommendations.&#13;
I would like to make&#13;
one more plea to the people to&#13;
come to the public hearings and&#13;
express your views on changes in&#13;
local government. We have listened&#13;
to experts for two months and I&#13;
solicit your interest in this manner.&#13;
I am not so optimistic in t h e&#13;
thinking of "not many changes in&#13;
the present constitution", as 1 once&#13;
was. We have had very few practical&#13;
experienced people tell t h e&#13;
delegates in general what their need&#13;
is or luck*of need. I hope you will&#13;
find time to attend the Convention&#13;
often.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe&#13;
December 8, 161&#13;
Jr. Cagers&#13;
In Action&#13;
St. Mary's Little League&#13;
won last Saturday morning's basketball&#13;
game on a forfeit as t h e&#13;
Pinekney Merchant's team failed to&#13;
appear for the scheduled game.&#13;
In the second game Play Ian J&#13;
defeated the Pinekney Pilgrims, 33-&#13;
15. Robert Umstead made 13&#13;
points for the winners while Robert&#13;
Seefeld was high with 5 points&#13;
for the Pilgrims.&#13;
Mike Manns and Don Barker&#13;
were the referees.&#13;
Little League fans have a special&#13;
game treat in store for them Friday&#13;
evening. Dec. 15, when Playland&#13;
and St. Man's will play oft&#13;
the tie positions they now hold in&#13;
league standings. Each team ha*&#13;
won 6 and lost 2 games.&#13;
Morrie Scherrens, a star of Jr.&#13;
League play, will be in action&#13;
against the smooth-playing Playland&#13;
quints. There is no admissior&#13;
charge for this game to be played&#13;
in the high school gym at 7 p.m&#13;
NOTICE&#13;
The Pinekney Post office will&#13;
remain open all day Saturday, December&#13;
16 and 23. offering all ser&#13;
vices on these dates. 9 a.m. to 5:3&#13;
p.m., according to Postmaster L. E.&#13;
Baughn.&#13;
The Howell State Hospital Auxiliary&#13;
will sponsor the annual Accordion&#13;
Concert on Sunday. December&#13;
17. 4:00 p. m. at the South&#13;
Ea*t School. Howell.&#13;
A lively program oi much variety&#13;
has been planned for your&#13;
enjoyment. Accordion bands, specialty&#13;
feature acts and highlighting&#13;
it will be thj group. Buttons und&#13;
Keys, who have played all over th?&#13;
stale oi Michigan. Plan to attend&#13;
this concert next Sunday afternoon,&#13;
enjoy the program and support th:&#13;
Howell State Hospital Auxiliary.&#13;
Tickes are available at Greene's&#13;
^XiTfsx1 Store and-will be sold at the&#13;
door .Snndav.&#13;
The Sunda&gt; School Dept. of th:&#13;
Community Congregational church&#13;
and the Senior Choir will present a&#13;
joint Christmas program this year.&#13;
I he performance will be held at&#13;
the church on Friday-evening, Deeemher^&#13;
22 at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
The Women's Fellowship of th?&#13;
Congregational church will hold&#13;
their December meeting next Monday&#13;
evening. December 18. at 8&#13;
p. m. at Pilgrim Hall. Members&#13;
will bring canned goods for Christmas&#13;
baskets for needs families as&#13;
well as gifts for patients at the San.&#13;
There will be a program and refreshments.&#13;
Livermore&#13;
School Burns&#13;
Wednesday&#13;
The old Livermore sch.io! on&#13;
\l-3fc. a Gregory landmark. Ion&lt;_»&#13;
ago convened into a residence,&#13;
burned to th: ground last Wedn:sday&#13;
morning.&#13;
The home was occupied by th:&#13;
Robert Barber family. Mrs. Barber&#13;
stated that she thought ' h :&#13;
smelled smoke about 7 a.m. afte&#13;
her husband left for work but was&#13;
unable to locate th: source. Sh:&#13;
returned to bed and shortly afte:&#13;
9 a.m. awakened to find the living&#13;
room area in full blaze.&#13;
She broke open a bedroom window&#13;
and put her 3 year old daughter.&#13;
Pammie. outside. She grabbed&#13;
another daughter. 5 months old.&#13;
from her crib and dashed out of&#13;
the building. Neighbors called th;&#13;
Gregory fire department but th&gt;&#13;
flames were ou: of control by th:&#13;
time help arrived.&#13;
The Barbers lot every;hing ii&#13;
their home. The loss was partia U&#13;
covered by insurance. They are&#13;
ving in Ann Arbor temporarily.&#13;
Appoint Citizens' Committee&#13;
to Study Needs of Local&#13;
Community School System&#13;
The Pinekney Board oi Education&#13;
voted at its meeting Iu4 week&#13;
to set up a citizen's committee of&#13;
about 100 district residents to study&#13;
four aspects of the proposed $1,-&#13;
175,000 expansion of the school&#13;
system's facilities including the&#13;
building of a new 500 - student&#13;
high school. The board also voted&#13;
to become a registration school district.&#13;
School Board President John&#13;
Walton said that all of the trustees&#13;
of the school board will contact&#13;
individuals and invite them to&#13;
participate in the citizen's group.&#13;
—int€rested in&#13;
any one of the seven Board&#13;
Grid Champ&#13;
Dinner Set for&#13;
Saturday Eve&#13;
"Honor .the Champions" is the&#13;
word for Saturday night when&#13;
some 300 diners will he attsnd'nj&#13;
a banquet for th:? Pirates Vamty&#13;
football team, Washtenaw Conference&#13;
Champs, at the high school&#13;
gym at 6:30. The varsity player&gt;&#13;
and their dads will b? guests of&#13;
honor as will the coaches.&#13;
Ray Martinez, of E. M. S., coordinator&#13;
and consultant of school&#13;
bus drivers in this area of Michigan,&#13;
will be the guest speaker. He&#13;
is a former football coach oi th:&#13;
University of New Mexico.&#13;
A number oi student and adult&#13;
tickets are still available at Lavey&#13;
Hardware, LaRosas, Van's Motors&#13;
and Jerrys.&#13;
Football m o t h e r s , Kiwanians&#13;
and manv "area football fans ar:&#13;
preparing the banquet; the ar:&#13;
classes under the direction of Vrv&#13;
Don Swarthout are in charge of&#13;
decorations and the high school&#13;
band under the direction of Dennis&#13;
Napier, will appear on the program.&#13;
The public is invited to attenJ&#13;
but tickets are limited because of&#13;
the high school gym's capacity for&#13;
seating diners. A sell-out is anticipated&#13;
so don't delay; plan to hi&#13;
there as a tribute to the grid&#13;
champs of the year!&#13;
members.&#13;
It is planned to divide the group&#13;
of citizens into four sub-committees&#13;
to study site, buildings curriculum&#13;
and finances.&#13;
Hope was expressed that th:&#13;
work of the committees would result&#13;
in the bond issue election herj&#13;
wi.hin three months.&#13;
The election, when it is held,&#13;
will be the largest issue ever submitted&#13;
to Pinekney school voters&#13;
and it will be th: i\r&gt;[ election ot&#13;
the school system as a registration&#13;
chool district.&#13;
The Board's vote to become ;i-&#13;
TdrTegTstration of voters&#13;
directly to school officials and&#13;
away from the seven township&#13;
clerks handling the voting lists&#13;
presently.&#13;
The '$1,175,000 figure is. according&#13;
to the Board, a 'talking&#13;
figure" for the purpose of beginning&#13;
expansion pl.ms and the actual&#13;
bond issue figure to be voted upon&#13;
mav varv. The estimate of building&#13;
needs was made on the basis o\&#13;
informal evaluation and considerable&#13;
studv of needs.&#13;
An increase ot 6.25 per cen" in&#13;
school enrollment this year and th:&#13;
steady growth of population in recent&#13;
year- causing crowded conditions&#13;
in the district's present facilities&#13;
is the reason for the Board\&#13;
action.&#13;
Under the- -SI .175.00.') program,&#13;
if approved, the present high&#13;
school building would be converted&#13;
into an intermediate school for 6.&#13;
7 and 8th grades, easing pressure&#13;
in the elementary schools. The new&#13;
high school building would accommodate&#13;
expected growth for many&#13;
years to come, according to plans.&#13;
The expansion program wa&gt; approved&#13;
last month by Walton.&#13;
Goucher, Young. Roth and Swanson.&#13;
Mrs. Ross Read left Monday&#13;
from Willow Run airport for Pittsburgh,&#13;
Pa., where she will spend&#13;
the holidays with the Rus&gt;ell Read&#13;
family. On January 3. Mrs. Read&#13;
will travel on to Clearwater. Florida,&#13;
to spend the winter months.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Darrow and&#13;
family of Livonia were Saturday&#13;
callers at the Rav Burns home.&#13;
Christmas Concert Slated&#13;
For Tomorrow Evening&#13;
The Pinekney High School Music&#13;
Department will present its annual&#13;
Christmas concert tomorrow evening&#13;
at 8 p.m. in the high school&#13;
auditorium.&#13;
The Christmas concert is one of&#13;
the two major productions presented&#13;
by the department during thz&#13;
year and h the highlight of the&#13;
winter season.&#13;
Dennis Napier, music director,&#13;
has announced that the program&#13;
will be divided into four sections.&#13;
The first will consist of a variety&#13;
of sacred and secular numbers by&#13;
the High School Band including&#13;
"March of the Toys" from "Babes&#13;
In Toyland", and 'Winter Wonderland."&#13;
The High School Chorus will offer&#13;
a group of carols ending with&#13;
an attempt to recreate the first&#13;
musk of Christmas . . . angels singing&#13;
'Glory To God In the Highest!"&#13;
over Bethlehem . . . as reported&#13;
in the Bible story of Christ's&#13;
birth.&#13;
The third section will feature th:&#13;
Pinekney - Hamburg Elementary&#13;
School Chorus, the High School&#13;
Band, and a narrator in a presentation&#13;
of "The Christmas Story" as&#13;
told in the Bible.&#13;
The final section of the concert&#13;
will again feature the High School&#13;
Chorus with selected holiday music&#13;
ending with the "Hallelujah&#13;
Chorus" considered by many authorities&#13;
to combine in one piece the&#13;
most typical choral effects of Handel,&#13;
one of the most skillful writers&#13;
for chorus that ever lived.&#13;
There is no admission charge for&#13;
the concert, and everyone is invited!&#13;
,&#13;
8" Bonni* Doll with Lay.H. ...2.98 I I GAMES and PUZZLES&#13;
10" Bonni* Doll with Lay.*. ...2.981 As Advertised on T.V. I - * , . .&#13;
12" Bonni* Doll with Lay.H. .. .4.98 I I -29 to 3.98&#13;
' " Ball Turret Gun 12.98&#13;
Miss Muffet Tea Sets I us- Nov* Fr°9mo" "M W STOCKING STUFFERS&#13;
98c to $2.98 I Shark R O W 1 M i I 1Oe to&#13;
Fighting Lady .12.98 ' M&#13;
Doctor &amp; Nurse Sets • ^ ~ ^ 7 " &gt; , SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE&#13;
• PLASTIC MODELS | CHRISTMAS CANDLES&#13;
_^^#niiKITS&#13;
.15 to 1.00&#13;
Structo and Tonka&#13;
STEEL TRUCKS I cork Rif.. . Z.7. ".". 1.29 ' RIBBONS&#13;
1.98 to 11.98 Ismok.Rifl. 2.98- L J A I I l i A D i /&#13;
*- j u . i « * „ « * , „ „ • H A L L M A R K&#13;
Gun and Holster Sets 98 to 4.98 I&#13;
_ Box*d Cards and Personal Cards ELECTRIC TRAIN and I CAVALRY OFFICERS&#13;
TRACK SET I 5addl. R^fl.MlLEpI,E&#13;
toiE*Hoi.t.r I TREE AND HOME&#13;
2.98 I C$5?9?" I DECORATIONS&#13;
U.S. Choice Standing # n | j | j v K T •• •« ^ # g%&#13;
RIB ROAST Ib. 0 7 Y[SHORTENING 31b. O V&#13;
U.S. Choice ^^^|PrideofOregon t\ t% £&#13;
RIB STEAK Ib. / 7 T|WALNl)TS-1lb.pkg. O 7 Y&#13;
Peters O O C 1 ^ " $PraY •** =- O O C&#13;
SKINLESS FRANKS Ib. O 7 TICranberrv Sauce...2for O 7 Y&#13;
Peters Sliced O C C lNesfles OIIC&#13;
SLICED BOLOGNA ...Ib. O 9 T Istrawberry Quik.• . * v O 7 Y&#13;
Imperial Q A ( 1 Fancy Holiday&#13;
SALAD DRESSINGS." L * CANDLES 2 tor&#13;
NrbJefs Whole Kernel 1 C C N Chrishnas " ^ £ ± Q C&#13;
N 1?QLcan I 3 YIGIFT WRAP 3mlk 0 7 T&#13;
PINCKNEY GENERAL STOR Op» EVONMOS '«i 9*0 — Sunday. 9^0 a.m. to 1:30 pjn. PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
fr&#13;
Perfect Attendance Record&#13;
Listed by High School&#13;
9TH GRADE:&#13;
Margaret Ackley, Marva Barker,&#13;
Joseph Basydlo, Larry Baughn,&#13;
Rose Marie Belcher, Carolyn Cocanower,&#13;
Diane Darrow, Joe Darrow,&#13;
Katherine Davis, Janes Eason,&#13;
Larry Emery, Kenneth Garr, Paul&#13;
Gary, Barbara Grant, John Haas,&#13;
John Hampton, Mike Harden,&#13;
Gary Henry, Shirley Hilerman,&#13;
Nancy Hollister, Jim Jeanette, Robert&#13;
Jones, Connie Keiser, Stanley&#13;
Kourt, Stanley Keziy, Dob La-&#13;
Celle, Barbara Ludwig, La Mc-&#13;
Kenna, Mirle McMichael, Ooyle&#13;
McMichael, Francis Mills, , ierry&#13;
Nixen, Karen Preston, Betty Radabough,&#13;
Rochelle Randall, S t e v e&#13;
Randolph, Judith Reynolds, Kathey&#13;
Ruggles, Fred Schuman, Sharen&#13;
Scott, Pam Seefield, Kathleen Shettleroe,&#13;
David Shirley, Marilyn Singer,&#13;
William Singer, Arlens Sockow,&#13;
Sharon Stebbles, Alice Suter.&#13;
Frances Tripp. Tom Trumbull.&#13;
Florence Utley, Rose Marie Vedder,&#13;
John Walton, Pat Wikshire.&#13;
Eddie Williams, John Bishop.&#13;
10th GRADE:&#13;
Chiquita Amburgey. Judy Bekkering,&#13;
Bonnie Bond, Pat Borovsky,&#13;
Christine Buda, George Colone.&#13;
fcshn Biukeh -fccer^mervT -Braes-&#13;
Warner, Dan Waterbury, Roy&#13;
White.&#13;
11 th GRADE:&#13;
Mary Lee A s c h e n b r e n n e r ,&#13;
Scharme Baxter, John Biery, Alyce&#13;
Bryan, Cammille Buda, Anita&#13;
Clark, John Colone, Charles De-&#13;
Wolf, Ralph Emery, Kathy Gustafson,&#13;
Chester Gow, Ronald&#13;
Haines, Gerald Howell, Dwight&#13;
Matteson, Donald McMichael,&#13;
Norman Melby, Sandra Miller,&#13;
Caroline Micheles, Jesse Petty,&#13;
Marie Rawden, Pat Richardson,&#13;
Nancy Read, Susan Sepulveda,&#13;
John Singer, Ronald Singer, Patty&#13;
Suggitt, Rubeelee Thornton, Larry&#13;
Slow, Steady Gains Are Made&#13;
In Wat On Crippling Arthritis . • • * * •&#13;
Frederick?"'Sfiafbn Ga&#13;
nard Garrett, Larry Gyde. J o h n&#13;
Harrer, Louise Hadden. Judy&#13;
Haines, Linda Haney, Loretta Haney,&#13;
Pam Hoeft, Barb Johnson.&#13;
Duane Knapp. Susanne Kettle,&#13;
Karen King, Don La Belle. Fred&#13;
Lindsay, Shirley Mitchel. Florence&#13;
Mrofka, Mike Rawden, Diarr:&#13;
Schenden. Ralph Schroeder. Alma&#13;
Kay Shugg. Howard Singer. G a i l&#13;
Smith, Gerald Sullivan. Deborah&#13;
Thumm, Dennis Thumm. Garry&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
TREES&#13;
SPECIAL&#13;
$2.00&#13;
Cut your own&#13;
for Cutting Appointment&#13;
Call&#13;
STANDRIDGE&#13;
UP 8-3356&#13;
NO SUNDAY SALES&#13;
By DR. EPHRAIM ENGLEMAN&#13;
Medical Director, National Foundation&#13;
Arthritis Clinical Study&#13;
Center, San Francisco, Calif.&#13;
Across the nation today,&#13;
countless thousands of&#13;
Americans have steeled&#13;
themselves to live with the&#13;
pain and suffering of crippling&#13;
arthritis, simply because&#13;
they have found no&#13;
alternative but to accept it.&#13;
Millions of dollars are spent&#13;
by arthritics each year on quack&#13;
remedies and spurious cures in&#13;
their frustrating search for&#13;
some means of improving their&#13;
Utley, Lee Ann Frederick, Shirley | condition. Their need is intense,&#13;
Czerwinski, Barbara Hines.&#13;
12th GRADE:&#13;
Don Ackley, Steve Aschenbrenner,&#13;
Barbara Baughn, Roy Carpenter,&#13;
Claudia Garr, Neil Hall, Bruce&#13;
Henry, Sharon Hollister, Rachel&#13;
Nash, Mickey Ritter, Janice Rose,&#13;
Terry Rowell, Dennis Singer, Larry&#13;
Smith, Barbara Waterbury, Bob&#13;
Williams, Kaye Wylie, Mary Pena.&#13;
LIVINGSTON COUNTY&#13;
ACCIDENT REPORT&#13;
Livingston County Accident Reto&#13;
EfecT370. • ~~&#13;
11 property damage accidents&#13;
8 personal injury accidents&#13;
17 persons injured&#13;
1 fatal accident&#13;
1 killed&#13;
33 cars involved&#13;
for arthritis is much more than&#13;
a mere stiffness of the joints&#13;
that accompanies the aging&#13;
process. It is a whole complex&#13;
of diseases and conditions&#13;
whose causes are largely unknown&#13;
and for which medical&#13;
science has yet to find a cure.&#13;
Because of rheumatic &gt;disease,&#13;
320,000 persons in this&#13;
country are totally unable to&#13;
do any productive work. The&#13;
condition hits children, too,&#13;
often with pain so intense that&#13;
even the weight of a bed sheet&#13;
is unbearable.&#13;
Preventive Unknown&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
My most sincere thanks are expressed&#13;
tor the many kindnesses,&#13;
cards, flowers and prayers of my&#13;
friends for me and my family during&#13;
my recent stay in the hospital.&#13;
Mrs. Gil Rooke&#13;
Specializing in Fine&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wl tUIIH COMPUTE&#13;
HOMES ft OARAGIS&#13;
Carpenter Work of All Kind$|&#13;
Claude Swar+hoi&#13;
10007 DexfefPindutey&#13;
UP 8-3106&#13;
For Sale&#13;
2 bedroom home on Vz&#13;
acre of land, new well; between&#13;
Howell and Pinckney,|&#13;
$3,000. Small d. p.&#13;
2 bedroom home on Vi&#13;
acre, picture windows, permastone&#13;
front in Pinckney. $10,-&#13;
000. Terms.&#13;
2 bedroom home on approximately&#13;
2 acres; full base-|&#13;
ment, 2 car garage, near Dexter.&#13;
$10,900. Terms.&#13;
For Rent: 1, 2 and 4 bed-I&#13;
room houses.&#13;
ACREAGE NEEDED;&#13;
Have Buyers waiting.&#13;
Henry Krahn&#13;
Real Estate 117 E. MAIN&#13;
Pinckney UP 8-3380&#13;
g&#13;
knowledge on how best to care&#13;
for the arthritic. With no way&#13;
to prevent the condition, physicians&#13;
have great need for&#13;
more and better resources for&#13;
dealing with the arthritis prob^&#13;
lem. New tools and new methods&#13;
must be developed through&#13;
research, and the new knowledge&#13;
thus attained must be&#13;
quickly disseminated to physicians&#13;
for immediate translation&#13;
into terms of high quality&#13;
treatment for their patients.&#13;
To meet the critical needs&#13;
resulting from a medical problem&#13;
of such overwhelming&#13;
proportions, The National Foundation-&#13;
March of Dimes has&#13;
turned the full force of its&#13;
dynamic organization to meet&#13;
the challenge of crippling arthritis.&#13;
By directing an organized&#13;
attack on the three major'&#13;
fronts of research, patient aid&#13;
and professional education, it&#13;
is confident that arthritis, birth&#13;
defects and other crippling diseases&#13;
can be fought with the&#13;
same success that marked its&#13;
historic fight against polio.&#13;
Here at the University of&#13;
California Medical Center a&#13;
whole new concept for dealing&#13;
with chronic disease is being&#13;
formulated. Supported with&#13;
funds raised through the March&#13;
of Dimes, an Arthritis Clinical&#13;
Study Center is in full operation,&#13;
one of a.growing number&#13;
of such centers being estaba&#13;
victim of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis in the New March of&#13;
Dimes-financed Arthritis Clinical Study Center in San Francisco&#13;
where he is medical director.&#13;
lished across the country with&#13;
National Foundation grants.&#13;
Under the ideal conditions&#13;
afforded by a full-scale university&#13;
medical center, with&#13;
its splendid research facilities,&#13;
an ever-increasing number of&#13;
patients and a large group of&#13;
medical students who will&#13;
carry the experience and&#13;
knowledge acquired here to&#13;
all parts of the nation, the Arthritis&#13;
Center is constantly&#13;
stepping up the pace in the&#13;
new assault upon rheumatic&#13;
diseases.&#13;
Under the direction of staff&#13;
members who are experts in&#13;
their fields, and with the close&#13;
cooperation of specialized departments&#13;
in biochemistry,&#13;
orthopedics, physical medicine,&#13;
pediatrics, radiology, ophthalmology&#13;
and social service, a&#13;
total team approach to the&#13;
complex problems of the arthritis&#13;
patient has been introduced.&#13;
Work Pays Dividends&#13;
Our work already has begun&#13;
to pay dividends. Improvements&#13;
in care have been effected.&#13;
The range and amount&#13;
of service have been increased.&#13;
The ever-widening circle of&#13;
knowledge is reaching more&#13;
and more professional workers&#13;
in medicine, thus affecting the&#13;
lives of a constantly-growing&#13;
number of people who need&#13;
help.&#13;
The mammoth task of fighting&#13;
arthritis as a total problem&#13;
has just begun. But the&#13;
vigor and scope of The National&#13;
Foundation's newest effort&#13;
should bring renewed hope to&#13;
the 11,000,000 victims of rheumatic&#13;
diseases who have waited&#13;
too long for the advance of&#13;
medical science to reach their&#13;
doorstep.&#13;
Holiday Drivers Will Be&#13;
Able To Use US-23 By-pass&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
"S«y It with Rower,"&#13;
PhoM 284&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS "HMNT WITH THK FUVOT&#13;
W. M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
LANSINo — One of Michi&#13;
gan's worst traffic bottlenecks wil&#13;
be reduced considerably by Christmas&#13;
with the opening of a fourmile&#13;
stretch of Interstate 96 Freeway&#13;
at Brighton.&#13;
The State Highway Department&#13;
said the exact date for opening thi&#13;
freeway that by-passes Brighton&#13;
has not been set but it may be as&#13;
early as Dec. 15.&#13;
State Highway Commissioner&#13;
John C. Mackie said the by-pass —&#13;
part of the Detroit to Vfuskegon&#13;
Freeway — is being opened to traffic&#13;
nine months ahead of schedule&#13;
in an effort to reduce traffic congestion&#13;
at the intersection of old&#13;
US-16 and old US-23.&#13;
Mackie had high praise for th.1&#13;
contractor — L. A. Davidson Construction&#13;
Co. of Lansing — a n d&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
We would like to take this wav&#13;
of saying thank you to every en*&#13;
who helped us so kindly in s &gt;&#13;
many ways after our home w a s&#13;
destroyed by fire. Also a sp.ct il&#13;
thanks to the Oregon Fire djpur -&#13;
ment and our neighbors for their&#13;
action during the fire.&#13;
The Robert Barber family&#13;
Highway Department personnel&#13;
who worked on the project.&#13;
The by-pass is part of a $5&#13;
million interchange at the junction&#13;
of the Interstate 96 and US-23&#13;
freeways.&#13;
The entire interchange, one of&#13;
the world's largest in terms of the&#13;
175 acres it covers, is expected t J&#13;
be opened to traffic by the middle&#13;
of next year.&#13;
By opening 1-96 around Brighton,&#13;
through east-west traffic will&#13;
not be required to take a detour.&#13;
However, west-bound traffic desiring&#13;
to go from 1-96 to US-23 will&#13;
be required to take the detour.&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 3301&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE Howell Phone 1769&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Dec. 13—14—15—16&#13;
COLO'&#13;
Sun., Mon., Tuet.&#13;
Dec. 17—18—19&#13;
Matinee Sunday at 2:30 pjn.&#13;
continuous&#13;
AUDREY HEPBUI&#13;
.* ! • &lt; : ' I&#13;
WeA, Thurtv, Fri, Sat.&#13;
Dec 20—21—22—23&#13;
Matinee Saturday at 2:45&#13;
p-m. Conttnuput&#13;
Fashion Notes for Thousands&#13;
To most fashion conscious—and subjects of helpful interest to&#13;
nnw neeri&#13;
^ to every one of her questions as&#13;
to what to buy, what to wear&#13;
where, and what will make her&#13;
look her best.&#13;
Now the right answers are being&#13;
worked out for her via a detailed&#13;
and thorough program of style education&#13;
at the "grass roots" level.&#13;
450,000 workers in the vast US&#13;
fashion industries, the majority of&#13;
tfcem women, have joined together&#13;
in a Fashion Consumer service&#13;
series of booklets and fashion films&#13;
sponsored by the Union Label&#13;
Department of the International&#13;
Ladies' Garment Workers' Union.&#13;
Both the booklets and half hour&#13;
colored films are distributed free&#13;
with funds raised by a 25c monthly&#13;
contribution from each garment&#13;
worker.&#13;
The booklets, written with a&#13;
'down to earth" approach, are&#13;
modeled after publications of the&#13;
U.S. Department of Agriculture&#13;
other government agencies on&#13;
a general fashion guide, 'Travel&#13;
in Style," a booklet for travel&#13;
wardrobe planners, three booklets&#13;
on school wardrobes covering preschool&#13;
to college, a bride-to-be&#13;
trousseau guide, and a fashion&#13;
book for teenagers. A capsule history&#13;
of fashion with a miniature&#13;
dictionary of fashion terms is&#13;
now in preparation.&#13;
The second phase of the ILGWU&#13;
fashion education program is the&#13;
production and distribution of&#13;
color films to aid women in the&#13;
ticklish matter of adding new&#13;
clothes to their wardrobes each&#13;
year.. Four fashion films have been&#13;
produced, and the fourth of these,&#13;
covering Fall 1961 style trends&#13;
from high to budget-priced fashion,&#13;
is being circulated in theatres,&#13;
as well as 125 prints that are&#13;
being distributed to TV stations,&#13;
women's clubs, conventions and&#13;
other meetings of women throughout&#13;
America.&#13;
Library News&#13;
New this week is "Captain Battle&#13;
Ax" by Street, the story of a&#13;
fifteen year old southern boy who&#13;
FOR SALE&#13;
ORCHIDS&#13;
(Homegrown)&#13;
Plants in Bloom&#13;
Ideal for Gifts or&#13;
Beautiful&#13;
CATALYA ORCHID&#13;
CORSAGES&#13;
for your Holidays&#13;
Mrs. Steve&#13;
Oleski&#13;
8979 Rushside Drive&#13;
UP 8-3350&#13;
follows his father to the war. When&#13;
his father is killed at Shiloh he is&#13;
spurned by the Confederate army.&#13;
The boy, determined to h:lp the&#13;
South, gathers a group of underage&#13;
ruffins to the cause as marauders&#13;
and emerges a young m a n&#13;
worthy of a commission in t h e&#13;
Confederate Army.&#13;
Also new are two mysteries by&#13;
top writers "Moment of Violence&#13;
by Caxe and 'Triple Jeopardy" by&#13;
MacDonald.&#13;
We also have a new collection&#13;
of reference books for the younger&#13;
school children: First Books of&#13;
France, England, Greece, Canada,&#13;
W. Germany and World War I and&#13;
Sutton's Illustrated Book of Africa.&#13;
Both young and old will find the&#13;
beautiful illustrations and the text&#13;
a interesting and valuable source&#13;
of information about this changing&#13;
continent.&#13;
We want to meet the needs of&#13;
the community for educational,&#13;
materials, general information and&#13;
recreational reading. We invite all&#13;
to make known to us their need&#13;
of the "right" book.&#13;
"^~PINCKNEY DISPATCH "&#13;
Wedneedey, December 13, 1961&#13;
TOYS - TOYS - TOYS&#13;
AT CLEARANCE PRICES!&#13;
— ALSO —&#13;
Reductions on smal electric appliances&#13;
—STORE HOURS—&#13;
Monday thru Friday 8:30 a.m.&#13;
Saturday 8:30&#13;
Sunday 9 a.m.&#13;
6:00 p.m.&#13;
6:30 p.m.&#13;
f:00 p.m.&#13;
HAMBURG HARDWARE&#13;
AC 9-7076&#13;
Victor G. Basydlo, son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Joe Basydlo of 8996 Pettysville&#13;
rd., will participate in Stout&#13;
State College's 1961 Christmas present&#13;
to the city of Menominie—the&#13;
annual Stout Christmas Concert.&#13;
He is a Junior in the Industrial&#13;
Education dept. of the college, located&#13;
in Wisconsin.&#13;
~~PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 13, 1961&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
250 Dtxttr Strttt ESTABLISHED IN 1683 Pinckmy, Michigan&#13;
Published Ev.ry W«dnt»d«y by C. M. Uvey and L. W. Doylt. O w w »&#13;
IUZAIITH A. COlONl, Editor&#13;
SS«ccoonndd cttww P&lt;»&gt;«* P * * Ptnckn»yy,, q _&#13;
Tht column* of th]» p«p»r art «n open forum w h « « «v«il«bl« spaca, grammatical,&#13;
logal and arnica! con*ioVation» f t tht only rt»tnct&gt;on».&#13;
Subscription ratat, $2.00 par yaar in advanca in Michigan; $2.30 in othtr »Ut«t and&#13;
U.S. PoMtMion*. $4.00 to foreign country. Six month, rates: $1.50 in Mkhigan;&#13;
$1.75 m other states and U.S. possessions; $3.00 to forewn countries. Military&#13;
personnel $2.50 per year. No mail subscriptions taken for less than six- months.&#13;
Advertising rates upon application.&#13;
NOTES FROM T H E - ELEMENTARY SCHO EIGHTH GRADE&#13;
Mrs. Osterhoudt&#13;
This week because it is so clos?&#13;
to Christmas we have been planning&#13;
what we will make for Christ-&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED LEAGUE&#13;
December 8, 1961&#13;
Toppers 36 20&#13;
Checkmates 35J/2 201&#13;
HeeHaws 31 25&#13;
Double D's 31 25&#13;
Pinckney Polkats 30 26&#13;
2716&#13;
Untouchables&#13;
Bombers&#13;
Patt. Lake Four&#13;
Bee Bee's&#13;
Bill Posters&#13;
27 V2&#13;
21 Vi&#13;
24&#13;
23&#13;
14&#13;
2&#13;
28&#13;
32&#13;
33&#13;
42&#13;
MEN'S MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
Joe's Tavern 30 22&#13;
Blatz 29»/2 18'/2&#13;
Stroll's 28 24&#13;
Boy d's 23 Vi 2814&#13;
Pfeiffer's 23 29&#13;
Falstaff 18 30&#13;
PINCKNEY MEN'S&#13;
'A' BOWLING&#13;
Velvet Eez Shoes&#13;
Jim's Gulf Service&#13;
Lee's Standard Oil&#13;
Read Lumber&#13;
Van's Motors&#13;
Kiwanis&#13;
Pinckney Plastics&#13;
Integral Corp.&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
Lavey Hardware&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Altes Beer&#13;
37 Vi&#13;
37&#13;
32&#13;
3P/2&#13;
29Vi&#13;
29'/2&#13;
27&#13;
27&#13;
26&#13;
24&#13;
17&#13;
14&#13;
18V2&#13;
15&#13;
20&#13;
241/2&#13;
26'/:&#13;
26»/2&#13;
29&#13;
29&#13;
30&#13;
32&#13;
39&#13;
42&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Burke returned&#13;
home by plane recently f r o m&#13;
Arizona where h* had b:en o i&#13;
location for the Jam Handy Motion&#13;
Picture Co. of Detroit f o r&#13;
several weeks. Mrs. Burke joine.1&#13;
her husband there for Thanksgiving&#13;
and spent some tim: visiting&#13;
the Hughes family in Phoenix and&#13;
enjoyed a trip into Mexico before&#13;
their return to Rush Lake.&#13;
In I960, the average American&#13;
ate 86 pounds of beef, 65 pound;&#13;
of pork, 6 pounds of veal and 5&#13;
pounds of lamb and mutton.&#13;
Visit our Cosmetic Counter&#13;
for COLOGNES, Dusting&#13;
Powder, Toilet Water.&#13;
Windsona&#13;
ChrtstniM&#13;
mas. We are going to make styrofoam&#13;
Christmas trees and c a n d l e&#13;
holders.&#13;
We painted our windows t h i s&#13;
week and some of them turned oui&#13;
pretty good but some aren't completed&#13;
yet. Our bulletin board i&#13;
also finished and it turned oui&#13;
good. The girls who worked on i.&#13;
did a good job.&#13;
The choir has been rehearsing&#13;
at the high school in preparation&#13;
for the Christmas. Concert.&#13;
Linda Latimer&#13;
SECOND GRADE&#13;
Mrs. Johnson&#13;
The-girls in^out,room made&#13;
J4&#13;
with the shepherds and sheep, ths&#13;
bright star above the stable.&#13;
The boys made the fun mural.&#13;
It is gay with Christmas trees and&#13;
Santa.&#13;
David Kimbler is going to spend&#13;
Christmas in Alabama with h i s&#13;
grandparents.&#13;
We are preparing a playlet for&#13;
the Christmas assembly.&#13;
• * *&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE&#13;
Mrs. Douglas&#13;
We drew names for exchange of&#13;
Christmas gifts. We have c o m -&#13;
pleted painting our windows. On&#13;
one bulletin board we have the nativity&#13;
scene. We are making candles&#13;
for Christmas presents for our parents.&#13;
We have a new collection of&#13;
library books and are enjoying&#13;
them very much.&#13;
SIXTH GRADE&#13;
We were so busy last Friday we&#13;
forgot to write the news. Last&#13;
week we made Christmas presents&#13;
for our mothers and fathers. We&#13;
have been planning a Christmas&#13;
program for our parents too.&#13;
* * •&#13;
TO PRESENT CANTATA&#13;
The senior choir of the Peoples&#13;
church will present its annual&#13;
Christmas program on Sunday evening,&#13;
December 17, at 7 o'clock&#13;
in the evening at the church.&#13;
"Prepare Him Room" by Rosemary&#13;
Hadler is the production this&#13;
year, Mrs- Floyse Campbell, is the&#13;
director.&#13;
im mmmmwmimmt mm* mm* mm* mm* a p mm* mm&gt; m Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
Feafuring&#13;
BILL KLAVE TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNERS SERVED&#13;
FRIDRYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger J. Can Agency)&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agent&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mitl Street&#13;
P/ncfcney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage Lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 83172&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
ay M. Duffy, MJ&#13;
P/ncJcney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 AJA. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesday*&#13;
Mon., TIMS., Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7.-00 to 8.-00 PJ*.&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's Largtst&#13;
Displays of Monumenfi&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
WILDING 4 CONTRACTING&#13;
Cottote*, Garages&#13;
Darwin Rood,&#13;
Mom UP 13234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENERAL INSURANCE&#13;
UP4V3221&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reiclchoff Si\&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 Wett Grand Rim&#13;
Howetl, MicniQOA&#13;
Phow 358 UtkUnem 613&#13;
Real Eitate&#13;
Uet Your Property with Gerald Reason&#13;
•raker 102 W Mota Stre*&#13;
Uptown $-3564&#13;
4-H Livestock Projects are Tops&#13;
Richard Haitt Chris MilUr&#13;
All-expense trips to Chicago and a chance at $400 college scholarships&#13;
are on tap for a pair of talented boys from Michigan at the&#13;
40th National 4-H Club Congress from Nov. 26-30.&#13;
The youths are Richard Haist, 17, of 1120 Haist Rd., Chelsea,&#13;
and Chris Miller, 18, of 4015 W. Coldwater Rd., Flint.&#13;
They will join 1,400 other delegates&#13;
to the congress being held&#13;
in Chicago's Conrad Hilton Hotel.&#13;
By excelling in the 4-H dairy&#13;
program, Miller won state honors&#13;
and the trip donated by Oliver&#13;
Corporation, Chicago. The firm&#13;
is offering six $400 scholarships&#13;
as national prizes.&#13;
Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Christian Miller, has made a fine&#13;
start toward his goal of a Hoistein&#13;
herd. Seven years ago, he"&#13;
h d&#13;
ma&amp;ff&#13;
Working on his family's 174&#13;
acre farm, this lad reported income&#13;
exceeding $3,000 from milk&#13;
in his project over an eight-year&#13;
span.&#13;
Miller is president of the Stanley&#13;
Community 4-H group and&#13;
plans to enter Michigan State&#13;
University.&#13;
Haist, son of Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Erwin Haist, won top state honors&#13;
in the beef program sponsored&#13;
by E. I. du Pont de Nemours &amp;&#13;
Company, Wilmington, Del. The&#13;
company also is offering six $400&#13;
scholarships for national beef&#13;
project winners.&#13;
A seven-year 4-H'er, Haist climaxed&#13;
his profitable project by&#13;
having a 900 lb. Angus steer&#13;
named grand champion at the&#13;
recent Chelsea" Community Fair.&#13;
.This y oung.. Jarmer has served&#13;
Club.&#13;
Another trip is awaiting Haist&#13;
to the National 4-H Conference&#13;
in Washington, D. C, next April.&#13;
Top business firms, the National&#13;
4-H Service Committee&#13;
and the Cooperative Extension&#13;
Service have arranged the 4-H&#13;
Club Congress.&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
Training awards for 1961 were&#13;
given to three Livingston District&#13;
scouters at the annual Recognition&#13;
Dinner of the Portage Trails Council&#13;
held in Saline last Wednesday.&#13;
John Campbell of Howell received&#13;
a Scouters Key; Helen Farr and&#13;
Margaret Trumbull of Howell. Den&#13;
Mother awards.&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
MO1T0AUI SAIE&#13;
Default having b—n made in the&#13;
conditions of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Russett&#13;
8. Buckner and Dorothy V. Buckner,&#13;
hit wife, at mortgagor!, to Thurber&#13;
Cornell, at mortgagee, and recorded in&#13;
the office of the Register of Deeds for&#13;
Livingston County, Michigan, Apr^l 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber 155 at page 626; which&#13;
taid mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
December 16, 1954, astigned by J. Hen-&#13;
-y Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administrators&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cor*&#13;
nell, deceased, to Esther D. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in liber 298 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January 17, 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Athey, by assignment&#13;
recorded on the same date in&#13;
Liber 299 at page 306 thereof;&#13;
Notice is hereby given that said&#13;
mortgage will be foreclosed pursuant to&#13;
power of sale and the premises therein&#13;
described as lend in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wit:&#13;
The north half of the southeast quarter&#13;
of Section twenty-six (26);—m Town*&#13;
ship 4 North, Range 4 east, Michigan,&#13;
containing eighty acres of land, more&#13;
tx less, excepting the right of way of&#13;
the Ann Arbor Railroad and also ex*&#13;
cepting easement to Consumers Power&#13;
Company recorded in Liber 187 of&#13;
Deeds at peg* 206, Livingston County&#13;
Records.&#13;
Will be sold at public auction to the&#13;
highest bidder for cash by the Sheriff&#13;
of Livingston County, Michigan, at the&#13;
west front door of the Court Movet in&#13;
the City of Howell, in said County and&#13;
Stele, on Friday the fifth d*y of January&#13;
1962, at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
of said day. There is due and payable*&#13;
at the date of this notice upon the debt&#13;
secured by said mortgage, the sum of&#13;
Four Thousand two hundred tighty-sii&#13;
Dollar* and Fifty-three Cents ($4286.53)&#13;
Ruth Cornell Athey,&#13;
Assign— of mortgagee.&#13;
Dated: October t i , 1961&#13;
Van Winkle, Van Winkle &amp; Heikkinen,&#13;
Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee.&#13;
Business Address:&#13;
Howell, Michigan.&#13;
Inverness country club held&#13;
open house for members and&#13;
friends Sunday at its newly-completed&#13;
clubhouse at North Lake.&#13;
The new building, completed at the&#13;
cost of $35,000, is located on N.&#13;
Territorial Rd., replaces the original&#13;
clubhouse which was the former&#13;
Douglas Fraser home.&#13;
A January trial has been set for&#13;
a 22-year old Lyndon township&#13;
Lman. Roger L. Davis, charged in&#13;
TAnn Arbor's Municipal Court with&#13;
reckless driving. A warrant charges&#13;
"harrassing" a bus carrying Chelsea&#13;
High school students home&#13;
from Ypsilanti on a recent Friday&#13;
night. The harassment is described&#13;
as "bumper tag."&#13;
A Citizens Committee in Stockbridge,&#13;
on the strength of a recent&#13;
poll of their school district recommends&#13;
a $550,000 bond issue of&#13;
meeting school needs.&#13;
Homecoming Queen. Joann Freiermuth,&#13;
was named for the DAR&#13;
Citizenship Award of Stockbridge&#13;
High school last week.&#13;
Sam Fowler of Yale, has succeeded&#13;
Jim Erskme. as manager of&#13;
the Howell Co-Operative Co. He&#13;
is a native of Byron.&#13;
The Hartland Area choir of 60&#13;
voices presented Handel's 'Messiah'*&#13;
at the Music Hall Sunday&#13;
evening.&#13;
The Little Theatre group organized&#13;
recently in Brighton will&#13;
henceforth be known as the Livingston&#13;
Players. The name w a s&#13;
chosen in hopes that the organization&#13;
will become a county-wide&#13;
one. At their approaching January&#13;
meeting the group will elect officers,&#13;
pass upon by-laws and conskier&#13;
play selections.&#13;
State Police&#13;
Notes . . .&#13;
State Police officers made 17,-&#13;
303 arrests in October, 15,943 for&#13;
traffic offenses and 1,360 on&#13;
criminal complaints, according to&#13;
the department's monthly activity&#13;
report.&#13;
In addition, 446 juvenile traffic&#13;
offenders and 389 delinquent minors&#13;
were apprehended.&#13;
Troopers made 25,133 property&#13;
and 2,998 liquor inspections.&#13;
Department vehicles traveled 1,-&#13;
833,479 miles, of which 1,010,639&#13;
were on traffic patrol and 822,840&#13;
to investigate criminal and other&#13;
complaints.&#13;
The identification bureau received&#13;
11,731 sets of fingerprints,&#13;
of which 6,740 were criminal and&#13;
4,991 noncriminal. Thirty - four&#13;
wanted persons were identified.&#13;
Of 2,813 applicants for permits&#13;
to carry concealed weapons, 277&#13;
were identified with criminal records&#13;
through their fingerprints.&#13;
Four unknown dead were identified&#13;
by the same means.&#13;
Major league baseball broadcaster&#13;
"Ernie" Harwell of Detroit&#13;
will be the guest speaker at the&#13;
annual Farmer's Night program of&#13;
the Fowlerville Commercial Club&#13;
tomorrow evening."&#13;
Swainson Cuts Log To Open Freeway&#13;
$;!$:;&#13;
"ill&#13;
«. ' • • • . % ' •&#13;
GOV. JOHN B. SWAINSON (left), wearing a lumberman's&#13;
jacket and knit cap, took part in a log-cutting ceremony&#13;
recently to mark the opening of Michigan's 700th mile&#13;
of freeway. On the other end of die two-man cross-cut saw&#13;
was Chief Deputy State Highway Commissioner Howard E.&#13;
Hill. The colorful dedication highlighted the opening of 9.2&#13;
miles of Interstate 75 Freeway between Bridgeport and&#13;
Birch Run, the final gap of a freeway that now links Flint,&#13;
* - * " • " ' Bay €ity aad Midland. ..__ _&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain siwt and lawn mowers repaired and sharpened.&#13;
Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
Water pomps repaired Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
and used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
Have More Cash&#13;
for Christmas&#13;
This Time Next Year...&#13;
JOIN OUR&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
SAYINGS CLUB * * • , .&#13;
PAY FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
A LITTLE AT A TIME!&#13;
If you find it difficult to pay for all your&#13;
Christmas shopping in two or three&#13;
months, join our 1962 Christmas Savings&#13;
Club. You decide how much to save;&#13;
divide the amount by 12 months, put&#13;
away that much cash regularly here in&#13;
a Club Account. . . this time next year&#13;
you'll have all the cash you need.&#13;
ITS EASY! IT'S SMART! JOIN TODAY!&#13;
JUST DEPOSIT BEFORE CHRISTMAS&#13;
WEEKLY 1962 YOU RECEIVE&#13;
50c $ 25.00&#13;
$ 1.00 . $ 50.00&#13;
$ 2.00 $100.00&#13;
$ 3.00.. $150.00&#13;
$ 5.00 $250.00&#13;
$10.00 $500.&#13;
SERVING&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK&#13;
HOWELL—PINCKNEY&#13;
"Serving Since 1865"&#13;
FOR RENT or for sale: Small&#13;
truck farm with orchard, $60 mo.&#13;
Also 5 rm. house with bath and&#13;
garage. $50. mo. UP 8-3260. 49tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: Nine room house in&#13;
village. Modern; $55 per month.&#13;
Inquire 510 Patterson Lk. Rd.&#13;
WILL CARE for children in my&#13;
home at Rush Lake - licensed. Mrs.&#13;
Violet Eason, 3468 Rush Lake Rd.,&#13;
UP 8-3220. 49-5lp&#13;
FOR SALE: House, 5 room and&#13;
bath, and 2 a. of land on M-36.&#13;
Terms. Lucius J. Doyle, phone UP&#13;
8-3123.&#13;
49tfp&#13;
FOR RENT: 3 bedroom r u r a l&#13;
home. Call UP 8-3219 evenings.&#13;
49tfc&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens^ sod.&#13;
Pft; UP&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Roasting chickens,&#13;
six pounds and up, alive or dressed.&#13;
UP 8-3355. 50tfc&#13;
WANTED: Baby sitting, evenings&#13;
and week ends; graduate and junior&#13;
student available. Call UP&#13;
8-3377. 49-51C&#13;
FOR RENT: three room apt. on&#13;
ground floor; 2 bedrooms and&#13;
bath. Near Pinckney. 3410 W. M-&#13;
36. 49-50p&#13;
FOR RENT: modern, six rooms&#13;
and bath, 3 bedrooms, furnished or&#13;
unfurnished. Call Mrs. Oscar Beck,&#13;
UP 8-3434 or UP 8-3524.&#13;
FOR SALE: Feeder pigs, average&#13;
weight, 120 pounds. 7700 Gawley&#13;
Road. Pinckney, Call after 7 p.m.&#13;
UP 8-3298; or all day Sunday or&#13;
Monday. 49-50p&#13;
FOR SALE: Locust fence posts. T&#13;
line; 8* corner. Also fire place&#13;
wood. Emery Hajnal. 124 Tiplady&#13;
Rd.. Phone UP 8-9924. 49-50p&#13;
FOR LEASE: Store building for&#13;
lease, remodeled front, next to&#13;
Pinckney General Store. Will remodel&#13;
and modernize interior for&#13;
reliable tenant and lease. See Bob&#13;
Parks at General Store. 49tf&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
telling oil. Pinckney district manager,&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
house trailer, 35 feet long. UP 8-&#13;
6648. 47-4Xo&#13;
FOR RENT: two sleeping rooms,&#13;
nicely furnished. 6310 Buckshore&#13;
Drive, Hamburg. 48-49c&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
WANTED — Your deer hide to&#13;
tan and make into gloves and jackets.&#13;
Deer heads mounted true to&#13;
life. Prices reasonable. Guntzviller&#13;
Taxidermy, Northville, Mich. Take&#13;
10 mile, 8 miles east of South Lyon.&#13;
Open Sundays. FI 9-2555.&#13;
47-52c&#13;
FOR SALE: geese, alive or dressed.&#13;
Clifford Van Horn, UP 8-3225.&#13;
50c&#13;
FOR SALE: Kalamazoo wood and&#13;
coal circulating heater, like new.&#13;
$25. Call UP 8-3435. 50p&#13;
FOR SALE: Aluminum boat, 15&#13;
h.p. Evinrude; trailer, steering and&#13;
controls for skiing. Used very little.&#13;
$300. Call UP 8-3435. 50p&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom house,&#13;
furnished, in village; gas heat. $55&#13;
per month. UP 8-3435. 50p&#13;
FOR SALE: L. C. Smith typewriter;&#13;
long carriage. $5.00. UP 8-&#13;
3282. 50c&#13;
ALTERATIONS, sewing, mending,&#13;
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PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 13, 1961&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
The annual Christmas program&#13;
of the Congregational Sunday&#13;
school will be held next Tuesday&#13;
evening. Forty different selections&#13;
are listed on the program. Hazel&#13;
Chambers and Pauline Vedder are&#13;
in charge of the speaking parts and&#13;
the music is under the direction of&#13;
Mrs. E. E. Baughn.&#13;
John Crowley, 91, who was a&#13;
mess-boy for Gen. Grant during&#13;
the Civil War died this week in&#13;
California. He was a resident of&#13;
Lansing for many years and was a&#13;
cousin of ths Haze sisters of Pinckney.&#13;
He visited here recently before&#13;
leaving for California,.&#13;
For the first time in the memory&#13;
of man no tax has been spread in&#13;
Putnam township this year. Supervisor&#13;
Hoisel informed the Dispatch&#13;
that there was no need to collect&#13;
taxes this year because there was&#13;
sufficient money on hand to take&#13;
care of township finances.&#13;
William Lamb who has b e e n&#13;
sailing on the packet. Crescent&#13;
Queen, from Duluth to Buffalo this&#13;
summer, has returned here to&#13;
spend the winter.&#13;
Robert Meyers and George&#13;
Clark attended the Fat Stock show&#13;
in Detroit last week and saw Gov.&#13;
Fitzgerald auction off the grand&#13;
prize steer.&#13;
The Junior King's Daughters&#13;
visited the University Hospital on&#13;
Saturday with gifts for the children's&#13;
ward.&#13;
The John Dinkel family enjoyed&#13;
a long-distance telephone visit on&#13;
Sunday with the Otto Dinkel family&#13;
in Sioux City, Iowa. The callers&#13;
reported that the Sioux weather&#13;
in Iowa was 9 below zero and&#13;
there was six inches of snow on&#13;
the ground. It was 20' here and&#13;
less snow.&#13;
Percy Ellis was installed 'as Worshipful&#13;
Master of the Masonic&#13;
lodge here Saturday night. Past&#13;
Master John Martin was the in&#13;
stalling officer. Attendance was&#13;
very good and a big social evening&#13;
followed the installation services.&#13;
Miss Marguerite Rowe, 17, of&#13;
Stockbridfe, and a companion&#13;
they were riding collided with a&#13;
train near Whitmore Lake.&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Rebeson&#13;
and Marie spent Sunday afternoon&#13;
and evening on December 4th with&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lester DeWitte and&#13;
family of Lansing; ice cream and&#13;
cake were served as it was Mrs.&#13;
DeWitfs birthday.&#13;
A Christmas Cantata and drama&#13;
combined called "Miracle at the&#13;
Inn'* will be presented by the Gregory&#13;
Baptist choir with several&#13;
members of the church participating&#13;
in the drama.&#13;
It will be presented on Sunday,&#13;
December 17th at 7:30 p.m. Every&#13;
one is invited to attend.&#13;
Mrs. Elaine Singer and Mrs.&#13;
Vincent Young, Sr., were injured&#13;
in an automobile accident November&#13;
28th when the car in which&#13;
they were riding was struck by a&#13;
truck ten miles Northwest of Gregory.&#13;
Friends of Mrs. Young may&#13;
send cards to her in care of room&#13;
202, Mercy Hospital in Jackson,&#13;
Michigan.&#13;
The long time landmark east of&#13;
Gregory on M-36, the "Livermore&#13;
School house" long since remodeled&#13;
into a home, burned to the&#13;
ground early Tuesday of last week.&#13;
Tuesday of this week the vocal&#13;
music department of the Stockbridge&#13;
high school presented t h e&#13;
musical highlight of the Christmas&#13;
season, with this year's theme,&#13;
"Music for Christmas". The 200&#13;
voices taking part in the singing&#13;
of Christmas music, was a thrill to&#13;
hear. Those groups participating&#13;
were: Girls Glee Club, Boy's&#13;
Chorus, under the direction of Mrs.&#13;
American GFs In Europe&#13;
To See Wayne Theatre Troupe&#13;
In preparation for the troupe's departure, Director Leone&#13;
(left) and Instructor Smith help student actor Lawrence Lerew&#13;
with a costume for "Where's Charley."&#13;
DETROIT—Wayne State Univ&#13;
e r s i t y ' s T h e a t r e has been&#13;
selected to make its second international&#13;
tour during February&#13;
and March. Its troupe,&#13;
now in rehearsal, will leave by&#13;
air for Europe February 4.&#13;
The European tour will be&#13;
made for the« Department of&#13;
Defense under the auspices of&#13;
the American E d u c a t i o n a l&#13;
Theatre Association and the&#13;
U.S.O., the latter supported by&#13;
community contributions&#13;
The Wayne Theatre and nine&#13;
other college theatre groups&#13;
were selected from 45 applicants.&#13;
The touring company will&#13;
be composed of 18 students, Director&#13;
Leonard Leone, and Instructor&#13;
Russell Smith.&#13;
Its repertoire will consist of&#13;
the musical "Where's Charley?"&#13;
and several one-act plays, to be&#13;
presented for armed force bases&#13;
and local communities in various&#13;
European countries. The&#13;
other college groups will tour&#13;
in other areas of the globe.&#13;
The Theatre's first international&#13;
tour was in 1958 when,&#13;
under sponsorship of the Department&#13;
of State, it toured&#13;
India.&#13;
Paul Ramsdell. Special numbers&#13;
were sung by a double trio, a small&#13;
chorus from the Girls Glee Club&#13;
and a small chorus from the Junior&#13;
High chorus. The entire program&#13;
was sung with great enthusiasm,&#13;
and skill under their f i n e&#13;
direction.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Taylor will&#13;
be honored this Sunday, December&#13;
17th at an open house on their silver&#13;
wedding anniversary. T h e&#13;
Taylor's will receive relatives,&#13;
friends, and neighbors from 2 until&#13;
5 p.m. at their home, 5167 Dexter&#13;
Trail, Stock bridge.&#13;
Hosts for the open house will be&#13;
the couple's sons, Gordon and&#13;
John, and Miss Ruth Ryba.&#13;
Obituary&#13;
WILLIAM KETCHUM&#13;
William A. Ketchum, 85, of 212&#13;
E. Main St. died Thursday night&#13;
at his home after a long illness.&#13;
He was born Dec. 23, 1875, in&#13;
Jackson, the son of Wilson N. and&#13;
Lottie B. Branchflower Ketchum.&#13;
On April 17, 1894, he married&#13;
Mary Sharpsteen in Jackson. She&#13;
died in 1954.&#13;
On July 30, 1955, he married&#13;
Luella Brown of Pinckney. She&#13;
survives. Mr. Ketchum was a retired&#13;
store operator and interior&#13;
decorator. He had lived in Pinckney&#13;
for the past 20 years.&#13;
He- was a member of th-&#13;
People's Church and the Livingston&#13;
Surviving in addition to his wife&#13;
are two sons. Dr. Louis Ketchum&#13;
and Russell Ketchum, both of Van&#13;
Nuys, Calif., a daughter, Mrs. Ellen&#13;
Dapprich of Lincoln P a r k :&#13;
three brothers, Luman of Jackson&#13;
and Ralph and Harley of California;&#13;
five grandchildren and nine&#13;
great-grandchildren.&#13;
Funeral services were held at 1&#13;
p.m. Monday at the Swarthoiu&#13;
Funeral Home with the Reverend&#13;
Thomas Murphy officiating. Burial&#13;
was in Forest Lawn Cemetery in&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
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Outer vinyl jacket is dust and odor free—wipes&#13;
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The Convertible hot 50% mere suction when&#13;
used with attachments because of Hoover's&#13;
new two-speed motor.&#13;
You Nmror Go Wrong When you Buy tbe Bmstl LAVEY HARDWARE m-UP- sim- MNCKNEY&#13;
WYNNE CHESTER SAYS:&#13;
Pot Roast Feast For&#13;
The Proud Deerslayer!&#13;
He did it! My boy Mike got&#13;
his first deer! It's not the biggest&#13;
buck you ever saw, to be&#13;
sure — but who cares? A boy's&#13;
first buck is the greatest hunting&#13;
thrill imaginable, and there&#13;
may never be another to match&#13;
it.&#13;
To celebrate, we invited all&#13;
Mike's pals to dinner last night&#13;
I served Venison Pot Roast.&#13;
It's a delicious, simple-to-make&#13;
dish — why not try it next&#13;
time your deerslayer brings one&#13;
home?&#13;
Roll 4 lbs. of venison shoulder&#13;
in seasoned flour. Brown&#13;
on all sides in kettle. Add V4&#13;
cup tomato juice, Vi cup red.&#13;
wine, 2 tbsp. horseradish, cover,&#13;
and cook slowly, adding&#13;
water if necessary. After about&#13;
2 hrs. 15 min., add 8 small&#13;
whole onions, 6 medium sliced&#13;
carrots, 6 stalks of celery, 2&#13;
small turnips (halved), 8 peeled&#13;
potatoes. Salt to taste. Cook&#13;
45 min. more. Thicken juice&#13;
with flour for gravy.&#13;
Serve this with a green vegetable&#13;
and salad, top off with ice&#13;
cream and pie — and you'll be&#13;
rewarded with whoops of joy&#13;
from youngsters Mike's age&#13;
to Grandads who remember&#13;
Ulysses S. Grant!&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Eichman&#13;
and Joan attended the Freshman&#13;
capping ceremonies of the Mercy&#13;
School of Nursing at St. John, The&#13;
Evangelist, church in Detroit on&#13;
Sunday and the reception following&#13;
the ceremonies at the school.&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
Daughter Karen Eichman, a '60&#13;
graduate of P.H.S., was one of the&#13;
class of 101 receiving a cap.&#13;
Mrs. Edmund Haines, Judy,&#13;
Mrs. Donna Plummer and children&#13;
visited the Ford Rotunda Sunday&#13;
to see "Christmas Fantasy."&#13;
Mrs. Ernest Chanyi of Dexter&#13;
road is enrolled in a 12-week&#13;
course in advanced cake decorating&#13;
at the Snyder school in Detroit,&#13;
attending Saturday classes.&#13;
TO ENTERTAIN AT&#13;
CHRISTMAS PARTY&#13;
Mrs. Francis Shehan will be host&#13;
to the PEGS at her home at 12:30&#13;
tomorrow afternoon at the group's&#13;
annual Christmas party.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Ward will conduct&#13;
a lesson in making Christmas&#13;
wreaths. Members are to bring&#13;
their own materials.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wcdiunday, Dtc«nb*r 13, 1961&#13;
^—^&#13;
n &lt; \ &lt; r \A\ \ ^ HHp&#13;
M t ( t I t !&#13;
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RED ROME WAGNERS&#13;
$2.00 Per Bushel&#13;
ALSO — UTILITY AND PIE APPLES&#13;
$1.00 Per Bushel Cbarboneau s&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
MIRROR&#13;
Adequate medical service, a&#13;
basic need of the nation's population,&#13;
has been found tacking in&#13;
Michigan according to surveys by&#13;
the U.S. Department of Health,&#13;
Education and Welfare.&#13;
The department's Health Manpower&#13;
Source Book published in&#13;
1959 showed there were 8,118&#13;
physicians in Michigan, or 105.6&#13;
doctors per 100,000 people.&#13;
It carries a report by the American&#13;
Medical Association showing&#13;
that by 1975 Michigan will n e e d&#13;
15,065 doctors if the state is to&#13;
have what the AMA considers adequate&#13;
medical service. This would&#13;
provide 124.7 doctors for e a c h&#13;
100,000 of Michigan's anticipated&#13;
1975 population og 12,081,000, a&#13;
number which could not possibly&#13;
be supplied if present medical&#13;
schools were forced to expansion&#13;
beyond optimium capacities.&#13;
• • •&#13;
Where will these doctors come&#13;
from?&#13;
A Michigan State University&#13;
study recently showed between 100&#13;
and 150 doctors of medicine were&#13;
coming into the state each y e a r .&#13;
This was over and above the number&#13;
gradated from Michigan's two&#13;
existing medical schools at Wayne&#13;
State University and the University&#13;
of Michigan. _.___&#13;
The need for more doctors, ths&#13;
lack of Michigan's medical schools&#13;
^Lwkl'ttjg fj^ tb^ ^ i ^ \ neetb l € ^&#13;
to a rec\)Tnmendati6n by the 0. S.&#13;
Public Health Service that additional&#13;
medical education programs&#13;
be started here.&#13;
Michigan State University officials&#13;
started a project two years&#13;
ago to study the feasibility of establishing&#13;
a medical school program&#13;
on the East Lansing campus.&#13;
The project resulted in the recent&#13;
approval by the MSU Board&#13;
of Trustees of the establishment of&#13;
an Institute of Biology and Medicine.&#13;
The Institute will be a two-year&#13;
program of post-graduate education&#13;
which medical students need&#13;
before they can start clinical work.&#13;
Michigan State officials proposed&#13;
the two-year curriculum presumably&#13;
as a start toward a fuU medical&#13;
school program at East Lansing,&#13;
but it was also intended to&#13;
fill another gap in Michigan's supply&#13;
of doctors.&#13;
The MSU study which prompted&#13;
the creation of the Institute showed&#13;
some 700 or 800 vacancies occur&#13;
annually in the third year of&#13;
the nation's medical schools. Other&#13;
studies indicated more two-y e a r&#13;
programs were needed to fill these&#13;
vacancies.&#13;
University officials also saw ths&#13;
Institute as a means of training&#13;
enough teachers and researchers to&#13;
staff medical colleges. In the 1959-&#13;
60 school year, the study showed&#13;
ight per cent of these staff positions&#13;
were unfilled.&#13;
The Institute's work began immediately&#13;
after the Board of Trustees&#13;
approved the plan. Actual&#13;
training of Michigan's future doctors&#13;
at MSU, however, will 'await&#13;
at least one' year of program development.&#13;
MSU spokesmen said the greatest&#13;
single need of the new unit&#13;
would be additional teaching and&#13;
research facilities. Present university&#13;
faculty members, especially in&#13;
existing biology and health-related&#13;
departments, will be used but some&#13;
other staff must be added.&#13;
This state lags behind others in&#13;
the number of medical schools.&#13;
Michigan now has two. The 1959&#13;
federal report showed the picture&#13;
in other states at that time: Ohio,&#13;
three; Illinois, five; New Y o r k ,&#13;
nine; California, five; Pennsylvania,&#13;
six; Massachusetts, three; Wisconsin,&#13;
two; Indiana, one.&#13;
Robert Herschal Ray, infant son&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ray of&#13;
Lakeland was christened on S u n -&#13;
day, Dec. 3, at St. Mary's church&#13;
here. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Martin&#13;
of Belleville are the godparents.&#13;
Following.the christening, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Ray entertained at dinner at&#13;
their home for the baby's grandparents,&#13;
friends and relatives.&#13;
Chuck Wiltshire, son of Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. C. H. Wiltshire of Pingreroad,&#13;
is a patient at Highland Park&#13;
General Hospital, where he underwent&#13;
surgery for a lung ailment&#13;
last Thursday. Chuck is a former&#13;
P.H.S. student.&#13;
Mrs. Oscar Beck is a patient at&#13;
McPherson Hospital, Howell.&#13;
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Reaction to the MSU program&#13;
from officials at the two existing&#13;
medical schools was favorable,&#13;
though relatively reserved.&#13;
The public reaction was not felt&#13;
immediately but was expected to be&#13;
that of overwhelming support. An&#13;
adequate supply of doctors, many&#13;
feel, would help bring medical&#13;
costs down.&#13;
If some measure of competition&#13;
was present in the medical field,&#13;
the "buyer's market" would enable&#13;
more people to receive care and&#13;
costs might be less to the individual.&#13;
Whether a switch from the "seller's&#13;
market" to a "buyer's market"&#13;
brings about lower individual costs&#13;
remains to be seen, but creation of&#13;
the Institute of Biology and Medicine&#13;
at MSU will almost undoubtedly&#13;
be a giant step toward relieving&#13;
Michigan's doctor shortage.&#13;
Successful operation of the Institute&#13;
and placement of its students&#13;
in medical schools is also expected&#13;
to encourage the establishment&#13;
of similar post-graduate programs&#13;
at other locations in the&#13;
state.&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
By RUSS ENGELHARDT, Manager&#13;
MANY OF YOU have asked why&#13;
telephone directory listings sometimes&#13;
are abbreviated. Abbreviation&#13;
makes it possible to put most&#13;
listings on one line. If abbreviations&#13;
weren't used your directory&#13;
would be much larger and more costly to produce. In&#13;
addition, the paper in your directory has been carefully&#13;
chosen for wearability, and the type style for readability.&#13;
All this is designed to make your directory easy&#13;
and convenient to use.&#13;
PHONELAND is a wonderful place-a storybook land of&#13;
Christmas surprises for all the family I In Phoneland, new&#13;
Home Interphone service lets you talk from room to room,&#13;
or answer the door, or check&#13;
on a sleeping baby—all by&#13;
telephone. In Phoneland&#13;
you can enjoy the security&#13;
and protection of extension&#13;
phones that save steps. You&#13;
can choosjT wall or table&#13;
models, or the lovely little&#13;
Princess with the light-up&#13;
dial, in a choice of cheerful&#13;
colors. To order a Phonebnd&#13;
surprise for your family this&#13;
Christmas, just call our business&#13;
office. WeU arrange&#13;
AND A MERRY CHRISTMAS to aD of you from afl of&#13;
us at Michigan BcD. It's been a pleasure to serve you&#13;
this year, we're looking forward to senring you in the&#13;
New Year with, as ever, the finest in telephone service.&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG The Hamburg school students&#13;
presented their Christmas program&#13;
on Tuesday evening. The students&#13;
who participated in the program&#13;
were from the first to the eighth&#13;
grades.&#13;
Mrs. Eleanore White and son,&#13;
Edsel, arrived home via train on&#13;
Friday night from a two week vacation&#13;
in California. They visited&#13;
old friends the Roy Fishers of Riverside,&#13;
who were former residents&#13;
of Pinckney and Lakeland. They&#13;
also enjoyed seeing son and brother,&#13;
Mark, who is at the March Air&#13;
Force Base.&#13;
John McMillan, Sr., passed&#13;
away last Thursday morning at his&#13;
home in River Rouge at the age" of&#13;
76. Mr. McMillan was the father&#13;
of John McMillan of Rush Lake.&#13;
Funeral services were held from&#13;
the Girrback funeral home in River&#13;
Rouge Saturday morning an'd&#13;
burial was in the Bloomdale cemetery&#13;
in Trenton.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Patrick Burke returned&#13;
home from Phoenix, Arizona,&#13;
last Monday evening.&#13;
Mrs. Maurice Link of Rush&#13;
Lake passed away at the new convalescent&#13;
home in Howell on Saturday&#13;
night. Funeral services were&#13;
held from the McDonald funeral&#13;
home on Tuesday afternoon at 2&#13;
o'clock. Burial was in Whitmore&#13;
Lake.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. James Tepatti attended&#13;
a Christmas party at the&#13;
home of Mrs. Arthur Rettman in&#13;
St. Clair Shores on Saturday night.&#13;
The Episcopal Church women&#13;
will have their Christmas party on&#13;
Thursday at Parishfield. The women&#13;
will take a gift to be given to a&#13;
home for the aged. They will also&#13;
help wrap the gifts. This will be&#13;
a pot-luck luncheon.&#13;
ST. STEPHENS' CHURCH&#13;
Hamburg, Michigan&#13;
Siinday worship services, 10:00&#13;
a.m.&#13;
4-H Club&#13;
4-H Club enrollments turned in&#13;
to the county office last week show&#13;
there are 25 boys enrolled in the&#13;
Handi-Hammer winter club. Marshall&#13;
Meabon, Paul Gehringer and&#13;
Paul Russell are leading the boys&#13;
in their handicraft projects.&#13;
Thirty boys and girls have enrolled&#13;
in the new Gun Safety Club&#13;
here. John Lundin, leader, will be&#13;
assisted by Bertrand Wylie a n d&#13;
Alvin Holcomb in this project.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
We wi^ to express sincere&#13;
thanks to our many friends for&#13;
their acts of kindness, words of&#13;
sympathy and floral offerings during&#13;
the illness and death of our loved&#13;
one; thank you to the Livingston&#13;
Lodge No. 76, the O.E.S., and to&#13;
Rev. Thomas Murphy of the People's&#13;
church.&#13;
The family of William Ketchum&#13;
MRS. GRACE E. LINK&#13;
Mrs. Grace E. Link, 74, of 8798&#13;
Rushview Drive., Rush Lake,&#13;
passed away_,_December9,_L.96L&#13;
She had been a resident of the&#13;
county area for 25 years and for-&#13;
Survtvors are her husband,&#13;
Maurice, two daughters, Mrs.&#13;
Charles Bookbinder and Mrs. Bernard&#13;
Rogers, six grandchildren and&#13;
three great grandchildren.&#13;
Mrs. Link's first husband, Emil&#13;
Strandburg, died in 1948.&#13;
Funeral services were Tuesday&#13;
at 2:00 p. m. at the MacDonald&#13;
Funeral Home, Howell.&#13;
Burial was in Whitmore Lakeview&#13;
cemetery.&#13;
Farming employs over seven million&#13;
workers in the United States.&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
Birthday greetings are extended&#13;
today to Vince LaRosa, Bob Barber&#13;
and Shirley Fredric; tomorrow&#13;
to Keith Morgan and Dick Darrow;&#13;
Friday, Florence Kourt;&#13;
Saturday, Rachel Nash, David&#13;
Bennett and Duke Waite. Dr.&#13;
Charles Wolf and Tommy Rader&#13;
are the "birthday boys" on Sunday,&#13;
Dec* 17. Edith Morgan's&#13;
birthday is Monday, Dec. 18 and&#13;
Louis Rogers, Bob Harding, Leisa&#13;
Marie Ledwidge and Robbie Morse&#13;
all share December 19 as their&#13;
natal day.&#13;
Wedding anniversary congratulations&#13;
are in order for Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Jack Bilkovsky (Mildred Kellenberger)&#13;
on December 17.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Young and&#13;
family and Ray Burns spent the&#13;
week end in Grand Rapids at ths&#13;
Dominic Conklin home. A family&#13;
diner party on Sunday marked the&#13;
16th birthday of Miss Kay Conklin,&#13;
granddaughter of Mr. Burns.&#13;
A drama for the New Year entitled&#13;
"Farewell, 1961; Hail 1962,"&#13;
by Rev. William Hainsworth, pastor&#13;
of the Community Congregational&#13;
church, appears in the December&#13;
issue of Church Management,&#13;
a publication for clergymen.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stackable&#13;
and Mrs. Raymondav Morris at-&#13;
Ledwkfge in Dearborn on Monday.&#13;
The Ralph Reeves family of&#13;
Huntington Woods and Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Jerry Mulligan of Berkley&#13;
were week end guests at th?&#13;
George Holt home.&#13;
Mrs. C. J. Clinton spent several&#13;
days last week at the Ralph Clinton&#13;
home in Lincoln Park.&#13;
Volunteer workers are on th?&#13;
march this week for the first&#13;
Hamburg - Putnam Community&#13;
Chest drive. All village and rural&#13;
areas will be solicited in the effort&#13;
to reach the $5000 goal for th?&#13;
joint chest.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs." Ralph Hall and&#13;
family were in Midland Sunday to&#13;
attend the annual family Christmas&#13;
party at the Cleo Curtis home.&#13;
Thirty-six were in attendance.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs..Rudolph Raetz of&#13;
Cordley Lake have arrived at their&#13;
winter home in Oneco, Florida.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Clark held&#13;
open house Saturday evening at&#13;
their new house on Patterson Lake&#13;
road. Many guests arrived to se?&#13;
the new home and to wish the family&#13;
much happiness in their new&#13;
home.&#13;
About sixty members of the&#13;
Fire Dept. and their guests attended&#13;
the annual Christmas party given&#13;
by the Pinckney firemen at the&#13;
high school gym Saturday night.&#13;
Mrs. James Shirey, Walter Pietras,&#13;
Alma Curts, Patricia Schroeder&#13;
and Michael Shelden were recent&#13;
patients at McPherson Health&#13;
Center.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Reggie Scarbrough&#13;
are the parents of a daughter born&#13;
at McPherson Health Center on&#13;
December 4.&#13;
About one-half of Michigan's&#13;
total livestock incomer .come* from&#13;
Michigan ranks first in th:&#13;
nation in the production of fielJ&#13;
beans, tart cherries, muskmelons.&#13;
late celery, cucumbers for pickles&#13;
and tomatoes for the fresh market.&#13;
Food accounts for about 22 per&#13;
cent of consumer household expenditures.&#13;
The average American eats nine&#13;
and one-half pounds of breakfast&#13;
cereals a year.&#13;
tlTHIl 1APTIST CHUtCH&#13;
H O W I U , MICMIOAW&#13;
Rebart M. Taylor, tote*&#13;
Service*: iJt&lt;Wk&#13;
Sunday School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Daniel'i Band, Young People'*&#13;
Group • Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship • Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bible Study, Prayer Meeting&#13;
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNITY CONOIIOATIONAl&#13;
CMUtCM&#13;
lav. W « . Halmw«rtli&#13;
Morning Worship 10:45 a.m&#13;
Sunday School 9:30 a.m&#13;
Choir renaarsal Wednesday a van ing 7:30&#13;
I CHUtCH&#13;
Undenominational&#13;
Rev. Them** Murphy, Pastor&#13;
Weal between Unedilla and Main&#13;
Sunday School °:45 :m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Choir 6 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 7 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday senior choir practice 8 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. mid-week prayer service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
~OAUI!AN~BAPTIST CHURCH&#13;
•700 McOregor Road&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday night prayer service 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
ST. MAtY:r"cA7HOUc"'cMU«CM&#13;
Pinckney, Michtaait&#13;
R*v. Father Oeor«e Herlian. Paster&#13;
Sunday Masses: 6:30, 8:00, 10:00, 11:30&#13;
Weekday Mass 8:00 a.m.&#13;
Novena devotions in honor of Our&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 5:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
~HIAWATHA BIACH CHURCH&#13;
Undenominational&#13;
luck lake. Michigan&#13;
Rev. Charles Michael, Pastor&#13;
Bible School 10:00 a.m.&#13;
\&#13;
$ £&#13;
Boys Brigade (12 • 18yri.), Mon. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise &amp; Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST. PAVlTrUTHllTAirCMUICM&#13;
(Missouri Snyoel)&#13;
E. M 4 t , Hamburg, Michigan&#13;
. Luther Krtefell, Paster&#13;
•547 N. Main Street, Whitmere lake&#13;
Divine Services:&#13;
Matins 8:45 a.m&#13;
Sunday School and Bible Class 9:445 p.m.&#13;
Liturgy, with sermon 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Communion: All major festivals and the&#13;
last Sunday of every month.&#13;
For information phone&#13;
ACademy 9-3532 or Hickory 9-7061&#13;
C M V A i Y ~ M l N N O N I T r CHUtCH&#13;
Putnam between Howell and Mill Streets&#13;
Paster: Melvtn Stauffer&#13;
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Prayer Meeting, every Thursday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
The value of farm real estate&#13;
more than doubled from 1950 to&#13;
1960.&#13;
Wheat is the most important&#13;
cash crop in Michigan.&#13;
Farmers receive about 11 cents&#13;
from the sale of a 25 cent quart of&#13;
milk.&#13;
Local Plant Manager Hurt&#13;
In Ypsilanti Auto Crash&#13;
Mervin F. Read, 38, general&#13;
manager of Integral Corporation&#13;
here, who was critically injured&#13;
last Tuesday morning when his&#13;
1893—1961&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member FDJ.C.I&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
WiCHIGAN&#13;
sports car left the 1-94 expressway&#13;
near Ypsilanti, was reported to b :&#13;
slightly improved on Monday afternoon.&#13;
Mr. Read, who suffered&#13;
fractures of the pelvis, ribs and&#13;
hips plus head injuries and cuts is&#13;
in Beyer Memorial hospital. Ypsilanti.&#13;
A relative reported Monday that&#13;
he had regained consciousness for&#13;
short periods over the week end.&#13;
Mr. Read who lives at 1029 Pomona&#13;
road, Ann Arbor, was driving&#13;
west on the JExpressway just&#13;
west of the S. Huron street over&#13;
pass bridge in Ypsilanti township&#13;
when the crash occurred. State Po&#13;
lice said he lost control of the car&#13;
which rolled over twice before&#13;
coming to a stop in the median&#13;
divider strip. He was thrown from&#13;
the car.&#13;
8-9726&#13;
NEW STYLING SETS AWARD!&#13;
New Forward Flair Design&#13;
brings a completely new look&#13;
to the low-price field.&#13;
KST ECONOMY HI KSTORY!&#13;
You get up to 7% better gas&#13;
mileage than last year's&#13;
Mobilgas Economy Run dass&#13;
champion.&#13;
QUICKEST PLYMOUTH EVER!&#13;
Plymouth's up to 1 0 %&#13;
quicker than last year. Unbelievably&#13;
smooth ride. S e *&#13;
satiooal handling ease.&#13;
TOP QUALITY OF ALL TIME!&#13;
Quality-engineered by Chrysler&#13;
Corporation as never before.&#13;
New, tougher Unibody.&#13;
Print fof 1st lownt^pnot&#13;
Futkia, family-tin&#13;
Smoy 2-door sedan&#13;
AND MOST SUmHSMG OF&#13;
M l , THE FULL-SIZE PLYMOUTH&#13;
BM0WPMCEIFI0M$11lT0&#13;
$172 LESS t M I I FULL-SIZE&#13;
CHEVIOLET AMI F i l l ! *&#13;
NEATEST SAVM6S EVEt! SEE&#13;
VOUI PLYMOUTH KALEII&#13;
0ml&#13;
DRIVE IT AND YOU'LL BUY IT... PLYMOUTH!&#13;
VAN'S MOTOR SALES</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 13, 1961</text>
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                <text>December 13, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27598">
                <text>1961-12-13</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No. 49 — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinckney, Michigan — Wednesday, December 6, 1961 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
Belleville Man&#13;
•Belle* i1h&#13;
man was'ifiTIeTraTrouTT"&#13;
Tuesday evening when his car&#13;
crashed on W. M-36 just east of&#13;
Gregory.&#13;
Glenn P. Daymon of 18455 Elwell&#13;
road, Sumpter township, one&#13;
KilledinCrash&#13;
tttheOt n&#13;
dently lost control of the station&#13;
wagon he was driving, skidded off&#13;
the highway and into a marsh.&#13;
A sheriffs deputy at Howell said&#13;
death was due to a hroken neck.&#13;
Approximately 60 Local&#13;
Citizens Attend Club Meet&#13;
Little League&#13;
Cagers Roll On&#13;
The Little League cagers made&#13;
a guest appearance rt the high&#13;
school basketball court at half time&#13;
of the Pirate - Webberville game&#13;
last Tuesday evening. The Playland&#13;
team beat St. Mary's. 9-8, in a fast&#13;
little game. Kitchen was high&#13;
scorer with 6 points for the victors&#13;
and M. Scherrens with four for St.&#13;
Mary's.&#13;
On Saturday morning Hamburg&#13;
Little Leaguers defeated Playland.&#13;
27-25. Mike Stevenson was high&#13;
for Hamburg with 11 points:&#13;
Kitchen, also 11, for the losing&#13;
team.&#13;
Bruce Henry and Mike Manns&#13;
were the—referees. —&#13;
In the second game of thj&#13;
morning St. Mary's defeated the&#13;
Approximately 60 loc.il citizens&#13;
attended i!u &gt;fV4i4 meeting W tlw&#13;
Parents Club last Thursday evening&#13;
at the elementary school to&#13;
hear four oi the five board members&#13;
favoring the proposed bond issue&#13;
answer questions and discuss&#13;
hoard treasurer Lyle Kinsey anJ&#13;
'thomas. Line, irnste\ havo&#13;
gon-: on record as opposing the&#13;
SI.I75.(MM) proposal, were not invited&#13;
to express their views and&#13;
reason* for their stand.&#13;
In addition to the questions.&#13;
Data of the Pinckney Community&#13;
Schools and facts pertinent to&#13;
growth and needs studs were presented&#13;
to those attending.&#13;
The proposed new debt, according&#13;
to the figures, would mean an&#13;
actual increase of 2 mills over the&#13;
present mi 11 age.&#13;
Applying the Suite Equalized&#13;
Valuation factor oi 2.S5 tor the&#13;
Pinckney Community School District.&#13;
2 mills will mean a $5.70 increase&#13;
in taxes for each SI.000 assessed&#13;
valuation on your property.&#13;
(Former Hamburg District will add&#13;
4 mills or $1 1.20 increase in u\*&gt;&#13;
for each $1,000 assessed valuation.)&#13;
the proposal. Jack Swanson. trus-(sheets showing I 9 6 I _ Financial&#13;
tee. was unable to attend because&#13;
o\ illness. Board President John&#13;
Walton. Lee Voucher. Jack Young&#13;
and Cieorge Roth took turn* reading&#13;
and answering a list oi sixteen&#13;
questions prepared h&gt; the Parents&#13;
Club who wished to hear why the&#13;
hoard favored the bond issue for&#13;
which a special school election will&#13;
be held in the near future...School&#13;
Area Women&#13;
Hurt in Crash&#13;
Two Gregory women suffered&#13;
injuries in an auto accident ten&#13;
miles north of Gregory when their&#13;
car was struck by a truck on Tuesday.&#13;
November 28.&#13;
Mrs. Fred Singer and her mother,&#13;
Mrs. Maud Young, were taken&#13;
to Mercs Hospital in Jackson following&#13;
the crash. Mrs. Young sustained&#13;
a broken arm and a broken&#13;
leg. Mrs. Singer remained in the&#13;
hospital for two days with eye injuries&#13;
caused by flying glass. The&#13;
windshield oi the car. driven by&#13;
Mrs. Singer, was completely demolished.&#13;
One year old Betty,&#13;
daughter of Mrs. Singer, also a&#13;
passenger, was not injured.&#13;
It is expected that Mrs. Young&#13;
will remain in Mercy hospital for&#13;
some time. Her room number there&#13;
is 202.&#13;
had six points Tor his team and"R.&#13;
Seefeld caged seven for the Pilgrims.&#13;
STANDINGS TO DATEW&#13;
L&#13;
St. Mary's 5 2&#13;
Playland 5 2&#13;
P. Pilgrims 3 3&#13;
Hamburg 2 4&#13;
P. Merchants 0 4&#13;
Bill Barber at Pilot's Meet&#13;
in Paris, France, Dec. 11&#13;
Engaged&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
Board of Education, regular&#13;
meeting, December 7, 7:30 p. m.,&#13;
home ec room. P.H.S.&#13;
Writers Club meeting a n d&#13;
Christmas Workshop, Dec. 11,&#13;
I Pinckney Community L i b r a r y .&#13;
Adults interested in writing invited.&#13;
:|: :;: :,:&#13;
Christmas Cantata. Community&#13;
Congregational church choir, Sunday&#13;
evening, December 10, 7 p.m.&#13;
Public invited.*&#13;
* «&#13;
Community Chest Fund Drive,&#13;
Dec. 11. All Hamburg - Putnam&#13;
area to be solicited by workers.&#13;
The Rainbow Board of the&#13;
Pinckney Rainbow Assembly will&#13;
serve a Pancake Supper, Saturday.&#13;
December 9, from 5 to 9 p.m. at&#13;
the Masonic Hall. The public is invited;&#13;
tickets at the door, adults&#13;
SI.00; children .75. 'Pete" Rahrig&#13;
will be the chef.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Wild of&#13;
While Lodge entertained a group&#13;
of friends and neighbors FrjJay&#13;
evening "honoring Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Rudolph Raetz at a farewell patty.&#13;
The couple left today for Oneco,&#13;
Florida, to spend the winter.&#13;
Sidney Van Ness who was a patient&#13;
at St. Joseph Mercy hospital&#13;
fof^he-past mnmh was able, to&#13;
return home on Saturday.&#13;
Chest Drive&#13;
Starts Monday&#13;
Final details tor the Hamburg-&#13;
Putnam Community Chest Drive&#13;
were completed at a meeting of the&#13;
seven - man board of directors hold&#13;
at the ACO. Inc.. plant last nigh:&#13;
and volunteer workers will start&#13;
Monday morning. December 11.&#13;
on their week long fund drive.&#13;
The hoard of directors earlier&#13;
announced a total goal of $5.(MM)&#13;
for the two townships. Volunteer&#13;
workers under area captains will&#13;
solicit ever&gt;' home in the village of&#13;
Pinckney and Hamburg as well as&#13;
the rural homes.&#13;
Serving on the hoard are Lloyd&#13;
Hcndee. chairman; Oscar Beck,&#13;
treasurer: Hugh Radloff and Manly&#13;
Bennett* both of Hamburg: Don&#13;
Swarthout. James Bkxnmel anJ&#13;
Don Gibson.&#13;
The *&lt;Jive Once For Air pattern&#13;
of giving will be appreciated&#13;
an this initial drive and the cooperation&#13;
of every resident is urged&#13;
to make the goal and its ^ ^ H J ^ . ! ?&#13;
menu possible. ^_™~-jMofm&#13;
Mrs. Velna knapp announced&#13;
the engagement of her daughter.&#13;
Da vie Louise, to Al Kaufman of&#13;
Inkster at an open house at her&#13;
home on Sunday afternoon. December&#13;
3.&#13;
Miss Knapp, a graduate of Ann&#13;
Arbor High school, is a nurse at&#13;
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Ann&#13;
Arbor. Her fiance is employed by&#13;
the Ford Motor Company. Dearborn.&#13;
The couple has not set a wedding&#13;
date.&#13;
O. E. S. CALENDAR&#13;
Regular meeting, Friday, December&#13;
8, 8:00 p. m. Officers wear&#13;
white formals.&#13;
Charles Hewlett of Victoria.&#13;
Texas, was the Wednesday night&#13;
dinner guest at the William Brash&#13;
home.&#13;
William A. Barber of 8881 Mc-&#13;
Gregor Road, Pinckney, will leave&#13;
for Europe this week to represent&#13;
the United States in meetings of&#13;
pilots from the free world and Iron&#13;
Curtain countries beginning December&#13;
11 in Paris. France.&#13;
Barber, an exhibition aerobatic&#13;
pilot, will be the delegate from the&#13;
U. S. Aeronautic Association at&#13;
the meetings sponsored by the Federation&#13;
Aeronautique Internationale.&#13;
The- group will establish the&#13;
requirements for the first world&#13;
championship aerobatics flying&#13;
events to be held sometime n e x t&#13;
year.&#13;
Countries participating will include&#13;
the United States, G r e a t&#13;
Britian, Switzerland, West , Ger-&#13;
Barber, who is now based at&#13;
Willow Run Airport as a captain&#13;
for North Central Airlines, started&#13;
flying when still in high school. He&#13;
has been a crop duster, charter&#13;
pilot, army flight instructor a n d&#13;
has done exhibition flying throughout&#13;
the country.&#13;
In addition to serving as a representative&#13;
in Europe this month.&#13;
Capt. Barber, assisted in the filming&#13;
of a special CBS T.V. show on&#13;
aerobatic flying which will be televised&#13;
coast to coast on Fcbruury&#13;
18.&#13;
High School&#13;
Yule Concert&#13;
The music department of the&#13;
Pinckney High School will present&#13;
its annual Christmas Concert on&#13;
Thursday, December 14, 1961 at 8&#13;
o'clock in the evening in the&#13;
Pinckney High School auditorium.&#13;
The program, to be performed&#13;
by the high school band, chorus.&#13;
and combined Hamburg a n d&#13;
Pinckney Elementary chorus, will&#13;
include yuletide selections from G.&#13;
F. Handel to Irving Berlin,&#13;
There is no admission charge,&#13;
and everyone is invited to receive&#13;
a powerful injection of Christmas&#13;
spirit from the music to be presented.&#13;
Students Win&#13;
Essay Awards&#13;
The National Essay Association&#13;
of Los Angeles. California, notified&#13;
Pinckney High School on December&#13;
4, that three of the Pinckney&#13;
students who submitted essays&#13;
in the fall writing contest will receive&#13;
certificates of acceptance.&#13;
The essays, which will be published&#13;
in the Annual Essay Anihology,&#13;
were written by Pam Seefeld. |&#13;
Kathee Shettleroe. and Mary Wy-&#13;
Pirates Beat Webberville;&#13;
Fall to Manchester Cagers&#13;
Football stars. End Ed Guy and&#13;
Quarterback Jack Young turned&#13;
their attention to basketball last&#13;
week and combined on several fast&#13;
breaks Tuesday night to assure th2&#13;
Pirates of a 64-35 victory over&#13;
Webberville in the season's opener.&#13;
lie. students&#13;
ninth A&#13;
are in Mrs.&#13;
Local Scouters, Cubbers and&#13;
several parents of area boys will be&#13;
among the guests at the Annual&#13;
Appreciation and Recognition Dinner&#13;
of the Portage Traits Council&#13;
to be held tonight at St. Paul's Evangelical&#13;
and Reformed church m&#13;
Saline. Mr. Merritt B. Hill, president&#13;
of the Detroit Area Council.&#13;
Boy Scouts of America, will be the&#13;
speaker.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Young visited&#13;
the former's mother, Mrs.&#13;
Maud Young at Mercy Hospital in&#13;
Guv led the Pirate's attack with 22&#13;
points while Terry Rowel 1 and&#13;
Young accounted for 13 and 12&#13;
respectively.&#13;
, Gary Lantis was high scorer for&#13;
the visitors with seven points. This&#13;
was a non-league game.&#13;
It was a different story* however,&#13;
for the Pirates, in the Washtenaw&#13;
Conference opener with&#13;
Manchester on Friday. They lost&#13;
49-28.&#13;
Zone defense was reported to&#13;
have been bothering the Pirates in&#13;
this encounter. Terry Rowell was&#13;
high scoring man with 11 points.&#13;
In the preliminary games tht&#13;
young Dutchmen defeated the little&#13;
Pirates, 35-32.&#13;
This week Friday, the Pirates&#13;
wHI host Saline, defending champions,&#13;
who pulled away from Dexter&#13;
last w e * in the final quarter of&#13;
their game, 47-37.&#13;
NOTES FROM T H E - ELEMENTARY SCHOOL EIGHTH G R A D E -&#13;
OUT room enjoyed the Thanksgiving&#13;
Assembly very much. We&#13;
contributed stories, poems, and a&#13;
song.&#13;
We have started our Christmas&#13;
art work. On one of our bulletin&#13;
boards we will have Christmas of&#13;
all nations, showing things typical&#13;
of other countries at Christmas.&#13;
We have completed our book reports&#13;
on historical fiction or autobiographies.&#13;
Most of them were&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
lowell Phone 17691&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Dec. 6—7—8—9&#13;
Gregory Ddvid Anthonyl&#13;
PECK NIVEN QUINN&#13;
&gt; NAVAROM • E&#13;
COIN intf CIIEU&#13;
First Show, 6:30 p.m.;&#13;
Second Show, 9:15 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Mon., Tues.&#13;
Dec. 10—11—12&#13;
At WALTER NWCHELL&#13;
MICKEY WKMSS1&#13;
Matinee Sunday at 2:30 p.m.&#13;
Continuous&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat.&#13;
Dec. 13—14—15—16&#13;
COLOR&#13;
very good.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Today we are discussing what&#13;
we are going to do to decorate our&#13;
room. We decided that there will&#13;
be a religious scene on the bulletin&#13;
board and a Santa Claus scene on&#13;
the windows.&#13;
We are going to draw names today&#13;
too. We have also planned&#13;
what we will do for the Christmas&#13;
assembly.&#13;
Miss Penrose is now, she is Mrs.&#13;
Osterhoudt.&#13;
SECOND GRADE—&#13;
Keith Stapleton left our school&#13;
last week. He is now attending the&#13;
Chelsea school.&#13;
We are making Christmas tree&#13;
decorations.&#13;
We had a spelldown. There were&#13;
16 who were still standing after&#13;
time was up.&#13;
We are learning how to tell&#13;
time. We are going to make our&#13;
wn clocks.&#13;
We are going to have a playlet&#13;
for the Christmas assembly, December&#13;
15.&#13;
KINDERGARTEN—&#13;
We made a new calendar for&#13;
December.&#13;
We have enjoyed hearing many&#13;
hunting stories this fall. Some of&#13;
one rrurrtin •e-w&#13;
mncra n&#13;
deer from up north.&#13;
We are hearing the Christmas&#13;
story and talking about all the&#13;
things we are going to do for&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
We learned how to make lanterns.&#13;
Chris Harnack and Joe Hardin&#13;
celebrated their 5th birthdays last&#13;
week.&#13;
MRS. ERHARD'S ROOM—&#13;
This week we elected two Safety&#13;
Pyrrols; Tom Mitchell and Larry&#13;
Kessler. Tuesday we took a final&#13;
test in Science on "Growing&#13;
Up".We are working on three pictures&#13;
for Christmas.&#13;
* * *&#13;
FOURTH GRADE—&#13;
We are sorry that Laura Bell has&#13;
moved. We are sure she will get&#13;
along fine in her new school.&#13;
On Friday we started Christmas&#13;
decorations for our room. Most of&#13;
us started on the easy project of&#13;
making candles.&#13;
We hope that Tim Stauffer is&#13;
out of the hospital, home, and back&#13;
to school soon.&#13;
We completed our study of the&#13;
Netherlands. Now we are doing a&#13;
science project on plants.&#13;
In our reading book we are&#13;
reading stories of pioneer days. We&#13;
read about pioneer days in Oklahoma,&#13;
in Australia, and modern&#13;
pioneers in Alaska.&#13;
Thanksgiving guests at the home&#13;
of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bryan&#13;
included their son, Leslie, and Mrs.&#13;
Herbert Bryan included their son,&#13;
Leslie, and family. Miss Olive Leslie&#13;
of Romeo. Mr. ami Mrs. William&#13;
R. Bryan and Holmes Bryan&#13;
of Detroit.&#13;
Mrs. Herbert Bryan will open&#13;
afternoon at 12:30. There will b:&#13;
a dessert-luncheon.&#13;
Tim Stauffer. son of Rev. and&#13;
Mrs. Melvin Stauffer, is home&#13;
from Fort Wayne Hospital. Fort&#13;
Wayne, Indiana, where he underwent&#13;
emergency s u r g e r y on&#13;
Thanksgiving Day. The S.uuffcrs&#13;
arrived in Fort Wayne to spend&#13;
the holiday with Tim's grandparents&#13;
when the fourth grader became&#13;
ill. In a matter of hours he&#13;
was in surgery for a ruptured appendix.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
250 D«xt«r ESTABLISHED IN 1883 Pincfcnt.&#13;
IIIZAMTH A. COlOHf^ Editor&#13;
•t&#13;
»od «thk«l&#13;
Advertising rat«» upon application&#13;
WYNNE CHESTER SAYS:&#13;
Family Project...&#13;
"Hunt America Time&#13;
My whole family—husband,&#13;
youngsters and assorted inlaws&#13;
— has just joined a marvelous&#13;
do-it-yourself program to restore&#13;
landowners* confidence in&#13;
hunters. It's called "Hunt&#13;
America Time/* and its slogan&#13;
is "Respect Private Property —&#13;
Save Public Hunting.**&#13;
The program has two parts.&#13;
The first is aimed at hunters&#13;
through publicity, speeches and&#13;
demonstrations. They are asked&#13;
to sign a pledge card promising&#13;
to respect property rights and&#13;
be careful with firearms.&#13;
The second phase has us&#13;
calling on landowners and asking&#13;
them to permit hunting.&#13;
Those who agree are given free&#13;
signs reading "Hunting By Permission&#13;
_Only" and "Safety&#13;
Zone — No Hunting Near&#13;
Buildings.** We even tack up&#13;
the signs for them, if they&#13;
wish!&#13;
And it works — many a&#13;
"Posted" sign has been replaced&#13;
by our new signs, once&#13;
we convinced the landowners&#13;
that hunters who carry the card&#13;
will respect their property.&#13;
Give it a try in your neighborhood.&#13;
You can get a free&#13;
pledge kit and sample fence&#13;
post signs by writing to the&#13;
Izaak Walton League of America,&#13;
1326 Waukegan Road.&#13;
Glenview, Illinois.&#13;
Word was received here last&#13;
week of the death of Mrs. Reta B.&#13;
Dodge, principal of the Marshall&#13;
Elementary school in Detroit. She&#13;
was the wife of Francis M. Dodge.&#13;
Detroit attorney. w«ll-knoun in&#13;
Masonic circles and a frequent&#13;
visitor at the Livingston l.odgj&#13;
}\&#13;
Lean Meaty&#13;
SPARE RIBS&#13;
Sugar Cured&#13;
SLICED BACON • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I&#13;
Young Tender&#13;
BEEF LIVER..&#13;
Campbell's&#13;
TOMATO SOUP&#13;
Sweef Zipper-Skin&#13;
TANGERINES&#13;
CHEER k off Label&#13;
SOAP POWDER •%&#13;
CARNATION OR&#13;
PET MILK. .6 tall cans&#13;
RED RIPE&#13;
TOMATOES Cello&#13;
Plcg.&#13;
6c Off&#13;
Label Shedd's&#13;
PEANUT BUTTER 2 Ib, jar&#13;
Vlaslk Kosher or Polish&#13;
DILL PICKLES... Quart&#13;
Jar&#13;
RALSTOR Open Evenings 'HI 9:00 — Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 1:30 p.m&#13;
Telephone Pinckney UPtown 8-9721 Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
December 6. thru Satui&#13;
HAMBURG TOWNSHIP&#13;
BOARD MINUTES&#13;
Meeting was called to order at&#13;
8:00 P.M. by Supervisor F. Shehan&#13;
for the transaction of such&#13;
business as might properly come&#13;
before it.&#13;
Minutes of October 23, 1961&#13;
meeting read and approved.&#13;
The following biHs were read:&#13;
F. Shehan,&#13;
Nov. services $258.00&#13;
E. McAfee,&#13;
Nov. services 208.00&#13;
E. Retinger.&#13;
Nov. services 125.00&#13;
Big Appetizing Dish&#13;
TURKEY-HAM CASSEROLE&#13;
Tfils" casserole 67Ycr&lt; a mu^TrDTript-mg and appetizing way To&#13;
utilize the good meat left on turkey after the first or second&#13;
round.&#13;
The dish comes out of the oven, gently a-bubbl.1. breathing&#13;
of apples, of turkey, of seasonings and other savory ingredients.&#13;
It's filled with onicn. green peppers, pimientos, sliced olives&#13;
and canned apple sauce. Not to mention ham and noodles and&#13;
lots of rich gravy. And the turkey itself, of course. All of it&#13;
hearty, relishing and satisfying.&#13;
Come one. come all . . . the day is brisk and here's a dish&#13;
that fortifies, sustains and bestows happy content on all&#13;
who eat it.&#13;
This is how you make it:&#13;
1 cup chopped onion&#13;
4 cup diced green pepper&#13;
j cup butter or margarine&#13;
1-4 ounce can whole&#13;
pimientos. diced i.j cup sliced ripe olive.-;&#13;
j teaspoon salt&#13;
1&#13;
Pi'&#13;
I1.'&#13;
teaspoon oregano&#13;
cups diced cooked turkey&#13;
cup* diced cooked ham&#13;
2Xi cups cooked noodles&#13;
2 cups canned apple sauce&#13;
2 tablespoons melted butter&#13;
Few grains paprika&#13;
Saute onion and green pepper in butter or margarine until&#13;
lightly browned. Add pimientos, olives, salt and oregano.&#13;
Using l l j cups of noodles, place in layers the turkey, vegetables,&#13;
ham and the noodles in buttered 2 quart casserole,&#13;
ending with vegetable layer. Spoon apple sauce over top.&#13;
Toss remaining noodles with 2 tablespoons melted butter;&#13;
place in ring around edge of casserole and sprinkle with&#13;
paprika. Bake in hot over. 375 degrees, 25 to 30 minutes.&#13;
Slakes 6-8 servings.&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
BILL KLAVE TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNERS SERVED&#13;
FRIDRYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
Pinckncyitcs Laurence M i l l s ,&#13;
Alma Curls. Patricia Schmeder.&#13;
Michael Sheklen and Ann C'a\in&#13;
were listed as patrents at McPhcrson&#13;
Health Center during the past&#13;
week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert SchroeJer&#13;
arc the parents of a daughter born&#13;
at McPherson Health Center on&#13;
November 26.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cieorge Brunton&#13;
of Rush Lake observed their 53rd&#13;
wedding anniversary last Wednesday.&#13;
The couple vsas married in&#13;
Nottingham. England, on November&#13;
29, 19U8. and came to Detroit&#13;
shortly after. They moved from&#13;
there to Rush Lake in 1951. The&#13;
Bruntons have three children, ten&#13;
grandchildren and two great&#13;
grandchildren.&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"MUIT WITH THI FlAVOr&#13;
W. M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
W. Backlund,&#13;
Nov. services&#13;
M. Bennett.&#13;
Nov. services&#13;
C. Radloff,&#13;
Nov. services&#13;
F. Vosmik,&#13;
Liquor Inspection&#13;
10.00&#13;
10.00&#13;
20.00&#13;
50.00&#13;
5.35&#13;
11.50&#13;
14.63&#13;
(Special deputy mileage) 27.50&#13;
Hamburg Fire Dept. 200.00&#13;
Det. Edison street lights 64.69&#13;
Mich. Bell T. H. phone&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
Brighton Argus&#13;
J. Boyd Ins. Co. (robbery) 26.50&#13;
Cemetery labor (2 men) 115.00&#13;
Boos Sales Service 3.00&#13;
Motion by Backlund&#13;
Supported by Rettinger&#13;
that bills he paid.&#13;
Motion carried.&#13;
Communications from Pinckney&#13;
Library and The Brighton School&#13;
District were read &amp; ordered filed.&#13;
Motion by Backlund&#13;
Supported by Rettinger&#13;
that Mr. F. Vosmik be appointed to&#13;
the office of Constable of Hamburg&#13;
Township to fill out the term&#13;
of office of Manley Bennett.&#13;
Motion Carried.&#13;
Mr. F. Vosmik was sworn into&#13;
office by E. Rettinger. Hamburg&#13;
Township Clerk.&#13;
Motion bv Backlund&#13;
Supported by Rettinger&#13;
hat $5000.00 '(five thousand dollars)&#13;
be forwarded to the Livingston&#13;
County Road Conimjssion_&#13;
uJditional road work can be under&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
The Michigan Seamless Tube&#13;
Company of South Lyon has announced&#13;
an expansion program expected&#13;
to increase the capacity of&#13;
production from 35.000 tons to&#13;
40,000 tons of seamless steel tube&#13;
per year. Construction of a 200-&#13;
foot x 63 foot mill bay that will&#13;
adjoin the main building has already&#13;
begun.&#13;
A Chelsea couple. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
F. S. Armstrong, who live at Sugar&#13;
Loaf Lake, picked eight large&#13;
strawberries from their garden on&#13;
Thanksgiving Day. One of the berries&#13;
wes reported to be 41/: inches&#13;
in circumference.&#13;
Two members of the Fowlerville&#13;
High school band were recently&#13;
accepted as members of the&#13;
Michigan Youth Symphony Orchestra,&#13;
under the direction of Orien&#13;
Dalley of Ann Arbor. They are&#13;
John Grill (french horn) and Rontaken&#13;
in Hamburg Township.&#13;
Motion Carried.&#13;
Motion by Rettinger&#13;
Supported by M. Bennett&#13;
that meeting be adjourned&#13;
Motion Carried.&#13;
Time 11:00 p.m.&#13;
Next meeting of Hamburg&#13;
Township Board December 18,&#13;
1961. at 8:00 P.M.&#13;
Respectfully submitted.&#13;
Edward A. Rettinger&#13;
Hamburg Township Clerk&#13;
old Miller (trombone).&#13;
Marie Scherdt was named Dexter&#13;
High school's winner of the&#13;
Daughters of the American Revolution&#13;
"Good Citizenship" award.&#13;
She is also president of the Student&#13;
Council this year.&#13;
Robert A. Wasson. retired mail&#13;
carrier from the Stock bridge post&#13;
office, died last Thursday at a&#13;
Jackson hospital.&#13;
90 per cent of all deaths due to&#13;
fire occur between 8 p.m. and 8&#13;
a.m.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 6, 1961&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 330&#13;
for Christmas&#13;
This Time Next Year...&#13;
JOIN OUR&#13;
CHRISTMAS&#13;
SAYINGS CLUB&#13;
PAY FOR CHRISTMAS&#13;
A LITTLE AT A TIME I&#13;
If you find it difficult to pay for all your&#13;
Christmas shopping in two or three&#13;
months, join our 1902 Christmas Savings&#13;
Club. You decide how much to save;&#13;
divide the amount by 12 months, put&#13;
away that much cash regularly here in&#13;
a Club Account . . . this time next year&#13;
you'il have all the cash you need.&#13;
IT'S EASY! ITS SMART! JOIN TODAY!&#13;
JCST DEPOSIT ' BEFORE CHRISTMAS&#13;
WEEKLY 1962 YOU RECEIVE&#13;
50&lt; $ 25.00&#13;
S 1.00 $ 50.00&#13;
$ 2.00 $100.00&#13;
$ 3.00 $150.00&#13;
$ 5.00 $250.00&#13;
$10.00 $500.00&#13;
SERVING&#13;
ALL YOUR&#13;
FAMILY^&#13;
BANKING&#13;
NEEDS&#13;
McPHERSON STATE BANK&#13;
HOWELL—PINCKNEY&#13;
"Serving Since 1865"&#13;
News Notes Fr&#13;
HAMBURG The St. Stephans Church Women&#13;
of Hamburg an dthe Village&#13;
League will sponsor a tea and bazaar&#13;
on Saturday, December 9th&#13;
from 2 to 5 p. m. in the parish hall&#13;
of St. Stephans church.&#13;
Mrs. Dale Robinson of Lakeland&#13;
is also in St. Joseph's hospital.&#13;
She was taken to the hospital&#13;
before Thanksgiving Day. The report&#13;
is that she is coming along&#13;
very good and will remain in the&#13;
hospital to receive therapy treatments.&#13;
On Dec. 13th the Lakeland&#13;
Kings Daughters will hold their&#13;
regular monthly meeting at the&#13;
home of their president. Mrs. Hoilis&#13;
White. Everyone is requested to&#13;
bring a $1 gift exchange and a 50&#13;
cent prize. This will be a noon potluck&#13;
luncheon.&#13;
The Milo Cases spent last week&#13;
end with the Raymond Andersons&#13;
of Davisburg.&#13;
The Lynn Beatiies of Ann Arbor&#13;
were Sunday callers of the Mc-&#13;
Afees.&#13;
Mrs. Sidney Van Ness was a&#13;
Wednesday dinner guest of the&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, December 6, 1961&#13;
James Boyds.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Bryan, of&#13;
Pinckney called on Mrs. James&#13;
Boyd on Thursday afternoon.&#13;
Banquet Tickets&#13;
Available&#13;
Adults tickets for the "Honor&#13;
The Champions" football dinner of&#13;
December 16 are now on sale and&#13;
available at the Lavey Hardware,&#13;
La Rosa's, Van's Motor Sales and&#13;
the Dispatch Office. Since the gym&#13;
will hold only 300 diners the number&#13;
of tickets is limited and it will&#13;
be "first come first served" white&#13;
they last.&#13;
Student tickets are on sale at the&#13;
high school.&#13;
Varsity players and their dads&#13;
will be guests while mothers, Kiwanians&#13;
and senior girls will plan,&#13;
prepare and serve the dinner.&#13;
A program will be announced&#13;
next week.&#13;
Mrs. L. J. McKinley was host&#13;
to the Women's Missionary Society&#13;
of the Peoples church at her&#13;
home -&#13;
FT A Initiation&#13;
The Future Teachers of America&#13;
held their annual initiation service&#13;
Monday afternoon during the&#13;
regular high school club meeting&#13;
period, with the following officers&#13;
in charge: Jack Young, president;&#13;
James DeWolf, secretary; Terry&#13;
Rowell, vice president; Bruce&#13;
Henry, historian; Pamela Hoeft,&#13;
librarian; and Don Barker, treasurer.&#13;
The following became members&#13;
of the chapter: Jim Barker, Gary&#13;
Hull, Shirley Mitchell, Cheryl Van-&#13;
Norman, Shirley Czerwinski, Robert&#13;
Darrow, Suzanne Kiuel, Elma&#13;
Shugg, Karen Rowell, Karen Downing,&#13;
Ann Marie Young, Bob&#13;
Jones, Kathie Shettleroe, Marilyn&#13;
Singer, John Walton, and Joan&#13;
Eichman.&#13;
After the ceremony, punch and&#13;
cookies were served by the refreshment&#13;
committee which consisted of&#13;
Rachel Nash, Caroline Nichols,&#13;
and Anita Clark.&#13;
The table was attractively decorated&#13;
with Christmas greens and&#13;
official club insignia.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
We take this means of expressing&#13;
our sincere thanks to our&#13;
friends for their acts of kindness,&#13;
florai tributes and words of sympathy&#13;
during our recent bereavement.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Speake&#13;
ii Chip" Scores Again in&#13;
State Police Manhunt&#13;
Two of three Camp Pellston es- tor three-quarters of a mile and&#13;
capees were flushed out of their&#13;
hiding place by Xhip," State Police&#13;
German shepherd sleuth, and&#13;
his handler, Tpr. Clare Helms, of&#13;
the Houghton Lake post.&#13;
It was the third recapture of&#13;
Camp Pellston escapees in which&#13;
"Chip" has played a prominent&#13;
role. The trio cut telephone wires&#13;
before fleeing the youth correctional&#13;
camp in a conservation department&#13;
truck which was later found&#13;
wrecked.&#13;
"Chip" was placed on tracks&#13;
found south of Pellston by an Emmett&#13;
county deputy sheriff. He followed&#13;
them along a railroad track&#13;
then for 100 yards into the brush,&#13;
where two of the escapees were&#13;
found sleeping under a blanket.&#13;
"Chip" pulled off the blanket and&#13;
the two made no effort to resist recapture.&#13;
Apprehended were Donald L.&#13;
Lincoln, 24, serving three to 15&#13;
years for assault and robbery&#13;
armed, sentenced from Wayne&#13;
county, and Duane Irwin, 26,&#13;
serving 15 months to 10 years for&#13;
embezzlement, sentenced from&#13;
lngham county.&#13;
Still at large was Lowell W.&#13;
Smith, 25, serving 10 months to&#13;
two years for parole violations,&#13;
sentenced from lngham county.&#13;
Former Minister Named to&#13;
Iowa Campus Ministry&#13;
Friends here have learned that&#13;
Reverend J. W. Winger, former&#13;
pastor of the Community Congregational&#13;
Church, now pastor of&#13;
the Congregational C h r i s t i a n&#13;
church* Eldora, Iowa, was recently&#13;
selected to the Iowa Conference&#13;
Committee on Christian Education&#13;
as a member of the United Campus&#13;
Ministry Committee. The&#13;
group serves as a liaison group between&#13;
the Student Centers and the&#13;
MICHIGAN IS MARKETS&#13;
Markets are of vital importance to industry.&#13;
Ready with the answer to this need are Michigan's&#13;
large markets and the nearby markets&#13;
throughout the midwest. These combined potentials&#13;
are important advantages no industry can&#13;
afford to overlook.&#13;
The facts speak plainly. In Michigan are centralized&#13;
industrial markets and almost eight million&#13;
consumers. Personal incomes exceed the national&#13;
average. These factors assure industry's future&#13;
growth in Michigan.&#13;
As for Michigan's regional market, one-fourth of&#13;
the nation's population and 30 percent of the&#13;
country's industry are within overnight delivery&#13;
range of Michigan plants. And now the St. Lawrence&#13;
Seaway has brought world markets closer&#13;
to Michigan.&#13;
Help carry Michigan's message to the nation. Clip&#13;
this ad and mail it to someone in another state with&#13;
your own comment. Let's talk up Michigan and its&#13;
advantages for industry. Together, we can assure&#13;
a greater future for all of us.&#13;
ThHmd horn of o frit p*ktbU4 of a&#13;
with tlm Mickipmm&#13;
servlc* kf&#13;
Mkki§mm £&#13;
campus ministry of Drake University&#13;
in Des Moines, University of&#13;
Iowa, Iowa State University, Dubuque&#13;
University, Grinnell College&#13;
and the State College of Iowa.&#13;
*- ————^———^——————.&#13;
Mrs. Ted Stockton was the guest&#13;
of honor at a stork shower at the&#13;
home of Mrs. L. J. McKinley&#13;
Saturday evening. There were&#13;
&lt;gjr»ieth i!nrr£:&#13;
XiT3C£:&#13;
"Mayor assisted the hostess in&#13;
serving refreshments at a table&#13;
beautifully decorated in a shower&#13;
motif with a large umbrella and&#13;
ribbon streamers.&#13;
Birthday greetings are extended&#13;
today to Paul Ciray and Mike Winisky.&#13;
On Friday, Dec. 8, Rex&#13;
Winklchaus, Kathleen Kirschke.&#13;
Manley Bennett, Earl Schuman.&#13;
Bobby Baughn and Margaret Atkins&#13;
will celebrate birthdays. Nancy&#13;
Read's birthday is, December 9;&#13;
Dick Hollis, Dana Lenhart and&#13;
Donna Parlette,. December 10;&#13;
Lorraine Schcndcn. Dec. II; and&#13;
Becky Read. Dec. 12.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rahrig of&#13;
Toledo were Sunday guests at the&#13;
John Rahrig home. Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
(ieorge Lloyd of Brighton were&#13;
Wednesday night callers.&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
"S«y It with FIOWWJ"&#13;
Phoiw 284&#13;
HOWEll. MICHIGAN&#13;
1893—1961&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member FJD.I.C,&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
OBOER. MKHIGAM</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch December 06, 1961</text>
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                <text>December 06, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27591">
                <text>1961-12-06</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No. 48 — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinckney, Michigan — Wednesday November 29, 1961 Single Copy, 10c&#13;
Football Banquet To Be&#13;
Held Dec. 16 at PHS Gym&#13;
A football banquet to honor ths&#13;
P. H. S. varsity team which won&#13;
the Washtenaw Conference championship,&#13;
has been scheduled for&#13;
December 16 at 6:30 in the evening&#13;
in the high school gym.&#13;
All varsity players, their dads,&#13;
coaches and speakers will be guests.&#13;
Those who wish to honor the team&#13;
may purchase tickets of which a&#13;
limited number will be available.&#13;
Serving as tri-chairmen for the&#13;
event are Mrs. John Young, Mrs.&#13;
John Burg and Mrs. John Colone&#13;
who will have the assistance of all&#13;
football mothers, the Kiwanis Club&#13;
and many members of the community&#13;
who have followed the&#13;
team through its 9-0 season.&#13;
tne banquet. Tickets" w&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Basydlo and&#13;
family were Thanksgiving d i n n er&#13;
guests at the Anthony Piotrowski&#13;
home in Detroit. Victor Basydlo.&#13;
home from Stout State college,&#13;
Minominie. Wis., and Louise, home&#13;
from Jackson Business . College&#13;
were also guests.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kaufman&#13;
of New York City were Thanksgiving&#13;
week-end guests at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Kaufman's parents, the&#13;
ME. Darrows.&#13;
able later this week from the&#13;
chairmen, Kiwanis officers and at&#13;
the high school.&#13;
Little League&#13;
Play Results&#13;
In Little League basketball t h e&#13;
results of last week's play shows&#13;
Playland defeating St. Mary's 28-&#13;
22 with Robert Umstead scoring&#13;
10 points for the victors and Maurice&#13;
Sherens scoring all of the 22&#13;
points for his team.&#13;
Mike Manns and Bruce Henry&#13;
refereed the first game.&#13;
Hamburg cagers were downed&#13;
Pilgrims 20 - 12.&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
There will be a Book. Fair on&#13;
Monday, December 4 from 10&#13;
a.m. to 4:30 p.m. in the all-purpose&#13;
room of the elementary&#13;
school. There will be displays by&#13;
three companies numbering more&#13;
than 2000 books. The public is invited&#13;
to see the fair and may purchase&#13;
books.&#13;
».t * *&#13;
The "Peoples Church of the&#13;
Air" with Pastor Thomas Murphy&#13;
will be heard from 10:05 through&#13;
10:20 a. m. Sunday mornings on&#13;
Radio Station WHMI, Howell.&#13;
«Si&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner guests at&#13;
he home of Mrs. Roger C a r r&#13;
were the Robert Carr family of&#13;
Cleveland, Ohio; the Michael Carrs&#13;
of Decatur. 111.; the Leo Bett2s&#13;
amily of Wailed Lake, Mr. and&#13;
Carr and Molly and&#13;
for the winners and Mike Stevenson&#13;
7 for Hamburg.&#13;
Jack Young and Mike Manns&#13;
were the officials.&#13;
In a third game the Pinckney&#13;
Merchants played the second team&#13;
(younger boys) of St. Mary's and&#13;
defeated them 22-8. Jeff Davis was&#13;
high with 11 points for his team&#13;
though he actually scored 13&#13;
points — 2 tor St. Mary's in the&#13;
opponents basket. Mike Sepulveda&#13;
caged 5 points.&#13;
Con-Con Delegate Reports&#13;
Things Are Moving Forward&#13;
I am privileged to report to you&#13;
this week that things at the Convention&#13;
are beginning to shape up&#13;
and I can see that we are starting&#13;
to move in a forward direction.&#13;
As of today, ail committees have&#13;
had. or still having, testimony&#13;
from every field imaginable. Trm&#13;
could, in some cases, prove drastic.&#13;
However, I don't believe there&#13;
will be any difficulty on the part&#13;
of the delegates to sift the grain&#13;
from the chaff in order to come up&#13;
with the right answers. Today, it&#13;
was brought out in our Committee&#13;
Meeting on Local Government&#13;
that 75 per cent of the state's population&#13;
lives in cities or villages.&#13;
We also 1257 townships in Michigan,&#13;
of which 90 of these townships&#13;
have a population of over&#13;
5.000 people. Needless -40 say.&#13;
these are located around metropolitan&#13;
areas. Because of the high population&#13;
within the township, this&#13;
results in problems such as sewers,&#13;
water and other services. However,&#13;
the township is also faced with annexation&#13;
problems from large cities&#13;
adjacent to them. I might add.&#13;
there are those delegates who think&#13;
that annexation should be no longer&#13;
a problem ofc the people but that&#13;
possibly the courts would be uble&#13;
to hold hearings and act on annexation&#13;
problems. Thus, taking&#13;
away from the people, the overall&#13;
decision as to the final outcome.&#13;
However. I believe also, that thj&#13;
Convention feels it would be playing&#13;
with dynamite if it tried to&#13;
abolish the township government as&#13;
we know it today in rural Michigan.&#13;
Yesterday, the Coaifcttee of the&#13;
Executive Branch w*s privileged to&#13;
have before them the Honorable&#13;
Murray D. VanWagoner. Mr.&#13;
VanWagoner stated very firntfy&#13;
that the system of electing our&#13;
SSte Wfrhfriy Coimntakincr h the&#13;
system that holds the best interest&#13;
of Michigan's future. He also stated&#13;
that he thought the highwas&#13;
commissioner is one of those offices&#13;
that should be kept as closelv&#13;
to the people as possible, and that&#13;
he could not think of another agency&#13;
in state government that effects&#13;
the lives and economy ot&#13;
Michigan as critical as the StaU&#13;
Highway Department.&#13;
Governor VanWagoner not only&#13;
strongly recommended the election&#13;
of our State Highway Commissioner,&#13;
but he would also give him a&#13;
four year term and make sure that&#13;
he has the funds through constitutional&#13;
earmarking of gas and&#13;
weight taxes to do the job so vital&#13;
to Michigan's social and economic&#13;
future.&#13;
In respect to the Judiciary Committee,&#13;
they were privileged of having&#13;
our Circuit Judge Michael Carland,&#13;
who represented the Michigan's&#13;
Judges Association, testify&#13;
for them last Thursday. Judge Carland&#13;
stated that he thought he&#13;
could safely say that his Association&#13;
did not believe that there was&#13;
need for radical changes in our&#13;
present constitution, insofar as the&#13;
Judicial Branch of our State Government&#13;
was concerned. He also&#13;
stated that they believed, on the&#13;
whole, that our present method of&#13;
selecting our judges should he continued&#13;
and upon a non-partisan basis.&#13;
Judge Carland also stated that&#13;
the Michigan Judges Association&#13;
favored the abolition of probate&#13;
and justice courts as constitutional&#13;
courts.&#13;
At the finish of the Judge's&#13;
tstimony. the committee posed 92&#13;
questions lor him to answer. It was&#13;
the feeling of. the commit** that&#13;
the JudgeY wstimony was a great&#13;
benefit to tffcm. And I am proud&#13;
to say that our Judge is highly respected&#13;
among the members of the&#13;
Committee of this Conventton.&#13;
The latter remained as a week end&#13;
guest.&#13;
Community Chest Goal Set&#13;
AT $5,000; Starts Dec. 11&#13;
The newly organized Hamburg-&#13;
Putnam Community chest directors&#13;
have set a goal of $5000 for the&#13;
first fund raising effort and have&#13;
named December 11 as the starting&#13;
day of the campaign throughout&#13;
the Hamburg and Putnam&#13;
areas.&#13;
At the organizational meeting at&#13;
the high school last week Hamburg&#13;
joined the Putnam residents&#13;
who earlier laid plans and named&#13;
a board of directors for an initial&#13;
drive.&#13;
Lloyd Hendee has been named&#13;
to serve as Chairman of the&#13;
Board, Oscar Beck is the treasurer&#13;
while James Blommel, of ACO,&#13;
Inc., Don Gibson. Don Swarthout&#13;
Bennett&#13;
Hamburg .tre&#13;
board members.&#13;
PIRATE FULLBACK Terry Rowell, Pinckney's top football player&#13;
of the undefeated season, was named last week to the third team of&#13;
the Detroit News' All-Suburban selections for 1961. Terry, a senior,&#13;
was the only player to be chosen from the Washtenaw Conference.&#13;
He scored seven touchdowns, threw six touchdown passes from the&#13;
fullback position and intercepted eight passes as a linebacker. He is&#13;
the son of Mrs. John Rowell of Patterson Lake. Terry was also named&#13;
to the Washtenaw All-League team as a back.&#13;
School Board Will Discuss&#13;
Proposed Bond Issue&#13;
Members of the Pinckney Board&#13;
of Education will make their first&#13;
public appearance at the Parents&#13;
Club meeting tomorrow night to&#13;
discuss the S 1.175.000 bond issue&#13;
for which they plan to call a spjeial&#13;
election in the near future.&#13;
The proposed bond issue will be&#13;
for a new high school and for additions&#13;
to both the Pinckney and&#13;
Hamburg elementary schools.&#13;
The board voted five to two in&#13;
favor of proceeding with preliminary&#13;
steps and other requirements to&#13;
bring the issue to a vote. The SI.-&#13;
175.000 total was approved on the&#13;
basis of informal estimates made&#13;
Livingston County Christmas&#13;
Seal contributions, as in nearly&#13;
every county in the state, are soaring&#13;
substantially above the 19 6 0&#13;
level, it was reported today.&#13;
Receipts from this area for the&#13;
first two weeks of the campaign,&#13;
which opened Nov. 13, totalled&#13;
$1,409.00 compared with $1,173.&#13;
for the like period last year. J. Irvin&#13;
Nichols, executive director of&#13;
the Michigan Tuberculosis and&#13;
Disease Association reported.&#13;
of the current and long range needs&#13;
of the school district. No architectural&#13;
plans have been prepared.&#13;
Captains are being named this&#13;
week and will assume their job of&#13;
enlisting volunteer works to solicit *&#13;
funds in all areas. Campaign kits&#13;
and materials are expected to arrive&#13;
here this week.&#13;
Chairman Lloyd Hendee has&#13;
pointed out that the chest will support&#13;
eight or more organizationswith&#13;
the pledges made on the percentage&#13;
basis rather than in indefinite&#13;
amounts in this first campaign.&#13;
Mrs. Stanley Dinkel and other&#13;
volunteer workers in the area as&#13;
well as several people from the&#13;
Hamburg area are credited with&#13;
making the organization of the&#13;
Community Chest a reality for the&#13;
two communities.&#13;
Optimism is felt for the success&#13;
ef ih^mdcrtfijkingjw= thejotaMse^&#13;
drives in one area alone have netted&#13;
about S3000 a winter in tru*&#13;
past years.&#13;
Ten tentative breakdown of campaign&#13;
collections reached by thj&#13;
committee at the meeting last week&#13;
would be as follows: various community&#13;
endeavors, 20r&lt; ; American&#13;
Red Cross, 2(K&lt; ; Muscular&#13;
Dystrophy, 20rf; Boy Scouts o\&#13;
America, 2(Kr and The Girl&#13;
Scouts, American Cancer Society;&#13;
Boys' and Girls' Recreational activies&#13;
and the Heart Association&#13;
sharing in the balance.&#13;
Elks to Hold&#13;
Memorial&#13;
Services&#13;
Howell Elks Lodge No. 2168&#13;
will honor their deceased members&#13;
in Memorial Services at 1 P.M.&#13;
on Sunday. December 3. This is&#13;
in keeping with a tradition in which&#13;
all Elks Lodges set apart the first&#13;
Sunday in each December for this&#13;
purpose.&#13;
• Highlighting the local services&#13;
will be the dedication of a Memorial&#13;
Tablet on which will be inscribed&#13;
the names of the deceased&#13;
members. This tablet will remain&#13;
permanently in the lodge room.&#13;
The public is invited to attend&#13;
these open services uhich will be&#13;
held in the lodge room at 215 E.&#13;
Grand River. Howell.&#13;
HASSa HEATON of Mill Street was the first to report hit&#13;
cUer kiH to the Dispatch. Hunting in th* Waterloo Area, south of&#13;
Waterloo on the second day of the season, Heaton bagged this 12-&#13;
bock «4ich aVessed out 136 pound* at a local freeier plant&#13;
News Notes F&#13;
HAMBURG The Howard Riopelles spent&#13;
Thanksgiving with son, Howard&#13;
and his family of Allen Park. They&#13;
returned home on Sunday.&#13;
The James Tepattis spent their&#13;
Thanksgiving with her brother,&#13;
John Hatter, and family of Dearborn.&#13;
The Lester McAfee family and&#13;
the Duane Waterburys drove to&#13;
Muncie, Indiana, to spend Thanksgiving&#13;
with Mrs. McAfee's sister&#13;
and her family, Mrs. Amelia&#13;
Campbell. Mrs. McAfee remained&#13;
for the week end while the rest of&#13;
the family drove back Thursday&#13;
night.&#13;
Jane N. Bennett of the Bennett&#13;
Insurance Agency in Hamburg has&#13;
announced plans to consolidate&#13;
with the Grace Brown Agency of&#13;
Whitmore Lake. The firm will be&#13;
known as the Bennett - Brown&#13;
Agency and will be located on the&#13;
Whitmore Lake road, Whitmore&#13;
Lake, in a building now being remodeled&#13;
for new offices. The firm&#13;
expects to open about February 1.&#13;
Open House|&#13;
10 X ^&#13;
"Elizabeth's&#13;
Studio"&#13;
A NEW GIFT SHOP&#13;
featuring Ceramics and&#13;
hand pa in ted China.&#13;
10142 BUHL DRIVE,&#13;
STRAWBERRY LAKE,&#13;
LAKELAND&#13;
AC 9-4587&#13;
I Lb.&#13;
Cans&#13;
HYGRADE'S * « For&#13;
Hy - Ration&#13;
DOG FOOD&#13;
The Hamburg PTA have been&#13;
invited to hold their regular&#13;
monthly meeting at the Boys Vocational&#13;
School near Whitmore&#13;
Lake. The date of the meeting is&#13;
on the 4th of December at 8 p.m.&#13;
The PTA is also making plans for&#13;
the Christmas program.&#13;
The James Kubat family spent&#13;
Thanksgiving at their cabin near&#13;
Ludington. They remained for a&#13;
few days to do a little hunting also.&#13;
Mrs. Hollis White and son Edsel&#13;
are accompanying Mrs. Dorothea&#13;
Hart of Chelsea on a trip to California.&#13;
They left Friday morning&#13;
for Ottawa, Ohio, where they plan&#13;
to visit friends. A brief stop in&#13;
Knox, Indiana, to see old friends&#13;
and on to California. Mrs. White&#13;
plans to have a nice visit with son,&#13;
Mark, who is at the March Air&#13;
Force Base in Riverside.&#13;
The John McMillans of Rush&#13;
Lake were guests of the John Mc-&#13;
Millan Jrs., of Darwin Rd. for&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
We wish to express our deepest&#13;
appreciation to the members of the&#13;
Pinckney Fire Department who re-&#13;
QUT- emergency ~ call]&#13;
press our gratitude to Don Swarthout,&#13;
Harold Henry, Duke Van&#13;
Blaircum, Jerry Speake and Bob&#13;
Amburgey for their quick work&#13;
and speed in getting our dad to the&#13;
hospital.&#13;
The family of&#13;
Lawrence Umstead&#13;
Offering complete instructions&#13;
in ceramics, including lace&#13;
draping; greenware and sup.&#13;
plies.&#13;
PHONE AC 9-4587&#13;
Local Items&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lee Goucher and&#13;
family spent Thanksgiving Day in&#13;
Farmington as guests of the John&#13;
Webbs.&#13;
Local high school girls will be&#13;
among the more than 403,400 in&#13;
the nation's schools taking a written&#13;
examination for the 1962 Betty&#13;
Crocker Search for the American&#13;
Homemaker of Tomorrow.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bycraft of&#13;
Ann Arbor and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Charles Bycraft of Chelsea were&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner guests at the&#13;
James Pine home.&#13;
Mrs. Gladys Lee of Lakeland&#13;
together with Mrs. Helen Packard&#13;
of South Haven returned home&#13;
Sunday from a trip which took&#13;
them from the National Association&#13;
of Postmasters Convention at&#13;
Denver, Colorado, to Hawaii.&#13;
While in the islands they flew from&#13;
Honolulu to the Islands of Maui.&#13;
Molokai. Oahu. Kauai, Hila and&#13;
Kona. They also spent a week visiting&#13;
Mrs. Packard's son, Albert&#13;
Packard, stationed on a submarine&#13;
at Pearl Harbor. His home is in&#13;
Pearl City. After flying back to&#13;
San Francisco the travelers boarded&#13;
the Santa Fe train for their return&#13;
home via the scenic route. Mrs.&#13;
Lee reports heavy snowfall "from&#13;
the time we left California to Chicago."&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Drake and&#13;
family of Royal Oak. Noel Rose,&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
250 Daxter ISTAfttlSHEDJN ! Pincknty, Michigan&#13;
W«dr»»d«y by C. M. y l«vty «nd I. W. Poyt«. Owrwt&#13;
HI2AMTK A. COtONt. idHor&#13;
Second cUu po»fot paid «l Plwckmy, Michigan&#13;
Th» column* of thi* p«m * • *n opwt forum w U r t avft&#13;
tegd and •mk«l c o m t d f tiom f &lt;•&gt;• only ftttijtiom.&#13;
Sufacription ra!M, $2.00 ptr y««r in advwiot In MkhJg«t; $&amp;f0 * ^^&#13;
U.S. Po»«*»ioiu. U.00 to fottign countrit*. Sw monm«rttt»j $140 In&#13;
$1.75 In omor *tft and U. S. powtaion*; $3.00 to tertian countrtet.&#13;
paraonn*) $2.50 fmr Y*V- NO mail subscription* Uktn tor feu mm ttx&#13;
* « W t i i g r*t»» upon application.&#13;
Military&#13;
andlvfrs; George Yourigerman&#13;
were Thanksgiving dinner&#13;
guests at the Eric Rose home.&#13;
Sunday dinner guests at the Max&#13;
Reynolds home were Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
M. J. Reason, Mrs. Mabel Reynolds&#13;
and Miss Otho Reynolds of&#13;
Detroit.&#13;
Dr. and Mrs. Cecil Hendee of&#13;
Lansing, Mr. and Mrs. Russell&#13;
Nouffer of Holt, and the Ambrose&#13;
Kennedy family of Pontiac were&#13;
the Thanksgiving dinner guests at&#13;
the Lloyd Hendee home. Jim Kennedy&#13;
remained for a week end of&#13;
hunting with Jeff Hendee.&#13;
CAMPTON&#13;
Home-Style L&#13;
PEACHES.&#13;
Thanksgiving Day guests at the&#13;
home of Mrs. William Bova were&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Parks, Osca&#13;
Leslie, the Paul Ulrichs and the&#13;
Ernest Ulrichs, all of Redford.&#13;
The Pinckney Fire Departmen&#13;
was called to the Lawrence Um&#13;
stead home Saturday evening to&#13;
administer first-aid to Mr. Um&#13;
stead who had suffered a severe&#13;
heart attack. Three of the firemen&#13;
accompanied him to Veterans' hospital&#13;
in the ambulance using the&#13;
inhalator. As of Monday afternoon&#13;
Mr. Umsteads condition is listed&#13;
as critical.&#13;
Mrs. Ralph Otwell recently spent&#13;
a week visiting relatives in Eldred&#13;
and Gillespi, Illinois.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 29, 1961&#13;
In Case Of Fire&#13;
At home—&#13;
Get everybody out of the&#13;
houte quickly.&#13;
—.". ' ---^&#13;
(Every member of your family&#13;
should know how to call the fire&#13;
department.)&#13;
At public $ath*ring$—&#13;
Walk, do not run, to the&#13;
nearest exit.&#13;
Summon the fire department&#13;
from the nearest fire alarm box&#13;
or telephone. Keep calm.&#13;
Remember, the danger of be*&#13;
ing crushed in a milling crowd&#13;
at an exit can be almost ai&#13;
dangerous as fire itself.&#13;
Act quickly, but with a clear&#13;
head.&#13;
Domino&#13;
The Robert Amburgey family&#13;
had as their Thanksgiving dinner&#13;
guests the Ken Mohlman family of&#13;
Dray ton Plains and the Doyle&#13;
Templetons of Keego Harbor.&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
PHoo#1769&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fit, Sat.&#13;
Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1*2&#13;
GARY COOPER&#13;
First Show at 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Second Show at 9; 15 p.m.&#13;
Sun., Mon., Tues.&#13;
Matinee Sunday at 2:00&#13;
P.M. Continuous&#13;
'UK'OKt!&#13;
Wed., Thurs., Fit, Sat.&#13;
Dec. 6—7—8—9&#13;
Gregory 0«vid Anthony]&#13;
PECK NIVENQUINNf&#13;
m &lt;AIM OF&#13;
i NAVARvM&#13;
COlOt&#13;
First Show at 6:30 p.m.&#13;
Second Show at 9:15 P.M.&#13;
• Cans&#13;
Pure&#13;
CANE&#13;
SUGAR&#13;
Purchase&#13;
Fresh Lean&#13;
GROUND BEEF&#13;
MORTON FROZEN&#13;
Beef - Chicken - Turkey&#13;
POT PIES 6for&#13;
Lean Meaty&#13;
PORK STEAK&#13;
Morton Frozen&#13;
D I N N E R S . . .&#13;
All&#13;
Varieties&#13;
U. S. Choice&#13;
ROUND STEAK&#13;
Dole or Del Monte&#13;
PINEAPPLE JUICE .&#13;
1 V&#13;
U. S. Choice&#13;
SIRLOIN STEAK&#13;
Van Camp's&#13;
PORK &amp; BEANS&#13;
Optfl Ewniity '•* 9*0 — Stmoby. 9:00 •**. to 1:30 pan.&#13;
Jjiphoot ffMbwy UPtown M 7 l l Knduwy, Michio*&gt; RALSTOR /PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
Novmbf 29 Hint Saturday, December&#13;
MICHIGAN&#13;
MIRROR&#13;
Housewives in America spend at&#13;
least one-third of the nation's annu&#13;
tl income.&#13;
For this reason, a group of&#13;
Michigan people believe public&#13;
school education should train&#13;
women to be discriminating buyers&#13;
from the time they are playing with&#13;
dolls until they are ready to buy&#13;
toys for their own children.&#13;
A recent consumer protection&#13;
conference conducted by a division&#13;
of the state attorney general's office&#13;
spent a long day considering&#13;
the problems facing the public in&#13;
everyday buying.&#13;
:;: £ *&#13;
"It is rather difficult to explain&#13;
to a person with a minimum education&#13;
the difference between the&#13;
various size packages in relation to&#13;
price and content," said Mrs.&#13;
Maxine Virtue, assistant attorney&#13;
general in charge of the consumer&#13;
protection division.&#13;
'The conference participants&#13;
suggested education in this area&#13;
should start in the grade school and&#13;
be carried continuously in the curriculum&#13;
through the university/*&#13;
she said.&#13;
Jt was also urged that people in&#13;
responsible, leadership positions&#13;
should educate the housewife-consumer&#13;
regarding habits of discrimination&#13;
as contrasted with economics.&#13;
"Industry interests play largely PINCKMEY DISPATCH&#13;
piace choicer" Mrs. Virtue vauf."ff&#13;
the consumer seriously wishes to&#13;
he protected, she should develop a&#13;
resistance to these practices."&#13;
Conference participants general-&#13;
!v were agreed packaging habits of&#13;
industry should be standardized by&#13;
legislation.&#13;
"It seemed to be the concensus,&#13;
however, that proper education and&#13;
communication would bring about&#13;
.t great deal of voluntary self-regulation&#13;
by both producers and relailers."&#13;
said Mrs. Virue.&#13;
Near-end holiday preparations&#13;
m Michigan bring a sharp increase&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
"Say It with Rower*1'&#13;
284&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN&#13;
M A E ' S&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
THE VERY BEST&#13;
FOR LESS&#13;
UP 8-9726&#13;
10544 Whitewood Road&#13;
Pinclcney, Michigan&#13;
in both commercial and private&#13;
mail traffic.&#13;
''Christmas seals" account for a&#13;
large percentage of the commercial&#13;
mailings in November and December.&#13;
The term "Christmas seals"&#13;
started many years ago when tuberculosis&#13;
was striking at its peak.&#13;
Since then many organizations join*&#13;
ed the band - wagon and distributed&#13;
stamp-like seals during the holiday&#13;
season.&#13;
* * «&#13;
Tuberculosis a s s o c i a t i o n s&#13;
throughout the nation have continued&#13;
pre-holiday mailings of seals&#13;
as their single fund-raising campaign&#13;
of the year.&#13;
In Michigan this year seals were&#13;
mailed to nearly two million homes&#13;
and business places. The Michigan&#13;
TB and Respiratory Disease Association&#13;
hopes to set a new record,&#13;
by collecting a million dollars.&#13;
Impact of the disease has lessened&#13;
considerably, officials report.&#13;
Leaders in the battle against&#13;
TB have set 1970 as a target date&#13;
for eradication of the disease.&#13;
* * *&#13;
The happy holidays this year&#13;
will be somewhat less than joyous&#13;
for many Michigan residents, state&#13;
statistics show.&#13;
November, December and January&#13;
are traditionally the worst&#13;
months on the highways. Holidays&#13;
throughout the year generally bring&#13;
an increase in the number of traffic&#13;
accidents.&#13;
The three year-end holidays conto&#13;
extra care behind the wheel.&#13;
Highway department officials&#13;
marked the recent opening of additional&#13;
high mileage with predictions&#13;
the new multi-lane divided&#13;
highway through the north central&#13;
section of the state would result in&#13;
a sharp drop in traffic accidents.&#13;
* * •&#13;
Department studies on other&#13;
freeways in the state would tend to&#13;
support this prediction. There are&#13;
fewer accidents on divided highways&#13;
than on the roads they replaced.&#13;
One reason for this, however,&#13;
would seem to be that the old&#13;
roads were not built to accommodate&#13;
the current traffic load., and&#13;
speeds.&#13;
State Police records tend to discount&#13;
the highway department's&#13;
rosy picture of the effect of multilane&#13;
routes.&#13;
Overall traffic accident records&#13;
in Michigan have not substantially&#13;
decreased. In the last two years&#13;
fatalities have been as high or&#13;
higher than previous years.&#13;
&gt;'.&lt; * *!'&#13;
State Police Commissioner Joseph&#13;
Childs placed emphasis on recent&#13;
months on extra care on roads&#13;
near home.&#13;
"People get off the high-speed&#13;
routes and near their homes, where&#13;
they have driven the side roads&#13;
year in and year out," he said.&#13;
"They often get careless because&#13;
they aren't ready for the unpredictable."&#13;
Thomas Grainger has been dis&#13;
charged from McPherson Health&#13;
Center and is convalescing at&#13;
home as is Mrs. Zela Hull who- was&#13;
discharged on November 18.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 29, 1961&#13;
DELICIOUS—JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"FtUIT WITH THt PUVOT W . M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
NOTES R O M THE- ELEMENTARY SC THIRD GRADE—&#13;
Mrs. Henry&#13;
One of our reading groups has&#13;
finished the first third grade Economy&#13;
Reading Books. They are&#13;
looking forward to our new books.&#13;
This has been a week of reviews.&#13;
We took our review tests in&#13;
Arithmetic, Language and Spelling.&#13;
In spelling, those who got 100&#13;
on their trial tests in reviewing the&#13;
five weeks words, were excused&#13;
from the final test. Joel Burg, Penny&#13;
Goucher, Linda Gyde and&#13;
Cathy Salyer had gotten 100.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Mrs. Butler has been ill for several&#13;
days, we hope the cards and&#13;
letters we have sent will help her&#13;
recovery.&#13;
Joanne Craig has moved to Seattle,&#13;
Washington, but to take her&#13;
place we have a new boy Richard&#13;
Regensburg f r o m Gloversville,&#13;
New York. We hope he enjoys our&#13;
school.&#13;
Mrs. Clark has taught us how to&#13;
make stencils and many ways to&#13;
use them.&#13;
It will be interesting to watch&#13;
the sorghum seeds grow, and we&#13;
hope they will be a novelty in our&#13;
summer gardens.&#13;
Peter G. Chamberlain, son of&#13;
Mr. Franklin Chamberlain of&#13;
11447 Wieman Street is attending&#13;
his sophomore year at Sault&#13;
Branch of Michigan College of&#13;
Mining and Technology in Sault&#13;
Ste. Marie. He is majoring in Mining&#13;
Engineering. Peter was recently&#13;
elected treasurer of the Mining&#13;
Geological and Metallurgical Club&#13;
at Michigan Tech.&#13;
IETHIL IAPTIST CHURCH&#13;
4040 S w a r t h y Road&#13;
M O W i l l , MICHIGAN&#13;
R«fc*rt M. Taylor, Patle*&#13;
Services:&#13;
Sunday School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11.00 ».m.&#13;
Danitl'i Band, Young People's&#13;
Group • Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship - Sunday 7:00 p.m.&#13;
Bible Study, Prtytr Meeting&#13;
Wednesday 7:30 p.m.&#13;
COMMUNITY CONORIOATIONAL&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
Rev. Wm. Hatnswortfc&#13;
Morning Worship 10:45 $.m,&#13;
Scnday School 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Choir rehearsal Wednesday evening 7:30&#13;
THI M O M ' S CHURCH&#13;
Undewmwatl—&gt;ai&#13;
Rev. The**** Murpfcy, Pastor&#13;
M-M West betwee* Unedilla end Main&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Choir 6 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 7 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday senior choir practice 8 p.m.&#13;
Thurs, mid-week prayer service 8:00 p.m.}&#13;
IUEANiAPmfliHU&#13;
§700 McOrejf or Rote)&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday night prayer service 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
IT. MARTI C ATMOtTc" CHURCH&#13;
d&#13;
80&#13;
of Our&#13;
Thursday&#13;
5:30 §r&gt;6&#13;
••v. Fattier O w n Hawka*. Patter&#13;
Sunday Masses: 6.30, 8:00, 10:00, 11:30&#13;
Weekday Mess 8 00 a.m.&#13;
Novena devotions in honor&#13;
Mother of Perpetual Help on&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
ConfetsioM: Saturday 4:30 to&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
M I A W A T M / T M A C H CHUtCH&#13;
lev. Charles MkfcaeJ, Peete*&#13;
Bible School 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worihip 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Young People 6:445 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
Boy* Brigade (12-18 yrs), Mon. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wed., Praise 4 Prayer Service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
ST. PAUL'S LUTHI1AN~ CMUtCM&#13;
^b • e^^a^^^PBB/f ajvaB^BB^BvjB^BBv V H ^ a n v a j a w B j a ^ M&#13;
Uffctr Kfjefall, * • * • »&#13;
Met ins • S:45 «m&#13;
Sunday ScHooh end Bible Clets °:445 p.m.&#13;
Liturgy, with sermon 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Communion: All major festivals and the&#13;
lest Sunday of every month.&#13;
For information phone&#13;
ACedemy °-3532 or Hickory t-7O6t&#13;
CAAVA1Y MtNMOMITf CHUtCH&#13;
Sunday Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 1 1 * 0 a.m.&#13;
Prayer Mooting. • » * » - Thursday&#13;
SIXTH GRADE NEWS—&#13;
Mrs, Tasch&#13;
Tuesday afternoon we wrote&#13;
five sentences about what we&#13;
learned that afternoon. We voted&#13;
on which sentences were best and&#13;
Sam Singer got Ihe most votes.&#13;
These, are the sentences he wrote:&#13;
1. I read that Atomic Energy is&#13;
our tenth wonder. 2. I read how&#13;
small molecules and atoms .are. 3.&#13;
I learned that fissions means atoms&#13;
gathering and fusions means atoms&#13;
separate. 4. If you fire a bullet at&#13;
a target, you can't see the bullet&#13;
take off, but then you see the gun&#13;
is empty and a hole in the target.&#13;
That is indirect evidence. 5. I&#13;
learned about Lucretius, a poet,&#13;
Newton, a learner of gravity, and&#13;
Democritus, a philosopher.&#13;
We are making plans for Christmas&#13;
presents for our Moms and&#13;
Dads and are planning on making&#13;
them very soon.&#13;
We hope all of you had a nice&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
* * *&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE—&#13;
Miss Penrose&#13;
This week we only have three&#13;
days of school because of Thanksgiving&#13;
vacation, — _&#13;
Monday we got a new girl in our&#13;
room. She is from Gloversville.&#13;
New York. Her name is Paula&#13;
teacher Miss T^rose w S&#13;
be Mrs. Osterhoudt when she&#13;
comes back to school next Tuesday.&#13;
She is getting married during&#13;
Thanksgiving vacation.&#13;
Today, November 22 we are&#13;
having our Gym teacher. Mrs.&#13;
Rawson as a substitute teacher, because&#13;
Miss Penrose is away.&#13;
Jerry Smith has a new dog.&#13;
Steve Latimcr has a baby collie.&#13;
Mike Meriwether's dog has a&#13;
broken leg.&#13;
M i k e Hendee's grandfather&#13;
moved in with them.&#13;
Edna Thomas' baby kitten was&#13;
run over.&#13;
MRS. JOHNSON&#13;
We made a Pilgrim scene on&#13;
our science table. The children&#13;
made pilgrims and Indians and a&#13;
long table for the feast.&#13;
We have lost another boy from&#13;
our room. Keith Stapleton moved&#13;
to Chelsea. We now have only 25&#13;
boys to our 10 girls.&#13;
We had a couple daddies who&#13;
"got" their deer. The.)1... got them&#13;
in the Pinckney area.&#13;
Arlen Stauffer left for Indiana&#13;
for the holiday.&#13;
George Cottom has told all&#13;
about his trip to New York.&#13;
* * *&#13;
KINDERGARTEN&#13;
We made a Thanksgiving mural&#13;
with Pilgrims and Indians eating.&#13;
We have a new safety picture.&#13;
We are all making safety rules of&#13;
our own.&#13;
Most of us are going to our&#13;
grandmothers for Thanksgiving&#13;
We have learned the song about&#13;
"Over the River and Through the&#13;
Woods."&#13;
We think we have many things&#13;
to be thankful for.&#13;
We have started our rhythm&#13;
band. We have some good players&#13;
MRS. ERHARD'S NEWS&#13;
This week we have learned quite&#13;
a few new terms in arithmetic. We&#13;
had a 100 word spelling test on&#13;
Wednesday (November 22), we&#13;
don't know our marks yet! We all&#13;
enjoyed the Thanksgiving program&#13;
which was over the P. A. system.&#13;
• • •&#13;
SIXTH AND SEVENTH&#13;
Mrs. Carr&#13;
This week we have a new girl.&#13;
Her name is Hellen Lynch. She's&#13;
in the seventh grade. She came&#13;
from Hamburg Elementary school.&#13;
We've made a unit on farming&#13;
and space.&#13;
These people are the ones who&#13;
have 100 in spelling: Tanya Geib,&#13;
Donald Hollister, Carlene McCarty,&#13;
Judy Dean, Karen Crosser, La&#13;
Dawn Shirey, Judy Hull, John&#13;
Darrow, Jack Pfaff. And here are&#13;
the "A" people: Allen Porter, Barbara&#13;
Battle, Tim Umstead, Bonnie&#13;
Wylie, Bonnie Custs.&#13;
We had a substitute for Mrs.&#13;
Carr. The substitute was Mrs.&#13;
Wright.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 29, 1961&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
^ T i t - ihe&#13;
condition! of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Russell&#13;
B. Buckner and Dorothy V. Buckner,&#13;
his wife, as mortgagors, to Thurber&#13;
Cornell, as mortgagee, and recorded in&#13;
the office of the Register of Deeds for&#13;
Livingston County, Michigan, April 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber T55 at page 626; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
December 16, 1954, assigned by J. Henry&#13;
Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administrators&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cornell,,&#13;
deceased, to Esther D. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in Liber 296 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January 17, 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Athey, by assignment&#13;
recorded on the same date in&#13;
Liber 299 at page 306 thereof,&#13;
Notice is hereby given that said&#13;
mortgage wilt be foreclosed pursuant to&#13;
power of sale and the premises therein&#13;
described as land in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wtf:&#13;
The north half of the southeast quarter&#13;
of Section twenty-six (26), In Township&#13;
4 North, Range 4 east, Michigan,&#13;
containing eighty acres of land, more&#13;
or less, excepting the right of way of&#13;
the Ann Arbor Railroad and also excepting&#13;
easement to Consumers Power&#13;
Company recorded in Liber 187 of&#13;
Deeds at page 206, Livingston County&#13;
Records.&#13;
Will be sold at public auction to the&#13;
highest bidder for cash by the Sheriff&#13;
of Livingston County, Michigan, at the&#13;
west iront door of the Court House in&#13;
the City of Howell, in said County and&#13;
State, on fnday the fifth day of January&#13;
1962, at ten o'clock in the forenoon&#13;
of said day. There is due and payable&#13;
at the date of this notice upon the debt&#13;
secured by said mortgage, the sum of&#13;
Four Thousand two hundred eighty-six&#13;
Dollars and Fifty^three Cents {S428653J,&#13;
Ruth Cornell Athey,&#13;
Assignee of mortgagee.&#13;
Dated. October M, 1961&#13;
Van Winkle, Van Winkle &amp; Heikkinen,&#13;
Attorneys for Assignee of Mortgagee.&#13;
Business Address:&#13;
Howell, Michigan.&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 330&#13;
I&#13;
\ \ h r n « \ t r a n K m c i m n c v \ r i ^ &lt; ^ L e t I ^ H &lt; l p ^ o n&#13;
M r t - t I t *&#13;
^ O f I I ( , K T I M M I - D I \ I f \&lt; I I &lt; &gt; \&#13;
CITIZENS FINANCE CO.&#13;
4-H TO ORGANIZE&#13;
G U N SAFETY CLUB&#13;
The organizational meetin g of&#13;
the 4- H Gu n Safety Clu b will be!&#13;
held on Novembe r 29th at 7 p. m.&#13;
in Putna m town hall (basemen t&#13;
work shop) . Duan e Girbac h will bz&#13;
presen t as will Mr . Lundi n who&#13;
will lead th e club. Both boys an d&#13;
girls are eligible for membership .&#13;
RESOLUTION&#13;
Resolved that the Livingston&#13;
County Board of Supervisors authorize&#13;
the Detention Home Committee&#13;
to solicit bids for new cars for&#13;
the Livingston County Sheriffs De -&#13;
partment, as below:&#13;
1. Two cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
2. One car without trade-in.&#13;
3. Three cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
These bids to be made on cars&#13;
that will meet specifications filed&#13;
at the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
office.&#13;
These bids to be filed with the&#13;
Livingston County Clerk before&#13;
December 8th, 1961, at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
V ^M^M W^^№ ^^^ v w » ^ ^m^m ^^m^ • GET YOUR&#13;
GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating !&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
©AS DiSTRIBUTORBOTTLE&#13;
GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-662 1&#13;
Pinckney, Michiga n&#13;
KINDERGARTEN NEWS&#13;
Lynn De e Miller and L i n d a&#13;
Susan Keiser bot h celebrate d thei r&#13;
birthday s on Nov . 13.&#13;
We learne d to form no . " 7" in&#13;
the air with ou r hands .&#13;
We learne d 2 Thanksgivin g&#13;
songs and are working on a mura l&#13;
of th e Thanksgivin g story.&#13;
Dann y Lobdel l has a new baby&#13;
brother .&#13;
We have been learnin g a b o u t&#13;
Indian s — how the y lived, h o w&#13;
the y mad e thei r house s an d ho w&#13;
the y got thei r food.&#13;
Som e of ou r father s have gone&#13;
up nort h hunting .&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
MONDA Y NIGH T MEN' S&#13;
LEAGU E&#13;
Joe's&#13;
Blatz&#13;
Boyd's&#13;
Strorf s&#13;
Pfeiffer's&#13;
Falstaf f&#13;
25&#13;
22&#13;
22V5&#13;
19&#13;
17&#13;
19&#13;
17V*&#13;
21V*&#13;
22&#13;
25&#13;
23&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
Senio r Thoma s Read , who spent&#13;
last summe r in Germany , was invited&#13;
to speak at the Bushnel l Con -&#13;
gregationa l churc h in Detroi t last&#13;
Monda y to a committe e of t h a t&#13;
churc h which was considerin g&#13;
sponsorin g a studen t on a trip to&#13;
Europ e in the future . To m described&#13;
his experience s and th e work&#13;
of the Michiga n Counci l of church -&#13;
es which sponsore d him . Thi s week&#13;
To m was notifie d tha t the commit -&#13;
tee decide d to send thei r studen t&#13;
throug h the same organization .&#13;
MJLMLMJLXJLJLJL1&#13;
PROMP T SERVIC E&#13;
Work Guarantee d&#13;
Oaaafag ft Ittftattinc&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
Ph. UP 8-314 8&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney !&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED&#13;
November 24,&#13;
Checkmate s&#13;
He e Haw s&#13;
Topper s&#13;
Sodbuster s&#13;
Bomber s&#13;
Doubl e D' s&#13;
Sharpie s&#13;
Untouchable s&#13;
Pinckne y Polkat s&#13;
Patterso n Lake Fou r&#13;
Bee Bees&#13;
Bill Poster s&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
1961&#13;
30V*&#13;
30&#13;
28&#13;
21 Vi&#13;
26Vi&#13;
26&#13;
24&#13;
2P/ 2&#13;
21&#13;
20&#13;
16&#13;
W/2&#13;
18&#13;
20&#13;
20 Vi&#13;
21V*&#13;
22&#13;
24&#13;
22]/ 2&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
32&#13;
35&#13;
MEN'S 'A' BOWLING&#13;
November 22, 1961&#13;
Jim' s Gul f&#13;
Velvet Ee z&#13;
Lee's Standar d&#13;
Rea d Lumbe r&#13;
Van's Motor s&#13;
Kiwani s&#13;
Lavey Hdwe .&#13;
Pinckne y Plastic s&#13;
Integra l Corp .&#13;
32&#13;
28V*&#13;
27&#13;
26V*&#13;
241/2&#13;
24 V*&#13;
24&#13;
23&#13;
22&#13;
12&#13;
15 V*&#13;
17&#13;
2P/ 2&#13;
23&gt;/ 2&#13;
23 V*&#13;
24&#13;
25&#13;
22&#13;
By PATRICIA LIVERMORE&#13;
Mrs . Gertrud e Bradsha w of&#13;
Webberville was a dinne r guest on&#13;
Sunda y with her parents , Mr . and&#13;
Mrs . Ralp h Chipman .&#13;
Mr . an d Mrs . Rober t Reid entertaine&#13;
d thei r childre n and thei r&#13;
families for Thanksgivin g dinner .&#13;
Mrs . A. E. VanSlambroo k spent&#13;
Sunda y afternoo n visiting at t h e&#13;
hom e of her son, Mr . and Mrs .&#13;
Lonni e Van Slambrook .&#13;
Misses Beverly Richardso n and&#13;
Janic e Harve y were in Atlanta ,&#13;
Georgia , over the Thanksgivin g&#13;
weekend .&#13;
Miss Jud y Jone s was at h o m e&#13;
with her parents , Mr . an d Mrs . Orlin&#13;
Jone s over the holiday .&#13;
Mr . Kennet h Osborne , and son,&#13;
Lynn , brough t back deer from thei r&#13;
huntin g at Mio .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Dea n Hoar d are&#13;
the parent s of a daughter , Deann e&#13;
Louise, who was born to the m on&#13;
Novembe r 17th. Th e youn g l a s s&#13;
weighed 7 pounds'an d SV2 ounces .&#13;
Mr . an d Mrs . Claud e H o a r d&#13;
were holida y guests at the hom e&#13;
of Mr . and Mrs . Elme r Chevalier ,&#13;
Howell .&#13;
Miss Sue Harvey , a studen t&#13;
Mrs . Luella Durke e an d Eleano r&#13;
were Thanksgivin g dinne r guests&#13;
with Mrs . Netti e Caske y and Fer -&#13;
ris.&#13;
Miss Patric e Livermor e s p e n t&#13;
Thursda y thr u Sunda y with h e r&#13;
grandmother , Mrs . Carli e Weidma n&#13;
and sons of Nort h Lake.&#13;
Joh n Latso n of Howel l visited&#13;
his grandmother , Mrs . Netti e Caskey&#13;
and Ferri s over the holida y&#13;
weekend ; Sunda y all joined John s&#13;
parents . Th e Charle s Latso n family&#13;
for Sunda y dinner .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Ellsworth Brunai ,&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Claud e Rowe , an d&#13;
Mr . Wm. Weidner were guests of&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Dewe y Brensie r on&#13;
Sunday .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Ro y McMille n of&#13;
Detroi t an d Mr . an d Mrs . R o y&#13;
Henr y and family of Garde n Cit y&#13;
were Thanksgivin g Da y guests at&#13;
the Andr e Henr y farm.&#13;
Reid Hartsuf f was lucky in getting&#13;
his four poin t buck deer Fri -&#13;
day afternoon .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs . Harol d Hartsuf f&#13;
and Mr . an d Mrs . Russell Hartsuf f&#13;
attende d the Golde n Weddin g an-&#13;
1 niversary receptjo n for Mr . an d&#13;
ACO , Inc . 13 35&#13;
H i Ind. , Do n Wiltse, 267.&#13;
Miss Jean Van Schote n of Ann&#13;
Arbor was a week end guest at th e&#13;
William Hill home .&#13;
You Too&#13;
CAN BE ONE OF OUR&#13;
HAPPY, HAPPY&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Clu b bers !&#13;
JUST DEPOSIT&#13;
BEFORE CHRISTMAS&#13;
AND.. .&#13;
You Too&#13;
WILL HAVE A MERRIER,&#13;
BILL FREE CHRISTMAS '6 2&#13;
McPHERSO N STATE BANK&#13;
I0WELL—PINCKNEY&#13;
"Serving Since 1865"&#13;
me~ fco?K?ay with her parents , Mr .&#13;
and Mrs . Delber t Harvey .&#13;
Mesdame s Isabelle Crotty , a n d&#13;
Belle Leach , are spendin g the winter&#13;
month s in Florida . Th e Women&#13;
left this week Monday .&#13;
Thanksgivin g dinne r guests at&#13;
the hom e of Mr . and Mrs . Delber t&#13;
Harve y were Mr . and Mrs. Car -&#13;
men Wheller, and Mr . and Mrs.&#13;
Rollan d Byerly. L&#13;
Frida y evenin g of this past week&#13;
Miss Eleano r Jacob s was hostess&#13;
for a pajam a part y at her hom e&#13;
in Plainfield .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs. Wm. Cronkrit e&#13;
have been recen t visitors at t h e&#13;
Arthu r Vlaschke home .&#13;
Mr. Richar d Tobin of Jackson&#13;
is spendin g some tim e at the hom e&#13;
of Mr, and Mrs. Clyde McCleer .&#13;
Mr, and Mrs, Arthu r Maschk e&#13;
were Thanksgivin g day dinne r&#13;
guests at the hom e of Mr . and Mrs.&#13;
Arza Clar k of nea r Howell .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur W e s t -&#13;
fall were holida y dinne r guests at&#13;
the hom e of Mr . and Mrs, Henr y&#13;
Camde n in Jackson .&#13;
Mr. and Mrs . Harol d M y e r&#13;
were in Detroi t Sunda y where they&#13;
visited at the hom e of the latter s&#13;
sister. Mrs . Dissinger , later calling&#13;
at the hom e of Mr . and Mrs. Wm.&#13;
Stoll in Moun t Clemons .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs. Ralp h Myer and&#13;
family hoste d a family Thanksgiving&#13;
day dinne r with 20 member s of&#13;
the Mye r family present .&#13;
Mr . and Mrs. Russell Grosshan s&#13;
were Sunda y afternoo n callers at&#13;
the hom e of Mr . and Mrs . J o h n&#13;
Grosshans .&#13;
Thanksgivin g dinne r guests at the&#13;
hom e of Mr . and Mrs . Arlo Hal e&#13;
were the latter s daughter , M i s s&#13;
Evelyn Schultz , and Mr . Weber&#13;
of Wayne, and Mr . an d M r s .&#13;
Howar d Mose r of Fenton .&#13;
Holida y dinne r guests tha t joined&#13;
Mrs. Margare t Haine s and M r s .&#13;
Monic a McKune , were: Mr . and&#13;
Mrs. David Haine s an d family, the&#13;
Rober t Kaiser family, and the&#13;
Jame s McKun e family.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs . Glen n Maye r of&#13;
Munith and Miss Dan a Dieterl e of&#13;
Stock bridge, joined Mr . and Mrs .&#13;
John Grosshan s an d son. Keith for&#13;
dinne r Thanksgiving day.&#13;
Sunday r Jater catlin g on Mr . an d&#13;
Mrs. Fre d Hartsuf f and son.&#13;
Joye and Daw n Hartsuf f had a&#13;
surprise birthda y party . Saturday ,&#13;
given by thei r sister. After appro -&#13;
priat e games were played, thei r&#13;
aunt . Mrs . Ace Sholt y serve/1 cake&#13;
and ice cream , muc h to th e delight&#13;
of the guests: Debbi e Stoffer, Me -&#13;
lanie Hodges . Lynett e Grosshans ,&#13;
Jeann y Gladstone , Dica n Biehn .&#13;
Susan and Stacy Shiller. Debbi e&#13;
McKune . Kath y and Kare n Barhour&#13;
. Sherr y Cole . Mar y Jones .&#13;
Bobby Stoffer. Gar y Ludtke . Tom -&#13;
my Beihn and Rita Sholty .&#13;
Th e Gregor y Parent s - Teacher s&#13;
Organizatio n met Monday . Novem -&#13;
ber 20th , for thei r regular monthl y&#13;
meeting , after the business was attende&#13;
d 25 intereste d parent s journeyed&#13;
to Stockbridg e where the y&#13;
joined in the discussion at the&#13;
special meetin g of the Stockbridg e&#13;
Schoo l board and administrativ e&#13;
heads . Man y subjects were discussed&#13;
with the main topic , hot on the&#13;
griddle, '"What Is Goin g to Hap -&#13;
pen in ou r School? "&#13;
Frida y evenin g last week Ronni e&#13;
Sholt y was an overnigh t guest of&#13;
his cousin . M*rk Hartsuff .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday. Novembe r 29, 1961&#13;
immm^m^ ^&amp;.^» ^ « t ^ &lt;a&gt; M a Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCIN G EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGH T&#13;
Featuring&#13;
BILL KLAVE TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNER S SERVED&#13;
FRIDRYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservation s Call&#13;
HA 6-818 3&#13;
HA 6-918 1&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain siwt and lawn mower s repaire d and sharpen -&#13;
ed. Sawi sharpened , hand and circular .&#13;
Wate r pumps repaired . Electri c motors repaired . New&#13;
d used fractiona l HP motors for sale.&#13;
&gt; • •&#13;
Scenic Michiga n Freewa y Wins Nationa l Award&#13;
A 21-mile section of Interstate 75 Freeway in Northern Michigan has been selected&#13;
as one of America's most scenic new highways. The freeway, which extends from Indian&#13;
River to Mackinaw City, was cited as an outstanding example of a highway designed to&#13;
take adv ge d leriain agd"5 Stftt t Hi Cnm&#13;
WtR n?celve a plaqu* from l*g№3e Tlitmjp*2i3i&amp;&#13;
ik&#13;
ways information Foundation, sponsors of the national contest to pick the nation's ffinest&#13;
new highways.&#13;
1893—196 1&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-283 1&#13;
Membe r&#13;
DEXTER, MICHIGA N&#13;
Dee r Storag e&#13;
Is Under&#13;
Regulation s&#13;
Dressed and cut up deer may be&#13;
stored in commercial cold storage&#13;
with other food supplies if skins&#13;
and hides are not included under&#13;
Michigan laws.&#13;
This is the word to successful&#13;
deer hunters from the Michigan&#13;
Department of Agricultures' foods&#13;
and standards division headed by&#13;
J. L. Littlefield. Each year the&#13;
lucky hunter creates more than his&#13;
share of problems for locker plant&#13;
inspectors.&#13;
Strict regulations govern the&#13;
storage of wild life. One of these&#13;
prohibits the storage of hides and&#13;
skins unless separate storage rooms&#13;
with no open passages leading into&#13;
locker rooms, chill rooms, aging&#13;
rooms, or sharp freeze rooms are&#13;
provided. Hides and skins must be&#13;
stored elsewhere.&#13;
"Deer stored in other than locker&#13;
plants, such as refrigerators or&#13;
freezers in grocery stores and meat&#13;
markets must be stored so there is&#13;
Michigan deer hunters uill take&#13;
home at least as many bucks this&#13;
fall as in I960 when thev harvested&#13;
some 41iM&amp;Mhg Consecvation&#13;
field reports covering the first week&#13;
of the firearm season.&#13;
LIBRARY NEWS&#13;
We wish to thank Miss E l l a&#13;
Campbel of Ann Arbor for books&#13;
and Mrs. Wm. Austin (Pat Palmer)&#13;
for magazines.&#13;
New books include Freuchen,&#13;
"Arctic Adventure" and Michener&#13;
''Return to Paradise" for adults.&#13;
We also have several new books&#13;
for children just beginning to read.&#13;
"Hole in the Hill," 'Boy W ho&#13;
Would Not Say His Name."&#13;
"John's Back Yard," "Just Follow&#13;
Me, " "My Own Little House" and&#13;
"Nobody Listens to Andrew."&#13;
Teen-age girls will e n j oy&#13;
Wyndham "Candy Stripers", a&#13;
story of young student nurses&#13;
The Writer's Club met .a t h e&#13;
library Monday, Nov. 20. Several&#13;
members read poems a b o ut&#13;
"Peace," "Thanksgiving" a nd&#13;
Christmas.&#13;
One member outlined a work on&#13;
Lifeskills, those atitudes and knowledges&#13;
which make for a w e 11 -&#13;
rounded, mature individual and his&#13;
participation in civic and world&#13;
affairs.&#13;
-. There will be just one meeting in&#13;
December. Monday the eleventh.&#13;
We hope all members will be present&#13;
at this Christmas meeting.&#13;
Anyone interested is invited.&#13;
NEIGHBORIN G NOTES&#13;
G E N T I L E H O M E&#13;
C E N T E R&#13;
MODERNIZ E YOUR HEATING&#13;
SYSTEM&#13;
David Vickers of Stockbridge&#13;
was elected to membership in the&#13;
American Angus Association at&#13;
St. Joseph. Missouri, recently. He&#13;
was one of the nine Michigan&#13;
breeders of pure Aberdeen - Angus&#13;
cattle to be named last month.&#13;
Santa Claus visited Brighton last&#13;
Saturday arriving for the brief unscheduled&#13;
visit via heliocopter.&#13;
Twenty-nine members of the Brighton&#13;
Area Chamber of Commerce&#13;
are launching their "Holiday Bonanza,"&#13;
a special affair designed to&#13;
keep shoppers '"at home" with their&#13;
local merchants.&#13;
The Fowlerville post office was&#13;
recently commended on its promotion&#13;
and sale of U. S. Savings&#13;
stamps and bonds during the past&#13;
year.&#13;
City postal delivery in S o u t h&#13;
Lyon became a possibility again as&#13;
a new survey was set. Residents&#13;
have long sought home delivery of&#13;
mail but were denied as "too small&#13;
a city" to deem the service.&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Davenport, newly&#13;
announced Dean of Women at&#13;
the University of Michigan is. a&#13;
former Dexter girl. She was t h e&#13;
former Elizabeth Kingsbury and&#13;
received her early education in the&#13;
Dexter schools.&#13;
A 20-point buck shot down near&#13;
Manchester last Thursday is thus&#13;
far believed to be the champion&#13;
for size with its points and 24 inch&#13;
rack spread. The jubilation of the&#13;
two men who shot the prize was&#13;
short-lived; they had no hunting&#13;
license and used a .32-caliber deer&#13;
rifle which is not legal in lowe&#13;
Michigan. The men, one aged 74&#13;
were cited by Conservation Office&#13;
Boyer of Washtenaw County and&#13;
paid fines and costs in Ann Ar&#13;
bor Municipal Court.&#13;
no possible contamination of other&#13;
foods from dust, vermin, animals&#13;
or persons," Mr. Littlefield explained.&#13;
Deer still having the hide on&#13;
must be stored in a separate room&#13;
from all other provisions, under&#13;
Michigan regulations.&#13;
ecretar y $ez&#13;
If you can't relax&#13;
beeauMe you just can9 !&#13;
get comfortable on a&#13;
ifr. try making&#13;
to tig foy~UatTo on, inflated&#13;
just enough to&#13;
give your head and&#13;
neck the amount of&#13;
support you need.&#13;
Specializin g in Fin*&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
WE BUUH COMrlET !&#13;
HOMI S 4 OARAOIS&#13;
Carpente r Work of All Kinds&#13;
Claude Swarthoir t&#13;
1000 7 DeKfer-Pinckne y&#13;
UP 8-310 8&#13;
NAME COMMITTEES&#13;
Mrs. Jeanett e Slagle of H a m -&#13;
burg, Mrs. Pat Scott and Mrs. Em -&#13;
met t Widmayer were name d by the&#13;
Parent s Clu b last week to serve on&#13;
a committe e preparin g a recom -&#13;
mendatio n to the Board of Educa -&#13;
tion tha t hot lunch menu s be posted&#13;
in advanc e by the hot l u n c h&#13;
progra m of th e Pinckne y C o m -&#13;
munit y schools. Parent s intereste d&#13;
in this informatio n should write to&#13;
the committe e on or before Decem -&#13;
ber 1st.&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
24-Hou r Burner Service&#13;
Pinckne y Michiga n&#13;
Telephone UP 8-314 3&#13;
Pheasan t kill dippe d to about&#13;
950,000 birds in Michiga n t h i s&#13;
fall, some 22,000 shy of last year's&#13;
mark , accordin g to a preliminar y&#13;
estimat e fof th e Conservatio n De -&#13;
partment . Par t of the drop in kill&#13;
is traced to reducing hunting pressure&#13;
evident throughout much of&#13;
the state' s pheasan t country.&#13;
Roger J. Ca n Agent&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE |&#13;
Agent&#13;
Edith R. Ca n&#13;
14 2 Mill Stree t&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone UP 8-3133&#13;
Mar y Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
742 1 Portag e Lake Road Tel. Dexte r&#13;
HA 6-818 8&#13;
13 2 W. Mai n Street , Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-313 0&#13;
1403 4 N. Territoria l Rd., Nort h Lake&#13;
Chelte a Tel. GR 5-324 1&#13;
FUNERAl HOME&#13;
C.&#13;
Moder n Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP B-3172&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, M.D .&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:0 0 A.M . to 2:0 0 P.M .&#13;
Except Wednesday !&#13;
Mon. , Tues., Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7:0 0 to 8:0 0 P.M .&#13;
Wiltse Electrica l&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
600 0 West M-3 6 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
MONUMENT S&#13;
One of Michigan's largest&#13;
Display** of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGA N&#13;
Allen Monumen t&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 9-077 0&#13;
Wedding anniversar y congratulations&#13;
are extended on November&#13;
30 to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jeffreys&#13;
and on December 5 to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. James P. Richards. ^__&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 29, 1961&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
WILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
Homes* CottoQ#t # Goroojcs&#13;
1992 Oorw'm Hood, Pmcktfy&#13;
Hone UP6-32S 4&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GENERAL INSURANCE&#13;
MO M 0? $-3221&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff , Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIS T&#13;
12 0 West Grand River&#13;
Howell, Michigan&#13;
Phone 356 Residence 613&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Farm , Home* , Lake Propert y&#13;
itftwws r Opportunitie s&#13;
Utf Your Propert y with&#13;
Gerald Reason&#13;
ftrokor 10 2 W Mai n Strot t&#13;
rtione UHown $4564&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St., Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
ALTERATIONS, sewing, mending,&#13;
costume jewelry repair, leather&#13;
work. Connie's, 642 Hamburg&#13;
St., 10:30 a. m. to 6:00.p. m. daily&#13;
except Friday. UP 8-3569. 44p&#13;
RED! - MIXED CONCRETE.&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement.&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs. Evergreens, spd.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard .motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods.&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter.&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
rpp SA*Freasonable.&#13;
Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR SALE: Buttercup and Butternut&#13;
squash. Marshall Meabon.&#13;
1135 W. M-36, Pinckney. 46-48p&#13;
f OR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: MobiTgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil. Pinckney. district manager.&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-9792.&#13;
FOR RENT: Furnished house, 5&#13;
rooms and bath; garage. References&#13;
required. Call UP 8-5595.&#13;
46c&#13;
FOR SALE: 1956 Great Lakes&#13;
house trailer, 35 feet long. UP 8-&#13;
6648. 47-48p&#13;
FOR SALE: Fuel oil tanks with&#13;
legs and gauges. $15. Also used&#13;
fuel oil stoves. Call Howell 290.&#13;
47-48c&#13;
FOR RENT: two sleeping rooms,&#13;
nicely furnished. 6310 Buckshore&#13;
Drive, Hamburg. 48-49c&#13;
FOR RENT: Comfortable 2 bedroom&#13;
ranch, furnished or unfurnished,&#13;
$55 monthly. 4120 Patterson&#13;
La. Rd., Phone UP 8-9778.&#13;
48p&#13;
FOR SALE: Cosco play pen, stroller,&#13;
jumper; large size crib and&#13;
mattress. 26' boy's bike. Call HA&#13;
FOUR OF THE Washtenaw Conference Champion P.H.S.&#13;
Pirates were named for the Detroit News' Detroit Area All League&#13;
elevens; taking four of the eleven positions on the Washtenaw All-&#13;
League team are Gary Szalwinski (G); Jim DeWolf (c); Ed Guy (e),&#13;
and Terry Rowell (b). Making up the remainder of the All-League&#13;
team are Ed Strait (E) Saline; Barry Colder (T) Roosevelt; Don Zeigier&#13;
(g) Ann Arbor U High; Gary Nithammer (t) Saline; Paul Fauri (b)&#13;
AAUH; Rick Johnson (b), Saline; and Dave Birchmeir (b) Dexter.&#13;
WANTED: House work and baby&#13;
sitting. UP 8-3500.&#13;
FOR RENT: Apartment, three&#13;
rooms and bath in village. Call&#13;
AC 9-6982 after 6 p.m. 48tfc&#13;
WANTED — Your deer hide to&#13;
tan and make into gloves and jackets.&#13;
Deer heads mounted true to&#13;
life. Prices reasonable. Guntzviller&#13;
Taxidermy, Northville, Mich. Take&#13;
10 mile, 8 miles east of South Lyon.&#13;
Open Sundays. Fl 9-2555.&#13;
47-52c&#13;
Fall Pasture Top-Dressing&#13;
Benefits Farmers Five Ways&#13;
PUTNAM TOWNSHIP&#13;
BOARD MEETING&#13;
Regular meeting of the Putnam&#13;
Township board, held at the town&#13;
hall Wednesday, November 22,&#13;
1961 at 8:30 p.m. All board mem-&#13;
^&#13;
Meeting called to order by Supervisor&#13;
Hendee.&#13;
Minutes of the meeting of October&#13;
18, 1961 read and approved.&#13;
Motion by Wylie, supported by&#13;
Reynolds that the township p a y&#13;
Arthur Rentz S300.00 for the year&#13;
of 1961, as Putnam township&#13;
Liquor Enforcement officer. Motion&#13;
carried.&#13;
Motion by White, supported by&#13;
Wylie to pay the following b i I I *&#13;
as read. Motion carried.&#13;
Pinckney Community Schools&#13;
Sept. Del. Tax $1032.25&#13;
Howell Public Schools&#13;
Sept. Del. Tax 33.6S&#13;
Florence Preuss - Oct.&#13;
Librarian 25.00&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch -&#13;
Oct. acct.&#13;
George Alber - Oct.&#13;
Custodian at dump&#13;
Cecil Murphy - Oct.&#13;
Custodian at dump&#13;
16.80&#13;
15.00&#13;
15.00&#13;
Cub Scouts&#13;
Hold Meeting&#13;
Cub Scout Pack 58 held its regular&#13;
monthly pack meeting Monday,&#13;
Nov. 27 at Pinckney H i g h&#13;
School with Harold Halliburton,&#13;
Cub Master presiding. The meeting&#13;
began with Den 4 performing the&#13;
Opening Ceremony. Den 1 did a&#13;
skit, a magic Act in accordance&#13;
with November Theme of Magic.&#13;
Den 5 did the Closing Ceremony.&#13;
David Zezulka, Court Geib, and&#13;
Mike Sheldon of Den 7 received&#13;
Service Stars for the year.&#13;
Jon Randolph received his Lion&#13;
Badge and a Gold Arrow for Electives&#13;
completed. Mike Scott, a new&#13;
Cub Scout received his Bob Cat&#13;
Pin. Of the Pack Committeemen and&#13;
Den Mothers for Cub Scout Basic&#13;
Training. Program planning and&#13;
Den Meeting Training, certificates&#13;
were presented to Marian Clark&#13;
and Connie Auxier. For Basic&#13;
Training Wanda Riggs, Robert&#13;
Riggs. and Courtland Geib received&#13;
certificates. Hal Schall received&#13;
a certificate for Basic Training and&#13;
Program Planning.&#13;
December Theme is titled "Follows,&#13;
Helps and Gives" where Cubs&#13;
,karn the real meaning of the Holidays&#13;
and Cuh Scout ideals.&#13;
An Inspection Report of Uniform-&#13;
51.52&#13;
16.73&#13;
Lavey Ins. Agency - Ins.&#13;
on Dodge Tanker&#13;
The Ohio Oil Co., fuel oil&#13;
for town hall&#13;
Mich. Bell Telephone Co. -&#13;
five (5) unit fire phone -&#13;
phones in Town Hal&#13;
&amp; tire hall 1&#13;
The Detroit Edison Co. -&#13;
lights for town hall&#13;
Michigan Township Assoc. -&#13;
1962 Duos 33.00&#13;
Arthur Rcntz - Putnam I up.&#13;
Liquor Enforcement&#13;
Officer ' 300.00&#13;
Motion b\ White, supported bs&#13;
Wslie- to adjourn.&#13;
MURRAY J. KRNNEDY.&#13;
Putnam I wp. Clerk&#13;
45.73&#13;
4.73&#13;
big factor. Each Uniform had the&#13;
same chance to score and the cubs&#13;
proudly displayed their achievements&#13;
and badges.&#13;
It was announced that Webelos&#13;
Meeting would be Dec. 13. at the&#13;
Pinckney Elementary School.&#13;
Cub Scouts and parents enjoyed&#13;
pop and cookies at the close of&#13;
Pack Meetinn.&#13;
More and better grass, lower feed bills and higher profits are&#13;
among "pay-offs" from top-dressing permanent pastures this fall&#13;
with nitrogen-phosphate-potash fertilizer according to soil tests.&#13;
FIVE profitable "pay-offs"&#13;
from top-dressing permanent&#13;
pastures this fall with a complete&#13;
fertilizer containing nitrogen,&#13;
phosphate and potash&#13;
where needed were listed by the&#13;
Midwest division of the National&#13;
Plant Food Institute:&#13;
1 - Earlier grazing next spring&#13;
for beef and dairy cattle; 2 -&#13;
More and better grass during&#13;
the spring season; 3 - Extra&#13;
grazing days at the end of the&#13;
season; 4-Lower feed bills;&#13;
5 - Higher net profits because of&#13;
lower costs of production.&#13;
"There are increasing indications&#13;
in many Corn Belt areas&#13;
that fall-added fertilizer containing&#13;
nitrogen as well as phosphate&#13;
and potash can give as&#13;
good results in pasture production&#13;
as plant food put on in the&#13;
spring." says the Institute.&#13;
"Some safeguards are necessary,&#13;
however, so iar as nitrogen&#13;
is concerned. On very sandy&#13;
soils where water leaches quickly&#13;
through the soil, losses of&#13;
nitrogen can occur.&#13;
"Agronomists say there will&#13;
be a greatei response in the&#13;
spring if pasture fertilizer is put&#13;
on the late fall, just before&#13;
growth stops."&#13;
Fall fertilization is a timesaver,&#13;
because it helps the&#13;
farmer spread out his work&#13;
load, the Institute reports. By&#13;
putting on plant food in the fall,&#13;
more attention can be given to&#13;
other important work in the&#13;
spring.&#13;
Moreover, in the fall firmer&#13;
ground makes it easier to apply&#13;
fertilizer through the use of&#13;
broadcast spreaders and bulk&#13;
spreading with trucks. In the&#13;
fall, too, you can be sure of&#13;
a greater choice of fertilizer&#13;
grades and fast deliver.&#13;
Charles F, Hewlett of Victoria.&#13;
Texas, is a house iiuest at the homJ&#13;
of his son. Mr. and Mrs. Charles&#13;
E. Hewlett. He arrived for Thanksgiving&#13;
and ttill remain until Sunday.&#13;
Mr. Hewlett, a former Pinckney&#13;
resident, is also enjoying visits&#13;
uith man&gt; local friends during his&#13;
stav.&#13;
For Sole&#13;
4 bedroom home on Howell&#13;
I Lake front. 2 lots, reduced tor&#13;
quick sale. SI 3.000. terms.&#13;
4 bedroom brick home, near&#13;
lAnn Arbor expressway: (S&#13;
[miles to A.A.. Brighton or&#13;
(South I.son), on two lots, full&#13;
lbasement with rec. room. 2&#13;
fireplaces: natural gas. Whit-&#13;
Imorc lake area; SI 6.500.&#13;
Terms.&#13;
3 bedroom home. Rush&#13;
ll.ake priv.. hardwood floors.&#13;
lot 2OO\2OO' on black - top&#13;
road; 2 fireplaces, full b a s e-|&#13;
ment. $16,500, terms.&#13;
Birthday greetings go this week&#13;
to Tom Kennedy. Nancy Hayes,&#13;
Chuck Hewlett, Pat Clarke, Herman&#13;
Vedder. John Brewis and&#13;
Clyde -dough, all of whom celebrate&#13;
today. Tomorrow Mar&gt; Jane&#13;
Porter, Fredrick Thomas Porter&#13;
and Milton Campbell will m a r k&#13;
their birthdays; on Friday. Cheryl&#13;
Ann Williams. Richard Line a n d&#13;
Robert Amburgey: on Saturday,&#13;
Frank Niewiadomski, Roy Campbell&#13;
and Theo. Klingman. Jr.; on&#13;
Monday, December 4A Deborah&#13;
Rogers. Terry Bennett, and Robert&#13;
Read will cut the birthday cakes.&#13;
OUR BEST WAY-OF-LIFE INSURANCE&#13;
The men of the Army and Air National Guard work as citizens and&#13;
train as military men to protect our way of life. More than 472,000&#13;
strong, they stand at our first line of defense. On a minute's notice,&#13;
runway alert units are activated.. air defense units manning Nike-&#13;
Ajax bases swing into action...27 combat divisions prepare for&#13;
mobilization. But the Guard's protection does not end with its battle&#13;
function. In peacetime, it is just as ready to cope with disaster...&#13;
and just as admirably efficient. Today, the citizen-soldiers of the&#13;
National Guard are better trained than ever before in the 300-year&#13;
history of the Guard. They are, in every sense, our Up-to-th*-Minute&#13;
A/rw, ever ready to serve, and to serve well, our nation's interest&#13;
THE CITIZEN SOLDIERS OF THE&#13;
NATIONAL GUAR SERVE YOUR COUNTRY. . . I N YOUR C O M M U N I T Y . . . IN THE NATIONAL GUARD]&#13;
2 bedroom cottage, l a k e&#13;
Ipriv., on Bruin Lake. turnish-|&#13;
ed: $45(X) with low terms.&#13;
2 bedroom home on ! 2&#13;
acres land. 1 mile from Pinck-I&#13;
nev. $1().(HK) terms.&#13;
3 bedroom home in Pinckney&#13;
Village on 2 lots, house in&#13;
excellent condition, reduced&#13;
price. S13.(KK), low d o w n |&#13;
payment.&#13;
ACREAGE NEEDED;&#13;
Have Buyers waking.&#13;
Henry Krahn&#13;
Real Estate 117 €•&#13;
Ftackaey S-3380&#13;
Tuna With A Twist Of Taig And Craned Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Williams&#13;
are entertaining the former's parents,&#13;
the R. L. Williams of Jonesboro,&#13;
Arkansas. All the Williams&#13;
were Thanksgiving dinner guests at&#13;
the James Turner home in Brighton.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Euler observed&#13;
their 54th wedding anniversary&#13;
on November 20. On Thanksgiving&#13;
Day they were dinner guests&#13;
at the K. A. Wylie home. Cadet&#13;
Dick Wylie telephoned from West&#13;
Point Military Academy in the afternoon&#13;
to extend greetings to his&#13;
parents and to his grandparents,&#13;
the Eulers.&#13;
&lt; tn'fn nh r. I in'..&#13;
Tin* fivative twist in this tuna protlintion conies from a couple&#13;
of versatile stipjxtt'ting players perfectly cast in the roles they&#13;
ph*y. Tasty French Fried onion* rings add palate-pleasing "tang:"&#13;
JL&lt;»--an—a --la—king- *-aw*e- and'-crisp.- *h&lt;*&gt;*Uing^glY'le potato k&#13;
Actually each of these stellar performers has a dual role.&#13;
Besides using the onion rings to dramatize the flavor of your&#13;
sauce, save a few to garnish your casserole or chafing dish. The&#13;
shoestring: potato sticks offer both a zesty flavor of their own&#13;
and an ingenious switch on the usual a la king base of toastpoints,&#13;
patty-shells or rice.&#13;
Staging this hearty nartv or family dinner dish is simplicity&#13;
itself! The French FrierJ onion rings and potato sticks come right&#13;
out of a can convenient and delicious either hot or cold.&#13;
T I N A A LA KINCi WITH CRISPY POTATO STICKS&#13;
i Serves 5 to 6i&#13;
i 4 cup butter or margarine&#13;
'i tablespoon* diced&#13;
I ran&#13;
1&#13;
4 n i p flour&#13;
2 teanpomi salt&#13;
s teaspoon |M»p|M*r&#13;
2 mp* milk&#13;
4 flip diced raitiH'tf pimiento*&#13;
&lt;»ri»p O &amp; C French&#13;
onions (3' 2 oz.)&#13;
8-oz. can drained button&#13;
mushroom*, (optional)&#13;
2 caiiM tuna fi*h (?oz.)&#13;
2 can* ori*p O &amp; C Shoe-&#13;
-Style Potato Sticks&#13;
oz.)&#13;
2 cup sliced celery&#13;
Melt butter in saucepan Add fcreen popper and saute until&#13;
lender. Stir in flour and seasonings. Blend in milk and cook,&#13;
stirring constantly till thickened. Add pimientos. celery. French&#13;
Fried onions, mushrooms and tuna fish. Continue to heat, stirring&#13;
constantly, until mixture is hot. Heat Potato Sticks just&#13;
before serving. Serve a la king over the crisp hot sticks. Lobster&#13;
OF shrimp, substituted for the tuna fish make this dish elegant&#13;
enough for any gathering.&#13;
Slate Christmas&#13;
Tea Dec. 2&#13;
The annual Christmas Tea and&#13;
silent bazaar of the Women's Fellowship&#13;
of the Community Congregational&#13;
church will he held in&#13;
Pilgrim Hall on Saturdav. December&#13;
2. from I to 5 p.m. The public&#13;
is invited.&#13;
There will be a Treasury Tree&#13;
upon which will be pinned the tiny&#13;
aprons and envelopes distributed&#13;
earlier for contributions of c a s h&#13;
to be given in lieu of seeing and&#13;
furnishing material things as tor&#13;
the usual type of bazaar. Tables&#13;
of beautiful Christmas goodies and&#13;
decorations will be on displa).&#13;
Baked goods wilt alt be for sale&#13;
as will some of the decorations.&#13;
Many members will be displaying&#13;
their holiday specialties, not f o r&#13;
sale, but to give suggestions for&#13;
those seeking ideas on "What To&#13;
Make at Home."&#13;
There will be a Christmas p r ogram&#13;
and music under the directorship&#13;
of Mrs. Doris Shetteroe, whose&#13;
program of last yule season h a s&#13;
brought requests for a repeat performance.&#13;
Mrs. Charles Ward. Mrs. James&#13;
Whitley and Mrs. John Lundin&#13;
will be in charge of baked goods&#13;
and refreshments.&#13;
All members and friends of the&#13;
church are urged to attend, bring&#13;
a friend, and launch the holiday&#13;
season by enjoying the fellowship&#13;
program, holiday goodies and novelties&#13;
at Pilgrim Hall this Saturday&#13;
afternoon.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Vedder observed&#13;
their 15th wedding anniversary&#13;
on Mondav of this week.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday. November 29, 1961&#13;
LAVEY HARDWARE&#13;
114 W. MAIN PH. UP 8-3221 PINCKNEY&#13;
W I N T E R H O U R S&#13;
Monday thru Saturday&#13;
OPEN: 8:30 a. m.&#13;
CLOSE: 5:30 p.m.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
S&#13;
if you*re planning a&#13;
! to a friend, make&#13;
a checklist of the or*&#13;
tides in your nultcane&#13;
before you pack* Then,&#13;
when you're packing&#13;
for home, you'll not&#13;
leave any thing behind*&#13;
GoodManasementi&#13;
Plant Food Make&#13;
Profitable Team&#13;
DOT your "first team*' in the 1 field if you plan to score high&#13;
profit yields of forage and row&#13;
crops, advises Dr. a. N. Driskell,&#13;
University of Kentucky&#13;
extension agronomist.&#13;
Dr. Driskell says the "first&#13;
team" should include fertilizer&#13;
that provides nitrogen, phosphate&#13;
and potash, plus lime,&#13;
as needed. Other team-mates&#13;
should be well-adapted seed and&#13;
good cultural practices.&#13;
YOUR&#13;
TOP PROFIT*/&#13;
•fl JZ£~ n«*ovto&#13;
"Best place tu siart is with an&#13;
accurate soil test, says Dr.&#13;
Driskell, in a statement summarized&#13;
here bv the Midwest&#13;
division of the National Plant&#13;
Food Institute. "Such a test can&#13;
tell you what nutrients the soil&#13;
needs to produce high-income,&#13;
low-cost crop yields.&#13;
If lime is needed, it can be&#13;
U J L 3 | h f e&#13;
to v&#13;
plantings."&#13;
The importance of proper fertilization&#13;
is emphasized by the&#13;
Kentucky Department of Feed&#13;
and Fertilizer which says that&#13;
"a farmer cannot expect to produce&#13;
a good crop unless he&#13;
feeds the plants by applying&#13;
the proper amount and kind of&#13;
fertilizer."&#13;
The department points out&#13;
that a return of $3 to $5 can be&#13;
expected from each dollar invested&#13;
in proper fertilizer,&#13;
where fertilizer is needed.&#13;
RAINBOW GIRLS&#13;
PLAN DANCE&#13;
The Order of the Rainbow for&#13;
Girls, Pinckney Chapter, No. 76,&#13;
will sponsor a "Snow Frolic"&#13;
dance, Saturday evening, December&#13;
2, from 7:30 to 11:30. The&#13;
public is invited to attend this&#13;
event in the gym of the elementary&#13;
school. Music will be by recordings.&#13;
Tickets are .35c per person.&#13;
Thanksgiving dinner guests at&#13;
the Robert Vedder home were the&#13;
Joseph Heath family of Jackson,&#13;
the Noel Cooke family and Mrs.&#13;
Catherine Heath. Tiny visitors over&#13;
the week end were infant twins&#13;
Candy and Marty Heath who&#13;
stayed while their parents the&#13;
Charles Heaths of Ypsilanti a t -&#13;
tended funeral services for M r s .&#13;
Heath's grandmother in Pennsylvania.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 29, 1961&#13;
Visit our Cosmetic Counter&#13;
for COLOGNES, Dusting)&#13;
Powder, Toilet Water.&#13;
Tabu&#13;
Flower o.&#13;
3&amp;&#13;
i/u Christmas in July&#13;
J E R R Y ' S&#13;
10'T i MAIN ST&#13;
UP 8 3480&#13;
Full-tilt, family-silt&#13;
Savoy 2-door stdao&#13;
NEW STYLING BETS AWMI!&#13;
New Forward Flair Design&#13;
brings a completely new k m&#13;
to the low-price field.&#13;
BEST ECONOMY IN MSINT!&#13;
You get up to 7% better gas&#13;
mileage than last year's&#13;
MoWgas Economy Run class&#13;
OWCKEST PLYHOOTN EVER!&#13;
Plymouth's irp to 1 0 %&#13;
quicker than last year, (invWmwmmf&#13;
WNIUU1 TmM. *Btr&#13;
sstiQfial hannDng ease.&#13;
TOf WALITY flf A a T K !&#13;
fratfty-enfineefed by Chrysler&#13;
Corporation as nwer before.&#13;
New, tougher IMboo&gt;.&#13;
6N0WMHCanMI$11IT0&#13;
$172 LESS THAN FVU-SIZE&#13;
CMEVIOLET AMI FOH!*&#13;
MEMl mm EW! SEE&#13;
T i l l FtYtJNTI IEALEI!&#13;
YOU'LL BUY IT...PLYMOUTH!&#13;
VAN'S MOTOR SALES&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Ago&#13;
The Pinckncy chapter O. E. S.&#13;
held installation services Saturday&#13;
night for new officers. Mrs. Winifred&#13;
Graves was installed as Worthy&#13;
Matron; Albert Dinkel as the&#13;
Worthy Patron. Mrs. Hazel Parker&#13;
and Percy Ellis are the associate&#13;
matron and patron.&#13;
The Sprout school held a very&#13;
successful box social S a t u r d a y&#13;
night. Mrs. Grant Cass was the&#13;
auctioneer. The first part of the&#13;
evening was spent in playing keoo&#13;
with poultry as prizes. Miss Bernke&#13;
Isham, teacher of the school,&#13;
said part of the proceeds would be&#13;
used to buy dishes for hot noon&#13;
lunches for the students.&#13;
The William G. Greening Estate&#13;
at Plain field was sold at auction&#13;
this week.&#13;
Mrs. Weltha Vail spent the week&#13;
end with Dr. and Mrs. W. Snyder&#13;
in Horton.&#13;
C. H. Kennedy and Verne Corey&#13;
were in Toledo last week to&#13;
purchase Christmas goods for the&#13;
general store and the drug store.&#13;
The Misses Fanny Monks a n d&#13;
Nellie Gardner had as Sunday dinner&#13;
guests Mrs. Maria Dinkel, Mrs.&#13;
Zora Chambers, and Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
John Dinkel.&#13;
John Smuda, 55, well-known&#13;
Howell plumbing contractor lost&#13;
his life Saturday noon when his&#13;
pick-up truck collided with a large&#13;
truck operated by the Brewery Products&#13;
Co. of Ann Arbor.&#13;
Six slot matchines were confiscated&#13;
near Howell by Sheriffs officers&#13;
this week. Operators failed&#13;
to' heed the warning issued earlier.&#13;
Putnam's quota for the annual&#13;
Red Cross Drive of 1936 is $25.&#13;
M. J. Hoisd and Miss Nellie Gardner&#13;
are the chairmen of the local&#13;
drive.&#13;
Five of the local deer hunters&#13;
have returned with deer so far&#13;
from the north country: Edmund&#13;
Haines, Bert Daller, Ralph Harris,&#13;
Clare Swarthout and Rex Harris.&#13;
PFC Walter Pietras, son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. John Pietras, was recently&#13;
transferred from Ft. Rucker,&#13;
Ala., to Ft. Gordon, Ga., where&#13;
he will spend nine weeks in the&#13;
Communication School of telctyping.&#13;
HOLY NAME SOCIETY&#13;
TO HOLD PARTY&#13;
The second annual Chinese&#13;
Auction and card party has been&#13;
announced for Saturday evening,&#13;
December 2, by the Holy Name&#13;
Society of St. Mary's church.&#13;
The affair will begin at 8:00 p.&#13;
m. in the parish hall. Joseph Basydlo&#13;
is general chairman.&#13;
Admission to the card party is&#13;
$1.00 per person. There is no admission&#13;
charge for the auction&#13;
which will follow the card party at&#13;
about 9:30 p. m. The public is&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
How 000 companies&#13;
help their employees&#13;
The average American company is&#13;
)retty busy tending to its own&#13;
)usiness. Yet many companies&#13;
lave sandwiched in a valuable&#13;
service for their employees—the&#13;
Payroll Savings Plan for U.S.&#13;
Savings Bonds.&#13;
Through this plan, your payroll&#13;
clerk sets aside a certain amount&#13;
each payday for Bonds, buys&#13;
them, and arranges to get them&#13;
to you. It's completely automatic,&#13;
and the easiest way in the world&#13;
to save.&#13;
Save as much or as little&#13;
as you wish&#13;
Employees can sign up to save as&#13;
little as $1.25 a week. The average&#13;
among the more than 8 million&#13;
folks on the Plan is $20 a month.&#13;
All in all, 45,000 companies help&#13;
their employees save about $2 billion&#13;
in Savings Bonds a year—a&#13;
lot of future homes, vacations,&#13;
college degrees, and nest eggs for&#13;
retirement.&#13;
The security built into&#13;
Savings Bonds&#13;
U.S. Savings Bonds are guaranteed&#13;
by the Government to grow.&#13;
$tf8.75 becomes $25 in 7 years, 9&#13;
months. In 10 more years, it becomes&#13;
$36.25. Your Bonds can be&#13;
cashed in anytime, with interest.&#13;
And if they're lost or destroyed,&#13;
the Treasury Department replaces&#13;
them free.&#13;
Every Savings Bond you buy is&#13;
an investment in Peace. What&#13;
better way to help your government&#13;
help you enjoy the things&#13;
you're saving for.&#13;
Hats off to American Industry!&#13;
"American Industry has given the Savings&#13;
Bonds Program its greatest success/* says&#13;
William H. Neal, National Director of the&#13;
Treasury's Savings Bonds Program.&#13;
"45,000 American companies have sold many&#13;
billions of dollars in Savings Bonds—at no&#13;
cost to the taxpayer/' says Mr. Neal. "By&#13;
operating the Payroll Savings Plan, these&#13;
companies, big and small, are helping to&#13;
keep our country strong. At the same time,&#13;
they're helping 8 million people save automatically&#13;
for the things they want. America&#13;
owes a vote of thanks to these companies for&#13;
their outstanding contribution to the 20-year&#13;
success story of the U.S. Savings Bonds&#13;
Program."&#13;
You save more than money with&#13;
Buy them where you work or</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 29, 1961</text>
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                <text>November 29, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>1961-11-29</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No. 47 — Ph. UP 8-3111 Pinekney, Michigan — Wednesday, November 22, 1961 Single Copy, fOc&#13;
Rogers Elected&#13;
President&#13;
of Kiwanis&#13;
Louis A. Rogers was elected&#13;
president of the Pinckney Kiwanis&#13;
club at the recent annual election.&#13;
Rogers, presently the treasurer of&#13;
the club, is an insurance agent and&#13;
lives with his wife, Margaret, and&#13;
their five children at 3074 W. M-&#13;
36.&#13;
Named first vice president for&#13;
the coming year is Robert Tasch;&#13;
second vice president, George&#13;
Roth; treasurer, Leonard Lee and&#13;
re-elected as secretary was Frank&#13;
Czerwinski.&#13;
The new officers and a s#»v*»nman&#13;
board of directors will take&#13;
office following installation services&#13;
early in January.&#13;
Senior&#13;
In Baking&#13;
Competition&#13;
Denise Mower, a senior at&#13;
Pinekney high school, was one of&#13;
the 25 teenagers who participated&#13;
jn the $22,000 Baking Contest preliminaries&#13;
held in Flint last Friday.&#13;
She was chosen for the competition&#13;
by contest judges for Pyrofax Gas&#13;
as one of the writert of prize essays&#13;
of 100 words or less on the&#13;
subject "Why I Want To Go To&#13;
College."&#13;
The fop winner of Saturday's&#13;
contest will be announced later and&#13;
she will be eligible for the grand&#13;
finals to be held in December in&#13;
Indianapolis, Ind.&#13;
The grand prize .winner of the&#13;
contest, open to students in 27&#13;
Eastern and Mid-West states, will&#13;
win a $1,500 scholarship to&#13;
the college of her choice; a possible&#13;
$500 bonus, a $500 Caloric gas&#13;
range for her family and another&#13;
for the home economics room of&#13;
her high school. There will be 117&#13;
prizes awarded in all.&#13;
Denise's entry for the contest&#13;
prepared in Flint was a particularly&#13;
delicious cookie recipe "Butterscotch&#13;
Ambrosia Bars."&#13;
Pinckney Pilgrims, sponsored by the Community Con*&#13;
gregational church; front row, left to right; D. Holhster, H. Holnster,&#13;
A. St^g- F, Zcziilka, D. Zsztt&amp;s. Back row, Sfsm Kyseii, couch; R.&#13;
Seefeld, D. Reynolds, C. Bell, T. Shettfcroe, W. Scott.&#13;
The tta«* play each Saturday&#13;
cheer these cagers.&#13;
Junior League Basketballers&#13;
To See Detroit Pistons Play&#13;
. » ; « . « Ti»in wSh Mel Relnhart, sponsor, frout row, nart&#13;
to Mr. Rebtart; D. Parker, L. Rusom, T. Umstead, J. Douglas. Back&#13;
row, left to right, R. Umstead, G. Preston, A. Kitchen, J. «—•«— i~&#13;
About 50 of the boys who make&#13;
up the Junior basketball league&#13;
have a great day of basketball in&#13;
store for them on Saturday. Along&#13;
The Hamburg team defeated tht&#13;
Pinekney Merchant's small cagers&#13;
in the first game on Saturday's!&#13;
schedule, 19-14 with Dick HaUJs&#13;
with about 7500 boys from every- scoring eight points for the visitors&#13;
where in the state they will be at- and Jeff Davis accounting for 6&#13;
tending the Basketball Clinic at&#13;
the Cobo Convention Arena in Detroit.&#13;
School buses will take them&#13;
to Detroit and local sponsors and&#13;
managers will accompany them for&#13;
the day.&#13;
The clinic begins at II a. m.&#13;
and the boys will leave Pinekney at&#13;
9 a. m.&#13;
In the afternoon they will be&#13;
guests at the game between the Detroit&#13;
Pistons and the Los Angeles&#13;
Lakers.&#13;
points for the losers.&#13;
Bill Light and Bruce Henry refereed&#13;
the game.&#13;
St. Mary's scored a victory over&#13;
the Pinekney Pilgrims, 15-9.&#13;
Maurice Scherens caged 11 of the&#13;
winner's points and Robert Seefeld&#13;
9 for the Pilgrims.&#13;
John Holben and Bruce Henry&#13;
were the officials for this game.&#13;
jnrs&#13;
Pinckney Merchant' TMm; front row, left to right, J.&#13;
Phimmcr, J. Oarrow, T. Mitchell, R. Joseohson. Back row, J. Davis,&#13;
H. Osterum, M. Wiltshire, BUI Rentz, Gerald Darrow, coach.&#13;
Championship&#13;
Statistics&#13;
Statistics for the past football&#13;
season of P.H.S. Pirates, published&#13;
last week by the Coach Wesley&#13;
Reader, show that the Pirates outscored&#13;
their combined opponents&#13;
by 216 points; they had 261 points&#13;
to the 45 made by nine teams they&#13;
defeated to attain a perfect season.&#13;
Of the total points scored by the&#13;
Pirates 240 were on touchdowns,&#13;
21 were points after the T.D.&#13;
Bob Williams scored a total of&#13;
60 points for the season; T. Rowell,&#13;
42; Ed Guy, 30; Mike Manns,&#13;
26; J. Young, 24; C. DeWolf. 18;&#13;
G. Szalwinski, 18; Mills, 12; Barker,&#13;
6; Beiry, 6; Darrow, 6; HaO,&#13;
6; and D. Singer, 5.&#13;
Jack Young was responsible for&#13;
10 TD passes; Rowell for 6; Holben&#13;
for 2; C. DeWolf and B. Williams.&#13;
1 each.&#13;
Witiams kicked 12 of the season's&#13;
points after touchdowns, D.&#13;
Sinfer kicked 5; Young to Manns&#13;
2 and Youag to Guy 2.&#13;
Parents Club&#13;
Sets Special&#13;
Meeting&#13;
The Parents Club plans a special&#13;
meeting, in addition to the&#13;
regular meeting of the past week,&#13;
to be held on November 30, 8 p.m.&#13;
at the elementary school all-purpose&#13;
room to discuss the proposed&#13;
bond issue for the building expansion&#13;
program.&#13;
Members of the school board&#13;
will attend the meeting to explain&#13;
details and answer questions on the&#13;
issue. Parents of all the students&#13;
are urged to attend.&#13;
A "White Elephant'* sale has&#13;
been scheduled for the same evening&#13;
to raise funds for the clubs1&#13;
treasury. Each person is asked to&#13;
bring a white elephant item for the&#13;
sale table and these will be sold&#13;
during the coffee hour at the close&#13;
of the meeting.&#13;
PINCKNEY HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
VARSITY BASKETBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE — 1961-62&#13;
Tue., Nov. 28 — Webberville *&#13;
Fri., Dec. 1 — Manchester&#13;
Fri., Dec. 8 — Saline *&#13;
Wed., Dec. 13 — Roosevelt&#13;
Tue., Dec. 1,9 — Whitmore Lake&#13;
Fri., Jan. 5 — Chelsea *&#13;
Fri., Jan. 12 — Dexter&#13;
Fri., Jan. 19 — U-High *&#13;
Fri., Jan. 26 — Manchester *&#13;
Fri., Feb. 2 — Saline&#13;
Tue., Feb. 6 — Roosevelt*&#13;
Fri., Feb. 9 — Chelsea&#13;
Tue., Feb. 13 — Whitmore Lake&#13;
Fri., Feb. 16 — Dexter*&#13;
Fri., Mar. 2 — U-High&#13;
* Home games.&#13;
J. V. games start at 6:45 p. m.&#13;
Annual Christmas Tea and Silent&#13;
Bazaar, Women's Fellowship of the&#13;
Community Congregational church;&#13;
PINCKNEY HIGH SCHOOL&#13;
FRESHMEN BASKETBALL&#13;
SCHEDULE — 1961-62&#13;
Wed., Dec. 6 — Hartland *&#13;
Mon., Dec. 11 — Howell&#13;
Thur.. Jan 4 — Brighton *&#13;
Tue., Jan. 9 — Saline *&#13;
Thur., Jan. 11 — South Lyon&#13;
Mon., Jan. 15 — Dexter*&#13;
Mon., Jan. 22 — Manchester&#13;
Thurs.. Jan. 25 — Hartland&#13;
Mon., Jan. 29 — Howefl *&#13;
Thur., Feb. 1 — South Lyon *&#13;
Mon., Feb. 5 — Brighton&#13;
Mon., Feb. 12 — Manchester*&#13;
Mon., Feb. 19 — Dexter&#13;
Tue., Feb. 27 — Saline&#13;
All games start at 7:00 p. m.&#13;
* Home games.&#13;
St Mary's Team; front row, left to right: B. Bottteoa, D.&#13;
Young, B. Botsford, G. Barker, R. Edwards. Back row, IJai Mern*&#13;
coach; J. Wtodyga, M. Scherrens, J. Clayton, R. Kefcer, R. vetffler&#13;
December 2* 1 p.m. to 5 p.m., Pilgrim&#13;
Halt Christmas specialties on&#13;
display and for sate. Program chairman,&#13;
Mrs. Doris Shetteroe.&#13;
Advent dales which have been&#13;
already announced include Dec. 1&#13;
as the time of the Christmas Can-! Kiwanis Club&#13;
tate by the choir of the Congrefa- Night" for student* and guests retional&#13;
church. Dee. 22 is the date I presenting various fields of work,&#13;
of the church's Sunday SchooHDinoer meeting at 7 pja.&#13;
program. \ grin Hall, November M&#13;
- Letters to the Editor -&#13;
To the Editor.&#13;
In the Wednesday, November&#13;
15 edition of the Ann Arbor News,&#13;
I wa» quoted aevenl times in an&#13;
article dealing with a proposed&#13;
building program in the Pinckney&#13;
Community Schools District.&#13;
Moat of these "Reader quotes*1&#13;
were not made by me.&#13;
I did aay that the present equalized&#13;
valuation of this school district&#13;
is about $17,250,000; the 1961&#13;
membership 'is 327 in the high&#13;
school and 949 in the elementary&#13;
grades; and me present bonded indebtedness&#13;
is $447,000.&#13;
These arc fact, substantiated by&#13;
office records and represent my&#13;
actual contribution to the above*&#13;
mentioned article.&#13;
Wesley Reader&#13;
Supt of Schools,&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan.&#13;
To the Editor: "~"&#13;
American Education Week has&#13;
come and gone and like so many&#13;
other parents in the county we were&#13;
among those who visited our child's&#13;
classroom to observe the function&#13;
of their school day.&#13;
One-can not help but be impressed&#13;
each year that in America,&#13;
education must have an A-l rating.&#13;
Nu Ofle Caii tell What a yuUfigstef&#13;
may b « ^ n e or iff v^4»i kicd of *&#13;
rid Eaen child carries&#13;
his family's burning hopes for&#13;
more learning, more friends, more&#13;
security, more comfort, more respect,&#13;
more responsibility. We all&#13;
ask the school to fulfill our hopes&#13;
for our child's tomorrow.&#13;
Our teachers and administrators&#13;
are doing an amazing job of&#13;
teaching our youth in spite of the&#13;
perplexing problems Avhich face&#13;
them daily. Our children are being&#13;
challenged to learn new methods&#13;
seek knowledge and ideas to keep&#13;
pace with the miracles of the age&#13;
in which we live.&#13;
Yes, our average and better students&#13;
are benefiting from the increased&#13;
emphasis placed on more&#13;
learning, and as a parent, I am&#13;
pleased and thankful for all the&#13;
things I saw at our school. However,&#13;
I am ashamed and disturbed&#13;
that we parents have not been&#13;
so concerned for the special child&#13;
—the child not fortunate to have&#13;
normal physical and mental and&#13;
i capabgUics H&#13;
• J_ _ are there in your child's schoolroom?&#13;
Can the classroom teadfe&#13;
meet his needs? I say no. It is&#13;
neither fair to the child who is&#13;
handicapped nor to the thirty othtr&#13;
children in the room, it is not&#13;
to expect the teacher to provide H*&#13;
individual help for that boy or gtf&#13;
who needs special training in drier&#13;
to equip him for our society.&#13;
What is the task before us? It&#13;
is to provide negessary rooms,&#13;
equipment, materials, special teach&#13;
ers, counselors in a Special Education&#13;
Program for Livingston&#13;
ty. A high percentage of counties&#13;
around us are providing for these&#13;
special needs for their boyt and&#13;
girls, are these children in fc/vingston&#13;
County to be pushed asMe and&#13;
forgotten and perhaps liter to become&#13;
welfare cases?&#13;
We have a glimmer, of hope.&#13;
Our County Board of Education&#13;
has provided us the services of&#13;
Mr. Richard Daniels, a cBagnosticlon&#13;
who is tramed&#13;
these children who are handicapped.&#13;
To make his services worth&#13;
while it is necessary we make provisions&#13;
for special help and teach&#13;
ing.&#13;
In view of what I have tried to&#13;
say to you of our needs, how could&#13;
the Board of Supervisors in Liv&#13;
ingston County, in good conscience&#13;
turn down just $4500. which was&#13;
requested this month for* m o n e y&#13;
needed to promote Special Educa&#13;
tion?&#13;
Will you catch the vision and begin&#13;
to talk with your school people&#13;
about these special needs for "boy&#13;
and girls in your local school district?&#13;
Do you care about what happen:&#13;
to these children who are mental!)&#13;
Students See&#13;
Edison Show&#13;
The new Detroit Edison science&#13;
show, "The World of Energy&#13;
presented to&#13;
was&#13;
p&#13;
Monday by E. Burdefl Clark of thcL Detroit Edison's Speakers Bureau.&#13;
The program is the inspiring and&#13;
dramatic story of man's endeavors&#13;
and accomplishments in harnessing&#13;
One of the several development&#13;
devices which were demonstrated&#13;
produced electrical energy using a&#13;
thermo-electric solar generator.&#13;
The show now touring, junior&#13;
and senior high schools throughout&#13;
Southeastern Michigan is offered&#13;
by the Edison Company to stimulate&#13;
creative linking nfK*qg boys&#13;
and girls, to spark their curiosity&#13;
about science and engineering and&#13;
to stress the need of higher education.&#13;
Peace Corps&#13;
Exams Set&#13;
The Peace Corps examinations&#13;
will be held November 28 and 29,&#13;
in Ann Arbor, Michigan, at the&#13;
Downtown Post Office Station at&#13;
r3fh A^^:pik*m^fy ~|ar those m&#13;
tlm area who wish to apply, Postmaster&#13;
Lawrence Baughn was informed&#13;
today.&#13;
Peace Corps posters, giving this&#13;
information, will be displayed in the&#13;
local post office on the bulletin&#13;
boards.&#13;
Livingston County Accident Report&#13;
for the Week November 5th&#13;
to 13th.&#13;
12 property damage accident, 5&#13;
personal injury accidents, 0 fatals,&#13;
13 persons injured, 27 cars involved.&#13;
and physically handicapped in Liv&#13;
ingston County? I'm sure you do.&#13;
Anita McNamara&#13;
Fowlerville, Michigan&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
States Oil Boom Raises&#13;
Farmers Land Problems&#13;
More exploration for oil and gas&#13;
is now occurring in Michigan than!&#13;
in any other state. This presents!&#13;
legal problems to thousands of&#13;
farmers who own land under exploration.&#13;
C. R. Humphry*, Michigan State&#13;
University development&#13;
is the author of a bulletin which&#13;
helps clarify some of these problems.&#13;
The bulletin, entitled "Mineral&#13;
Rights for Michigan Landowners,**&#13;
is free at county extension&#13;
offices.&#13;
"Geologists regard the southern&#13;
Lower Peninsula as one of the&#13;
MASONIC CALENDAR&#13;
LIV. UODGE NO. 76&#13;
Regular meeting* Deeembei&#13;
Oyster&#13;
supper will follow meeting.&#13;
4-H NEWS&#13;
On November 13, the meeting&#13;
was called to order by D i a n e&#13;
Hall. Elections for new officers&#13;
were held. Diane Hall was re-elected&#13;
president, Christine Dinkel,&#13;
vice president, Jean Wlodyga, secretary,&#13;
Barbara rlbeft treasurer,&#13;
Gail Schaner songleader, and Marilyn&#13;
Scherrens reporter.&#13;
We decided to have our business&#13;
meetings on the first Monday&#13;
of each month. Our sewing classes&#13;
will be held on Monday with Mrs.&#13;
Hall at the high school, or Thursday&#13;
with Mrs. Singer at her house.&#13;
Mrs. Basydlo offered to take a&#13;
group on Tuesday.&#13;
nation's best potential oil sou&#13;
Humphrys points out. "More exploration&#13;
is needed to determine&#13;
the exact extent of this potential.**&#13;
Oil companies are now drilling&#13;
on over 20 well sites in Calhoun,&#13;
HiHsdale and Jackson counties.&#13;
The* new fields will double t h e&#13;
state's oil production.&#13;
Humphrys explains that sand&#13;
and gravel, peat and muck, and&#13;
other materials in the soil are of&#13;
increasing value. His bulletin summarizes&#13;
legal and property rights&#13;
in these areas as well as with oil.&#13;
UNDERGOING RECRUIT&#13;
TRAINING AT GREAT LAKES&#13;
Leonard E. Simonson, son of&#13;
Mr. m&amp;Mtx&#13;
FaTiey, iv&#13;
going recruit training at the Naval&#13;
Training Center, Great Lakes, 1J1.&#13;
The nine-week basic course includes&#13;
classroom instruction in various&#13;
naval subjects, military etiquette,&#13;
drill, physical fitness, swimming&#13;
and survival, first aid, shipboard&#13;
safety precautions and security&#13;
duty.&#13;
Throughout the training, recruits&#13;
receive specialized counseling to&#13;
help determine which of the 67&#13;
Navy jobs they will enter." Upon&#13;
graduation, the new bluejackets will&#13;
report to a Navy school for further&#13;
instruction or to a ship or shore&#13;
station for on-the-job training.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22, 1961&#13;
CENTER&#13;
CHOPS&#13;
5c Off CRISCO&#13;
SHORTENING ...31b. tin&#13;
Choice Standing PILLSBURY&#13;
F L O U R .&#13;
Fresh Pork Domino Pwd. or Brown&#13;
SUGAR... I Lb.&#13;
Ctfts*&#13;
MAXWELL Labd&#13;
EGG PINCKNI&#13;
Asst. Flavors&#13;
J E L L O . . .&#13;
Lady Graham Fancy&#13;
MIXED miTS....:« 13 Ok.&#13;
W»dwidty, Nor. 21 t. Nov. 25&#13;
Items of Interest About Your Friends and Neighbors&#13;
Frank Czerwinski and son have&#13;
returned from their northern Michigan&#13;
hunting trip. No luck.&#13;
The Married Couples Club of&#13;
the peoples church met at the&#13;
home of Mr. and Mrs. Jackie&#13;
Clark Monday evening.&#13;
Tommy Ritter who hunted at&#13;
Grayling got his deer Sunday&#13;
morning, a four-point buck.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Craig&#13;
and three daughters and son have&#13;
gone to Seattle, Washington, where&#13;
they will make their home. Howard&#13;
has accepted a position with Boeing&#13;
Aircraft there. New owners of the&#13;
Craigs former home on W M-36&#13;
are Mr. and Mrs. Ronald (June)&#13;
Darrow.&#13;
The Delta Kappa Gamma Society&#13;
of Livingston County entertained&#13;
the Future Teachers Associations&#13;
of Brighton, Ho well,&#13;
Pinckney and Fowlerville at the&#13;
Fowlerville Intermediate School on&#13;
November 10 at 7:30 p. m.&#13;
Everyone enjoyed listening to&#13;
Tom Read's sketch of his trip to&#13;
Europe last summer.&#13;
A scholarship by the society was&#13;
announced £$£ mtJg-_~£^_j^ rocmwhq&#13;
TTitght ftegd same fretp in&#13;
Wedding anniversary congratulaare&#13;
extended to Mr. and Mrs.|the Thursday night performaoce of&#13;
order to attend college next fall.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Sheldon Latterette,&#13;
who have traveled in Japan&#13;
where Mr. Latteretie taught school,&#13;
showed their beautiful colored&#13;
slides and told of their experiences&#13;
while living there.&#13;
The evening ended with square&#13;
dances and refreshments by the&#13;
Fowlerville committee.&#13;
MARY WOLTER&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
Ntw two btdroom shall hovsa,|&#13;
24' x 3C, on ont acre on Mc-&#13;
Gregor Rd., noor Portogt lakt.&#13;
$4000. Terms&#13;
—OFFICE—&#13;
7421 Dextor-Pinckney rd.&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
GET YOUR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For Cooking, Heating,&#13;
Etc., from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6621&#13;
Pinckney, MicHigan&#13;
Robert Johnson and to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Clare Miller who will be observing&#13;
their anniversaries on&#13;
Thanksgiving Day and to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Earl Murray who will mark&#13;
their anniversary on November 27.&#13;
Among the younger nimrods in&#13;
this area Pete Singer is the envy of&#13;
his fellow hunters; Pete shot a 150-&#13;
pound buck while hunting o n e&#13;
morning before school opened.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Read have&#13;
gone to Florida for the winter.&#13;
They plan to arrive at their residence&#13;
in Fort Lauderdale tomorrow.&#13;
The Albert Shirieys report a r&#13;
riving November 12 for their winter&#13;
stay at Stuart, Florida, to find&#13;
the temperatures in the 80's and&#13;
fishing very promising.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Beck were&#13;
very pleasant surprised Saturday&#13;
morning by the arrival, for a short&#13;
visit, of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Fisher&#13;
from Santa Ana, California. The&#13;
Fishers, former local residents,&#13;
moved to California about t h r e e&#13;
years ago. Presently they are visiting&#13;
relatives in the- Lansmg area&#13;
amfr wtft- rearnt tff Ptnefcitry&#13;
week for an extended visit.&#13;
Among the committeemen a n d&#13;
den mothers of Cub Scouts, Pack&#13;
58, who recently completed a training&#13;
course in Howell are Mrs. Russell&#13;
Clark, Mrs. Connie Auxier,&#13;
Courtland Geib, Hal Schall and&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Riggs.&#13;
Jerry Steffen, son of Mr. a n d&#13;
Mrs. Dewey Steffen enlisted in the&#13;
U.S. Air Force recently and is receiving&#13;
his basic training at Lackland&#13;
Air Force Base, near S a n&#13;
Antonio, Texas. Jerry is a I9il&#13;
graduate of P.H.S.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Devinc art&#13;
the parents of a daughter born on&#13;
November 9 at McPherson Health&#13;
Center.&#13;
Karl Burg, who was recently&#13;
back in University Medical Center&#13;
for five days of treatment is&#13;
home again and making good progress.&#13;
Mi. and Mrs. Lloyd VanBlaircum&#13;
and Paul Burg hunted at LoveHs&#13;
over the week end.&#13;
~PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22. 1961&#13;
"The Egg and I", senior class play&#13;
of Southwestern High School in&#13;
Flint Her brother, Dennis Kingsley&#13;
was a member of the cast portraying&#13;
Mr. Maniac Depressive.&#13;
Ptnckneyites recently confined to&#13;
McPherson Health Center included&#13;
Shirley Devine, Zela Mae Hull&#13;
and Thomas Grainger.&#13;
Mrs. Clarence DeKett attended&#13;
Birthday greetings are in order] Sunday evening with a 9 point,&#13;
for Thomas Mitchell, John Krupa&#13;
and Kitty Sue Williams who ob-|&#13;
serve their birthdays today: Mrs&#13;
Clare McMacken on Friday; Tommy&#13;
Radloff on Saturday; Freddie!&#13;
Eisenhardt and Nelson Kiner on&#13;
Sunday; Al Cottom and Mrs. June&#13;
Darrow next Monday and D i a n e&#13;
Halliburton and Don Ackley on&#13;
Tuesday. November 28.&#13;
The home of Mrs. Mary Wolter&#13;
of Dexter - Pinckney road will be&#13;
the scene of the Baha-I World&#13;
Faith Conference, Thursday thru&#13;
Sunday of this week. From 30 to&#13;
50 college and high school youth!&#13;
are expected to attend the meeting.&#13;
This year the conference wil&#13;
feature a workshop, dramatizing&#13;
Hhe^solutios&#13;
FUDAY LEAGUE&#13;
bagging their deer so far this season&#13;
include Don Gardner, Edmund&#13;
"Friday" Haines, Pete&#13;
Singer, Gene Edgar, John Paul&#13;
Ware, and George Tansley. The&#13;
first three named hunters bagged&#13;
their buck in Livingston County as&#13;
did John Ware. Gene Edgar and&#13;
George Tansley, near Wolverine.&#13;
James Knight returned home&#13;
160 pound buck he shot while&#13;
hunting west of Cadillac on opening&#13;
day.&#13;
1 Cherfrmatri&#13;
2 Toppm&#13;
3 He* Haws&#13;
4 Sodbusters&#13;
5 Double D's&#13;
6 Sharpies&#13;
7 Bombers&#13;
8 Pofluts&#13;
9 Untouchables&#13;
10 Patterson Lk. 4&#13;
11 BeeBee's&#13;
12 Bill Posters&#13;
28V*&#13;
28&#13;
27&#13;
26**&#13;
25&#13;
23&#13;
22V*&#13;
21&#13;
18V*&#13;
17&#13;
14&#13;
9&#13;
15Vi&#13;
16&#13;
17&#13;
17V*&#13;
If*&#13;
- 2 1&#13;
2VV*&#13;
23&#13;
21V4&#13;
23&#13;
30&#13;
35&#13;
First varsity hwfrcrtull gam* of&#13;
the season, Nov. 28, 7 p.m. at&#13;
P.H.S. gym.&#13;
I B LIKE YOU TO&#13;
START &gt; PAYROLL&#13;
SAVINGS PLAN&#13;
£.UNCA&#13;
DONALD/&#13;
FOR&#13;
11"^&#13;
• A «&gt;&#13;
Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
Ftaturing&#13;
BILL KLAVt TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNERS SERVED&#13;
FRIORYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL.&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
Worthy Matron Mrs. Edna&#13;
Ward of the local chapter O. E. S.,&#13;
Mrs. Bonnie Henry, Mrs. Mae&#13;
Daller. Mrs. Harriet Rahrig and&#13;
Mrs. Lucille Camburn attended the&#13;
Installation Service of the Manchester&#13;
Chapter last Friday evening.&#13;
Cub Scouts, Pack 58, Pack meeting&#13;
at elementary school, 7:30 p.m.&#13;
November 27; "Magic" November&#13;
theme for displays and program.&#13;
Cub awards and advancements.&#13;
HA&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain saws and lawn mowers repaired and sharpen*&#13;
ed. Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
-ALSOWater&#13;
pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
and used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
PROMPT SERVICE&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SitVICE&#13;
S-314S&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Airmtittmmt&#13;
i&#13;
fiom vh«e I $\t~£yJoe Marsh&#13;
Clock Watcher&#13;
right upend taid,«G&lt;Mh, you're&#13;
right! It te getting later&#13;
Oaeet&#13;
e*n it • * I km •&#13;
1962 Plymouth prices on every series and&#13;
every body style range from $8400 to $15900&#13;
less than comparable Fords and Chevrolets!&#13;
Here it is! Chry*ler Corporation'* lowest -priced&#13;
size car for '62. the action-packed Plymouth with&#13;
styling to turn th* head of those who think young!&#13;
Full-frize for family comfort custom-tailored nt&#13;
for the average garage. Quiet a* a Idttea in sneakers&#13;
—ssBooth at a sprinter with a 20-yard lead.&#13;
And qualHy&lt;enfineered r»y Chrysler G&#13;
to rtand up to the month* and miles ahead.&#13;
*elf the favor of driving one—this week— for 1&#13;
BMiVM TMM MEAITIFVI DIFFSMMATI I J f . f l l l O W I I C I FiBLB&#13;
VAN'S M O ALES&#13;
Delegate Thomas Sharpe's&#13;
Weekly Con-Con Report&#13;
It is nearing the end of another&#13;
week, so here we go attempting to&#13;
describe to you a few of the highlights&#13;
of the last few days.&#13;
The first thing that disturbed me&#13;
this week, was the testimony of our&#13;
Supreme Court Chief Justice Dethmers,&#13;
testifying in front of our Judiciary&#13;
Committee, "when he came&#13;
up in favor of the appointment of&#13;
judges". Since then, however, % the&#13;
committee has heard Judges, Edwafds^&#13;
felack and Kavanagh, all of&#13;
whom are strongly in favor of the&#13;
election process, so this seems to&#13;
a quieting effect upon my&#13;
TTien yesterday, Mr. Aus,&#13;
President of the AFLtestified&#13;
in front of Dr. Han-&#13;
Committee on Legislative Qrition&#13;
dealing with the reappoftionment&#13;
problem. This testimony&#13;
shakes me also. However,&#13;
thanks to the committee for inviting&#13;
Judge Creighton Coleman, of&#13;
\ Battle Creek, Michigan, Circuit&#13;
Judge from the 37th Judicial District,&#13;
who presented a very im-&#13;
• pressjv* talk on why we must not&#13;
charige our present system. This, in&#13;
majority: of the peopierepreseffling&#13;
the Livingston - Shiawassee district.&#13;
Under reapportionment, one thing&#13;
that might be of interest to you in&#13;
regard to population increase in&#13;
representative district in Michigan&#13;
between 1950 and 1960. Shiawassee&#13;
and Livingston district has increased&#13;
26.2 per cent, while Wayne&#13;
County total increase, over the&#13;
same period, was 9.S per cent.&#13;
In. regard to the Committee on&#13;
Local jp^vernment, we have been&#13;
discussing, among other things, the&#13;
possibility of making it possible for&#13;
a township to adopt home rule government.&#13;
It seems that this* might&#13;
answer the needs of some of the&#13;
urban townships; it would have to&#13;
be acceptable by the people within&#13;
the respective townships before it&#13;
can be adopted. There has also&#13;
been considerable amount of conversation&#13;
in regarding the uniformity&#13;
of assessments, along with the&#13;
15 mill limitation, of which we&#13;
hope will remain the same. The&#13;
concensus of opinion seems to be,&#13;
in regard to assessors, that a local&#13;
men is better qualified and would&#13;
know valuation of property more&#13;
accurately than a state appointed&#13;
assessor.&#13;
We believe, and it was also&#13;
pointed out in our committee meeting,&#13;
that the counties in Michigan&#13;
have gone a long ways in bettering&#13;
the equalization problem in the past&#13;
five years. However, we also realize,&#13;
it is true, there is yet work to&#13;
be done to complete the job properly.&#13;
Today, the Convention established&#13;
a deadline for the introduction&#13;
of delegate proposals as of December&#13;
1. This will not prevent delegates&#13;
or citizens to enter proposals&#13;
at a later date. However, after December&#13;
1, the proposals will be&#13;
submitted directly to their proper&#13;
committees. There has been 214&#13;
proposals turned in at the present&#13;
time and I presume there will be&#13;
many more before December 1. So&#13;
rather busy for swnetime, Tills&#13;
summarizes some of the highlights&#13;
of the week.&#13;
If this report is of interest to you,&#13;
I would appreciate hearing from&#13;
you. Do not forget you are welcome&#13;
to attend the Convention at&#13;
any time.&#13;
Thomas G. Sharpe&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
We wish to acknowledge with&#13;
grateful appreciation your kindness&#13;
and sympathy shown us during the&#13;
illness and passing of our mother,&#13;
Bertha B. Hinckley.&#13;
We also want to thank you for&#13;
the flowers, and the generous donations&#13;
to the St. Stephen's church&#13;
of Hamburg and The Ameriean&#13;
Cancer Society. We assure you this&#13;
thoughtfulness will never be forgotten.&#13;
Clifford and Beatrice Van Horn&#13;
; THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger I. Can Agency&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agtnf&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
Pinckney, Mich. Phone UP 8*3133&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portage Lake Road TeJ. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney TeL&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake I&#13;
Chelsea Tel. GR 5-3241&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modern Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Pnone UP 8-3772&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP 8-5558&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, MJ&gt;.&#13;
Pinckney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 A.M. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Tves«« rtx.f ana Sot*&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 PM.&#13;
MONUMEN ".&#13;
One of Michigan's Laii \&#13;
Displays of Monunrnts&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE F! 94770&#13;
L J. Swarthout&#13;
tUUDtNG e\ CONTRACTING&#13;
UPM2M&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
GfNGRAL INSURANCE&#13;
UP4VJ22I&#13;
Fred C .&#13;
Reiclchoff, Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
HoweJI, Michigan*&#13;
Phon* 358 /U«oWe 613&#13;
Real Eftate&#13;
ff«oejiei# Lose&#13;
Gerald Beam&#13;
102 wf MOM Street&#13;
UPtovn ISS64&#13;
Offic&#13;
Minut Regular meeting of the Villag&#13;
Council called to order by President&#13;
Stanley Dinkel followed by&#13;
roll call of officers. Present: Lee&#13;
Tiplady, Don Swarthout, Mrs*&#13;
Marian Russell and Roy Clark.&#13;
Absent: C. M. Lavey and Albert&#13;
Shirley.&#13;
Motion by Swarthout supported&#13;
by Clark to allow bills as read:&#13;
Rohde Brick and Supply Co.,&#13;
Supplies $ 3.90&#13;
F. E. Grimes, digging and&#13;
use of equipment 313.30&#13;
Martin Markos, Labor on&#13;
street and park 111.00&#13;
Thos. Read Sons, Inc.&#13;
Misc. 1.20&#13;
Howell Sanitary Excavators,&#13;
drain field 32.00&#13;
Lavey Ins. Agency, Workmens&#13;
Insurance 63.84&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch, printing 2.75&#13;
Beck's Marathon, Misc. 5.37&#13;
Livingston County Road&#13;
Commission, culvert 15.00&#13;
Lee's Standard Ser., Misc. 5.81&#13;
Michigan Vitrified Tile Co.&#13;
Obituaries&#13;
JOHN L GARFIELD&#13;
Funeral services for John I.&#13;
arfield, 62, of 3495 W. M-36,&#13;
inckney, who died suddenly at&#13;
home Thursday night, were&#13;
:ld at 2 p. m. Sunday in the&#13;
warthout Funeral Home, with the&#13;
Rev. William Hainsworth officiating.&#13;
Mr. Garfield was born Sept. 29,&#13;
1889, at Trenton, N. J., the son of&#13;
Benjamin and Margaret Smith&#13;
Garfield.&#13;
He married Eleanor Heinz May&#13;
29, 1944, in Chicago, 111.&#13;
They had lived in this area for&#13;
the past six years, moving here&#13;
from Ortonville, Mich.&#13;
Mr. Garfield was an independent&#13;
brick mason contractor in&#13;
Ann Arbor until his retirement two&#13;
years ago.&#13;
He was a veteran of World War&#13;
II, during which he served in the&#13;
North African theater. He is survived&#13;
by his wife. Burial was in&#13;
Pinckney cemetery.&#13;
S. M. SPEAKE&#13;
S. M. (Mike) Speake, age 60,&#13;
father of Jerry Speake and fatherin-&#13;
law of Emerson Pattison, local&#13;
fryi^inj*frymfn passed away in z&#13;
6.00&#13;
Robert Egeler, marshals&#13;
salary&#13;
Jim's Gulf, Misc&#13;
Motion to adjourn.&#13;
Mildred Ackley, Clerk&#13;
125.00&#13;
19.94&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
I wish to express my sincere&#13;
thanks to the many friends and&#13;
organizations who sent cards, gifts&#13;
and flowers while I was in the hospital&#13;
and convalescing at home. I&#13;
shall always remember your many&#13;
kindnesses to myself and my family.&#13;
Mrs. Gerald Reason&#13;
lowing a long illness. His home&#13;
was at 121 E. Webster, Royal Oak.&#13;
Survivors include his widow, Cecilia,&#13;
two sons Gerald N. of&#13;
Pinckney and John of Detroit,&#13;
three daughters, Mrs. Pattison&#13;
(Jeanne) of Pinckney, Mrs. Frank&#13;
Bartlett and Miss Rita Speake.&#13;
There are 10 grandchildren.&#13;
Funeral services were held Monday&#13;
at one o'clock from the V. E.&#13;
Kinsey Funeral Home in Royal&#13;
Oak. Interment was in White&#13;
Chapel cemetery.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
48 Years Ago&#13;
The third in the. series of lecture&#13;
course programs here next Saturday&#13;
will feature a great woman orator,&#13;
Mrs. Leonaro M. Lake. She has&#13;
been speaking out strongly in the&#13;
past 16 years for better working&#13;
conditions for women and children&#13;
and "equal pay for equal work.*'&#13;
All the editors of Livingston&#13;
Cognty met at the Livingston Hotel&#13;
last week and organized the first&#13;
county Press Association. They are:&#13;
G. L. Adams of the Fowlerville&#13;
Review; John Ryan of the Livingston&#13;
Democrat; Fred Bush of Livingston&#13;
Tidings; George Barnes of&#13;
the Livingston Republican; Seth&#13;
Jacobs of Brighton Argus; Roy&#13;
Caverly of the Pinckney Dispatch.&#13;
G. L. Adams was elected president&#13;
and Roy Caverly, secretary - treasurer.&#13;
Jackson prison now has 804 inmates.&#13;
This is the largest number&#13;
since 1896.&#13;
The town boys of Pinckney will&#13;
meet the High School team for a&#13;
rough football game here on&#13;
Thanksgiving Day.&#13;
Miss Anna Fitzsimmons of&#13;
Pinckney and Edward Gehringer of&#13;
ber 19 at St.&#13;
A movement is on foot to have&#13;
the County road system submitted&#13;
to vote in Livingston County. The&#13;
system is much needed here. Livingston&#13;
is one of the richest counties&#13;
in the state and has the worst&#13;
roads." (Editor's note: this was 48&#13;
years ago?)&#13;
Born to Mr. and Mrs. Mike&#13;
Fitzsimmons of Jackson (former&#13;
Pinckney residents) a ten pound&#13;
son on November 17.&#13;
Church&#13;
tlTHIL BAPTIST CHUtCH&#13;
404* Swar*«* toad&#13;
HOWIll, MICHIGAN&#13;
tabart M. Taylor, Pastor&#13;
Sorvlcos:&#13;
Sunday School 10.00 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worth ip 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Daniol's Band, Young Paopta't&#13;
Group • Sunday 6:00 p.m.&#13;
Evtning Worth ip • Sunday 7.00 p.m.&#13;
Bibla Study, Prayar Malting&#13;
Wadrwsday 7;30 p.m&#13;
COMMUNITY CONOtlOATIONAl&#13;
CHURCH&#13;
Morning Worship 10;45 a.m.&#13;
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.&#13;
Choir rahaarsal Wadnasday a van ing 7:30&#13;
HOnt'SCHUtCH&#13;
U«a11«eana*—l al&#13;
lev. Thews* Mvrpfcy, Patter&#13;
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.&#13;
Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth Choir 6 p.m.&#13;
Evening Service 7 p.m.&#13;
Wednesday senior choir practice 8 p.m.&#13;
Thurs. mid-week prayer service 8:00 p.m.&#13;
O A l l t i A N 1APT1ST CHUtCH&#13;
Sunday School&#13;
Mi y Wh&#13;
Morning Worship&#13;
i Fellowship&#13;
9:45 a.m.&#13;
11:00 a.m.&#13;
Youth fellowship 6:45 p.m.&#13;
Wadnotday night orayar sorvic* 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Evan ing Worship 7:30 p.m.&#13;
ST. M A I Y I CATHOLIC CHUtCH&#13;
Sunday Ma**a«: 6:30, 8:00, 10:00. 11:30&#13;
Waofcd«y Mass 8:00 a.m.&#13;
Novna dovotions tn honor of Our&#13;
Mother of ftrpttuat Htlp on Thursday&#13;
at 7:30 p.m.&#13;
Confessions: Saturday 4:30 to 5:30 and&#13;
7:30 to 9:00 p.m.&#13;
HIAWATHA MACM CHUtCH&#13;
Mrs. Bertha B. Hinckley, 86, of&#13;
8839 Henry Rd., died Wednesday&#13;
at the McPherson Health Center in&#13;
Howell after a long illness.&#13;
She was born May 23, 1875, in&#13;
Arbor township, the daughter of&#13;
William and Mary Lawley Parker.&#13;
On March 19, 1896, in Ann Arbor&#13;
township, she was married to Eddy&#13;
Ray Hinckley. For 60 years the&#13;
couple lived on a farm near Buck&#13;
Lake in Hamburg township. The&#13;
last three years they had lived with&#13;
their daughter, Mrs. Beatrice Van-&#13;
Horn of Pinckney. Mr. Hinckley&#13;
died last March.&#13;
Mrs. Hinckley had been a member&#13;
of St. Stephen's Episcopal&#13;
Church of Hamburg for 60 years.&#13;
Prior to tha^she had been a member&#13;
of St. Andrew's Episcopal&#13;
Church of Ann Arbor. She was a&#13;
past president of St. Stephen's&#13;
Guild, a member of the Lakeland&#13;
King's Daughters and the Webster&#13;
Grange.&#13;
Survivors include a daughter,&#13;
Mrs. Van Horn of Pinckney; a&#13;
brother, Frederick Parker of Ypsilanti?&#13;
and a sister, Miss Minnie&#13;
Parker of Ann Arbor. A son, Lloyd&#13;
Alton Hinckley, died at the age of&#13;
two in 1911.&#13;
Funeral services were held at 2&#13;
.m. Saturday at the St. Stephens&#13;
jChurch in Hamburg with Dealioness&#13;
Olive Robinson officiating.&#13;
Burial was in Hamburg Cemetery.&#13;
/&#13;
tibia School&#13;
Young Pooplo&#13;
10:00 a.m.&#13;
114)0 a.m.&#13;
6:445 p.m.&#13;
8:00 p.m.&#13;
Beys aVigad* (12 • I t yrs.), Mon. 6:45 p.m.&#13;
ttfed., Pnkm 4 "tayor Sorvict M 0 p.m.&#13;
tr. »Auri uttianm CMSMCH&#13;
(Ml&#13;
i . M-Mb&#13;
SdMd «k£Mblt CtMt t:443 ££.&#13;
^•^^^^a^^a^^^^^a^pB^^^a^ni* a^^^^w ^^^a^Bja^^p^s? ^^B^^B^s^^ar^p^paj ^ a ^ v o w ^v^^ar&#13;
• 4 S B or Hickory 9.7061&#13;
CA4VA1Y&#13;
№00&#13;
114 0 •.« .&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22, 1961&#13;
5»&#13;
1893—196 1&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-283 1&#13;
Membe r F.D.I .C. I&#13;
DEXTER&#13;
SAVINGS&#13;
BANK&#13;
DEXTER. MICHIGA N&#13;
LAVEY HARDWARE&#13;
114 W. MAI N PH. UP 8-322 1 PINCKNEY&#13;
W I N T E R H O U R S&#13;
Monda y thru Saturda y&#13;
OPEN: 8:3 0 a. m.&#13;
CLOSE: 5:3d p. m.&#13;
Closed Sundays&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
The latest Navy enlistments announced&#13;
by Navy Recruiter, Alex&#13;
Enesey, of the Howcll branch station&#13;
are Larry Francis Monkress of&#13;
Howell; John Theron Ruthruff of&#13;
Perry; Charles Edward Cool of&#13;
Webberville and Richard Daniel&#13;
Runyan of Holly. Monkress and&#13;
Ruthruff enlisted in the aviation&#13;
field of the training program and&#13;
will take their training at San Diego&#13;
and Great Lakes, respectively. Runyan&#13;
who entered the graduate seaman&#13;
branch will get his basic training&#13;
at San Diego, Calif., and Cool,&#13;
also in graduate seaman branch of&#13;
the training program will go to&#13;
Great Lakes, Illinois.&#13;
Bob Haarer of Hamburg, a student&#13;
at Eastern New Mexico University,&#13;
appeared in the University's&#13;
third annual water show there this&#13;
past week end. He participated in&#13;
two acts: the "Outerspace", underwater&#13;
synchronized swim and as&#13;
one of the "Seven Dwarfs" in "Hi-&#13;
Ho" a synchronized swim for men.&#13;
"Lost Horizon" was the produc-&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
STATi OF MICHIGAN&#13;
Tht Probate Court for the County of&#13;
Livingston.&#13;
h the ERNEST&#13;
tk&gt;n presented by the senior class&#13;
of South Lyon high school as their&#13;
senior play for this year. There&#13;
were two performances, Friday and&#13;
Saturday nights.&#13;
The Brighton high school seniors&#13;
chose "Curtain Going Up" as their&#13;
play they presented last week end.&#13;
Dave Birchmeir was named the&#13;
most valuable Dreadnaught football&#13;
play at Dexter High school's annual&#13;
football dinner. He was also&#13;
proclaimed the best backfield man.&#13;
Jim Smith, Walter Pish and Mike&#13;
Webb were named tri-captains for&#13;
the coming year.&#13;
The Chelsea Jaycees won first&#13;
place with a 2,920 series by team&#13;
members: Winchester, Eder, Laurdon,&#13;
Christ well and Hopkins, in the&#13;
Jaycee District IV Bowling tourna&#13;
ment held there last week.&#13;
The Fowlerville high school&#13;
Gladiators finished their football&#13;
October 31, 1961.&#13;
Preient, Honorable FRANCIS E. BARRON,&#13;
judge of Probate.&#13;
Notice is Hereby Given, That alt creditor*&#13;
of said deceased we required to preient&#13;
their claims in writing and under oath, to&#13;
said Court, and to serve a copy thereof&#13;
upon Clarence C. Greer of 530 Oldfield,&#13;
Alpena, Michigan, fiduciary of said estate,&#13;
and that such claims will be heard by&#13;
said Court at the Probate Office on&#13;
January 9, 1962, at ten A.M.&#13;
It is Ordered, That notice thereof be&#13;
given by publication of a copy hereof&#13;
for three weeks consecutively previous to&#13;
said day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispajch,&#13;
and that the fiduciary cause a copy&#13;
of this notice to be served upon e a c h&#13;
known party in interest at his last known&#13;
address by registered, certified or ordinary&#13;
mail (with proof of mailing), or by per*&#13;
tonal service at least fourteen (14) days&#13;
prior to such hearing.&#13;
FRANCIS E. BARRON, Judge of Probate&#13;
A true copy:&#13;
HELEN M. GOULD, Register of Probate&#13;
I. liackson and R. W. Beaudry, Attorneys&#13;
Address: Bertrand Blda., Alpena, Mich.&#13;
4 5 - 4 6 - 4 7&#13;
of&#13;
IIATI Of MICHIGAN&#13;
The Probate Court for the County&#13;
Livingston. ^ .&#13;
In the Matter of the Estate of LOT I&#13;
BOBON, Deceased.&#13;
At a session of said Court, held on&#13;
October 31, 1961.&#13;
Present, Honorable FRANCIS E BARRON,&#13;
Judge of Probate.&#13;
Notice is Hereby Given, That all creditors&#13;
of said deceased *f required to present&#13;
their claims in writing and under&#13;
oath to sajd Court, and to serve a copy&#13;
thereof upon Alfred Bobon of Pinckney,&#13;
Michigan, fiduciary of said estate, and that&#13;
such claims will be heard by said Court&#13;
at the Probate Office on-January 9, 1962,&#13;
at ten A.M.&#13;
It is Ordered, That notice thereof be&#13;
given by publication of • copy hereof for&#13;
three weeks consecutively previous to said&#13;
day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch,&#13;
and that the fiduciary cause a cqpy of this&#13;
notice.to be served upon each known party&#13;
in interest at his last known address by&#13;
registered, certified or ordinary mail (with&#13;
proof of mailing), or by personal service&#13;
at least fourteen (14) days prior to such&#13;
hearing.&#13;
FRANCIS E. BARRON, Judge of Probate&#13;
A true copy:&#13;
HELEN M. GOULD, Register of Probate.&#13;
Hiram R, Smith, Attorney/&#13;
Address: Howell, Michigan&#13;
4 5 - 4 6 - 4 7&#13;
champs with Haslett.&#13;
Joseph C. Cox, Fowlerville a t -&#13;
torney, has been named as research&#13;
consulant on the staff of Dr. Charles&#13;
Joiner, co-director of research&#13;
for the Constitutional Convention.&#13;
The appointment of Cox w a s&#13;
made by Stephen S. Nisbet, Pi;esiannounced&#13;
"By" I homas GT Sfiarpe&#13;
(R) of Howell, delegate from t h e&#13;
Shiawassee - Livingston representative&#13;
district.&#13;
A graduate of the University of&#13;
Maryland and the University of&#13;
Detroit Law School, Cox has served&#13;
the past five years as research&#13;
counsel with the Michigan Legis&#13;
lature.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Cox and their nine&#13;
children live at 5533 N. Fowlerville&#13;
Road.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22. 1961&#13;
J. V. Brady Named as&#13;
Michigan Week Chairman&#13;
Joseph V. Brady, executive vice&#13;
president of Citizens Mutual Automobile&#13;
Insurance Company of&#13;
Howell, will serve as Livingston&#13;
County chairman for the 1962&#13;
Michigan Week, to be observed&#13;
next May 20-26.&#13;
The appointment was announced&#13;
by John R. Meadows, vice president&#13;
of Ann Arbor Bank, regional&#13;
chairman for Livingston, Washtenaw,&#13;
Monroe and Lenawee counties.&#13;
Brady will begin organizing&#13;
county committees immediately to&#13;
nsure adequate time for the longrange&#13;
planning so essential to success&#13;
of the ninth annual Michigan&#13;
Weejc observance in all communities.&#13;
McPHERSON HKALTH&#13;
at a meeting held Tuesday, November&#13;
14 that the topitaJ has been&#13;
approved by the Joint&#13;
on Accreditation.&#13;
This approval is dated for a period&#13;
of one year. The hospital will&#13;
again be inspected at the end of&#13;
this year and is again approved, accreditation&#13;
can be given for a&#13;
It took two acres of paper to&#13;
season as Ingham County co-build the world's largest inter-&#13;
Meadows said other regional appointments&#13;
are being made as rapidly&#13;
as possible and that planning is&#13;
off to its earliest start.&#13;
Chairman Brady is a graduate of&#13;
The University of Michigan and&#13;
holds a teaching certificate from&#13;
Wayne State University.&#13;
Extremely active in community&#13;
and state - wide affairs, he holds&#13;
such posts as: director and past&#13;
president, University of Michigan&#13;
Alumni Association; director and&#13;
past president, Michigan Inter-Industry&#13;
Safety Foundation; member&#13;
of the Michigan Citizens Highway&#13;
Safety Action Committee and the&#13;
Michigan Industrial Ambassadors&#13;
Committee; director, M i c h i g a n • ,-, . 4. ,.&#13;
State Chamber of Commerce; past m n&#13;
C o n , f U C t™ . ? m t r a c * t o t e l 1 1 ?&#13;
district governor, Rotary Interna- m O r e t h a n $ 2 ™l!ion,were ™ a r *&#13;
three year period.&#13;
Mrs. Zimmerman, when making&#13;
announcement stated that the&#13;
&gt;mmission commeoded the hos-&#13;
4&#13;
rving of accreditation and for the&#13;
KKpitaJ's efforts to improve t h e&#13;
quality of patient care.&#13;
change.&#13;
Construction plans and blueprints&#13;
for the interchange at th2&#13;
junction of Interstate 96 and US-&#13;
23 freeways at Brighton would, if&#13;
laid side-by-side, cover an area of&#13;
two acres.&#13;
If laid end-to-end, the plans&#13;
and blueprints would make a strip&#13;
long.&#13;
The interchange plans required&#13;
11.557 sheets measuring 24 by 36&#13;
inches and 10, 230 sheets meas*&#13;
uring 11 by 18 inches.&#13;
The plans were printed for contractors&#13;
who bid on the various I&#13;
interchange contracts, as well as|&#13;
Highway Department personnel&#13;
who worked on the projects.&#13;
Each set of prints included 155&#13;
engineering drawings, which were&#13;
done by the Highway Department's&#13;
Engineering and Design&#13;
sections.&#13;
It took Michael Baillos. Supervisor&#13;
of the Reproduction Section.&#13;
tional; director and treasurer, Citizens&#13;
For Michigan.&#13;
and nine other employees, a total&#13;
of 112 hours to print the gigantic&#13;
order.&#13;
The interchange, located just&#13;
east of Brighton in Livingston&#13;
County, covers an area of 171&#13;
acres and includes elfcht bridges&#13;
and 1.3 miles-~oi four and six-lane&#13;
high way?:--: _ _&#13;
ed for the interchange last January.&#13;
The Interstat^oW tytoass of&#13;
Brighton, the easfcfflfest SCJ&amp;Dfi of&#13;
¥ interchange, i&amp;kpected to be&#13;
completed and o ^ k d U&gt; traffic&#13;
by the end of this&#13;
Resident of ftfiNhigan paid&#13;
average of $44.95wch in sales t$x&#13;
during the fiscal y&amp;r which&#13;
June 30, according to the R&lt;&#13;
Department,. /&#13;
TOYS - TOYS - TO*&#13;
AT CLEARANCE PRICES !&#13;
— ALSO —&#13;
Reductions on small electric appliances&#13;
CONGRATULATION^&#13;
to the Pirates football team, coach -00 community&#13;
on their perfect season.&#13;
HAMBURG&#13;
!-•».'&#13;
J r '&#13;
^&#13;
$i&lt;?&#13;
i&#13;
.$60 5&#13;
0M0NAGO&#13;
$57.7&#13;
$79,7&#13;
r&#13;
r j&#13;
L [":• AlGU .J&#13;
iua&#13;
$19.1&#13;
MOtTOAOl SAll&#13;
Dtfault having been mad* in tntf&#13;
conditions of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Ruttell&#13;
B. Buckner and Dorothy V. Buckner,&#13;
hit wife, as mortgagors, to Thurber&#13;
Cornell, at mortgagee, and reworded in&#13;
the office of the ftegitter of Deeds for&#13;
ttvlngttorr Courtfy, Michigan, April 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber 155 at page 626; which&#13;
taid mortgage wat thereafter and on&#13;
December 16, 1954, assigned by J. Henry&#13;
Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administrators&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cor.&#13;
nell, deceased, to Esther D. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in Liber 298 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January 17, 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Athey, by assignment&#13;
recorded on the seme date in&#13;
Liber 299 at page 306 thenof;&#13;
Notice is hereby given that satd&#13;
mortgage will be foreclosed pursuant to&#13;
power of saJe and the premises therein&#13;
described as land in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wtt:&#13;
The north half of the southeast quarter&#13;
of Section twenty-six (26). m Township&#13;
4 North, Range 4 east. Michigan.&#13;
leno. more&#13;
of way of&#13;
also exto&#13;
Consumers Power&#13;
in Liber 1*7 of&#13;
at page 206. Livingston County&#13;
ship 4 Norm. Range 4 easr.&#13;
containing eighty acres of la&#13;
far less, excepting the right «&#13;
{he Aim Arbor Railroad and&#13;
$90.7&#13;
$50.2 L . ^&#13;
OttA $51.6&#13;
$100.4&#13;
MACIMAC&#13;
$69 196.2&#13;
$76&#13;
$62.7&#13;
'*"'&#13;
$34.4&#13;
Q&#13;
MICHIGAN'S HIGHWAY NEEDS&#13;
1960-1980&#13;
$60&#13;
CMMUVCJB&#13;
i».&#13;
$»»• 1$l&#13;
MCON*&#13;
$«*&#13;
STATE HIGHWAYS,&#13;
COUNTY ROADS, CITY STREETS&#13;
(IN MILLIONS)&#13;
t 31.4 $243 $40.6&#13;
^-.-—.—J • &gt;&#13;
|M.t j ( M j $J0.JJ $51.5 I $33.7&#13;
• — • i ' • ' - • • • • • • • 1&#13;
THE MICHIGAN HIGHWAY NEEDS&#13;
TUDY reports it wW cfjff m •ftimat&#13;
$•5^ | $67.1&#13;
A&#13;
$61.7&#13;
GAAlO $S87&#13;
be sold&#13;
highest bidder&#13;
f L i i&#13;
at public auction to Hit&#13;
for^asti by tht Sheriff&#13;
of" Livingston Coouunnttvy,. Miicchhiiggaann,, at fJn&#13;
W K front door of tht Court&#13;
11, M M m&#13;
Van Winkle, Van Winkle^&#13;
$85.9 I $236.2 . J____.&#13;
$378.9&#13;
b#tw«#n&#13;
1960 and 1980 for construction,&#13;
maintftfianc* and #ngin#&gt;#ring of&#13;
itato highways, county roads and&#13;
city itroots. ___&#13;
$761&#13;
•226 7 i $777&#13;
$152 2 i $64.5 ;$ 119.3 | $275 j $94 | $881.2&#13;
. 1 i&#13;
New Note* Fi 3 1 1&#13;
Mn. Carl Friskey of&#13;
Arizona, is at the home of her par*&#13;
ents, the Arthur Srofrhf of Hamburg.&#13;
She wiU spend a week with&#13;
them. Mr. Smith returned home&#13;
from the University hospital l a s t&#13;
week and getting along fairly.&#13;
The Charles Kneeshaws of Flint&#13;
and the Richard Hollenbecks spent&#13;
this past weekend at the Hollerbeck&#13;
cottage near Hale.&#13;
POLAROID&#13;
CAMERAS&#13;
10% Discount&#13;
OFF REG. PRICE&#13;
OFF REGULAR PRICE&#13;
With this Ad&#13;
Nov. 24-30, 1961 only&#13;
CLEARANCE&#13;
of oil 1960 model&#13;
The third anual water show at&#13;
xn New Mexico University&#13;
which was presented last week featured&#13;
a local boy, Bob Haarer, son&#13;
of the George Haarers of H a l l&#13;
goad on Silver Lake. He was presented&#13;
in the Colorful Seven&#13;
Dwarfs "Hi Ho", a synchronized&#13;
swim by men, as well as other features.&#13;
Bob is a graduate of A n n&#13;
Arbor High School in the 1961&#13;
dass.&#13;
Francis Shehan, Jim Myma and&#13;
Roy Hoeft hunted in the Vanderbilt&#13;
area the first few days of the&#13;
hunting season. Walt DeWolf and&#13;
son, Jerry hunted near Hale l a s t&#13;
week.&#13;
Mrs. Howard Green and son,&#13;
Jeff, and daughter Jennifer, spent&#13;
the weekend with the HoHis White&#13;
family. ^The Greens were former&#13;
residents of this area, Mr. Green&#13;
was with the local Conservation department&#13;
until he was transferred&#13;
to Unionville a few years ago.&#13;
20% DISCOUI&#13;
OFF REGULAR PRICE&#13;
TV TUBES TESTED&#13;
J E R R Y ' S&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Av*.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 330,&#13;
The Raymond Lampes of Maga-|&#13;
dore, Ohio and Mrs. Dorothea&#13;
Hart were Sunday visitors of the&#13;
HoUis Whites.&#13;
Mrs. Gerald DeWolf and daughter,&#13;
Shirley, and Mrs. Duaae Waterbury&#13;
called on Mn. DeWolf s&#13;
mother, Mrs. June Baschal of Livonia-&#13;
Mrs. Baschal fell and injured&#13;
her back recently.&#13;
Mrs. Douglas Smith of Pettysvilte&#13;
road slipped and fell two steps&#13;
down from her kitchen to a landing&#13;
which leads to the basement,&#13;
the result was a split bone in her&#13;
ankle. It will require a cast for&#13;
many weeks.&#13;
Mrs. George Marowsky, Mrs.&#13;
Leslie Case and Mrs. Hoilis White&#13;
will attend the 15th Anniversary of&#13;
the Friendly Neighbors of the&#13;
Kings Daughter Circle which will&#13;
be held at the home of Mrs. Merrill&#13;
Buckley of Parkers Corners on&#13;
Monday night. Mrs. Marowsky is&#13;
the County President of the Kings&#13;
Daughters. Mrs. Vase is secretary&#13;
and Mrs. White is the local president.&#13;
Mrs. Raymond Smith of Owosso&#13;
attended the funeral on Saturday&#13;
of Mrs. Bertha Hinckfcy, mother&#13;
of Mrs. Clifford Van Horn. Mrs.&#13;
Smith is the former Eva Wenderlien&#13;
who taught at the Pettysviile&#13;
school and lived in the Rush Lake&#13;
area for years.&#13;
getting set for bigger profits&#13;
next season by broadcasting&#13;
and plowing down this fall the&#13;
extra fertilizer needed for topincome&#13;
yields of corn and small&#13;
grains.&#13;
"Fall applications take the&#13;
heat off the spring rush when&#13;
farmers are at their busiest/'&#13;
says the Midwest division of the&#13;
National Plant Food Institute.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22, 1961&#13;
How tlii nation's wtaflMi&#13;
build&#13;
in buying power&#13;
At the atari of World War n . they had a&#13;
- - ^ — to attach* •J^mi-an*&#13;
help meet a dire seed of&#13;
igh the promotion of&#13;
• • ! — • . Few groups in&#13;
aa wall qualified to promote flte5gTOaoldoyer&#13;
fall their&#13;
•peed AeVictory.&#13;
1941 meant ha** iuwatod $121 bflUoa&#13;
to Sax , Bond., apent. $78 bfllko far the&#13;
tfaina u y wanted aa the Bonde matured,&#13;
S d v e t ill holding a lar« $*8bfllion reaerve&#13;
aa Laying power for thaftrtara.&#13;
IL&amp;8avin|a&#13;
a pm&#13;
ana it b&#13;
Bwy Bond you&#13;
H45.&#13;
ie a abate in a&#13;
Tuberculin Tests at Schools&#13;
Are Now Completed&#13;
During the month of October,&#13;
tuberculin skin tests were offered&#13;
to aH school children and personnel&#13;
in Livingston County s c h o o l&#13;
systems. The response has been&#13;
most satisfactory regarding this.&#13;
Out of 9,397 enrolled school&#13;
children, 8,055, * ox 85.7% were&#13;
tested and read. Thtre were 39 reactors,&#13;
or 0.5% of those tested and&#13;
read.&#13;
Of Pinckney public school's total&#13;
enrollment of 1218, 1017 were&#13;
tested and only one reactor was&#13;
found, or 0.1% of those tested.&#13;
At St Mary's, where 153 are&#13;
enrolled, 131 were tested and read&#13;
and there were no reactors.&#13;
The majority of kindergarten&#13;
children were tested at the time of&#13;
pre - school physicals as required&#13;
and therefore were not tested at&#13;
this time.&#13;
Of 196 adults tested, 32 showed&#13;
a positive reaction. It is natural to&#13;
expect adults to show a higher percentage&#13;
of positive reactors due to&#13;
a greater opportunity for contact&#13;
with the tuberculosis bacillus.&#13;
What is a positive reactor? This&#13;
is a person who has had the tuberculosis&#13;
bacilli in his body. It does&#13;
not necessarily mean active disease.&#13;
A person may have ingested the&#13;
bacilli, fought the disease successfully&#13;
and show no signs on a chest&#13;
x-ray of active disease. In order&#13;
to be sure of this, all positive reacton&#13;
will be x-rayed.&#13;
This program has been made&#13;
possible through the cooperation of&#13;
many persons. Volunteer help has&#13;
been provided by the nurses and&#13;
parents of Livingston County. The&#13;
physicians who did the testing also&#13;
gave wilingy of their tlime. Sterilization&#13;
of equipment was done by&#13;
the McPherson Community Health&#13;
Center. Supplies were furnished by&#13;
the Michigan Tuberculosis Association&#13;
and the Michigan Department&#13;
of Health who also has provided&#13;
funds for the hiring of an R.N. to&#13;
assist our county nurse in planning&#13;
and follow-up of the program.&#13;
Dorothy Dinkel, R.N., of Pinckney,&#13;
has assisted Judith Hubbel,&#13;
R.N., Public Health Nurse, in this&#13;
capacity.&#13;
Buying U.S. Savings Bonds&#13;
on the Payroll Plan makes&#13;
member&#13;
W. It KimMe, Executive Vice&#13;
President and Cashier of The&#13;
Brighton State Bank and a Brighton&#13;
Councilman, today announced&#13;
that he ted invited Gerald Pbeuw&#13;
(photo above) to handle two speaking&#13;
engagements in the Brighton&#13;
fact 8 million Americans&#13;
buy about $2 billion in U.S.&#13;
Bonds each year just this&#13;
way.&#13;
This year millions of Americans&#13;
will buy about $3V2&#13;
billion worth of Series E&#13;
U.S. Savings Bonds where&#13;
thev work or bank.&#13;
Visit our Cosmetic Counter&#13;
for COLOGNES, Dusting&#13;
I Powder, Toilet Water.&#13;
% j j u&#13;
Desert HoweF i ^ .&#13;
ISfeM ^ 4711 &gt;*y\&#13;
[wood&#13;
Phelaa Is Assistant Manager —&#13;
Public Information Santas of the&#13;
Michigan B a n k e r s Association&#13;
whose beadquarters are at Lansing.&#13;
The first meeting wfl be at&#13;
10:15 Tuesday, November 28&#13;
when Mr. Phefan wai address the&#13;
senior students under ass ajuldanee&#13;
of Mrs. Afice Wison, instructor of&#13;
Government Studies at Brighton&#13;
High School&#13;
Hie second presentation wffl be&#13;
at the regular luncheon meeting of&#13;
the Brighton Rotary d a b&#13;
Tuesday&#13;
DID YOU KNOWFOUJOHERS&#13;
OF tUDONA&#13;
PRACTICED ORAL HYGCNE.&#13;
H WAS H 6 CUSTOM 10 US£&#13;
A TOOTHBRUSH AND&#13;
WATER REGULARLY!&#13;
Jge&#13;
Windtenj Jealousy&#13;
Christmas 7* July&#13;
RR Y&#13;
V M ! N S T&#13;
Specializing in Fine&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
Wl t U f t * COMPUTI&#13;
HOMiS 4 OAIAOtS&#13;
Carpenter Work of All Kinds&#13;
Claude Swarthoiri&#13;
UP 8-3106&#13;
D6UCKXJS--JONATHON—MdNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
4880 W. M.36 UP 8-9756&#13;
NOTES PROM ELEMENTARY SCHOOL FOURTH GRADE—&#13;
One of our reading groups completed&#13;
their first reading took.&#13;
Now they are reading Friends Far&#13;
and Near.&#13;
On Friday we made Pilgrims&#13;
and turkeys for Thanksgiving decorations.&#13;
We are sorry that Lee Smith is&#13;
ill. We hope she will be able to return&#13;
soon.&#13;
For our study of geography we&#13;
made a model of a dike in Holland.&#13;
Several of the boys made small&#13;
models at home.&#13;
David Walton celebrated his&#13;
birthday on November 13th, Terry&#13;
Lynn Gustafson, and Courtland&#13;
Geib on November 16.&#13;
* • •&#13;
SdCTH GRADE—&#13;
We had a spelling bee and the&#13;
winner was Bob Wylie and runner&#13;
up was Bob Potter.&#13;
Susan Baughn is working on a&#13;
pantomiming act. We all liked seeing&#13;
it.&#13;
we had a different teacher because&#13;
Mrs. Erhard was ill and, we are&#13;
all glad she is back. In science, we&#13;
are reading "Growing Up" and&#13;
taking tests on this chapter.&#13;
This week our classes exchanged&#13;
pictures.&#13;
We hope everyone has a good&#13;
Thanksgiving.&#13;
• * •&#13;
EIGHTH GRADE—&#13;
Douglas&#13;
Wednesday, we had election of&#13;
officers. They are as follows: Richard&#13;
Heller, President; Jeff Hendee,&#13;
Vice - President; Linda Kaminski,&#13;
Jack. Haas, Treasurer.&#13;
ATR&#13;
1769&#13;
Wed., Ttmrs., Fit, Sat&#13;
Nov. 22-23-24-25&#13;
Matinee Thanksgiving Day at&#13;
2:45 P. M. Continuous&#13;
M I C , I * I / X T&#13;
Sun., Moo., Tue.&#13;
Nov. 26-27-28&#13;
Matinee Sunday at 2:30&#13;
P. M. Continuous ansscisist&#13;
OILLMAN&#13;
Wed., Thun&gt;, Fri.&#13;
Nov. 29-30, Dec. 1-2&#13;
GARY COOPEI&#13;
Fir* * o w at 6:45 P. M.&#13;
Secoad Show at 9:15 P. M.&#13;
TEACHER'S CLUB NEWS&#13;
At the November meeting of the&#13;
Pinckney Elementary Teacher's&#13;
Club, a representative of the&#13;
Washington National Insurance&#13;
Company presented a group plan&#13;
Mrs. Tasch has been reading&#13;
Tom Sawyer to us and finished it&#13;
today. We really liked the book.&#13;
Now she started to read Huckleberry&#13;
Finn.&#13;
• • *&#13;
Melba Danieb was chosen Service&#13;
Squad girl of the month. Richard&#13;
Hefler was chosen Safety Patrol&#13;
boy of the month for October.&#13;
The sponsors are proud of the&#13;
work these boys and girls are doing.&#13;
MRS. ERHARDS ROOM 1 BAD TOLZ, GERMANY&#13;
This week Monday and Tuesday!Army Specialist Four Benjamin A.&#13;
Marchese, 22, son of Mr. and&#13;
for income insura&#13;
Following the meeting, the&#13;
teachers presented Miss Pcnrose&#13;
with a wedding gift. Refreshments&#13;
were served. i v&#13;
roll. They are: Lind^Kamimki,&#13;
Greg Preston, Pat Scott, JoAnne&#13;
Shugg, Bruce Melby, Martha Nash,&#13;
and Donna Parlette.&#13;
In arithmetic we are reviewing&#13;
percents.&#13;
THIRD GRADE—&#13;
Mrs. Henry&#13;
Our Parent Conference was very&#13;
successful. Only five families did&#13;
not come to our room.&#13;
We had finished our weather&#13;
unit and had our books made to&#13;
show our parents. It was the first&#13;
time many of us had searched for&#13;
information to make up a book.&#13;
We have an ant colony in our&#13;
room so we are reading for information&#13;
on them.&#13;
In arithmetic we began column&#13;
adding and checking. Monday we&#13;
study Roman Numerals.&#13;
One of our reading stories was&#13;
about a terrible dragon. We drew&#13;
pictures and painted them. Some&#13;
of them are so weird we are glad&#13;
they are not alive.&#13;
We hope everyone has a happy&#13;
Thanksgiving vacation.&#13;
* * *&#13;
Craig Campbell has a new beagle&#13;
puppy.&#13;
Mike Clark has moved to a&#13;
new house.&#13;
Greg Pena's baby sister is going&#13;
to get the TB test.&#13;
Mrs. William Marchese, 10611&#13;
Pine Bluff ave., Hamburg, Mich.,&#13;
graduated from the Seventh U. S.&#13;
Army Non-Commissioned Officer&#13;
(NCO) Academy in Bad Tolz, Germany,&#13;
Nov. 3.&#13;
Specialist Marchese received four&#13;
week of training in various subjects&#13;
with emphasis on leadership and&#13;
combat tactics. The purpose of the&#13;
academy is to broaden the professional&#13;
knowledge of the soldier and&#13;
to instill in him the self-confidence&#13;
and sense of responsibility required&#13;
to make him a capable leader of&#13;
Nurnberg, entered the Army in&#13;
June 1959, completed basic training&#13;
at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.&#13;
and arrived overseas the following&#13;
April.&#13;
He attended Ann Arbor High&#13;
school.&#13;
Library News&#13;
We are beginning our winter&#13;
reading program. All children in the&#13;
community are invited to participate.&#13;
Progress will be recorded in&#13;
a Ski-Jump device — climbing to&#13;
the summit and length of jump&#13;
coining down.&#13;
New for adults is Cronin, "The&#13;
Judas Tree." For older boys, who&#13;
are hot rod enthusiasts we have&#13;
"Dragging and Driving*1 by Me-&#13;
Pherson. This book is not only enjoyable&#13;
reading but it gives sound&#13;
advice on safe driving.&#13;
LOCAL BOY COMPLETES&#13;
RESERVE TRAINING COURSE&#13;
Pyt John W. Lang, son of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Harry Lang, 2914 W.&#13;
Shafer rd.t Howell, completed the&#13;
teletype operation course under the&#13;
Reserve Forces Act program at the&#13;
Army Signal Training Center, Fort&#13;
Gordon, Ga., Nov. 3. During the&#13;
eight week course Lang was trained&#13;
to receive and disseminate communications&#13;
using the standard teletype&#13;
set with military keyboard. He&#13;
entered the Army in September,&#13;
1960 and completed basic training&#13;
at Fort Knox, Ky. The 19-year-old&#13;
soldier is a 1961 graduate of Howell&#13;
High School.&#13;
Don Ray of Lakeland, hunting&#13;
near Pinckney shot&#13;
buck on Saturday,&#13;
master of Boy&#13;
a stx-poin&#13;
n is scout&#13;
Troop 58&#13;
rmti&#13;
children will be among the Thanksgiving&#13;
dinner guests at the Harold&#13;
Koch home in Dearborn tomorrow&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22, 1961&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
MEN'S •A" BOWLING&#13;
Jim's Gulf 28&#13;
Velvet Eez 26&#13;
Read Lumber 25V*&#13;
l i e s Standard 24&#13;
Kiwanii 23 Vi&#13;
Van's Motor 23&#13;
Beck's Marathon 21&#13;
Plastics 20&#13;
Lavey Hdwe 20&#13;
Integral Corp. 19&#13;
Altes Beer 13&#13;
ACO, Inc. 13&#13;
12&#13;
14&#13;
18V*&#13;
16&#13;
20V*&#13;
21&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
24&#13;
21&#13;
31&#13;
31&#13;
MEN'S MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
Strohs&#13;
Joe's&#13;
Blatz&#13;
Boyd's&#13;
Pfeiffers&#13;
Falstaff&#13;
22&#13;
22&#13;
21V*&#13;
18 V*&#13;
17&#13;
15&#13;
18&#13;
18&#13;
14 V*&#13;
21V*&#13;
23&#13;
21&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
LEAGUE&#13;
Pinckney General&#13;
Jerry's Drug&#13;
LaRosa Bowl&#13;
Davis Crop Dusting&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
27&#13;
21&#13;
20&#13;
18&#13;
17&#13;
16&#13;
1?&#13;
19&#13;
2C&#13;
23&#13;
24&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
&amp;OWERS&#13;
"Say H with Flowers&#13;
PhoM 284&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN&#13;
You Too&#13;
CAN BE ONE OF OUR&#13;
HAPPY, HAPPY&#13;
Christmas&#13;
Clubbers!&#13;
G E N T I L E HOME&#13;
CENTER&#13;
JUST DEPOSIT WEEKLY:&#13;
BEFORE OHRISTMAS 1962 YOU RECEIVE&#13;
50*... $25.00 $ 3 $150.00&#13;
$ 1 $50.00 $ 5 $250.00&#13;
$ 2 $100.00 $10 $500.00&#13;
PLUMBING&#13;
MODERNIZE YOUR HEATING&#13;
SYSTEM *&#13;
III&#13;
24-Hour Burner Service&#13;
Pinckney Michigan&#13;
Telephone&#13;
AND...&#13;
You Too&#13;
WILL HAVE A MERRIER,&#13;
BlU FREE CHRISTMAS '42&#13;
McPHERSON STATE B&#13;
IOWELL—MNCKNEV&#13;
"Serving Since 1865*&#13;
FOR RENT: Six rooms and bath,&#13;
three bedrooms. Furnished or unfurnished.&#13;
Very reasonable rent&#13;
Can Mrs. Oscar Beck, UP 8-3434,&#13;
UP 8-3524. 47tfc&#13;
FOR SALE: 1956 Great Lakes&#13;
house trailer, 35 feet long. UP 8-&#13;
6648. 47-48p&#13;
FOR SALE: Fuel oil tanks with&#13;
kgs and gauges, $15. Also used&#13;
fuel oil stoves. Call Howell 290.&#13;
47-48c&#13;
FOR SALE: Good used 80 gallon&#13;
electric water heater, $35.00. Max&#13;
Reynolds, 545 Putnam.&#13;
LOST: Two dogs, one black &amp; tan&#13;
and one blue tick &amp; walker. Near&#13;
game reserve. Reward. Alfred Warren,&#13;
ST., 8401 Carbondale, Detroit&#13;
4. TYler 4-6082. 47p&#13;
WANTED: Raw furs — all kinds&#13;
of raw furs, deer skins and beef&#13;
hides. Lucius J. Doyle, 310 Putnam&#13;
St, Phone UP 8-3123.&#13;
WEDDING CAKES: made to order,&#13;
any size, beautifully decorated&#13;
CaM UP 8-3104. 44-47p&#13;
WANTED: Ironings to do in my&#13;
home. UP 8-3496. 44-47p&#13;
ALTERATIONS, sewing, mending,&#13;
costume jewelry repair, leath-&#13;
.jr jwori^ ftngnjffV 64? Hamburg&#13;
except Friday. UP 8-3569. 44p&#13;
REDI - MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscaping.&#13;
Ph. UP 8-6681.&#13;
NEED CASH? We pay cash or&#13;
trade; used guns and outboard motors.&#13;
Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Albers Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howefl, Michigan.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two boys jackets,&#13;
Soe 10. Reasonable price. UP 8-&#13;
3277. 45p&#13;
FOR RENT: Year round cottage,&#13;
2 btdroy^fi excellent condition.&#13;
Lake priv. $65.00. UP 8-3220.&#13;
FOR SALE: Buttercup and Butternut&#13;
squash. Marshall Meabon,&#13;
1135 W. M-36, Pinckney. 4*48p&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom unfurnished&#13;
home at Portage Lake. $50 per&#13;
month. Gerald Reason Real Estate.&#13;
UPtown 8-3564.&#13;
FOR SALE: Apt size electric&#13;
range, $25.00; G. E. refrigerator,&#13;
$20.00; stall shower, $20.00; Due-&#13;
Therm 4-room space heater, $15.00&#13;
Call HA 6-2504. 47c&#13;
WANTED — Your deer hide to&#13;
tan and make into gloves and jackets.&#13;
Deer heads mounted true to&#13;
life. Prices reasonable. Guntzviller&#13;
Taxidermy, Northvillc, Mich. Take&#13;
10 mile, 8 miles east of South Lyon.&#13;
Open Sundays. FI 9-2555.&#13;
47-52c&#13;
Perfect Attendance Records&#13;
Given for High School&#13;
FOR RENT: Near Hamburg, new&#13;
modern, small 4-room house; 15&#13;
minutes from Brighton, or Ann Armonth.&#13;
Call AC 7-5713 evenings.&#13;
47c&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
McPHERSON OIL CO.: Mobilgas,&#13;
Mobiloil, the world's largest&#13;
selling oil Pinckney district manager,&#13;
Jack Reason. Phone UPtown&#13;
8-5532 or UP 8-979 fei&amp;Ll&#13;
Resolved that the Livingston&#13;
County Board of Supervisors authorize&#13;
the Detention Home Committee&#13;
to solicit bids for new cars for&#13;
the Livingston County Sheriffs Department,&#13;
as below:&#13;
1. Two cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
2. One car without trade-in.&#13;
3. Three cars with two trade-ins.&#13;
These bids to be made on cars&#13;
that will meet specifications filed&#13;
at the Livingston County Sheriffs&#13;
office.&#13;
These bids to be filed with the&#13;
Livingston County Clerk before&#13;
December 8th, 1961. at 4:00 p.m.&#13;
rmm&#13;
Sept 5ft . Oct 13,19*1&#13;
Twelfth Grade — Don Ackfcy,&#13;
Steve Aschenbrcnner, Don Barker,&#13;
Bob Beck, Paul Burg, Roy Carpenter,&#13;
David Carver, Gerald Darrow,&#13;
James DeWolf, Jerry DeWolf,&#13;
Claudia Douglas, Claudia Garr,&#13;
Ned Hall, Bill fteaton, Bruce Henry,&#13;
Ron Hollis, Sharron HoUister,&#13;
Judy Janowski, Jeff Linden, Leslie&#13;
McAfee, Michael Manns, Denise&#13;
Mower, Rachel Nash, Mary Pena,&#13;
Carol Pierzinski, Grace Poulson,&#13;
Kathy Reason, Mickey Ritter, Terry&#13;
Rowell, Julie Trumbull, Barbara&#13;
Waterbury, William Waterbury,&#13;
Bob Williams, Jack Young.&#13;
Eleventh Grade: Alice Allen,&#13;
Mary Lee Aschenbrenner, Pat Bays&#13;
John Biery, Alice Bryan, Steve&#13;
Chamberlain, Dorothy Clark, John&#13;
Colone, Shirley Czerwinski, Charles&#13;
DeWolf, Ralph Emery, Lee Ann&#13;
Frederick, Ronald Haines, Gerald&#13;
HoweU, Roy Kinsey, Roberta Logan,&#13;
Dennie Mason, Donald Mc-&#13;
Michael, Rita Miller, Rebecca Morris,&#13;
Caroline Nicholes, Jesse Petty,&#13;
Gerald Pike, Marie Rawden, Pat&#13;
Richardson, Nancy Read, Sue Ann&#13;
Scott, Susan Cepulveda, John&#13;
Singer, Mary Ellen Singer, Ronald&#13;
Singer, Gary Szalwinski, Irwina&#13;
Tait, Rubeelee Thornton, Larry&#13;
gey, Larry Bierwald, Jim Barker,&#13;
Richard Blades, Bonnie Bond,&#13;
Catherine Buda, Thomas Chambers,&#13;
Tim Clark, George Colone,&#13;
Sharon Courdway, Karen Downing,&#13;
Danny Doyle, Gary Doyle, Robert&#13;
Darrow, Bruce Frederick, Delbert&#13;
Fritz, Sharon Gallup, Maynard&#13;
Garrett, Larry Gyde, John Haarer,&#13;
Judy Haines, Linda Haney, Loretta&#13;
Haney, Pam Hoeft, Donna Hoi&#13;
lister, Wayne Howell, Gary Hull,&#13;
Larry Hull, LaVern Hunt, Bar&#13;
bara Johnson, Suzanne Kettel, Jack&#13;
Kitchen, Duane Knapp, Don La&#13;
Belle, Fred Lindsay, John Mayne,&#13;
Shirley Mitchell, Greg Pena, Carol&#13;
Pietila, James Ruggles, Nancy Rutter,&#13;
Diane Schenden, Elma Kay&#13;
Shugg, Gail Smith, Jane Stenke,&#13;
Gerald Sullivan, Dennis Thumm,&#13;
William Timm, Cheryl Van Norman,&#13;
Gary Warner, Dan Waterbury,&#13;
Roy White, Jim Wicker, Carmen&#13;
Bonsai r.&#13;
EARN $ 5 0 &lt; £ FOR YOUR GROUP&#13;
DURING THIS SENSATIONAL - OFFER&#13;
«MMKKS..JUST PUM GOOD HiSNESS&#13;
HERE'S HOW THIS POPULAR PLAN WORKS&#13;
You S e l l . . . 100 Bottles of World-Famous Watkins&#13;
4-oz. Double Strength Imitation Vanilla At The&#13;
Low Price of $.89 each—Giving You A Total of&#13;
$89.00.&#13;
Your Profit . . . The 100 Bottles of Vanilla Will&#13;
Cost You 144.00. Subtracting This Amount From&#13;
The $89.00 Total—Your Profit is $45.00.&#13;
No Cash Needed . . . You Can Get Your 100&#13;
Bottles on 30-day Consignment Without Any Cash&#13;
Outlay. However, Early Payment Will Give You&#13;
SPECIAL $ 5 3 4 BONUS&#13;
If You Pay Cash For Your Vanilla Shipment or&#13;
Settle Within Two Weeks . . . You Receive SIX&#13;
BOTTLES FREE or $5.34 Extra Profit—Making&#13;
Your Total Profit $50.34.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 22, 1961&#13;
Ninth Grade: Margaret Ackley,&#13;
Joseph Basydk), Larry Baughn,&#13;
Rose Marie Belcher, Roger A.&#13;
Bonner, Niane BowHn, Patricia A.&#13;
Breningstall, Susan Buggy, Floyd&#13;
Caldwell, Joyce Cocanowcr, Mary&#13;
Cosgray, Ronald Courdway, Michael&#13;
Czerwinski, Diane Darrow,&#13;
Harold Darrow, Joe Darrow, Katherine&#13;
Davis, Sharon Derryberry,&#13;
James Easen, Joan Eichman, Larry&#13;
Emery, Tonya Farris, Terri Fulkerson,&#13;
Kenneth Garr, Paul Gray,&#13;
Clyde Gow, John Hass, Mike Hardon,&#13;
Gary Henry, Shirley Hikman,&#13;
Dennis Hollister, Nancy Hollister,&#13;
Robert Jones, Connie Keiser, Barbara&#13;
Kennedy, Stanley Kourt, Stanley&#13;
Kezij, Dale LaCelle, Barbara&#13;
Ludwig, Terry LaTour, Larry Mc-&#13;
Kenna, Doyle McMichael, Francis&#13;
Mills, Perry Morgan, Terry Nixon,&#13;
Marilyn Pietras, James Pine, Karen&#13;
Preston, Betty Radabaugh, Rochelle&#13;
Randall, Steve Randolph,&#13;
Frances Reason, Judith Reynolds,&#13;
Roxand Richardson, Kathy Ruggles,&#13;
Fred Schuman, Sharon Scott,&#13;
lene Sockow, Allen Ray Spare;&#13;
Alan Steffen, Sharon Stibbles, Alice&#13;
Suter, Ron Tanner, Laurel Titus,&#13;
Tom Trumbull, Florence Utley,&#13;
Rose Marie Vedder, John O. Walshire,&#13;
Anne Mfatie Young, Gloria&#13;
Jaskowski, John Bishop.&#13;
"No Christmas&#13;
Tree Chopping'&#13;
Deer hunters are again caution&#13;
ed this season by the Conservati&#13;
Department to "bury the hatchet&#13;
on any thoughts they may have&#13;
about chopping down Christmas&#13;
trees on state lands.&#13;
These trees are being grown&#13;
help wildlife, boost future timbe&#13;
production, and control soil e&#13;
sion, and persons caught cutting o&#13;
removing them may be char&#13;
with trespassing and stand liable&#13;
pending court action, to stiff fines&#13;
or jail sentences.&#13;
Hunters desiring to take t r e e s&#13;
home from private lands must first&#13;
get permission from landowners.&#13;
When more than six trees are in&#13;
volved, each person must obtain&#13;
and carry a bill of sale signed by&#13;
the property owner.&#13;
Fredenburgs&#13;
Are Set for&#13;
Prize Trip&#13;
Mr. and Mrs, Al Fredenburg&#13;
who were named the first prize&#13;
winners of a Florida trip in the&#13;
Howell melon raising contest last&#13;
August at Howell will be realizing&#13;
their good fortune in the coming&#13;
week. They will leave Willow&#13;
Run at 12:40 a. m. Sunday, November&#13;
28, via Eastern Airlines&#13;
and arrive in Tampa, Florida,&#13;
about 7:15 the same morning.&#13;
They will be met by the mayor&#13;
and city council of Treasure Island,&#13;
Florida, where a busy schedule&#13;
has been arranged for them.&#13;
The couple will be guests for the&#13;
week at the Thunderbird Motel on&#13;
the Island.&#13;
President Harry Griffiths of the&#13;
Howell Area Chamber of Commerce&#13;
presented the Fredenburgs&#13;
with their flight tickets last week.&#13;
The couple lives at 3885 Mason&#13;
road, Howell, where they raised&#13;
the HoweU Honey melon that was&#13;
judged tops at the August Festival.&#13;
Mr. Fredenburg is McPherson&#13;
manager here.&#13;
A THANK YOU NOTE&#13;
The Pinckney Pirate football&#13;
players would like to express their&#13;
appreciation to the following peo-&#13;
The Dexter game: milk shakes&#13;
from Leonard Lee; banana splits&#13;
Lee Lavey and from Mrs. Stackable;&#13;
and steak dinners from Jerry's&#13;
Drug Store. The Saline game:&#13;
banana splits from Lee Lavey.&#13;
The U. High game: banana splits&#13;
from Lee Lavey.&#13;
"All this food kept us wellnourished&#13;
and contributed greatly&#13;
toward our undefeated season."&#13;
The Varsity Team.&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
REASONS WHY THB Offlt TOPS ALL OTHEM&#13;
L T I M Prefect&#13;
Housewives are we* aware of the vast difference&#13;
|O Vanilla quality. And, for this reason, you'll&#13;
usually find Watkim Double Strength Vanilla&#13;
holds the place of honor on their spice shelves.&#13;
xSt w m l d h i i w flavoring won't bake out,&#13;
won't treat out, ftml goes twice as far with Mice&#13;
ate savor. It'a easy-» ssll because h't a pleasure&#13;
Muse Homemskm will welcome the opportunity&#13;
s j boy Wattiss Vanifia at the special 89c price&#13;
p d your grows " * •* " ^ • * • ***** • »&#13;
S y dS IWbottlcs are sold. Yoo have a prod-&#13;
^m «ou can ael! Now. let's consider your prom...&#13;
2. l i t Profit&#13;
MAO. THS OOUrON f O l ADOITIOfl AL F ACTt&#13;
Watkim is proud to be able to present your&#13;
group with this Vanilla offer. To our knowledge,&#13;
it gives you the highest rate of profit of aay&#13;
other fund raising program. For srlling onh/&#13;
$95.00 worth of Vanilla, you receive $50.00&#13;
dollar* far your group. That give* you over 50%&#13;
clear profit per bottle. Organizations usually haw&#13;
to seU closer to $150.00 of other products to make&#13;
the same amount. Your group can make money&#13;
with thto srasational offer and without a great&#13;
deal of effort. You are srBing an outstandmf&#13;
product at a bargain price far maximum prom.&#13;
"» YOU! WATaUKf DCALH&#13;
— JACK HatNNETT&#13;
of Orgaoitttion&#13;
UP (.3175 318 S.&#13;
Pmckney, Michigan&#13;
Addf&#13;
C*r Sum.&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Ramseyer&#13;
entertained member of Mrs. Ramseyer's&#13;
family for Thanksgiving;&#13;
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Robert&#13;
Potenge and son, David of East&#13;
Lansing; Mrs. Emma Finstad, and&#13;
daughter Kirsten of Jackson; Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Dan Conway of Detroit;&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Pat Conway and&#13;
family of Livonia, Mrs. Joseph&#13;
Conway and Rev. and Mrs. D. E.&#13;
Ramseyer of Bay City.&#13;
Russell Livermore shot his buck,&#13;
opening morning at his farm home&#13;
east of Gregory.&#13;
The Unadilla Township 4-H&#13;
clubs met for their annual fall rally,&#13;
Saturday evening, November&#13;
18th. After pins, certificates and&#13;
project money had been awarded,&#13;
the Livingston county 4-H extension&#13;
leader, Duane G i r b a c h,&#13;
showed the members and guests&#13;
the many new projects that have&#13;
been opened up to our youth, to&#13;
use for projects.&#13;
A talent show was presented,&#13;
they were as follows — Judy and&#13;
Jack Dooohue, a dance team;&#13;
Brian Boyce, pantomime; Betty&#13;
Barbara Schubert (twins) their&#13;
poppy; and Jane Kifliam doa&#13;
novelty *yg number, fol*&#13;
by Judy Donohue, doing a&#13;
number.&#13;
This was followed with a film.&#13;
an the achievement of 4-H club&#13;
work, what it can mean to an individual,&#13;
to a family, and to a&#13;
community.&#13;
The meeting was closed with refreshments&#13;
being served.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie VanSlamsrook&#13;
and son Donnie were&#13;
Thanksgiving guests at the home of&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McDaniels&#13;
in Chelsea.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Orel Whitfield&#13;
were Sunday callers at the Clyde&#13;
Robeson family.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Max Cosgray, and&#13;
two daughters Carlie and Yvonne,&#13;
and the John Livermore family&#13;
were dinner guests Thanksgiving&#13;
day at the home of Mrs. Carlie&#13;
Weidman and sons at North Lake.&#13;
Steven Barbour from Oceana,&#13;
Virginia visited his parents Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Laurmer Barbour last week&#13;
end.*&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Liming are&#13;
entertaining the children of Emory&#13;
Hoard to help him celebrate his&#13;
birthday Sunday.&#13;
A special Thanksgiving worship&#13;
service was held Wednesday evening&#13;
at the Gregory Baptist church&#13;
A time of fellowship and refreA&#13;
rows IOBPWPO»I1&#13;
sored byifae BYF.&#13;
LOCAL&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Edgar and&#13;
the Don Wiltses hunted near Wolverine&#13;
at the Gene Towner hunting&#13;
lodge. Gene brought down a&#13;
spikehorn early Saturday morning.&#13;
They returned home Sunday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bennett and&#13;
family of Hamburg enjoyed a visit&#13;
to Sarasota Jungle Gardens during&#13;
their recent vacation on Florida's&#13;
Lower West Coast. The visitors&#13;
mingled with flamingos and other&#13;
rare wildfowl from every continent&#13;
roaming freely in these worldfamous&#13;
Gardens. Other points of&#13;
interest in Jungle Gardens were&#13;
hundreds of unusually colorful&#13;
tropical plantings, huge Royal&#13;
Palms bordering jungle trails, and&#13;
brilliant macaws and cocatoos&#13;
which pose with visitors for pictures.&#13;
The Bennetts were there on&#13;
November 16.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie VanSlambrook&#13;
spent Sunday with Mrs. Effie&#13;
Armstrong.&#13;
Mrs. Jennie Grant is spending&#13;
some time with her daughter Doris&#13;
Whitfield, and family in Ypsilanti.&#13;
Carolyn Robeson of Muskegon&#13;
spent Thanksgiving vacation with&#13;
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde&#13;
Robeson.&#13;
Mrs. Barbara Clark, Karen and&#13;
Gary are spending Thanksgiving&#13;
with Mrs. Blanche Clark of Pinckney.&#13;
Bob Johnson is deer hunting at&#13;
his place in northern Michii&#13;
Dress&#13;
VHY&#13;
8-9726&#13;
10544</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 22, 1961</text>
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                <text>November 22, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27577">
                <text>1961-11-22</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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                  <text>Below is a list of all the newspaper information we know about for Livingston County, Michigan:&lt;br /&gt;
&lt;ul&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Brighton Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (1880-2000) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1880-1968 in the Local History Room. Brighton Library also has holdings of this newspaper in their &lt;a href="https://brightonlibrary.info/about-bdl/genealogy-local-history/the-brighton-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Brighton Room&lt;/a&gt;. &lt;a href="https://brighton.historyarchives.online/home" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Community Life&lt;/strong&gt; (Hartland) (1933-present) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper from 1933-1991.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville News and Views&lt;/strong&gt; (1984-present)- a newspaper that has been covering the Fowlerville, Webberville, and Howell areas. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?fc=websiteGroup%3AFowlerville+News+and+Views" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; (contains 2018-present newspapers and 2015-present blog entries). &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Fowlerville Review&lt;/strong&gt; (1875-1971) - we have microfilm of this newspaper in the Local History Room. &lt;a href="https://www.fowlervillelibrary.net/cool-stuff/local-history-room/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Fowlerville Library&lt;/a&gt; has digital copies available in their library.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Gregory Gazette&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1912–1913) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=gregory+gazette"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/strong&gt; (2003–2009)&lt;span&gt; - digital copes of newspaper. &lt;/span&gt;The&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;&lt;em&gt;Livingston Community News&lt;/em&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;was a local community newspaper, housed in downtown Brighton, with a weekly circulation of 54,000. Encompassing a News, Features and Sports sections, the paper operated from 2003 to 2009 under the umbrella of The Ann Arbor News. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=livingston+community+news"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt; &lt;strong&gt;&lt;em&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/em&gt;&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Argus-Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt; (1965-1969) - Brighton Argus and Pinckney Dispatch merged in 1965. Then became Brighton Argus again in 1969. See either Pinckney Dispatch or Brighton Argus for access to this newspaper.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston County Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1937-2000) - Livingston Republican Press changes name in 1937. In 1980 Brighton Argus buys and continues to publish both Brighton Argus and Livingston County Press. In 1997 both papers are published twice weekly. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Courier &lt;/strong&gt;(1843-1857) - we have 1843-1846 in digital format. We don't have the rest of the date range. Becomes Livingston Democrat in 1857. Have microfilm for 1843-1856 in Local History Room.&lt;span&gt;&lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus&lt;/strong&gt; (2000-present) - In September 2000, two successful twice-weekly newspapers the Livingston County Press and the Brighton Argus – that had each been publishing in various forms for more than 100 years - became one. The first edition of the Livingston County Daily Press &amp;amp; Argus hit the streets Sept. 7, 2000. Gannett purchased the newspaper in 2005 as part of the acquisition of Hometown Communications Inc. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Democrat&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1857–1928) - index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Herald&lt;/strong&gt; (1886–1887) - digital copies of newspaper. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/paper/the-livingston-herald/9306/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;The Livingston Post&lt;/strong&gt; (2009-present) - a all-digital information and opinion site in Livingston County, Michigan. &lt;a href="https://archive-it.org/collections/13451?" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; (1855–1929) &lt;/span&gt;&lt;span&gt;- index of one of two of Livingston County, Michigan oldest newspapers. The index can be used in the Local History room on the Reference level of the library. The microfilm is processed by edition date. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/show/249"&gt;View Index&lt;/a&gt; or &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Republican Press&lt;/strong&gt; (1929-1937) - Livingston Republican and Livingston Democrat merged in 1929. &lt;em&gt;&lt;strong&gt;(view in library only)&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;/em&gt; &lt;a href="https://livingstondaily.newspapers.com/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;span&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Livingston Tidings&lt;/strong&gt; (1906-19??) - By 1910 it was published by A. Riley Crittenden.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Pinckney Dispatch&lt;/strong&gt;&lt;span&gt; &lt;/span&gt;(1883–1965) - digital copies of newspaper. We have all the years except 1890 and 1894-1896 are missing. &lt;a href="http://archives.howelllibrary.org/items/browse?tags=pinckney+dispatch"&gt;View Digital Copies&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Brief Sun&lt;/strong&gt; (1883-1965) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;li&gt;&lt;strong&gt;Stockbridge Town Crier&lt;/strong&gt; (1966-1999) - we have microfilm holdings of this newspaper in the Local History Room.&lt;/li&gt;
&lt;/ul&gt;</text>
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              <text>Vol. 78 — No.46 — Ph.UP8.3IM Pinckney, Michigan — Wednesday, November 15, 1961 Single Copy, 10c Propose New High School&#13;
Local Community Chest&#13;
Organized at Tuesday Meet&#13;
Pinckney and its surrounding&#13;
area will have a Community Chest&#13;
starting with a fund drive this&#13;
month.&#13;
At an organizational dinner at&#13;
the Kiwanis meeting last Tuesday&#13;
-fr board was named&#13;
Missionary to&#13;
Speak Here&#13;
There will be special Thanksgiving&#13;
services at the Peoples&#13;
church on the evening of November&#13;
23, at 8 o'clock, featuring a&#13;
talk and a film "The Young Doctor&#13;
Goes Home.*' The public is&#13;
invited to attend.&#13;
Mrs. Helen Correll, wife of&#13;
Dr. Sidney Correll, Director of&#13;
the United World Mission, St. Petersburg,&#13;
Florida, will be the&#13;
speaker.&#13;
Mrs. Correll has visited a number&#13;
of mission fields in South&#13;
America, the Orient, Europe and&#13;
Africa. For a number of years she&#13;
conducted a daily radio broadcast&#13;
in Dayton, Ohio, known as "Wings&#13;
Over Dayton/*&#13;
Her last missionary trip her to&#13;
West Africa. Her talk here will be&#13;
a first _h§nd report on the missionaries,&#13;
the result of medical&#13;
missions and the progress of the&#13;
building of the "Sidney Robert&#13;
Correll Memorial Hospital" in&#13;
memory of the ConeiTs son, a&#13;
medical missionary, who lost his&#13;
life in West Africa.&#13;
head the chest for this year. Lloyd&#13;
Hendee will serve as chairman,&#13;
James Blommell, vice - chairman&#13;
and Oscar Beck as treasurer. Serving&#13;
also will be Don Gibson and&#13;
Don Swarthout. Ten volunteer&#13;
iiu.vu&#13;
Hamburg joining to form a Putnam&#13;
- Hamburg Community Chest&#13;
is still under consideration with interested&#13;
Hamburg residents scheduled&#13;
to meet on November 21 in&#13;
Room 14 at the high school with&#13;
the five men named here.&#13;
The meeting will be for the purpose&#13;
of reaching a final decision&#13;
on the above plan and setting a&#13;
goal for the proposed drive. Putnam&#13;
will carry on whether Hamburg&#13;
joins at this time or not.&#13;
Pirates Finish&#13;
Perfect Season&#13;
The P.H.S. Pirates, Washtenaw&#13;
Conference Champions, made it a&#13;
perfect 9-0 football season by defeating&#13;
St. John of Ypsilanti, 39-&#13;
6, here Friday night.&#13;
In the first quarter of the game&#13;
fullback Terry Rowelt charged&#13;
into the end zone from the fouryard&#13;
line and the six-yard line-and&#13;
then tossed a 30-yard scoring pass&#13;
to halfback Bob Williams. Jack&#13;
Young, quarterback, made the extra-&#13;
point throw to end Ed Guy&#13;
for the 19-0 score at the end of&#13;
the initial quarter.&#13;
After Chuck DeWolfs pass to&#13;
Gary Szalwinski on a 30-yard&#13;
scoring play it was 25-6 at half&#13;
time; St. John also having a TD&#13;
set up by Quarterback Jim Wilson&#13;
to end Mark Lund, a 40 yard play.&#13;
The Pirates made their fifth and&#13;
sixth touchdowns in the final period&#13;
with Young throwing 27 yards&#13;
to Rowell for one and Bob Williams&#13;
traveling 43 yards for the&#13;
other.&#13;
Both extra points in this period&#13;
were kicked by Dennis Singer.&#13;
Hospital Auxiliary Holds&#13;
Monthly Meeting Tonight&#13;
The Women's Auxiliary of the] will prove of interest to all area&#13;
McPhenon Community Hearth&#13;
Cenler will hold its monthly meeting&#13;
at 7:30 p. m.y Wednesday, November&#13;
15 th in the hospital auditorium.&#13;
James Sullivan, hospital administrator,&#13;
witt outline the part the&#13;
Women's Auxiliary wifl play in&#13;
future Civil Defense plans for the&#13;
county.&#13;
John Slater of Brighton, a mem&#13;
ber of the hospital Board of Trustees,&#13;
will be the speaker for the&#13;
evening. Mr. Slater wifl discuss&#13;
plaas lor the hospitaTs new addtreskfcnts,&#13;
the public is invited to&#13;
attend this meeting.&#13;
PARENTS - TEACHERS&#13;
CONFERENCES HELD&#13;
The second annual Parents-&#13;
Teachers Conferences held at thj&#13;
elementary school on November 9&#13;
and 10. have been pronounced&#13;
highly successful. The school was&#13;
closed for the two days while parents&#13;
visited their £hildren*s teachers&#13;
by appointment for IS minute&#13;
talks.&#13;
The plan was repealed this year&#13;
tioa and additional types of carJbecause of marked interest and&#13;
to be made available « a result &amp;$№*№* w a *s last year, ac-&#13;
Icordtot ; to Principa l Jenni e Kd -&#13;
Mr. Slater's tatt J knberfer .&#13;
Rachel Nash&#13;
Wins Award&#13;
Specia l Election t o Be Held in&#13;
District As Soon As Possible&#13;
The Board of Educatio n of the&#13;
Pinckne y Communit y Schools, at&#13;
a special meetin g last Thursda y&#13;
evening, voted to place a bond issue&#13;
proposa l before the taxpayers&#13;
at a special school district election&#13;
The&#13;
a sum up to $1,175,000.0 0 to bs&#13;
retired over a thirt y year period ,&#13;
Rache l Nash , a senior, was the&#13;
winner of the Kiwanis Club's&#13;
Hono r Award for the first sixweeks&#13;
of school. The award given&#13;
at each card-markin g period by&#13;
the local Kiwanians , is based on&#13;
leadership , integrity, courtes y and&#13;
studies. The studen t is selected by&#13;
a committe e of three citizen s from&#13;
a list of eight name s chosen by the&#13;
student s of the four high school&#13;
classes. Terry Rowell and Susan&#13;
Sepulveda were runners-u p at this&#13;
selection and with Miss Nash&#13;
were guests of the Kiwanis Club at&#13;
their dinne r meetin g at Pilgrim&#13;
Hall last night.&#13;
The three were given the oppor -&#13;
tunit y to decide the type of award&#13;
to be given to future winners: a&#13;
trophy , a ring* or a pin. Their decision&#13;
will be made known at the&#13;
next hono r selection .&#13;
Rache l is the daughte r of Mr.&#13;
and Mrs. Mark Nash .&#13;
the proceed s to be used for a district&#13;
wide building expansion pro-&#13;
Most of the funds to be voted&#13;
upon would be used for acquirin g&#13;
a site and constructio n of a new&#13;
500 studen t high school building.&#13;
The propose d building and site&#13;
I would be planne d for orderly expansion&#13;
in future years. The present&#13;
high school building would&#13;
then be converte d to an interme -&#13;
diate school to house all the sixth,&#13;
seventh and eighth grade students ,&#13;
thus releasing a total of nine&#13;
classroom s for use of the lower&#13;
elementar y grades at Pinckne y and&#13;
Parent s and&#13;
Teacher s&#13;
To Mee t&#13;
Ther e will be a meetin g of the&#13;
Parent s *and Teacher s Club of the&#13;
Pinckne y School s Thursday , No -&#13;
vember 16th at 8:00 p. m. in the&#13;
All Purpos e Room of the Elemen -&#13;
tary School . Futur e meeting s of&#13;
the Club will be concerne d with&#13;
advance menu s for the school&#13;
lunch program and with consider -&#13;
ation of the propose d building&#13;
program to provide more classroom&#13;
space. All parent s of children&#13;
in the Pinckney . schools, high&#13;
school as well as elementary , are&#13;
member s of the Parent s Club. Be&#13;
actively intereste d in your chikfs&#13;
school and what it offers your&#13;
child for the future. Attend the&#13;
club meeting s regularly.&#13;
NEW AftfA NOTARIES&#13;
The list of area notarie s appointe&#13;
d or reappomte d durin g the&#13;
thir d quarte r of 1961 recentl y released&#13;
by Secretar y of State lames&#13;
High School&#13;
Honor Roll&#13;
First Six .Weeks—1961-62&#13;
Nint h Grade : Barbara Ludwig,&#13;
John Walton, Joyce Cocanower ,&#13;
Shirley Hileman , Stanley Kourt ,&#13;
Kath y Ruggles, Larry Baughn, Niane&#13;
Bowlin, Mary Cosgray, Joan&#13;
Eichman , Judy Reynolds , Pam&#13;
Seefeld, Kathe e Shettleroe , Rose&#13;
Marie Vedder, Mary Wylie, Kath -&#13;
leen Yeoman, Anne Marie Young.&#13;
Tent h Grade : Barbara Johnson ,&#13;
Gar y Warner, Judy Haines , Gar y&#13;
Hull, Suzann e Kettel , Elma Shugg.&#13;
Eleventh Grade : Geral d Pike,&#13;
Marie Rawden . Mary Aschenbren -&#13;
ner, Robert a Logan. Nanc y Read.&#13;
Mary Singer, Rubeele e Thornton ,&#13;
Viola Treaster .&#13;
Twelfth Grade : Rache l Nash .&#13;
Denis e Mower, Barbara Baughn.&#13;
Neil Hall, Janic e Rose, Karen&#13;
Singer, Kaye Wylie.&#13;
Hamburg . The balance of the&#13;
funds would be used for constructin&#13;
g a multi-purpos e room at&#13;
the Hambur g Schoo l and additiona&#13;
l room facilities at the Pinck -&#13;
ney Elementar y School .&#13;
In connectio n with the work at&#13;
Ihe original&#13;
erecte d in 1888 would be demol -&#13;
ished. All special equipmen t now&#13;
in use in the science, hom e economic&#13;
s and industria l arts depart -&#13;
ment s would be moved to the new&#13;
high school.&#13;
All the present buildings are&#13;
now being used to capacit y and&#13;
overcrowdin g is being experience d&#13;
this year in some classes. Ther e&#13;
are about 952 student s enrolle d in&#13;
afl the elementar y schools and 327&#13;
in the high school. This is an increase&#13;
of 75 student s for all&#13;
grades or 6.25% over the previous&#13;
year. This is the exact increase&#13;
predicte d in studies made for the&#13;
board last yeat.&#13;
The decision by the Board to&#13;
place the issue before the people&#13;
at this time results from more&#13;
than a year of plannin g and study&#13;
of the district' s present needs and&#13;
anticipate d future requirement s&#13;
for the next ten year period. Informatio&#13;
n obtaine d from Federa l&#13;
and Schoo l Censu s studies and future&#13;
populatio n projection s of the&#13;
Livingston and Washtenaw Count y&#13;
Plannin g Commission s were used&#13;
to forecast future school building&#13;
requirements . The State Depart -&#13;
ment of Public Instructio n was&#13;
consulte d and their representativ e&#13;
explained the various possibilities&#13;
to the Board and pointe d out that&#13;
the Pinckne y Schoo l Distric t is in&#13;
excellent financia l conditio n and&#13;
should be well able to carry out a&#13;
major building program at this&#13;
time. Should the bond issue receive&#13;
a favorable vote, the resultan t tax&#13;
Coming Events&#13;
The P. E. G.' s of Pinckne y will&#13;
meet Thursda y afternoon . Novem -&#13;
ber 16th at 12:30 with Mrs. Arthu&#13;
r Rent z for the Christma s&#13;
Workshop Lesson.&#13;
The Women's Fellowship of the&#13;
C o m m u n i t y Congregationa l&#13;
churc h will meet tonigh t at 8:00&#13;
at Pilgrim Hall; the meetin g date&#13;
having been advance d because of&#13;
Thanksgiving falling on the regular&#13;
meetin g date. The Women' s&#13;
than k - offering boxes are to be&#13;
returne d at this time and ther e&#13;
increase should not exceed two&#13;
mills to be levied against the state&#13;
equalized valuation of the district .&#13;
The majorit y of the Board&#13;
member s feel that the propose d&#13;
program if approved by the voters&#13;
will give the childre n of the&#13;
Pinckne y Distric t school facilities&#13;
comparabl e with those eryoyed by&#13;
many of the nearby communities .&#13;
They further believe that this program&#13;
will make the best use of the&#13;
several buildings and addition s&#13;
built unde r bond issues approved&#13;
by the people in tHe past ten years.&#13;
Board member s voting yes for&#13;
placing the issue on the ballot were&#13;
John Walton, president ; Jack&#13;
Young, secretar y and Georg e&#13;
Roth , Jack Swanson and Lee&#13;
Goucher , trustees. Voting against&#13;
the proposa l were Lyle Kinsey,&#13;
wni be a dedicatio n of the offer- treasure r and Thoma s Line, trus-&#13;
Mrs. Arthu r Pardo n andltee .&#13;
Mrs. Joseph Tonasi k are hos-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Pau l Young of&#13;
M. Har e include d the following:. _ ^ .&#13;
William W. Mitchel l and AlbertF** * • * TO&#13;
-etonekrbox h of Pinckney ;&#13;
Whitehall were Sunda y dinne r&#13;
home .&#13;
Board member s sponsorin g the&#13;
program wiH be available to speak&#13;
on the subject to any group remr&#13;
r and Mrs.&#13;
questin g they do so. Detail s of the&#13;
special election are now being&#13;
prepare d by the school attorne y&#13;
• h • fl ft 4i •&#13;
y r «!•№ • i «iiu TO JHinuwKnnrpr or me&#13;
F. Boyd of Lakelan d and Ernes-llet l yerterda y for Jupiter , Florida , I and place witt be mad e m the nea r&#13;
tine L. Van Buren of Gregory . (where they wiH spend the winter. | future.&#13;
Mrs. Maud Dailey of Wisconsin&#13;
is spending some time here as a&#13;
house guest of her son-in-law and&#13;
daughter, the Howard Thayers.&#13;
Miss Jan VanSlambrook of&#13;
Darwin road was a mode) at the&#13;
state conference of the Michigan&#13;
National Hairdressers and Cosmetologists&#13;
Association in Lansing&#13;
recently. Miss VanSlambrook's&#13;
employer, Marilyn Mack of Ann&#13;
!&#13;
1893—1961&#13;
Over 68 Years&#13;
of Banking&#13;
Service&#13;
PHONE&#13;
HA 6-2831&#13;
Member F.D.I.C.I&#13;
Arbor, a member of the Michigan&#13;
Hair Fashion committee selected&#13;
Jan to wear one of her 12 creations&#13;
for the Fantasy Parade. The&#13;
costume entitled "Dinner At&#13;
Eight was designed of black net&#13;
over satin capri pants with a strapless&#13;
blac ktop. Roses in shades of&#13;
red and pink to correspond with&#13;
the colbr of the model's hair accented&#13;
the costume. An arrangement&#13;
of nine candles and crystal&#13;
drops on her head completed the&#13;
creation.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Merwin Camp-&#13;
I bell welcomed a granddaughter&#13;
last week. She is Tammy Sue,&#13;
born on November 6 to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Raymond Spencer (Bev&#13;
(Campbell) of Northville. She&#13;
weighed 5 pounds, 5 ounces and&#13;
arrived at St. Mary's hospital, Detroit.&#13;
SAV&#13;
BANK&#13;
DEXTER, MICHIGAN&#13;
umost floiulft your moji8Y&#13;
WlUi Y * M i M. Stiiifs&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 15, 1961&#13;
CHUCK'S REPAIR SHOP&#13;
Chain saws and lawn mowers repaired and sharpened.&#13;
Saws sharpened, hand and circular.&#13;
Water pumps repaired. Electric motors repaired. New&#13;
and used fractional HP motors for sale.&#13;
PLUMP YOUNG&#13;
ORDER N O W FOR THANKSGIVING&#13;
TOM TURKEYS&#13;
PETERS BONELESS&#13;
HAMS Whole&#13;
or&#13;
Half&#13;
TASTY TENDER&#13;
CUBE STEAK Ib,&#13;
Notes of&#13;
25 Years Aqo&#13;
Patrick Kennedy received word&#13;
last week erf the death of his niece,&#13;
Mrs. Anna Donovan Jewell, wife&#13;
of Thomas Jewell of Jackson.&#13;
Mrs. Sarah Snyder, 70, was&#13;
found dead Tuesday at the home&#13;
of Mrs. Louise Glenn where she&#13;
had been making her home. Mrs.&#13;
Snyder was a former summer* resident&#13;
of Half Moon Lake. Funeral&#13;
services were held in Detroit.&#13;
The Robert Jack family of&#13;
Lakeland sold their household&#13;
goods at public auction on Saturday,&#13;
November 14 and told of&#13;
plans to move to Gulf port, Miss.&#13;
Dilloway's Tavern is serving&#13;
special chicken dinners on Sundays&#13;
now.&#13;
The Haze Sisters received word&#13;
of the death of their cousin, Henry&#13;
Coburn, at the Masonic Horns&#13;
in Alma last week. He was buried&#13;
at Gladstone.&#13;
Stanley Dinkel and Kenneth&#13;
Wylie attended the Michigan State&#13;
Temple football game at East&#13;
Lansing Saturday.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. George Roche attended&#13;
a horse sale at Indianapolis,&#13;
Indiana, this week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Roche Shehan of&#13;
Ann Arbor are announcing the&#13;
pounds at "University Hospital,&#13;
Ann Arbor.&#13;
A lot owner at Portage Lake&#13;
has purchased two old Detroit&#13;
street cars and moved them to the&#13;
lake location last week.&#13;
Mrs. Elizabeth Curlett, Mrs.&#13;
Hattie Decker, Mrs. Luella Haze&#13;
and Mrs. Charles Clark called on&#13;
Edward Rouncifer at his home in&#13;
Genoa on Saturday. He has been&#13;
ill.&#13;
Leo Monks sold his farm south&#13;
of town to Mr. Tinkham of Oscoda&#13;
County who will start a dairy&#13;
farm using his herd of 50 registered&#13;
Holsteins as a nucleus. Mr.&#13;
Tinkham has rented the Dr. H. F.&#13;
Sigler house in the village and will&#13;
live there until he builds his new&#13;
farm home.&#13;
Pinckney Dispatch&#13;
250 OvtHt Sfrwt ESTABUSHtO IN II&#13;
Published Ev#rr Wedn-dr by C. M. Uwy nrf L W, Doyl*.&#13;
A. COiONt, Editor&#13;
MichiQii&#13;
Th» columns of Ihb papar ant an opan forum whtni&#13;
tagat aand «fhicfll contldrattorn am rtw onty rutfrJc&#13;
SSuubbaaccrriiption ratot, tt.00 ptf yar in ad»anc» in Michigan, $2-30 jn othar ifaiw and&#13;
U.S. Pottettiora. 14.00 10 foraign eowntria*. Si; monthi»ralo»i $1.50 In £&#13;
$1.75 in othar atataa and U. &amp; pouattions; $3.00 to foreign country&#13;
panonntl $2.50 par yoar. No mail subacriptions takan for ISM than six&#13;
Advertising rates upon application.&#13;
MilHary&#13;
month*.&#13;
Notes of&#13;
48 Years Ago&#13;
The home of Mrs. Nettie&#13;
Vaughn was the scene of a lovely&#13;
fall wedding on Wednesday, November&#13;
19, when her daughter,&#13;
Norma, was united in marriage to&#13;
George Roy Merrill of Webster.&#13;
Miss Sadie Swarthout was the&#13;
bride's attendant. Little Norma&#13;
Virginia Teeple was the ringbearer.&#13;
Dr. Morley Vaughn of Jackson&#13;
was the best man. Upon their&#13;
return from the East the young&#13;
couple will live in Webster.&#13;
The "Estes Fideles" class of the&#13;
M. E. church will give a Fish&#13;
Pond Social at the Fred Hemingway&#13;
home on Friday evening.&#13;
Supper will cost 15 cents. Appearing&#13;
on the program will be Florence&#13;
Byers and Florence Tupper,&#13;
Cordelia Dinkel, Gladys Carr,&#13;
Benfianr and^iBtarrche Martin.&#13;
Howell will become a city&#13;
soon; the question of changing to&#13;
a city corporation is before the&#13;
council. The board of supervisors,&#13;
will decide the matter in January&#13;
and it will have to be voted upon.&#13;
Myron Dunning, Fred Swarthout,&#13;
Leo Monks, Adrian Lavey,&#13;
Joseph Doyle and Walter Reason&#13;
attended the Penn.-Mich. football&#13;
game in Ann Arbor on Saturday.&#13;
The Old Rupert House in&#13;
Howell is being remodeled into an&#13;
apartment house. Thus passes an&#13;
old landmark to make way for&#13;
growth and increased population.&#13;
Mrs. J. S. Jenkins and Mrs. M.&#13;
C. Wilson of Flint are spending a&#13;
few days at the Willis Tupper&#13;
home.&#13;
The young people in this area&#13;
were very pleasantly entertained&#13;
one evening this week at the social&#13;
given by St. Mary's at the&#13;
Alfred Monks home.&#13;
Mrs. A. M. Utley is in Detroit&#13;
to buy holiday goods for her store.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jeffreys&#13;
are announcing the birth of their&#13;
third son, Christopher Robert, on&#13;
October 31 at McPherson Health&#13;
Center. He weighed in at ten lbs.&#13;
nine and one half ounces.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Kidd are&#13;
the parents of a boy born on November&#13;
4 at McPherson hospital.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Parker of&#13;
Portage Lake are happily announcing&#13;
the arrival of their second&#13;
grandson, Gregory Allen, whose&#13;
parents are Mr. and Mrs. John&#13;
Sprout (Dorothy Parker) of Ypsilanti.&#13;
Baby was born at St. Joseph&#13;
Mercy hospital, Ann Arbor,&#13;
on November I.&#13;
It M3sn*r53fflleal*fcCemtf&#13;
the November 1 listing of admissions&#13;
included Dennis Amburgey,&#13;
Ruby Kidd, John Aldrich, Eva&#13;
Lobdell, Joan Jeffreys and Earl&#13;
Stanle&#13;
M A E ' S&#13;
Dress Shop&#13;
THE VERY SEST&#13;
FOR LESS&#13;
UP 8-9726&#13;
10544 Whitowood Road&#13;
Pincknoy, Michigan&#13;
DEL MONTE&#13;
PUMPKIN. A . .2 for&#13;
PILLSBURY&#13;
CAKE MIXES&#13;
Asst.&#13;
Varieties&#13;
Whole or&#13;
Strained&#13;
Ocean Spray 2c Off Label&#13;
CRANBERRY SAUCE 2 for&#13;
NONE-SUCH&#13;
MINCE MEAT&#13;
DEL MONTE&#13;
CORN or PEAS&#13;
PINCKN Open Evening *4t 9:00 — Sunday, 9i00 wn. to I M pan.&#13;
Telephone PSnckney UPtown t-9721 Pmckney. Mfcnfean&#13;
GRADE A&#13;
URGE EGGS&#13;
BAKE-RITE&#13;
SHORTENING&#13;
PRICES EFFECTIVE&#13;
Wednesday. November 15. Thru Sat., Nov. 1 8 *&#13;
- LOCAL ITEMS -&#13;
Birthday greetings are in order&#13;
today for Mrs. Max Russefl; tomorrow&#13;
for Cort Geib and Mrs.&#13;
Alma Utlcy; Friday for Tiny Bennett,&#13;
Tim Swift, and Pearl Miller&#13;
and little Roy John Shehan who&#13;
will be two years old then. Richard&#13;
Canip, Betsie Lovell, Dick Young&#13;
and Dianne Pajrktte will celebrate&#13;
their birthdays on Saturday. Joe&#13;
Howlett, Otto Poulson, Lori Lynn&#13;
Knight and Butch Aschenbrenner&#13;
will be a year older on Sunday,&#13;
November 19. Monday, November&#13;
20 is the big day for six local&#13;
residents; Eddie Williams, Mary&#13;
E. Burg, Daisy Blake, Diana&#13;
Scott, Gary Bailey and Becky Amburgey.&#13;
Jim Belcher is the "birthday&#13;
boy" of November 21.&#13;
who were born at St. Joseph hospital,&#13;
Ann Arbor, on October 30&#13;
and November 4 respectively.&#13;
Mrs. J. P. Doyle of Sheldon&#13;
was a Pinckney visitor on Thursday.&#13;
She called at the homes of&#13;
Mrs. Leo Lavey, Miss Nellie&#13;
Gardner and Fannie Monks and&#13;
other friends. Mrs. Doyle, former&#13;
principal of P.H.S., enjoyed a trip&#13;
to Europe during the past summer;&#13;
ITESFROM ELEMENTARY SCHOOL EIGHTH GRADE—&#13;
Mhs Penrase&#13;
There isn't very much news this&#13;
week because there are only three&#13;
days of school.&#13;
We are learning the Metric System&#13;
of Measurement this week.&#13;
We are learning to outline a chapshe&#13;
visited in Greece and Israel, tteerr «ini HHiissttoorryy aaltssoo..&#13;
amloonnnng*g oonutht*eerr ccunouunnutrriuce**s... i Tod^a y ,w e ,w, , il,l recuei vi_e our R*e-&#13;
treDk eetor hthunet eNrso rhthav. e Ssotmaret edle ftth eaisr port Cards. Were all hoping for&#13;
early as Sunday to be on hand at&#13;
their favorite spots for the opening&#13;
of the deer season today.&#13;
Chuck Hewlett and Sam Gentile&#13;
y boy of November z i . | aariec |hIUuInUtIi|n|6g aait wLwewu wisuto»n ; *E-IImI«mWeHt.t&#13;
Congratulations are extended t o l l i n g and Bob Egeler at Newber-&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bennett who&#13;
observe their wedding anniversary&#13;
on November 16 and to Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. William Mitchell on November&#13;
19.&#13;
Mrs. John Atkins of Dayton.&#13;
Ohio, was the week end guest of&#13;
her mother, Mrs. Julius Aschenbrenner.&#13;
The visit also was "Aunt&#13;
Margarets" meeting with two new&#13;
nieces, Margaret Shari Hill, and&#13;
Elizabeth A n n Aschenbrenner.&#13;
MOVE TO SUNDAY&#13;
There has been a change in the&#13;
schedule of the Little League basketball&#13;
teams, according to Don&#13;
Gibson, an official of the league.&#13;
The teams will play on Sunday&#13;
afternoon, 1:30, in games open to&#13;
the public at the high school gym.&#13;
It is expected that the new time&#13;
will permit better attendance than&#13;
the former Saturday morning&#13;
hours.&#13;
Saturday St. Mary's defeated&#13;
the Pinckney Merchants, 29-16.&#13;
Maurice Scherrens scored 17&#13;
points for his team and Jeff Davis&#13;
with 12 points was high for the&#13;
Merchants.&#13;
In the second game Playland&#13;
beat the Pinckney Pilgrims 19-12.&#13;
Joe Sepulveda was high point man&#13;
for Playland with 12 points and&#13;
Clare Bell had eight for the Pilgrims.&#13;
Don Gibson and Bruce Henry&#13;
were referees.&#13;
In team standings St. Mary's&#13;
lead with three won and no losses.&#13;
Hamburg trails in the five-team&#13;
listing with 0-3.&#13;
ry; Lloyd and Rex Hendee, Bill&#13;
Baughn and Woody Massey are at&#13;
Lovells.&#13;
Mrs. John McMillan, Mrs.&#13;
Edna Spears, Mrs. Norman White,&#13;
Mrs. James Singer and Mrs.&#13;
Spencer Titus are in Fowler today&#13;
attending a day-long meeting of&#13;
the Lansing Deanery Council.&#13;
FORMER RESIDENT WEDS&#13;
Miss Jean Salyer of Stockbridge,&#13;
the best.&#13;
After school we are going to&#13;
give a "Going Away Party" for&#13;
Susan Craig. It's a surprise party&#13;
and will be at her house. She is&#13;
moving to Seattle, Washington on&#13;
the 18th of this month. We're all&#13;
going to miss her.&#13;
• • •&#13;
SIXTH GRADE—&#13;
Mrs. Tasch&#13;
We have been getting our room&#13;
ready for when our parents come&#13;
to the conferences. We have put&#13;
all about football and football&#13;
players on the board, about Ed&#13;
Guy, our hero. We have put up&#13;
about our football papers.&#13;
Dianna Haines suggested we&#13;
3 ^ and&#13;
and the latef torBet Salyer, former&#13;
Pinckney residents, became the&#13;
bride of Marvin Cook of Stock-&#13;
I FOURTH GRADEM&#13;
R . Campbell&#13;
The boys and girls all wjsh to&#13;
thank the parents who helped with&#13;
their Hallowe'en party.&#13;
Our Hallowe'en stories made a&#13;
booklet we are enjoying. Each pupil&#13;
wrote a story for it.&#13;
We are working hard on our&#13;
book reports. Many are finished&#13;
and have theirs on display for the&#13;
Conference Days.&#13;
We have kept a file of our work&#13;
for this period. This material has&#13;
been put into a booklet for our&#13;
parents.&#13;
We finished our unit on Iceland&#13;
by writing several special reports.&#13;
We had to learn how to gather&#13;
information from our reference&#13;
books.&#13;
A big Definition Mobile hangs&#13;
over our table. This shows us the&#13;
many ways a dictionary helps us.&#13;
• • *&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday. November 15. 1961&#13;
SECOND GRADEMR.&#13;
Anderson&#13;
We have a new boy. He Du-&#13;
Wayne Stroebel from Gaylord.&#13;
Edna Thomas taught her dog&#13;
to read.&#13;
Mike Hendee is to have glasses.&#13;
Mike King's father gave him a&#13;
gun.&#13;
Thanksgiving is coming.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. John Lundin are&#13;
spending two days this week with&#13;
the Robert Gannons at Gros&amp;e lie.&#13;
More than 200 guests attended&#13;
the Open House of the Pinckney&#13;
Typesetting Company to view the&#13;
new plant and offices of the publishers&#13;
of the Dispatch.&#13;
Visit our Cosmetic Counter|&#13;
for COLOGNES, Dusting&#13;
Powder, Toilet Water.&#13;
j&#13;
Flower&#13;
draw our school.&#13;
Earl Sawyer brought a hamster&#13;
, . tt0o sscchhooooll;; hhee sshhoowweedd iitt ttoo ssoommee ooff&#13;
bridge on November 3. The Rev-Htng o t h e r r 0 0 ms. The next day he&#13;
erend Frank Cowick, ppastor of | b r o u g h t t w o g u i n e a p i g s t 0 s c n o o i .&#13;
the First Methodist Church in&#13;
Stockbridge performed the seven&#13;
o'clock ceremony that evening.&#13;
Bowling News&#13;
MONDAY NIGMT&#13;
LADIES LEAGUE&#13;
General Store&#13;
Jerrys Drug&#13;
La Rosa Bowl&#13;
Davis Crop Ousting&#13;
ACO. Inc.&#13;
Becks Marathon&#13;
brought two guinea pigs to school.&#13;
Some of us who did not pass&#13;
the test are making a study on the&#13;
world geography. The following&#13;
pepple passed the test :Tim Daniels.&#13;
Dianna Haines, Dennis Verten.&#13;
Marjorie Quenenberry, Doug&#13;
Miller, Sam Singer and Pat Me-&#13;
Kenna&#13;
Work Guaranteed&#13;
O H M I M &amp; iMtaHiM&#13;
AL'S SEPTIC&#13;
TANK SIRVICE&#13;
Ph. UP 8-3148&#13;
435 E. Main Pinckney&#13;
24 HOUR SERVICE&#13;
7 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
Tabu 4711&#13;
52otfj&#13;
Windsong&#13;
Christmas in July&#13;
*7}&#13;
J E R R Y ' S&#13;
1C ' £ MAIN ST&#13;
UP 6 34o0&#13;
KIWANIS CLUB PLANS&#13;
CAREER NIGHT&#13;
MONDAY NIGHT&#13;
MEN'S LEAGUE&#13;
Blau 2P/i&#13;
Strohs 21&#13;
Joes 19&#13;
Boyds 17'/2&#13;
Falstaff 15&#13;
Pfeiffers 14&#13;
6 SAVINGS FQ&#13;
PINCKNEY "A" LEAGUE&#13;
Jim's Gulf 28 12&#13;
Velvet Eez 26 \4&#13;
The Kiwanis Club has announc- Lee's Standard&#13;
ed plans to hold a "Career* Night" I Kiwanis&#13;
* _&#13;
on November 28 when high school&#13;
students interested in a variety of&#13;
careers will be given an opportunity&#13;
to hear representatives of these&#13;
fields speak. Students have requested&#13;
information regarding engineering,&#13;
medicine, office management,&#13;
journalism, electronics&#13;
and Science and teaching:&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wolter&#13;
of North Lake have announced&#13;
the arrival of a son, Marcus Allen,&#13;
on November 6 at St. Joseph hospital,&#13;
Ann Arbor. The nine-pound&#13;
young man is the first grandson&#13;
and fourth grandchild for Mrs.&#13;
Mary Woltcr of Dexter - Pinckney road.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday. November 15. 1961&#13;
1 R I W " "&#13;
rouR&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
For 9&#13;
Eton from your&#13;
MICHIGAN BOTTLE&#13;
GAS DISTRIBUTOR&#13;
SHIREY&#13;
BOTTLE GAS&#13;
Ph. UP 84621&#13;
Read Lumber&#13;
Van's Motors&#13;
Beck's Marathon&#13;
Integral Corp&#13;
Lavey Hdwe.&#13;
Plastics'&#13;
ACO, Inc.&#13;
Altes&#13;
FRIDAY MIXED LEAGUE&#13;
November 10, 1961&#13;
Checkmates 28« 2 II&#13;
Toppers 26 14&#13;
Sharpies 23 17&#13;
Hee Haws 23 17&#13;
Sodbusters 22«2 17&#13;
Double D's 21 19&#13;
Pinckney Polkats 19 21&#13;
Untouchables I8»i 21&#13;
Bombers 18'2 21&#13;
Patterson Lake 4 17 23&#13;
Bee Bee's 14 2&lt;&#13;
BUI Posters 9 31&#13;
Specializing in Fir*&#13;
CABINETS&#13;
wi tutt* coMntn&#13;
HOMIS 4 QABAOtt&#13;
]c«rp»n*r Work of All Kinds IcUudeSw&#13;
UP 8-3108&#13;
Alum. Comb. Doors - Pre-Hung, Rt. or Left . $29.95&#13;
COMPLETE WITH CLOSER, CHAIN, ETC.&#13;
36" Alum. Thresholds with vinyl inserts, 1%" $ 1.05&#13;
36" Alum. Thresholds with Vinyl Inserts, V/z" . $2.25&#13;
Lighted Medicine Cabinets $17.00&#13;
•A" Electric Drills $9.1&#13;
%" Electric Drills $13.1&#13;
7" Electric Saws $28.88&#13;
Soldering Gun Kits $6.88&#13;
Sabre Saws $1525&#13;
Super Kem Tone - Discontinued Colors, gal.... $3.99&#13;
Deft Wood Finish, gal $6.95&#13;
Deft Wood Finish, quart.' $229&#13;
New LOWER PRICES O N . . .&#13;
LUMBER — PLYWOOD and INSULATION&#13;
Rox — 5 yr. All Surface Paint, qt. $2.05 — gal. $6.95&#13;
Clear Plastic and Polyethylene&#13;
for WINTER INSULATING&#13;
THOMAS READ SONS, INC&#13;
Pinckney UPtown 8-321&#13;
We Both Agree&#13;
THRIFT&#13;
CAN BE PRACTISED&#13;
IN MANY WAYS!&#13;
But ' . % -&#13;
&lt; . . ' : • • •&#13;
When You Deposit Your Savings&#13;
Be Sure You KNOW the DIFFERENCE&#13;
II 1&#13;
Some Savings and Loan Associations look like banks, but:&#13;
Only a bank accepts deposits.&#13;
Savings and Loan Associations accept investments in shares.&#13;
Only as a bank depositor are you a creditor.&#13;
Savings and Loan Association members are shareholders.&#13;
Only from a bank can you receive* 3% interest (the highest rate pemiitted by law) as a guaranteed&#13;
return on your savings.&#13;
Savings and Loan Associations can only offer a dividend rate which may be paid if earned.&#13;
Only from a bank are you guaranteed availability of your money upon request without extended&#13;
delay.&#13;
Applications for repurchase of Savings and Loan Association shares may be deferred for&#13;
thirty days at the end of which a "take your turn" plan may be put into effect.&#13;
Only a bank invests a large percentage of depositors funds in cash and negotiable securities so that&#13;
depositor's demands, can be met without extended delay .&#13;
Savings and Loan Associations loan out nearly all funds in long term mortgages and thus&#13;
cannot guarantee to pay on demand.&#13;
Only banks are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation which is obligated to make&#13;
depositors funds available promptly.&#13;
The Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation is not obligated to pay as long as an&#13;
Association applies a stipulated percentage of its receipts to repurchase of shares in&#13;
numerical order.&#13;
Only a bank can offer complete financial services under one roof.&#13;
Savings and Loan Associations can serve but a very few of your financial needs.&#13;
Compare the facts, the differences and the services available before you place your account.&#13;
A GUARANTEED&#13;
t ! :&#13;
1&#13;
lil&#13;
INTEREST RETURN&#13;
ON YOUR SAVINGS&#13;
STATESin BANK efim&#13;
HOWELL an d PINCKNEY&#13;
\ ! • •&#13;
DeKett-Gray Rites Read&#13;
The M e t h o d i s t Church at&#13;
Laingsburg, Mich., was the setting&#13;
for the wedding of Shirley Ann&#13;
Gray of Pinckney and Clarence&#13;
DeKett of Flint at three o'clock&#13;
Saturday afternoon, November 11.&#13;
The Rev. Beatrice Townsend performed&#13;
the double-ring ceremony&#13;
'families; ~ - - ^&#13;
The bride was given in marriage&#13;
by her brother, Dennis Kingsley&#13;
of Flint.&#13;
Mrs. Esther Kingsley of Flint&#13;
and Gorval G. Gray of Grand&#13;
Coulee, Washington, are the parents&#13;
of the bride.&#13;
The bridegroom made his home&#13;
with his brother and sister-in-law,&#13;
the Arnold DeKetts of Flint.&#13;
For her wedding Miss Gray&#13;
chose a gown of pale pink nylon&#13;
tulle over taffeta fashioned with&#13;
a portrait neckline and cap sleeves.&#13;
A taffeta cummerbund of d:eper&#13;
SNEDICOR'S&#13;
CLEANERS&#13;
IN PINCKNEY&#13;
WEDNESDAY and&#13;
SATURDAY&#13;
220 So. Michigan Ave.&#13;
HOWELL PH. 3301&#13;
pink ended in a draped bow over&#13;
the back of the full skirt. A pink&#13;
bow clip held her matching sheer&#13;
veil of shoulder length. She carried&#13;
a white orchid on a white&#13;
Bible.&#13;
Mrs. Arlene DeKett of Flint&#13;
was the matron of honor. She&#13;
blue silk over taffeta with a&#13;
News Notes From&#13;
HAMBURG Congratulations to Jim DeWolf,&#13;
who observed his eighteenth birthday&#13;
on Sunday. On Saturday night&#13;
his parents, the Fred DeWolfs&#13;
gave a party for him. His teammates&#13;
and classmates came to help&#13;
him celebrate.&#13;
The Hamburg Village League&#13;
will sponsor a "Fashion Parade"&#13;
at the Hamburg Elementary school&#13;
on Thursday, November 16th, at&#13;
8 p. m. Latest fashions will be&#13;
shown from the Mar-Don Shoppe&#13;
of Brighton and there will also be&#13;
little models showing the latest&#13;
from the Tots and Teen shop of&#13;
Ho well. Tickets will be available&#13;
at the door.&#13;
The James Wilsons of Strawberry&#13;
Lake Road attended the&#13;
Hunters Ball in Dexter on Saturday.&#13;
They went with the Earl Wilsons&#13;
of Dexter.&#13;
Legal Notices&#13;
STATI OP MICHIOAN&#13;
Th« Probate Court for th« County of&#13;
Livingston.&#13;
tn fh« AiiUtter of the Estate of ERNEST&#13;
H. GREER, Deceased.&#13;
Arnold&#13;
man for his brother.&#13;
Following a short wedding trip&#13;
in Northern Michigan the couple&#13;
will make their home at 592 Mowjr&#13;
road, Pinckney.&#13;
The new Mrs. DeKett is a&#13;
graduate of Flint Northern high&#13;
school. She attended Flint Junior&#13;
college and is employed as secretary&#13;
at the Pinckney Fabricating&#13;
and Sheet Metal Company and at&#13;
St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, Ann&#13;
Arbor.&#13;
EVERETT&#13;
Barber Shop IN GREGORY NOW OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK&#13;
(UNTIL 6 P.M.)&#13;
On Friday 'til 8 P.M.&#13;
PtewnV KonoriSte FfcftttCfS ERON,&#13;
Judge of Probatt.&#13;
Notice it Hereby Given, That all creditors&#13;
of said deceased art required to present&#13;
their claims in writing and under oath, to&#13;
said Court, and to serve a copy thereof&#13;
upon Clarence C. Greer of 530 Oldfield,&#13;
Alpena, Michigan, fiduciary of said estate,&#13;
and that such claims will be heard by&#13;
said Court at the Probate Office on&#13;
January 9, 1962, at ten A.M.&#13;
It is' Ordered, That notice thereof be&#13;
given by publication of a copy hereof&#13;
for three weeks consecutively previous to&#13;
said day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch,&#13;
and that the fiduciary cause a copy&#13;
of this notice to be served upon e a c h&#13;
known party in interest at his last known&#13;
address by registered, certified or ordirwif&#13;
mail (with proof of mailing), or by personal&#13;
service at least fourteen (14) days&#13;
prior to such hearing.&#13;
FRANCIS E. BARRON, Judge of Probate&#13;
A true copy: ,,&#13;
HELEN M. GOULD, Register of Probate&#13;
I. Isaekson and R. W. Beaudry, Attorneys&#13;
Address: Bertr-aannd BBlldg.,&#13;
45-46-47&#13;
Alpena, Mich.&#13;
1c SALE - NOVEMBER 17th- 23rd ONLY -&#13;
WHILE PRESENT STOCK LASTS&#13;
• ASPIRIN - 100 Reg. 38c&#13;
No finer Aspirin at O &lt;*,OQ*»&#13;
Any Price - 5 Oraiaat W T w&#13;
ID RUBBING Pt. Reg. 45c&#13;
ALCOHOL&#13;
far Aching O&#13;
D HYDROGEN 8 ex. Re*. 29c&#13;
PEROXIDE&#13;
Antiseptic 2 *•* 3 v C&#13;
D TINCTURE OP Reg. Me&#13;
MERTHIOLATE&#13;
In IODINE,&#13;
TINCTURE OP 2 ^&#13;
Rog. 18c&#13;
b THROAT MIX- R*g. 7SC&#13;
TURE-JOHNSON&amp; - # 2 76c&#13;
ID SACCHARIN R#g. 60C&#13;
1000 -Vi Graiitj* . Am&#13;
D ANTISBrTIC POWDB&#13;
— 69c c*n&#13;
SPECIAL BUYS!&#13;
NOT 1c ITEMS. BUT&#13;
EXTRA VALUES I I I I&#13;
• Colgate Dental Cream&#13;
Pack&#13;
I— 84c&#13;
D Baby Powder&#13;
tmmm J ft J Iran&#13;
D Dandruff Shampoo&#13;
PefaMlto - 12 ot.&#13;
— 69c&#13;
D Bn»M«« Shave, Shit&#13;
lazor and Madot&#13;
^ — 73c&#13;
D HALO SHAMPOO&#13;
— 53c&#13;
luster Cream&#13;
Lotion&#13;
OCC— 89c&#13;
D CAMPO PHENKMJE&#13;
— 49c&#13;
D VASflINf 5 — 6 9 c&#13;
STATI Of MICHIOAN&#13;
The Probate Court for the County of&#13;
Livingston.&#13;
In the Matter of the Estate of LOTI&#13;
BOBON, Deceased.&#13;
At a session of said Court, held on&#13;
October 31, 1961.&#13;
Present, HonorabJe FRANCIS E. BAR.&#13;
RON, Judg* of Probate.&#13;
Notice,-it Hereby Given, That all creditors&#13;
of said deceased are required to present&#13;
their claims in writing and under&#13;
oath to said Court, and to serve a copy&#13;
thereof upon Alfred Bobon of Pinckney,&#13;
Michigan, fiduciary of said estate, and that&#13;
such claims will be heard by said Court&#13;
at the Probate Office on January 9, 1962,&#13;
at ten A.M.&#13;
It is Ordered, That notice thereof be&#13;
given by publication of a copy hereof for&#13;
three weeks consecutively previous to said&#13;
day of hearing, in the Pinckney Dispatch,&#13;
and that the fiduciary cause a copy of this&#13;
notice to be served upon each known party&#13;
in interest at his last known address by&#13;
registered, certified or ordinary mail (with&#13;
proof of mailing), or by personal service&#13;
•t least fourteen (14) days prior to such&#13;
hearing.&#13;
FRANCIS E. BARRON, Judge of Probate&#13;
A true copy:&#13;
HELEN M. GOULD, Register of Probate&#13;
Hiram R. Smith, Attorney.&#13;
Address: Howe 11, Michigan&#13;
# 4 5 - 4 6 - 4 7&#13;
MOtTOAOf l A l f&#13;
Dtfauk having been mad* in the&#13;
conditions of that certain mortgage&#13;
dated April 5, 1947, executed by Rutsail&#13;
B. Buckner and Dorothy V. Bucfcner,&#13;
his wire, at mortgagors, to Thurber&#13;
Cornel L at mortgage*, and recorded in&#13;
the offico of the Register of Deads for&#13;
Livingston County, Michigan, April 7,&#13;
1947, in Liber 155 at page 626; which&#13;
said mortgage) was thereafter and on&#13;
December 1 ©71954, assigned by J. Henry&#13;
Cornell and Stanley Cornell, administratort&#13;
of the estate of Thurber Cor*&#13;
neH, deceased, to Esther 0. Sharpe, by&#13;
assignment recorded on the same date&#13;
in Liber 296 at page 400, thereof; which&#13;
said mortgage was thereafter and on&#13;
January 17, 1955 assigned by Esther D.&#13;
Sharpe to Ruth Cornell Alhay, by assignment&#13;
recorded on ma same data in&#13;
Liter 299 at paga 306 thereof;&#13;
Notica is hereby given that said&#13;
mortgaga will be foreclosed pursuant to&#13;
power of sal* and the premises therein&#13;
described as land in the Township of&#13;
Cohoctah, Livingston County, Michigan,&#13;
to-wit:&#13;
The north half of the southeast qo*.&#13;
tar of Section twenty-six (26), in Town*&#13;
ship 4 North, Rmga 4 east, Michigan,&#13;
taming eighty acres of land, more&#13;
lass, •xcepting the right of way of&#13;
Ann Arbor Railroad and alto ax*&#13;
Company recorded in Liber 1*7 of&#13;
Peade at paga 206, Livingston County&#13;
Record*.&#13;
^ Win* ba told at public auction to the&#13;
highest bidder for cash by m« Sheriff&#13;
of Livingston County. Michigan, at the&#13;
watt front door of ma Court Hoatj* in&#13;
the City of HowaJI, in said County a»d&#13;
State, on Friday the fifth day o T January&#13;
1962, at tan o'clock in mo forenoon&#13;
of M M day. There it dua and payable&#13;
at mo data of mit notice upon fhVdebt&#13;
aacurod by said mortg&#13;
DoSart and fiftySroa&#13;
omne&#13;
Van Winkle, Van Winkle A Mt&amp;k&#13;
for Atsitjstt of&#13;
Mrs. Muriel Heiner of Hamburg&#13;
was one of the delegates from&#13;
the Huron Valley Girl Scout&#13;
Council who attended the Great&#13;
Lakes Regional Conference of Girl&#13;
Scout adults in Chicago last week.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas King and&#13;
children are new residents of&#13;
Hamburg Township. Mrs. King is&#13;
the daughter of John Krupa of&#13;
Lakeland. Mr. King was formerly&#13;
with General Motors AC Spark&#13;
Plug of Milwaukee, Wisconsin,&#13;
and is now employed by the Ben&#13;
dix Corporation in the Ann Arbor&#13;
office. He is an electronic engi&#13;
neer. They will make their home&#13;
on Hamburg Road.&#13;
Ivan Waterbury, Harold Farley&#13;
and Ed. Shannon leave Tuesday&#13;
for the North for their annual deer&#13;
hunt. There will be many other&#13;
hunters heading for the North&#13;
woods this week but did not get&#13;
the names of them for this issue.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gallup received&#13;
news during the past week&#13;
of the arrival of a new grand&#13;
daughter. She is Therese Marie,&#13;
booL_io_the, Richard Gallups of&#13;
sixth daughter. The couple also&#13;
has one son.&#13;
Students Win&#13;
Mich. Week&#13;
Awards&#13;
Nine students of Pinckney High&#13;
School were pleasantly surprised&#13;
at the Honotf Assembly on Thursday&#13;
when Mrs. Stackable called&#13;
them on stage to receive awards&#13;
from the Michigan Week Committee.&#13;
Most of the nine had forgotten&#13;
all about the articles advertising&#13;
Pinckney and adjacent areas they&#13;
had stftt to Detroit last spring for&#13;
judging.&#13;
Mrs. Stackable announced that&#13;
Miss Ruth Browne of the High&#13;
School of Commerce, Detroit, recently&#13;
notified her that from the&#13;
thousands of entries checked, 500&#13;
were considered worthy of merit.&#13;
Third place winners included&#13;
these students from Pinckney: Camille&#13;
Buda, Shirley Mitchell, Val&#13;
Parker, Judy Bekkering, Gary&#13;
Warner, Beth Minock, Pam Hoett,&#13;
Gary Hull and Elma Shugg. An&#13;
extra certificate (honorable mention)&#13;
was given to Shirley Mitchell&#13;
for a poem on Michigan.&#13;
The students did this work last&#13;
spring as part of a project in&#13;
Civics Class, Mrs. Morris, teacher.&#13;
Wednesday, November 15, 196 \&#13;
News Notes From The&#13;
GREGORY AREA&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Robeson&#13;
spent several days last week with&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Malond Titus of&#13;
L'Anse.&#13;
Miss Beatrice Lamborn and&#13;
Mrs. Kathryn Whitehead attended&#13;
funeral services for their cousin,&#13;
Mrs. L. Redfield Saturday in&#13;
Fowlerville.&#13;
Rev. and Mrs. Ramseyer and&#13;
Joel visited in Bay City Friday&#13;
and Saturday.&#13;
The W. B. M. S. had a co-operative&#13;
luncheon and work meeting&#13;
at the home of Mrs. Irene&#13;
Marshall Wednesday of last week.&#13;
The Red Cross Fund drive in&#13;
Unadilla township will be held&#13;
during the month of November.&#13;
The 1961 chairman of this annual&#13;
fund drive is Mrs. H. E.&#13;
Marshall. Solicitors for the villages&#13;
of Plainfield, Unadilla and Gregory&#13;
and their out lying areas have&#13;
been appointed.&#13;
THE BUSINESS and&#13;
PROFESSIONAL CORNER&#13;
Roger I. Can Agency!&#13;
COMPLETE INSURANCE COVERAGE&#13;
Agtnt&#13;
Edith R. Can&#13;
142 Mill Street&#13;
, Mich. Phono UP 8-3 T 33&#13;
FUNERAL HOME&#13;
Don C. Swarthout&#13;
Modtrn Equipment&#13;
AMBULANCE SERVICE&#13;
Phone UP 3-3172&#13;
Mary Wolter&#13;
REAL ESTATE&#13;
7421 Portoge Lake Road Tel. Dexter&#13;
HA 6-8188&#13;
132 W. Main Street, Pinckney Tel.&#13;
UP 8-3130&#13;
14034 N. Territorial Rd., North Lake&#13;
Chelsea TeJ. GR 5-3241&#13;
Wiltse Electrical&#13;
Service&#13;
ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING&#13;
6000 West M-36 Pinckney&#13;
Phone UP B-SSSB&#13;
THE PINCKNEY SANITARIUM&#13;
Ray M. Duffy, MJ&gt;.&#13;
Pincfrney, Michigan&#13;
OFFICE HOURS&#13;
11:00 AJK. to 2:00 P.M.&#13;
Except Wednesdays&#13;
Men., Twes., Fri., and Sat.&#13;
7:00 to 8:00 P.M.&#13;
MONUMENTS&#13;
One of Michigan's Lorgesl&#13;
Displays of Monuments&#13;
NORTHVILLE, MICHIGAN&#13;
Allen Monument&#13;
Works&#13;
PHONE Fl 94770&#13;
L I. Swarthout&#13;
BUILDING &amp; CONTRACTING&#13;
1292 Oorwim Hood, PMdbiey&#13;
Mene UP 84234&#13;
Lee Lavey&#13;
UP&#13;
Fred C.&#13;
Reickhoff, Sr.&#13;
OPTOMETRIST&#13;
120 West Grand River&#13;
HowoU# Michioon&#13;
3Si tatiduittm 613&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
Forms* Howes, Lake Property&#13;
list Yew Property wMt&#13;
Gerald Reason&#13;
Rroher 102 W Mate Str*«&#13;
Pkom UPtown 8-3564&#13;
Peace Corps Exams&#13;
to Be Given Soon&#13;
Postmaster Lawrence Baughn&#13;
announced today that the&#13;
test for the Peace Corps win&#13;
be given on Tuesday and Wednesday,&#13;
November 28 and 29, 1961.&#13;
Within a few days information&#13;
showing the place and time for&#13;
the examination in your area will&#13;
be posted on the bulletin board of&#13;
the local post office, including&#13;
stations and branches.&#13;
If you are interested in t^igg&#13;
the test, be sure and watch for&#13;
complete information at your post&#13;
office.&#13;
The Postmaster added that he&#13;
would inform the press when the&#13;
information has been received.&#13;
CARD OF THANKS&#13;
For all the many and varied expressions&#13;
of good will from our&#13;
Pinckney area friends, that came&#13;
to me in my month in the hospital&#13;
and since my recent return&#13;
home — cards, letters, personal&#13;
:aUs, flowers and other gifts —&#13;
and for all the prayers offered for&#13;
my recovery, my wife joins me in&#13;
a heartfelt "thank you, all". And&#13;
thanks be to God, the source of&#13;
all our blessings.&#13;
William Hainsworth&#13;
Library News&#13;
We wish to thank Mr. and Mrs.&#13;
Franz Otto for books and magazines*&#13;
and Mrs. Florence AtLee&#13;
for m^p»«»n&#13;
New books include two mysteries&#13;
for adults: Sterling T o o Hot&#13;
to Handle** and Van Atta "Shock&#13;
Treatment."&#13;
For children we have a new&#13;
hone story by Henry, "Gaudanao"&#13;
and Wooky, MA Room for&#13;
Kathy."&#13;
At the Writer's Club meeting&#13;
ats the Library Monday, November&#13;
6 one of the members gave an&#13;
interesting account of the Writers&#13;
Conference at Ann Arbor, October&#13;
27 and 28.&#13;
A short story of an accident on&#13;
a safari in Africa opened a lively&#13;
discussion of the African reaction&#13;
I Local Deer Hunters Should&#13;
Report Kills to Conservation&#13;
Dept, Office in Brighton&#13;
Hunters killing buck deer near&#13;
Pinckney or elsewhere in southern&#13;
Michigan are urged to phone the&#13;
Conservation Department's field&#13;
office at Brighton.&#13;
The hunter can telephone his report&#13;
collect to this office at&#13;
Brighton AC 9-6566. A game biologist&#13;
will go to the hunter's residence&#13;
or frozen food locker, determine&#13;
the age of the deer by the&#13;
amount of wear on the teeth, and&#13;
Local Girl&#13;
in Germany&#13;
KORNWESTHEIM, C E RMANY&#13;
— Army Specialist Four&#13;
William A. Oliver, whose wife, th;&#13;
former Sarah Wylie, lives at 6185&#13;
Pingree RdM Howell, arrived in&#13;
Germany October 19 and is now&#13;
assigned to the 385th Military Police&#13;
Battalion.&#13;
Specialist Oliver, a military policeman&#13;
in the battalion's Company&#13;
A in Kornwestheim, entered&#13;
the Army in 1955 and was last&#13;
stationed at Fort Knox, Ky.&#13;
The 22-yeaix)Id soldier attended&#13;
Henry Clay High School, Lexington,&#13;
Ky.&#13;
to the white man's religion and&#13;
medical knowledge.&#13;
The next meeting is Monday,&#13;
November 20 at the Library at 8&#13;
p. m. We hope all members will&#13;
be present. Any one interested is&#13;
invited to join the group.&#13;
Co-Captains&#13;
Named By&#13;
Pirate Team&#13;
4-H HANDY HAMMER CLUB&#13;
measure its antlers and record the&#13;
weight. Even if only the head remains&#13;
he can still obtain the necessary&#13;
information.&#13;
"We need to examine» 500&#13;
southern Michigan buck deer this&#13;
fall,*1 states Marvin Cooley, district&#13;
game supervisor. "We are&#13;
now engaged in an intensive study&#13;
to secure information vital to the&#13;
management of the southern Michigan&#13;
deer herd. We cannot do the&#13;
job without the cooperation of&#13;
hunters. With the high productiv-&#13;
Many eager new faces appeared&#13;
£ °ofJ JtJw°o fawns from each doe, k&#13;
fawns *Tom e a c h *&lt;*&gt;&#13;
Thursday night, November 2, for r L , ^ J ? ** creasing at&#13;
th* 1Q*1.ft 4.M HanHi Hammer ft f a S t e f r a t e ' FlTSt Of all We need&#13;
y g&#13;
the 1961-62 4-H Handi Hammer&#13;
Club. And as usual Marshall Meabon,&#13;
our leader, instructed the&#13;
new members about tools, materials&#13;
and their uses.&#13;
After many instructions we decided&#13;
to elect the officers of our&#13;
club. The results were: John Singer,&#13;
president; John Wlodyga, vicepresident;&#13;
Jeff Hcndee, secretary;&#13;
and John Tasch, treasurer. This&#13;
election and meeting ended with&#13;
our new president closing the&#13;
meeting with the 4-H pledge.&#13;
P.H.S. CARNIVAL SET&#13;
captains of the P.H.S. Pirates football&#13;
team next season.&#13;
Chosen for the honor by their&#13;
varsity teammates at a meeting last&#13;
week were Gary Szalwinski, John&#13;
Beiry and Bill Light.&#13;
HELLER'S&#13;
FLOWERS&#13;
"S«y It with Bowers&#13;
Phoi* 284&#13;
HOWELL, MICHIGAN&#13;
The TTnckney High ScfToo^ student&#13;
council is having Us annual&#13;
Carnival this Saturday, November&#13;
18.&#13;
The hours will be from 2:00 to&#13;
5:00 and 6:30 to 9:30 in the evening.&#13;
The public is invited.&#13;
A dance will follow from 10:00&#13;
to 12:00. Dance' tickets are 50c&#13;
per person and 75c per couple.&#13;
DELICIOUS--JONATHON—MclNTOSH&#13;
WAGNERS&#13;
CRANE ORCHARDS&#13;
"NtUIT WITH THf PUVOT W . M-36 UP 8-9756&#13;
THE&#13;
DETROIT EDISON&#13;
COMPANY&#13;
260 pm.&#13;
20,1«M&#13;
BASKETBALL TIME&#13;
HERE FOR PIRATES&#13;
With football season at an end&#13;
the P. H. S. Pirates are losing no&#13;
time launching their basketball&#13;
season. A big turnout of eager&#13;
candidates greeted Coach Wei&#13;
Reader's call for first practice session&#13;
last Monday night.&#13;
The Pirates first game of thj&#13;
cage season is scheduled for November&#13;
28 with Webberville here.&#13;
League play will begin on Friday,&#13;
Dec. I, for the varsity team.&#13;
Paratrooper T. Ryan Bonner&#13;
IV of the 101 Airborne (Screaming&#13;
Eagles), Fort Campbell, Ky.,&#13;
is home spending a two week furlough&#13;
with his parents, Mr. and&#13;
Mrs. Thomas Bonner of Rush&#13;
Lake Road.&#13;
HOWELL&#13;
THEATRE&#13;
Phoni.1769&#13;
all e need&#13;
to know how many bucks are being&#13;
shot and how many of each&#13;
age class are being removed by&#13;
the hunter. This will be followed&#13;
around the year by a careful tally&#13;
of all other causes of mortality including&#13;
dogs, cars, fences, farm&#13;
machinery, etc.11&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Johnso*. and&#13;
daughters, Mary, Cathy and Cindy,&#13;
were recent week end guests at&#13;
the home of Mrs. Johnson's parents,&#13;
the Roy Campbells.&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 15, 1961&#13;
^^m^mmm ^ » ^ » ^m ^m ^m ^m ^ m Anchor Inn&#13;
PORTAGE LAKE&#13;
DANCING EVERY&#13;
SATURDAY NIGHT&#13;
Featuring&#13;
Bill KIAVE TRIO&#13;
FISH FRY&#13;
EVERY FRIDAY&#13;
DINNERS SERVED&#13;
FRIDRYS &amp; SATURDAYS&#13;
BANQUETS LARGE or SMALL&#13;
For Reservations Call&#13;
HA 6-8183&#13;
HA 6-9181&#13;
Wed., Than., Fit, Sat.&#13;
Nov. 15-16-17-18&#13;
Matinee Saturday at 2:30&#13;
P. M. Continuous&#13;
BOBBY&#13;
SWL, MOB*, Tees.&#13;
Nov. 14-20-21&#13;
Matiaee Smday at 2:30&#13;
P. M. COBUMHNIS&#13;
Carroll Bakei&#13;
aTnUf o&#13;
Nor. 22-23-24-25&#13;
P.M.&#13;
f f, li f / \ T&#13;
PINCKNEY&#13;
By RUSS ENGELHARDT, Manager&#13;
CHRISTMAS PHONELAND&#13;
1—Doing your Christmas shopiping&#13;
early? Why not ask the&#13;
] Business Office to help you seilect&#13;
a year around gift for your&#13;
I family or friend. Give the new&#13;
"Princess" which comes in five beautiful colors. An&#13;
extension for the kitchen to help Mother save steps.&#13;
An extra telephone in the bedroom with a night light&#13;
so that Dad will not stub his toe. Why not give yourself&#13;
a basement telephone and stop running upstairs&#13;
to take your calls.&#13;
We will gift wrap, provide the appropriate card&#13;
and deliver ready to place under your tree.&#13;
NOT ALL our customers get their telephone bills at the&#13;
some time of the month. Some of them have asked us why.&#13;
Hare's the answer: issuing bills throughout the month spreads&#13;
the work load, keeping our&#13;
employees who prepare bills&#13;
busy during the whole month.&#13;
This makes most efficient use&#13;
of billing equipment and also&#13;
spreads the work load more&#13;
evenly at biH payment offices.&#13;
You're served more promptly&#13;
than you'd be if every bill&#13;
came due on the tame day.&#13;
5 M T W T&#13;
ONE OF THE ways the Telephone Company keeps the&#13;
cost of your phone service low is by figuring how many&#13;
calls will be made at any given time. The volume of&#13;
calls varies with the time of day, the day of the&#13;
week, the weather and the season. Our studies tell us&#13;
how many people we need&#13;
to meet each day's expected&#13;
work load. Thus there's no&#13;
wasted manpower that&#13;
would add to the-cost of&#13;
your service. When emergencies&#13;
such as storms increase&#13;
calk, we can quickly&#13;
bring m extra people. Teat's&#13;
why your telephone as always&#13;
ready to serve you, 24&#13;
boon a day.&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom apartment,&#13;
furnished or unfurnished.&#13;
Call UP 8-3393, 1625 Patterson&#13;
Lake Road. 43tfc&#13;
FOR RENT: 3 rooms and bath in&#13;
Pinckney, available Nov. 1. Ph.&#13;
AC 9-6982. 43tfc&#13;
1 ^ _ —&#13;
WANTED: General m a c h i n e&#13;
work, dies and fixtures. UPtown&#13;
8-9946. 50p&#13;
FOR SALE: Small John Deere&#13;
tractor; elec. starter, wheel wts.,&#13;
plow, cultivator, power take off.&#13;
Reasonable. L. J. Doyle, Phone&#13;
UP 8-3123.&#13;
IS YOUR HOME ready for winter's&#13;
blustery coJd? If not, phone&#13;
UP 8-3213 for your insulating&#13;
needs. Forest wool blown insulation&#13;
guaranteed not to settle, vermin&#13;
proof, fireproof, dissipates&#13;
moisture, etc. Free estimates. Don&#13;
Wiltse, Insl. 40-46&#13;
FOR SALE: Buttercup and Butternut&#13;
squash. Marshall Meabon.&#13;
1135 W M-36, Pinckney. 42-44p&#13;
McPHERSON O I l 7 c O . : Mobifgas,&#13;
Mobilotl, the world's largest&#13;
Y diissttrriicctt ir^n*&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom home on&#13;
paved road at Hi-Land Lake. $50.&#13;
per month. Reference required.&#13;
UP 8-9915. 45c&#13;
WEDDING CAKES: made to order,&#13;
any size, beautifully decorated.&#13;
Call UP 8-3104. 44-47p&#13;
WANTED: Ironings to do in my&#13;
home. UP 8-3496. 44-47p&#13;
FOR RENT: Attractive 2-bedroom&#13;
lake front home: Half&#13;
Moon Lake. Reason's Real Estate.&#13;
UP 8-3564.&#13;
ALTERATIONS, sewing, mending,&#13;
costume jewelry repair, leather&#13;
work. Connie's, 642 Hamburg&#13;
St., 10:30 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. daily&#13;
except Friday. UP 8-3569. 44p&#13;
^ MIXED CONCRETE,&#13;
washed sand and gravel, processed&#13;
road gravel, Peerless cement,&#13;
Paint Dyke Hydraulic cement.&#13;
4950 Mason Road. Phone Howell&#13;
1389. Located 4 «miles west of&#13;
Howell. D &amp; J Gravel Co.&#13;
n. Phone UP&#13;
LANDSCAPING: planning and&#13;
developing by experienced landscaper.&#13;
Shrubs, Evergreens, sod.&#13;
Hi-Land Gardens and Landscap-&#13;
;. Ph. UP 8-668 i.&#13;
NEIGHBORING NOTES&#13;
Fowlerville Ro{arian$ will join&#13;
with more than half a million Rotarians&#13;
of 123 countries this week&#13;
to make special observance of&#13;
"The Rotary Foundation Week."&#13;
Floyd Stewart is president of thj&#13;
Rotary Club of Fowlerville.&#13;
The South Lyon area torch&#13;
drive campaign chairman announced&#13;
last week that collections&#13;
there have exceeded the 1961 goal&#13;
of $2,131 by $160.45. Many&#13;
areas report fearing they will fall&#13;
short of their particular goals.&#13;
The Brighton Area Public&#13;
Schools were under attack last&#13;
week for levying "layaway taxes"&#13;
in excess of current demands. A&#13;
test of the legality of the methods&#13;
by which the Board of Education&#13;
taps a taxpayer for anticipated expenditures&#13;
in future years is in&#13;
prospect.&#13;
Official School&#13;
Board Minutes&#13;
On October 5, 1961 at a regular&#13;
meeting Supt. Reader announced&#13;
that the enrollment figures&#13;
for this year are 1279 students&#13;
as compared to 1204 for&#13;
for last year.&#13;
A special meeting was called&#13;
j October ibf tor the purpose ot&#13;
Dexter varsity and junior varsity&#13;
football players were treated&#13;
to a banquet there last Thursday&#13;
night. Dads were invited to dine&#13;
with their sons while mothers&#13;
cooked and served the dinner. Elkin&#13;
Isaac, athletic director of/Albion,&#13;
only unbeaten collegiate football&#13;
team in Michigan this fall,&#13;
was guest speaker.&#13;
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ruhlig of&#13;
R No. 1, Dexter, were honored in&#13;
evening ceremonies November 9,&#13;
at Michigan State University, East&#13;
Lansing. They were among eleven&#13;
couples from all parts of Michigan&#13;
selected as district "Cooperators&#13;
of the Year" by Farm Bureau&#13;
Services. District winners&#13;
were picked from among 60&#13;
county winners in earlier competition.&#13;
HOLY NAME SOCIETY&#13;
NEWS N O U S&#13;
The members of the Holy&#13;
Name Society, St. Mary's Church,&#13;
are soliciting books to be added to&#13;
the school library. Books for children&#13;
of the elementary school age&#13;
are needed and most welcome.&#13;
The group also announced plant&#13;
for a Holy Name Father and Son&#13;
breakfast to be held on Sunday,&#13;
January 14.&#13;
The card party and Chinese&#13;
auction will be held December 2&#13;
at the parish hall. The public is&#13;
invited to this evening of recreation&#13;
and entertainment.&#13;
gan borrow up to the sum of one&#13;
million one hundred seventy five&#13;
thousand dollars ($1,175,000.00)&#13;
and issue thirty (30) year bonds&#13;
therefor for the purpose of:&#13;
1. Acquiring a site for a new&#13;
high school.&#13;
2. Planning, building and furnishing&#13;
a new high school building&#13;
and ground.&#13;
3. Demolition of the original&#13;
PINCKNEY DISPATCH&#13;
Wednesday, November 15, 1961&#13;
LOOK!&#13;
home*&#13;
only $3000; $500 doi&#13;
3 Bedroom home m Pnckty&#13;
Village on 2 lots; $ 14,000;|&#13;
|$2000 down.&#13;
FOR SALE: 3 bedroom brick; full&#13;
basement garage, 4 years old approximately&#13;
1 acre with lake rights&#13;
to Rush Lake. Low down payment&#13;
to G. I. 6359 Junior Drive corner&#13;
Pettysville Road. Reasonably priced.&#13;
Ph. UPtown 8-3535. 45-46&#13;
FOR RENT: Furnished apt., 3&#13;
rooms and bath. Call Mrs. Oscar&#13;
Beck, UP 8-3434 or UP 8-3524.&#13;
45tfc&#13;
FOR SALE: 2 one-year old ponies;&#13;
1 chocolate brown with cream&#13;
tail and mane; gentle; very reasonable.&#13;
UP 8-3110. 45c&#13;
FOR SALE: Shetland floor polisher,&#13;
like new. UP 8-3110. 45c&#13;
iary Woltei&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
trade; used gunTrrrfr oatboard&#13;
tors. Mill Creek Sporting Goods,&#13;
Dexter.&#13;
GULF OIL products. Fuel Oil &amp;&#13;
gasoline. Alters Oil Co., Dexter,&#13;
Michigan. Ph. Collect. HA 6-4601&#13;
or HA 6-8517.&#13;
FOR SALE: Two lots on Main&#13;
Street in Village of Pinckney. Very&#13;
reasonable. Ph. Up 8-3111.&#13;
BROKEN GLASS in your car expertly&#13;
replaced. See — Abe's Auto&#13;
Parts, 1018 E. Grand River. Ph.&#13;
151, Howell, Michigan.&#13;
FOR RENT: building in village;&#13;
suitable for garage or storage&#13;
space. Call UP 8-3149. 45&#13;
blacktop road,&#13;
on I&#13;
Port-&#13;
Lake; $1,000. More|&#13;
if wanted*&#13;
iPtockney, small b u f i n e s&#13;
build**; $4,000, terms.&#13;
|Portage Lake, privileges, 2]&#13;
cottages on V/i lots;&#13;
needs repair, $4,000.&#13;
iPinckney, attractive 2-bed-&#13;
FOR RENT: 2 — 4 rm. houses,&#13;
one with 2 bedrooms, basement,&#13;
garage. T. A. Ware, 1362 E. M-&#13;
36, Ph: UP 8-9776. 45c&#13;
discussing our future building&#13;
state Dept. ot Public Insfrucndiir&#13;
was present to assist the board.&#13;
At a regular meeting held November&#13;
2, 1961, Mr. Gregg of&#13;
the firm of Gregg &amp; Velker, Certified&#13;
Public Accountants, presented&#13;
their report of the annual&#13;
audit of the school records. The&#13;
report was unanimously accepted&#13;
by the board.&#13;
Mr. Goucher presented the following&#13;
motion: That a special&#13;
election of the school tax electors&#13;
of the Pinckney School District&#13;
be held at the earliest possible date&#13;
allowed by law for the purpose of&#13;
voting on the following question:&#13;
Shall the Pinckney Community&#13;
Schools, counties of Livingston&#13;
and Washtenaw, State of Michi-&#13;
*" 4 p-^^i-v r x n ^ i r r&gt; -r% vri. tiitr&#13;
ing high school building and alteratjons^&#13;
and/ar additions to this&#13;
Si&#13;
school for the sixth, seventh am&#13;
eighth grades or such use as may&#13;
be determined in the future.&#13;
4. Construction of a multi-purpose&#13;
room at the Hamburg Elementary&#13;
School.&#13;
5. Construction of additional&#13;
toilet facilities at the Pinckney&#13;
Elementary School.&#13;
After a lengthy discussion on&#13;
tbe above motion it was agreed&#13;
to table it until Nov. 9, 1961 so&#13;
that the board members could&#13;
have more time to reach a decision.&#13;
At, the special meeting on&#13;
November 9, after much discussion&#13;
a roll call vote was called for&#13;
and the motion carried by a 5 to 2&#13;
vote.&#13;
2 Bedroom, year round&#13;
front cottage, Cordley lk.,1&#13;
2 lots, $7500; $1500 dn.|&#13;
I bedroom home on two lots*&#13;
gas heat, $15,000,&#13;
I bedroom home on beai&#13;
HMLand Lake. Completely!&#13;
Ifurnbhed, new oil furnace,&#13;
[fireplace. $10,000 terms.&#13;
I 110 acre farm, 65 acres!&#13;
work land, 2 barm on good(&#13;
Iroad. $21,000, low down pay-&#13;
Iment.&#13;
Henry Krahn&#13;
Real Estate 117 E. MAIN&#13;
Pinckney UP 8-3380 I&#13;
FOR SALE: Two boys jackets,&#13;
Size 10. Reasonable price. UP 8-&#13;
3277. 45p&#13;
FOR SALE: three matching mahogany&#13;
tables, and one "Modern1'&#13;
water softener. Reasonable. Ph.&#13;
AC 7-2882. 46p&#13;
room home on 2 good!&#13;
condition, $10,500, terms.&#13;
'Land Lake, front, y&lt;&#13;
round home on one acre,|&#13;
insulated, full bath,&#13;
room with fireplace; needsl&#13;
some inside finish, $9,000.&#13;
WANTED: to rent a house in village&#13;
or near Pinckney; 2 bedrooms.&#13;
Call AC 7-7505.&#13;
WANTED: Feed oats. HA 6-9584&#13;
FOR RENT: Year round cottage,&#13;
2 bedrooms, excellent condition.&#13;
Lake priv. $65.00. UP 8-3220.&#13;
•or Rent, Silver Lake,&#13;
nice home with lake&#13;
leges; oil furnace, 2&#13;
rooms and sleep}&#13;
living room has&#13;
anrage with extra shower,&#13;
$80 per sftouth.&#13;
Iary Woltei&#13;
Real Estate&#13;
CALL HA 6-81M&#13;
7421 Dexto-Pteckney Rd.&#13;
FOR SALE: Buttercup and Butternut&#13;
squash. Marshall Meabon,&#13;
1135 W. M-36, Pinckney. 46-48p&#13;
FOR RENT: Furnished house, 5&#13;
rooms and bath; garage. References&#13;
required. Call UP 8-5595.&#13;
46c&#13;
LIVINGSTON COUNTY&#13;
ACCIDENT REPORT&#13;
Week of Oct 29 to Nov. 6&#13;
10 property damage accidents;&#13;
13 personal injury accidents; 26&#13;
persons injured; 35 cars involved.&#13;
IIP&#13;
111&#13;
I&#13;
CITIZENS FINANCE CO&#13;
1962 Plymouth prices range from $84 to $159&#13;
less than comparable Fords and CKevrolets!&#13;
Tbe "Big Hi" lowest-priced&#13;
fmtLsUe ear for *62, the action-parked&#13;
Plymouth with a continental contour to&#13;
ton the head of the young and tboee&#13;
who think young!&#13;
FulMae for family comfort custom&#13;
tailored fit for the average garage. Quiet&#13;
as a kitten m sneakers—smooth af a&#13;
sprinter with a 20-yard lead.&#13;
Do yourself the favor of dkiring one—&#13;
this week—and get, free of charge, the&#13;
biggest boot behind the wheel youf?o&#13;
h d in «tr automobile!&#13;
DRIVE FULL-SIZE CAR IN AMERICA TODAY I&#13;
VAN'S MOTOR SALES</text>
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              <text>Use the Windows Snipping Tool to capture the area of the document you want to save. If you want multiple pages printed please see staff to print the pages you want. &lt;a href="https://howelllibrary.org/technology/#print" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;View the library's printing information.&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Pinckney Dispatch November 15, 1961</text>
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                <text>November 15, 1961 edition of the Pinckney Dispatch, Pinckney, Michigan.</text>
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                <text>No Copyright - United States</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="27570">
                <text>1961-11-15</text>
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                <text>L.W. Doyle and C.M. Lavey</text>
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