HomeMy WebLinkAboutLivonian1945_1003Wilcox Starts
Lunch Program
Today, Monday, more than 200
students of the Wilcox school be-
gan enjoying hot lunches in the
school's new lunchroom. From
now on for the remainder of the
school year, students there may
obtain daily hot lunches and milk
for an average of 7.5 cents a week.
The idea was advanced by the
Wilcox Parent Teacher Associa-
tion. Through the combined ef-
forts of that agency- the lunch-
room and kitchen became a re-
ality.
In addition to donating between
$600 and $800 in cash with which
.to purchase equipment, the vari-
ous tradesmen in the organiza-
tion volunteered their services so
the labor cost was practically
nothing.
Plumbers, plasterers, carpen-
ters, roofers and common laborers
aorlerl their efforts to make the
project a reality. It was built as
an attachment to the school build-
ing proper.
The kitchen equipment includ-
es a hot water heater, dishwasher,
kettles,'stoves and benches. Cooks
will be hired .and regulated menus
prepared by qualified dieticians
will be observed.
Mrs. Clouston was chairmen of
the committee from the Wilcox
PTA that had charge of pushing
the lunchroom ,project through to
its successful completion.
No doubt the added attraction
of hot lunches at the. Wilcox
school will prompt similar pro-
grams to be put into effect at Li-
vonia's other schools.
Name New School
Band Members
New members of the band at
Newburg :School are Jane Tim-
mins, Derkson Worden, Thomas
Kettle, Raymond Case, Norman
Mahrley and Dave Thatcher, cor-
nets; Joan Thatcher, Donna Mor-
ris, Marilyn Snyder, Nancy Case
and Erlene Carithers, clarinets;
James Van Tassell and Glen Pace,
saxophones; and Robert Coburn,
Trombone.
At Livonia Center the band
members now participating in re-
hearsals are Charles Simpson,
saxophone; ISheldM Chambers,
Donald Beach and John Bluth,
clarinets; Joyce Carson, Shirley
Karns and Betty Ann Wixon,
drums; Merlin Holycross, cornet;
Roy Liddle, baritone, and Robert
Laing, trombone.
New Township
Dump Is Open
Livonia Township has opened
a new "fill" at the west end of
Greenland avenue. Anything but
perishable refuse will be accept-
ed. There is a small fee for
dumping refuse. It is open daily
except Sunday from 9 a.m. to
6p.m.
Within a few weeks a new
supply and feed store will be
opened at Hubbard and Five Mile.
The building is of brick and ce-
ment block construction and was
put up almost entirely by ,the pro-
prietor. Grading operations about
the building were completed last
week.
*THE LIVONIAN*
Entered at the Plymouth, Michigan, Postoffice as Second Class Mail Matter.
Phone Plymouth 16 Vol. ,6; No. 33 Wednesday, October 3, 1945
Three Boys Are
Given Home Here
Johnson Works
With State Group
Diphtheria Is
Cause of Death
Detroit's bewildered orphan Diphtheria already has reared
Providing .adequate school room
trio—the " Williams Brothers—are facilities motivated a group of its ugly head in Livonia to take
now living in Livonia with their educators, including Harry O. the life of one little girl and leave
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. W. Johnson, superintendent of Livo- the grief-stricken parents hospi-
A. Marsh, of 18796 Lathers street. nia public schools, to draft a res- talized by the dread malady.
They also have their two pet olution which was unanimously Last Sunday night, Sept. 23,
dogs. adopted at the recent school sup- Dr. Luther Peck was summoned
Mr. Marsh, a Detroit factory erintendent's convention at Tra- to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ste -
employe, also has four children of verse City. phen Spitza, 13526 Merriman road.
h9s own but did not hesitate to The resolution requests Gov. $e diagnosed the illness .of their
accept the responsibility of three Harry F. Kelly to include in- his daughter, Barbara, seven, as diph-
more when tragedy struck the call for a special session of the theria. She immediately was sent
family. Until a larger house can legislature, a proposition to pro- to Herman Kiefer Hospital in De=
be found the seven persons are vide state aid for school building troit. Barbara a student at Rose -
cozily ensconced in the Marsh's purposes. dale school, died there Tuesday.
three-room cottage. Supt. Johnsoli was most vitally _ Her parents, Stephen and Mary
The orphans, Bobby, Ralph and its leading author. He had in mind Spitza, both are patients at that
Tommy Williams, were the only interested in the measure ,and was hospital now in a serious condi-
survivors of a flash fire that de- of -course the °proposed consoli- tion with the same disease. Their
stroyed their parents small frame dated building for Livonia. home -on Merriman is under quar-
dwelling some weeks ago in Supt. Johnson said the action antine and being occupied by an
Southfield Township. by Livonians in voting to increase elder daughter, her husband, and
Mr. and Mrs. Williams and two their taxes for the next five years five -weeks -old baby, .according to
other children all were victims of to the fullest extent possible un- Dr. Peck.
the fire. der the 15 mill limitation would Dr. Larry Hotchkiss, Livonia
Detroiters and friends . and for
its best provide funds enough Township health officer, reports
neighbors of the Williams do- for only o classrooms. This he that -one other family in the town-
nated nobly to the trio's plight believes would be exclusive of a ship is also under quarantine.
and made the job of caring for gymnasium, auditorium or shops. Tests have shown them to have
With •a laudible forward think -
cash donathem a ittl s for the care of the easier. e ing attitude towards the Livonia act ositive cases.throat cultures ,but no
pitiful little boys is welcomed. educational system, Supt. Bohn-
. .son, seesthe need for a building Superintendent of Livonia
* of not less than 45 classroom; in Schools, Harry O. Johnson, said
addition to a cafeteria, gymna- he understood a student at St.
■ Michael's ;parochial school also
Richard Rice sium, shops and auditorium.
Livonian electors ,could not died of diphtheria last week. ,
possibly raise sufficient funds for Dr. Hotchkiss said he was un -
Rotary Speaker Such a plant, so the superintend- able to confirm or deny -the report
ent conceived the idea of solicit- because the parochial students
ing state aid. This idea was warm- came from many other areas than
Richardson Rice, director of the
Mi( higan Methodist Childrens'
Home and chairman of the Livo-
nia Rotary club's community ser-
vice committee, addressed his fel-
low members last Monday at the
Pen Mar. He was introduced by
Dr. Larry Hotchkiss.
Mr. Rice spoke on the theme,
"I Discovered Community Ser-
vice." He urged his fellow rotar-
ians to take an active personal
interest in the family group. He
advocated the investigating of
community needs and helping in
their solution.
"Support what we now have,
Mr. Rice said, don't go looking
for trouble when you aren't tak-
ing care of what is before you."
One of the greatest ways to give
community service, Mr. Rice
thinks, is to let the public know
what you think they need and
then create in them a desire for it
cr something better.
By example he said, a good
citizen can influence those that
are back sliding. He said this was
especially true in voting or ob-
serving local laws and regula-
tions.
He called for a better rural and
urban relationship and cited the'
mutual needs and necessity of co-
operation between - city dwellers
and rural residents.
throughout the state from areas He did say that to his knowl-
similar to Livonia. edge only one Livonia township
If 'Gov. Kelly will only put the resident had died, so far, from
requested proposition in his call.. the disease. It is possible, he said,
Livonians can feel sure the aid that a .parochial student did die
will be forthcoming. If Livonia from the infection but unless it
can receive 50 per cent of its was from a Livonia township
funds from the State andanother another family he. would have no record
25 per cent from the Federal gov- of; it.
ernment, the 45 -classroom build- To quiet the fears of school
ing will be insured, iSuPt. Johnson teachers and parents who said
believes. they expected an epidemic, Dr.
It will be simple to obtain Fed- Hotchkiss had this to say:
eral aid once the state aid is as- "I don't anticipate any epidemic
sured. With 75 per cent of the in Livonia schools. This is due to
building costs covered in that the fact that the vast majority of
manner the increased school taxes the students have been properly
;n Livonia for the next five years immunized. Parents should not
will conveniently underwrite the forget that immunization gives
other 25 per cent. the child a positive protection."
Supt. Johnson stresses the fact He also said that the outbreak
in his resolution to the_ governor of the disease would not affect
that, legal restrictions brought the township's announced immu-
about by the 15 -mill limitation nization :program for school chil-
make it practically impossible for dren which opened Monday, to -
most school.districts to finance the day, at the Wilcox School.
:.necessary school building con- Dr. Hotchkiss said in view -of
struction. the present conditions he was ad -
The move is a very smart one vising booster doses of diphtheria
and may provide the answer to toxoid for all children up to 15
Livonia's future school problems. years old who had not received
* immunization shots within the
Since 1909 when plantings on last two ,years.
state forest reserves covered only He stressed the fact that no epi -
224 acres, over" a quarter of a demic should be expected be -
million acres have been planter cause of the immunized children
and some of the first plantings and the availability of immuniza-
have been cut and marketed. tion for those who have not been.
Page Two THE LIVONIAN Wednesday, October 3, 1945 .
Michigan's first fish commis- The first legislation to regulate
sioner was appointed in 1873. In hunting was passed in 1859, 29 I
1887 protection of game was add- ' years after Michigan was admit- w,
ed to his duties making him the ted to the Union. It provided a �+ ME'S S 1N E A R
first salaried game warden in the closed season on deer for the first - 1.4k
United States. seven months of each year.
You can help yourself, if in a hurry, in our
rearranged, up-to-the-minute grocery and meat
store —
Save time — we have every thing that you
need including the choicest meats in Livonia
Service With We Carry Only
A Smile Quality Foods
M I LT"S
QUAI-FIFT KF - IF
Phone Livonia 2531 — 32105 Plymouth Road
CASH
AND CARRY
Get ready for Fall with
PRIDE -CLEANED
CLOTHES
LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES
LADIES' COATS
MEN'S TOPCOATS
MEN'S SUITS
79<
Ending
Oct. 6
Children's
Clothes
39c up
tilake This 'Tour
Jewelry Headquarter-■
W 19 it
Redfords Oldest Established I
Jewelers --Just west on t:urana
River Ave., at Lasher
PATRONIZE
YOUR OWN
Lumber -
---and—
Building Suppy
Headquarters
Coal - Lumber
Building Materials
Leadbetter
COAL & LUMBER
COMPANY
12434 Middlebelt Road
'/2 Mile N. of Plymouth Rd.
Phone Redford 0338
Made m
MHM SUITS
$30.00 - $32.50 - $35.00
Nationally Known
Tailored Suits made
to Your Measure
Topcoats and
Overcoats
ARROW SHIRTS
INTERWOVEN
SOCKS
Knox - Portis Hats
Jackets - Sportswear
Slacks - Dress Pants
Undergarments
Full Line of
WORK CLOTHES
Davis &Lent
"Where Your Money's Well
Spent"
811 Penniman Avenue
PLYMOUTH
OPEN fOR BUSINESS
Nankin
Mill's nn
33594 Ann Arbor Trail
—Visit Our Beautiful Bar—
CI E AN E R S Private Parties Given Special Attention
Ypsilanti: 20 N. Washington Plymouth: 774 Penniman Private Rooms Available
Ypsilanti: 32 Huron Street Wayne: 2925 N. Washington
Wednesday, October 3, 1945 THE LIVONIAN
Page Three
Vow's This for A
acation Trip?
When Civil Engineer Herald
Hamill takes a vacation, he real-
ly takes a vacation.
By bus, by plane, by train he
recently traveled from Plymouth
to Elko, Nevada, way up there in
the Rocky Mountains where noth-
ing much is, produced outside of
ore, cattle and hay.
And what did he do when he
landed in this land of high alti-
tude, cold mountain breezes and
bright sunshine?
He got a job on a ranch pitch-
ing hay!
For two weeks he labored in
the hay fields—then called it a
day and said his vacation was
over and back to Plymouth he
came to settle boundary line dis-
putes between property owners
and run survey lines for high-
Cways, byways and subdivisions.
"That was a great vacation I
had, the kind I have been want-
ing to take for the past six years
but just couldn't get around to
do it until this month" said En-
gineer Hamill yesterday.
Strange laws govern the lives
of many rulers of native African
tribes. One of these laws forbids
the official marriage of Mujaji,
Queen of the Bolovedus in the
Transvaal. However, she is permit-
ted to "lobolo" or take temporary
husbands whom she compensates
with cattle.
APPLIANCE
REFRIGERATOR
WASHING MACHINE
And
Motor Repair'
We Service All Makes Including
Cold Spot Refrigerators '
PHONE MIDDLEBELT 4701
Bassett Refrigeration
y� We Erincr the
Shore to Your Door!
Ocean Fresh LOBSTERS and Other Sea
Foods to please the most particular
FROG LEGS — FISH STEAK
CHINESE FOODS PREPARED IN THE
REAL CHINESE WAY
Open Nights to 3:30 a.m.
Mid - Juifty Grioll
Middlebelt and Joy Roads
RAY THORPE, Owner
Phone 9296 Livonia
WHEAT FOR SEED......,
Yorkwin From Certified Seed
A High Yielding Variety
FARM SEEDS FOR FALL
PLANTING
For Better Lawns Seed Now
Phone 107
Eckles Coal &
AV*
Jupply Coe
SAN R O STUDIO
Con no,,v furnish you reprints of your former
portrait sittings
Avoid the Christmas Rush
Give a purely personal gift this year —
a photograph
Hour:: 9:30 to 6 daily — 9:30 to 9 Saturday
Sunday by appointment
Phone Redford 7798
Want A Better Car? 20740 Feakell
Phone
You'll Find Detroit's Finest Red. 08.00
Selection On Our Lot
Our Service Department Is The Most Efficient
See Us When ILLBROWN y Yon
Want a Better Car
or When Your Ca:
BNeed's Repaking
In The Northwest Section.
LIVONIA'S
OLDEST REAL
ESTATE FIRM
HARRY S. WOLFS
ao•, ESTATE .ABM . DIMAM
Phone Livonia 2888
32888 Five Mil. Roa&—Juft MW ad reradog6ft VAed
List your property with us for prompt sale
Page Four
No longer a war secret is a
British invention, the thunder-
storm locator, which proved indis-
pensable to victory in Europe.
Three of these instruments, instal-
led at strategic points in England
registered simultaneously every
near and far flash of lightning;
and by plotting their records, it
was possible to determine the lo-
cation, direction and rate of travel
of all thunderstorms within 1500
miles of the British Isles and to
predict when and where they
would affect the Allied forces.
The roads leading to distinc-
tion in separate pursuits diverge,
and the nearer we approach the
one, the farther we recede from
the other. —Bovee.
Save with Safety
at your
REXALL DRUG
STORE
CECIL H. HABERMEHL
Corner of Blackburn
32101 Plymouth Road
Rosedale Gardens
Get better results with
better feeds
LARRO
HEADQUARTERS
Poultry Remedies
SAXTOtNs
Farm Supply Store
587 W. Ann Arb(,r Trail
Phone 174
THE LIVONIAN Wednesday, October 3, 1945
Total amount of park land un-
der conservation department su-
pervision on June 30, 1944 was Fisher
nearly 43,000 acres including land
in adiareas and
parks and recre-
ation areas and in unadministered
park sites.
ALAC .I N
Beer - Liquor - Wine
ED. PALISZEWSKI, Prop.
(formerly Frank's Inn)
31022 Ann Arbor Trail
Near Merriiman Road
Coal for all type
heating plants
Plymouth
Lumber & Coal
Company
308 N. Main St., at P. M.
Tracks
Phone 102, Plymouth, Mich.
Visit Our New
Jewelry Store
located at
842 Penniman
across from
The First National Bank
We carry an extensive line of
fine jewelry, crystal and
wooden ware in addition to
precious stones and jewelry.
South Main Street, Plymouth
HEADQUARTERS FOR THE FAMILY SHOES
Florisheim and Jarman For Men
Wilbur B. Coon and Air Step For Women
Buster Brown and Poll 'Parrott For Children
DAN" CC I I N G
Seven Nights
I�
of the Week
DANN S
TAVERN
34401 Plymouth Road
Serving Dinners 4 to 9 P.M., Daily
An Ideal Place to Spend an Evening
BEER - WIDE - LIQUOR
Music by Sod Schaeffer's Band
Amateur Night every Thursday
It's Easy To Shop In Our
Modern Serve -Self Market
With marketing as difficult as it is today
you will appreciate the convenience of our
modernized store.
LIDGARD BROS.
RED & WHITE STORE
Stark at Plymouth Road
Wednesday. October 3, 1,945 THE LIVONIAN Page Seven
Bombardier mann
cells of Raids
In a detailed letter from Sai-
pan, written Sept. 6 by Lt. Sher-
man Mann, formerly of 41.150
Ford road, to his brother-in-law,
Edward Mennick, a stirring ac-
count of a flight to Formosa is
described.
Lt. Mann, a bombardier at-
tached to the 20th Army Air
Force, Wing 73, writes of a flight
in which his plane was carrying
tons of food supplies and medi-
cine to a prison in Formosa where
many hundreds of Yanks were
held by the Japs. Their objective
was to drop the supplies by para-
chute to the starved but released
prisoners.
In the process of dropping the
supplies the chutes became en-
tangled in the bomb bay doors
and Lt. Mann was forced to crawl
into the opened bay with an axe
and free them. "We were only
250 feet above the ground, his let-
ter states, and if I had fallen out
my chute would never have open-
ed in time to save me."
During the mission his plane
developed engine trouble and on
the return trip was forced down
at Okinawa. He writes that he
had no sleep for three days and
nothing to eat but coffee and
doughnuts.
After getting repairs at Okina-
wa the crew resumed their trip
back to Saipan. When 400 miles
from Iwo Jima the plane again',
had engine trouble and the crew'.
prepared to bail out. They kept'
going however and finally reach-
ed Iwo Jima all right but their'
ship was finished.
7�C
The first meeting of the Elm
PTA will be Oct. 2. The speaker
of the evening will be Mrs. C.
Tuck our district director of Par-
ents and Teachers. All parents
are cordially invited to attend.
Refreshments will be served.
Be thorough in all you do and
remember that though ignorance
often may be innocent, pretension
is always despicable. — W. E.
Gladstone.
Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your good
works, and glorify your Father
which is in heaven. — Matthew
5:16.
Keep 'em roinagi We mean
dollars! Buy U. S. Savings Bonds
and Stamns.
Let Us Build Your
Garage Right Now
�k �k
Garage Building our
Specialty
Wixon and Sons
32718 Five Mile Road
Livonia 2928
arced Speakers
For Town Hall
New and dazzling names have
been ad,`,ed to the list of world -
known celebrities to appear at
Detroit Town Hall in the Fisher
Theatre during the coming season.
The .Series offering 20 Wednes-
day mornings of music, entertain-
ment, and lectures by the coun-
try's finest speakers will open
Wednesday morning, Oct. 10 at
11:00 with Margaret peaks and
Conrad Thibault, two of radio's
best beloved singing stars. This
brilliant couple need no introdue
tion to the thousands of fans who
have heard their glorious voices
weekly on leading chain pro-
grams.
In the roster of speakers to dis-
cuss current problems of today
are such headlining celebrities as
H. R. Knickerbocker, Basil O'Con-
nor, Vincent Sheehan, Robert
Boothby, Josephine Roche, Erika
Mann, Dr. James M. Hepborn,
Madame Lakshmi Pandit, Marie
Osmena, and Henri Chatillon, not-
ed hat designer of Paris and Mex-
ico who will speak on "Fashion Is
A Man's Business."
Musical and entertainment
mornings planned for the 17th'
season of Detroit Town Hall in-
clude concerts by Percy Grainger,
gre-` pianist, The American Trou-
badours, also the Fox Hole Bal-
let, a group of world famous stars.
reservations for the course and
additional information are obtain-
able at Detroit Town Hall Head-
quarters, Room 220 Hotel Statl_-,
Cherry 5617.
Trim Your Trees
Along Sidewalks
Property owners in Plymouth
are requested by City Manager
Clarence Elliott to trim their trees
that border public sidewalks.
His request was prompted by
a report made Monday morning in
which a local woman said her
umbrella was caught by swaying
branches and her glasses nearly
broken as she walked along one
of the city's streets.
It seems the branches at that
particular spot are low most of
the time but were pressed nearer
the sidewalk by the rain. Inves-
tigation shoved it would be im-
possible to pass under them with
a raised umbrella.
Mr. Elliot: believes a careful
pruning of the offending branches
would eliminate a lot of friction
among local residents. Rain is in-
convenience enough without run-
ning the risk of having one's um-
brella torn from their grasp while
struggling along the streets try-
ing to remain dry in a driving
rainstorm.
A tree need not be indiscrimi-
nately trimmed to alleviate the
prevailing condition, according to
Mr. Elliott. He advocates just
trimming off the lowest branches,
especially those hanging over
sidewalks which normally brush
the heads of passing pedestrians.
It is just a courtesy due pedes-
trians and remember courtesy
makes safety.
If a man dces not know to what
port he is steering, no wind is fav-
orable to him.—Seneca.
RAKING
BANKING
EASIER
!on 2Pamea
The check book, perhaps, more than any other one
thing, has made banking both a convenience and a
pleasure for women who formerly dreaded any thought
or mention of financial matters.
The ease and certainty with which obli-
gations, large or small, may be settled by
check appeals to most women. They like
the convenience, the safety, the orderli-
ness of paying by check.
Have YOU a checking account with
this bank?
1 ig FAIIMINGTON STATE �ANK
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION!"
Rosedale Garden Club
Not to Meet Oct. 9
The regular meeting of. the
Rosedale Gardens Beanch of the
National Farm and Gardens As-
sociation scheduled for Oct. 9 has
been cancelled to afford the mem-
bers the opportunity of attending
a lecture by Dorothy Biddle on
"Christmas Decorations" at the
Women's 'City club in Detroit at
2:30, the same date. Tickets for
this lecture are available at the
home of the Rosedale Gardens
Branch secretary, Mrs. Ralph
Dunlevy, 11426 Arden.
Two dances to be held for
the young people of Rosedale
Gardens. The first will be on
Friday ,Oct. 5, from 8 to 11 at the
Rosedale Gardens club house for
all 7th, 8th and 9th grade pu-
pils living in Rosedale Gardens,
will consist of modern and early
American dances. Refreshments,
75c per ,person. The second dance
will be for 10th, 11th and 12th
grade pupils, during November,
the date to be announced later.
Since 1930 in Germany, more
than 700 books have been pub-
lu'shed on pronaganda and its
value in modern warfare.
Ross and Rehner
It"MAJEt__
OCTOBER
gAe.1—First steamboat to sail
. down Mississippi arrives
at New Orleans, 1812.
'hAr,�Pan-American
opnsnWash-
RESington, D. C., 1899.
_ 3—President Wilson asks
voters to endorse League
of Nations, 1920.
4—Continentals fail in sur-
prise attack on British at
Germantown, Pa., 1777.
-h 1 b --Aluminum Company de-
clared a monopoly by
Trade Commission, 1924.
6—Naval War College es-
tablished by Navy De-
AWALWARCOLLEGE- partment, 1884.
7—Prof. Langley's "Aero.
drome" sinks in river
after launching, 1903.
WNU Se-icb
GOODEYESlGIP
Makes History for You
Compliments of
John A. Ross
L. E. Rehner
Doctors of Optometry
909 Penniman Ave.
Plymouth, Michigan
Phone 433
New Office Hours
OPEN DAILY
FROM 7 to 9 p.m.
Page Eight THE LIVONIAN Wednesday, October 3, 1945
Wednesday, October 3, 1945 THE LIVONIAN
Page Nine
i
Page Ten THE LIVONIAN Wednesday, October 3, 1945
LIVONIA COMMUNITY,
CHURCH, Farmington Road and
Five Mile road. Rev. Albert J.
Luibrand, pastor. Morning Wor-
ship 11:30 a.m. Sunday School,
claims for all ages, 10:30 a.m.
Choir practice Thursday evening
at 8 p.m. Prayer meeting and
Bible study Thursday evening
at 7 p.m. Friendship Circle first
and third Wednesday of each
month. Evening worship and
song service the last Sunday of
each month at 7:30 p.m. Young
People's meeting at the ohureh
last Sunday of each month A
7 p.m. Teachers meeting the first
Monday of each month at 7:30
p.m. This is an undenomina-
tional church and everyone .m
the community is cordially invit-
ed to attend.• • •
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
Farmington high school auditor-
ium, Sunday, 11:00 a. m., Sunday
school, same hour. Wednesday
evening services at 33336 Grand
River Avenue at 8:00P. m-
• • •
GAYLORD ROAD B A P T I S T
CHAPEL, 19188 Gaylord Rd. three
bucks south of Grand River. Rev.
Edwin C. Gordon, Pastor. 19248
Dalby, Phone EVergreen 0124. 10
a.m. Church School with Bible..
classes for all ages. 11.15 a.m.
Morning Worship. 6:30 p.m.
B.Y.F. Mrs. Edwin Gordon, lead-
er. 7:30 p.m. Evening service.
Wednesday, 7:45 p.m. Bible study
,and Prayer service. We cordial-
ly invite you to come and worship
with us.
ST. MICHAEL'S C A T H O Ll C
CHURCH—Father Contway, pas-
tor; Rosedale Gardens. Masses at
5:45 a.m., 8 a.m., 19 a.m. and
12 noon
HOPE CHAPEL, CHURCH 011
THE UNITED BRETHREN. SiX
Mile, west of Middlebelt. Morn
ing worship and Sunday schocAd
10:30 am. Young Peoples Chris -i
tian Endeavor at 6:30 p.m., wit i
Youth Fellowship following. Thq
mid -week prayer service is held
on Thursday evening at 8:00 p.m.
The Ladies' Aid meets on the first
Wednesday evening of each
month. The Women's Mission-
ary Society meets on the sec-
ond Wednesday of each month at
noon, beginning with a potluck
luncheon at 12:30, which is fol-
lowed by the business and devo-
tional meeting at 1:30 pm. We in-
vite everyone in our community
to take part in our Christian fel-
lowship.
BETHEL MISSIONARY CHA-
PEL, 8890 Middle Belt Road.
Sunday school, 1:45 p.m., Sunday
Evening service, 7:45 P.M. 3&id-
week Service, Thursday, 7:45 p.m.
ST. PAUL'S • EV. LUTHERAN
CHURCH, corner Farmington and
Five Mile roads. Theodore Sauer,
pastor. Worship service, 10:30
a.m. Sunday School, 9:45 a.m.
You are cordially invited to at-
tend. „ • •
ST. JOHN'S EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, Maple and S. Harvey
Sts. Rev. Francis Tetu, rector.
Sunday morning services: Church
School, 9:45 am. Morning prayer
with sermon, 11:00 a.m.
* BUY WAR BONDS
awn a Dog? Then
In
ead This "Law"
Plymouth's new dog ordinance,
legally known as ordinance No.
127, is actually an amendment to
the original law governing the
licensing of dogs here.
Commencing Oct. 8, the date
the new ordinance takes effect,
the annual license for female dogs
in Plymouth will be up -ed from
one to three dollars.
Licenses for male or unsexed
Electric Refrigeration
Service
Kelvinator, Leonard,
Frigidaire, Universal,
Copeland
Licensed and Bonded
Livonia 2605
FUEL OIL
"Wo Aim to Plea e"
Phone Your Order to
191 Northville
Wit Calls Phone 88
C. R. ELY & SONS
YOU'VE TRIED THE
REST, NOW USE THE
BEST...
CLOVERDALE
FARMS DAIRY
Your Local Dealer
Phone 9
841 West Ann Arbor Trail
Plymouth, Mich.
Old Furniture Made to Loofa
Like New
FREE ESTIMATES
Phone Redford 3199
GUILBEAULT
UPHOLSTERING
Red. 3100
Corner Westbrook
dogs will remain at one dollar
per year.
Owners purchasing licenses for
dogs that have been immunized
against rabies :will receive a li-
cense tag stamped, "Vaccinated."
Of course before such a tag can
be issued the dog owner must
present a certificate from a veter--
nary showing the dog has been
immunized within the two years
previous to making application
for the license.
Dogs up to six months of age
are not required to be iicensed.
Licenses issued any year after
June 1, unless the dog shall have
Just reached licensing age (is
months or over) will cost the
owner an extra 50 cents.
With each metal license tag is-
sued, the City Clerk also must
include a written description of
the dog and the owner's name and
address.
If we cannot be a lighthouse, I
let us be a tallow candle.—Moody
744 Wing St. Plymouth
SQUARE DEAL
BODY SHOP
J. W. Selle and Son
Expert Collision Work
PHONE 177
Kaercher Feed
Store
Feeds—Seeds—Fertilizers
29444 Joy Road at Middlebell
Oil Burner
Service
Plumbing & Heating
Repair &
Installation
John M.
Campbell
Licensed Master
Plumber
Phone Plymouth 1505
Nights, Sundays and
Holidays
Phone Livonia 2073
* * *
Located at
38630 Plymouth Rd.
In 1889 Michigan's total lum-
ber production was five and a
half billion feet, seven times the
state's present output.
Mary Camilot
Ann Stephan
• • •
9035 Middlebelt
Bet. Chicago & Joy
Get Ready for
Cold Weather
'Check Your Car
Battery Today!
Don't wake up some
cold morning & have
a car that doesn't
start.
Let us tune that motor
and check the starter,
generator and distrib-
utor.
Prepare Now
***
Skilled Mechanics Do
Our Work
Rabiola
Gulf Service
31390 Plymouth Road
Phone
Livonia 9202