President Hoover Writes Foreword ^•"Writings of GeorgeWashington 9* Complete Text of Tribute Made Public by the Georgit ' * Washington Bicentennial Commission President Hoover has written the| series will be found letters and docu- / (foreword to the first volume of the ments showing that he was the Amer- /Jv y *Writings of George Washington," ican of his time who had the liveliest , \-*f, the preat Memorial edition which was sense of the absolute necessity of och ;v authorized by a specific Act of Con- cdpying the West and making it a i<' V' % r e s s t o c o m m e m o r a t e t h e T w o H u n - p a r t o f a n A m e r i c a n c o m m o n w e a l t h . 1%. ' | • jredth Anniversary of the Birth of "The materials on his activity as a ^ " \lfk>orRe Washington in 1932. His j man of affairs, which are here brought •>1', . ^ %rst volume has been completed and into relief, bring home to the reader " . **ill be ready for distribution in a the picture of Washington as a landfew weeks, according to the Division; owner, land developer, and land cul- 4f Information and Publication of the tivator. A much neglected side of eorge Washington Bicentejinial his character is Washington as an enmmission. . ^ j gineer. His countrymen have not rei; ' i ; In a few printed pages, the pres- alized how modern he was in his en- . f nt engineer President, who is Chair-' gineering operations--as reclaimer of ' v *ian of the George Washington Bi-, the Dismal Swamp; as advisor and ientennial Commission, pays his'engineer of the Potomac and James < • : |ribute to the first engineer President. ( River Canal; as the first advocate of This is the first volume of the, J combined highway and waterwar •i:'-i^flemorial edition which will be some j from the Atlantic Coast to the Ohio V c'iwenty-five volumes long. The work1 River; as a bank director; as an in- - |s being edited by Dr. John C. Fitz- j vestor; as one of the earliest Ameri- : : iatrick, long a leading authority on ( cans to recognize the possibilities of ^ fieorge Washington and his time, for power transportation by water; and |he George Washington Bicentennial j the first to suggest that air naviga- Tpommission. The undertaking is one tion might be very useful to the peothe major projects of the Commis- j pie of the United States. fion in connection with the coming Bicentennial Celebration of the birth Of the Father of His Country. The foreword, as written by the President of the United States, is as follows: "The people of the United States Are justly proud of their literary men ~nd women. They likewise are proud their outstanding statesmen. Liter-1 ing and in maintaining the morale of >V -v,- *ry power and statesmanship were his troops. All the efforts to show * -'4^' Combined in George Washington, the that Washington had no military i4" (greatest political leader of his time genius will fade away under the jp • ** • fend also the greatest intellectual and searchlight of this publication of his •' ' L moral force of the Revolutionary military material, much of it for the >y ' ,'V'" ^period. Everybody knows Washing- first time. 5,» rV > ton as a quiet member of the Vir-j "If nothing had been written by ; I:-, -x,". -' jginia Assembly, of the two Continen- others about Washington's leadership tal Congresses, and of the Constitu- in forming a new nation, his papers tional Convention. Few people realize and correspondence while President . , that he was also the most voluminous would forever establish him as a great American writer of his period, and constructive statesman. His private ?, ,T*^'-":,!i.""-'that his principles of government have virtues are set forth from the earli- ; had more influence on the develop- est boy's letters down to the last entry If " ! ». ment of the American commonwealth that he made in his diary. Washingpif v. than those of any other man. ton with his wife's children and grand- "Unfortunately, Washington for children stands -out as clearly as S; many years was interpreted to his Washington 'at Yorktown. countrymen chiefly through warped "The United States George Washhiographies written upon a great deal ington Bicentennial Commission is un- <of legendary assumption. Until very dertaking to throw light upon the I?'v>V-iv.- - ^recently no readable biography of character of Washington in many •- .if JGeorge Washington in reasonable ways. None will be more enduring "compass made him stand for what he than this collection of his own words, ||*; was--the most potent human and in-' and thoughts. The addresses, the pa-j telleetual force in a firmament of geants, the public meetings, and the' 1THE MODEL ::S8 © J % Fuilt Hurst , - ((c), McClure Newspaper Syndicate.1 M 'What Washington sayk for himself will also be the foundation of our appreciation of his great abilities and immense services as the leader of the Continental Army. He was a thoroughly modern soldier, intensely interested in drill and tactics and plans of campaign, but equally unwearied in recruiting and supply and officer- . American intellect. Nowadays good' memorials of every kind which the ,i;"biographies of Washington are avail-j Commission will encourage and snp- »hle, written from the sources. Many ( port, will call public attention to the of them are devoted to a particular, most striking of the events in his phase of his activity--the military j life. But a hundred years after 1932 aide, the personal side. Hence when' Washington will still be appealing to the United States George Washing-, the sense, the interest, the public *on Bicentennial Commission began spirit, and the patriotism of that later ^ '"its work it did not attempt to inspirei age, by thq great thoughts of his \*new biographies. It selected as its mind, by his great hopes for his coun :,<most important literary duty thej try, and by the simple, straightforjmaking Washington better known, by | ward, elevated, manly, and patriotic spreading abroad his own thoughts spirit of which these writings will be and plans and hopes and inspirations j the imperishable record. In the exact form in which he framed them. "Thus one of the first decisions of the Commission was to provide an "Edition of Washington's writings as Complete as possible, in a form which Would make it available for the present generation and forever hereafter. Of the two previous editions of Wash- (signed) HERBERT HOOVER, President of the United States. Chairman of the George Washingten Bicentennial Commftson.•* VOLO Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield, Mr. ««> i_ . , . r ~ , Mrs. Tony Wegner, Mr. and Mrs. Mar- Ington s Writings the first, a hundred: tin Wegner, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fishfears ago, was the twelve-volume edi-j er, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Rothermel, Mr. tion edited by Jared Sparks, a pioneer a„d Mrs. Earl Hironimus, Mr. and j? collectjng and publishing historical I Mrs. Frank Hironimus, Mr. and Mrs. documents. Proper canons in histori-jEarl Paddock and son, Wm. Wagner riTV°i- ^t deve^ped ! attended the wedding dance of Miss jnd it hurt the feelings of Sparks if Loretta Behm and George Hertel at ihe great man misspelled or seemed to Round Lake last Wednesday evening, h-m^ungrammatical. Therefore the Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., of Wau- Bparks edition can not be relied upon conda spent Friday at the F. E. Wil- Jto tell us what Washington actually igon home. C FoarH fill6 editi°n °f Worthi"^on Little Robert DoweO ia on the sick C. Ford, forty years ago, was scholar- ij8^ ' *nd.,Care.fu"y ed.ited' but materials! Mr. and Mrs. Frank Harrison of Sr t!n n f E °TP ! edi_l Chicago and Miss Marie Seymour and roduct,on limited by Clayton Paddock caUed on Mr*. Ease considerations, and it is pi8her Sunday afternoon. "The Cnnfm " v ^ ^rs- Milton Dowell ia now improvni .Pf , rri8tS,0n j f8 ^ ^ 5°iin^ at th« ^ Theresa hospital, Wau publish a definitive edition of all the kegan. written and printed words of George Washington in the form in which they left his hands, including several volwhole of which up to now had re- Wednesday . yarned in manuscript only. Most of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey and son ill 7ra ( 7ntinss o{ every kind were callers at GrayslaW Saturday h™r!°nfUnr Pre8e^?d in the Li" Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher wen a^H nriL^0"^683' , 1,braries capers at Wauconda Monday. . and private owners of manuscripts Frank Meyer of McHenrv was a " fnr1nHF™ltte- ^otostats to be made caller here Saturday. readers, investigators, and writers * « ."The o™,, Tb" Sly " ' •ion takes great satisfaction in rend- Er<Sp Pi.w . . . ering this public service; for as the Waukeean week-end in publication of the new series pro- Mr and Mrs F F Wilann mnA ui Si 5>e.r that Ik. reputation of George w"ukeg,„ rSly Washington as a soldier, statesman, Esse Fishil c ui. .. j and man is enhanced by the record - f ^ Fred Smith, Lloyd everything ttlat he is LlVTJ til to Trevo'r pS™"' ,,OWeU committed to pen and paper. «> xrevor Friday. Mrs. M. Kiffle spent the past week at the home of Mrs. E. Bacon. Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and Mr. and Mrs. rem. im "One deviation has been made Trom Mf,8" Albert Ro8»nS and son the plan of including aH of WasW 2«.^,^erty f v,,,e ^ Sunday ttoonn"ss wwrriitfiinng.s. ^in this edi.ti oWna sh!TTh5e- wlTthh «t he fIoorrmmeerr'8s Ppaarreennttss hheerree. Duu-y h., bfen rwently publi.hed By le.^ „?ZU2«,1.W%" •h°cked /, ft «Will-fill flHit/ir L„ _• -- dwth of Gcorgs Cw. communitv this On the other are Monday evening at the Frank* Ro^in* ory »' tt • of the Revolution, are now for the first time made available in print, and will be distributed in the order of their dates. "What is the message from Washington revealed by this complete «nd scholarly edition? First of all it i*. ~-- eludes Washington's own graphic r|» Karlictt Trad* __ cords of his experiences on the fron- The first trade Journal inlhe couawr while it was still in the possession try was the New York Prices Current. «f the Indians. Throughout the started In 1795. a skillful editor, enlivened bv inter Ho u a i j ?. th^ts Lrni;rh" ,i,e'» left out of the new set. On the ntW **_ „„A _ hand, the General Order,, »hich are Monday et.S .t 7 - UIWr ,PMt °i great^ significance for the history home near McHenry! M Period* of RemorM Remorse goes to sleep during a proeperous period, wrote Rousseau, and wakes up In adversity. ir- RS. YAWITZ knew she was blessed with a "model son." She also knew that the term had~eome to carry with It a sort of ridiculous portent. Some wag had said that a "model child" was one built in a small imi: tation of the real thing. Mrs. Yawits knew better. She knevV that "model son," as applied to hers, meant th& kindest, most .considerate, most obedient and hlgb>prlndpl*d boy In the world. Gentle old lady that she "Was, she would have clawed out the eyes of one who said otherwise. As a matter of fact, there was no One who could have said otherwise. Ben Yawitz, a rotund little fellow with a kind, shining, circular face, short, dimpled hands and the gentlest eyes Imaginable, was impeccably the good son and the decent, respected and respecting citizen. His picture-framing establishment, which he had inherited from his father, was known over the area of a large neighborhood for Its reliability and good standing. The Yawits family, which had consisted of three while the father lived, occupied the apartment over the store, and for 36 years had paid rent punctiliously for their premises. Ben had developed^ the business nicely. He not only took care of a large neighborhood clientele, but handled the map-and-picture framing for two high schools and a large natural history museum in the district. His mother always said of him that he should have been an artist. Possibly. He took genuine pleasure In the mounting and framing of the various bits of art that came to him, and was tireless at discussing the mounting of a bridal or comnftinion photograph. He even dabbled a bit.In water- color himself, and once sold to a young bridal couple who set up housekeeping in the neighborhood, a framed painting of the little street scene before his shop. It had brought five dollars. Mrs. Yawitz kept the identical bill paid for it pinned to a little envelope of lavender sachet In her lower dresser drawer. Another • little characteristic that seemed to indicate that Ben came by his rrtlrtio l'"rt hor.csMy, as the saying goes, was the genuine love of music, not only of Uie son, but of the mother as well. It was a not ununual sight to seethe short, rotund l:^n and his short, rotund mother neatly, decently dressed, the two of them, setting forth of an evening (one of the three out of the week, it hail to be, when the store was not open) for the opera house or concert hall, A contented pair. A blessed mother, and a mother who was never unconscious of that blessing. Of coursc, time and time again, up to the time I!en approached his forties, the subject of the possibility of his marriage had not only been discussed among friends and neighbors, but between the two themselves. "I never "want to stand In the way, •on, of your marriage. No mother is entitled to a monopoly of the life of a child." "I'm not the marrying sort, mother." Ton will be some day, son." "Then there will be time to frifr of it" That time came and yet, strangely and a little terribly, there was never talk of it between mother and son. It had all eome about like this: A neighborhood girl who had recently moved Into the district, but who already had had time to acquire for herself the reputation of being "gay," came into the shop one day for the purpose of having a picture of herself framed. Strangely enough, It was Ben's little clerk and not himself who took the order, but it was lien himself who did the framing. It was an enlarged snapshot of Aimee McRae, taken at a beach. Tawny and blowing were her short, bobbed curls In that photograph, dimpled and adorable her short legs and, for a touch of nonsense, she slung a large, flappy sun hat filled with sand. Ben could scarcely believe that it was not what he called a "fancy picture' until, on the day of Its promised com pletion, the subject of it herself appeared, just as adorably saucy, just as piquant as the photograph. It began to happen almost at once. Almee, who had never even known, much less been loved by, anyone of Ben's stability, was quick to react to the sense of protection. Ben might prove a dull evening's diversion, but he was a sure, good meal, a warm, first-class seat in a motion picture theater. and sometimes even a taxi. Aimee, naughty, shrewd, elfish and a soubrette, was quick to sense all that She even put up with the occasional concert. It gave her an absolutely un precedented sense of anchorage to go about with this- quiet, serious-eyed, oldish-young fellow. She hooted abiuif It to her friends and yet, deep Inside of her, something cold was timing. Gradually ft was borne In upon the trout iled Ben that his mother's sup posed reticence was not reticence ai all. She did not know, apparently, bj one of Ihow mtvadn when pw" -r - . tftlMir , i^jf mil imuu *tm>- Samctot «f fl* l*ih*vatlo» flttt wm taking place aatfer her very eyes. To his shame, Ben felt a seaee of relief and thanksgiving well into his soul, it was not that he was ashamed of Aimee, the dear, sweet elf, untutored as a gamin, a product of hard, cruel conditions, a small angel of delight. But somehow, try as he would, he could not visualize compatabllity between his mother and this sprite. She would not, could not, know about his mother, for instance, dear Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Schaefer were McHenry callers Saturday. Ifra. He*ry Hetteiinenn entertained her .card duh T!b«mday aftexnpen. Mitt Mildred SeHaefer and friend and Mr. and Hrs. King of Long Lake motored to JEinosha Friday evening. Misses 'Mildred and Susan Fcett and John Freund of Chicago visited at the Ben Schaefer home Sunday. Nick L. Freund was a caller here for the past week. *- Miss Mildred Schaefer was a caller little foolishness that he did. And , at Crystal Lake Sunday. Aimee wore her blond hair In a riot | Charles Schaef Lyman Mueller, i rrR Cnr,"rer f ' TVhe John Pacpk ^ RaV Schaefef were mother of Ben there had always been | at Woodstoclt Sunday. rj™E *Ji I lt0™mer ™ •w<"k* - zzsl T".7 ,rr, sl h.apd' c"r;erd,"?- ob»f ^ peared in the few public places they i frequented. Then Aimee was forever 'n "f John horae* hitching her adorable shoulders to ad- ^ if- T^*"" just a tiny gilt safety pin on her un- ; J~.Ve™en^on hw bQ,,d>n*' the <*»- dergnrment or stooping to pull at a ! L j , AV „ . wrinkling stocking. Quaint, dear things ' Chamberlin an^brother of Chiwhen Aimee did them, yet things that i ^ ca"ed on in the eyes of his mother, Ben knew, - - dance at the Parish hall Mon- FtTortd CoiBtriM 'Unit Is no species of venomous mtm. In Cuba, Haiti, Porto Rico or JMMke ' : -• ftardi'a OwiUy Daly estimates the temperature ol the center of the earth at 90,000 degrees centigrad&-and the pressure «t* 25,000 tons per square inrk. A sittlnf was knowi tt ilie canae the there. Jef«MS Davit MmmtUI The JflCMMn Davis soonumeatt erected near his birthplace In Chris* tian coanty, iCentw^au !• S6i foet high." ' ; ' .*y -' r >" V*. ... -A ' . W , » •-. 2?' "' 'i-ZjM 0(?MFIt>ENCE IS BUSINESS . NEE% MERLE THOfiPE, Editor Jhm Natioo'i Bvimm. . would seem bold. Worry began to nest In the kind, day was a big success. Mr. and Mrs. George Miller of brown eyes of the little man. Anx- Vo'®. v5sited here Monday evening. iety .for the precarious position in which h& found himself with this girl who more and more, as tinje went on, was beginning to rest her battered little soul against the seclusion and safer ty he offered. Ben began to realize that he was about to be confronted with the problem of the cruelest kind of renunciation a man can be called upon to make. Even to attempt to Introduce madcap Aimee Into the tidy, arranged, speckless life of his mother was to»,, fantastic to consider. Almee musfr have realized it, too. She became furtive the moment the mother's name was mentioned. Clouds formed In her bright, blue eyes; sometimes the suspicion. of tears. They never discussed the small mother of Ben. They never dared. But always shi was there, between them. Like a shadow. Like a dread. There came the tinie when the soul of Ben, rent with doubt, with fear,' with love, began to set up such a torment within him that be realized that; between himself, his heart and hla God, there must be a reckoning. - It was not fair to the elf, Almee* even though she was renouncing noth-», ing more than a tawdry life, to encroach into her youth in this fashion.'i. There was never hesitancy or doubtf- In the mind of Ben, though, as to what his ultimate decision must be. To begin with, Almee was outsldef^ the faith so scrupulously fostered by ' the mother of Ben. Tliat in itself would be the equivalent of a dagger thrust into her faithful old soul. More than that, Ben knew, even though hlsT pity and his love flowed out all the. more to Aimee, that she had not been^ what his mother would have called a?', "good girl." Life had battered her, ' but to Ben the sweetness in the child,' which he was redeeming, more and> more, was simply unsmlrchable. He loved her. Strangely, oh strangely, once you knew the elf of a girl herself, Almee loved him. Not for the security he offered, not for the stability that in the beginning had drawn her. Aimee loved this round. little man because the soul In him burned like a lighted lamp for her. ; She, too, realized that they were In^i for heartbreak. Some things were too'r? good to be true. :>• They came to be more and more, silent together. The brooding, sad silence of something impending. Timely', and time again, Ben braced himself • for the sacrifice. Time and time again/, the sweet eyes of Almee, pained be--+ - fore they were really hUft, disarmed! him of intention. ' i; / And all the while their secret tryst*! went on. And all the while the namds^""' of Aimee never so much as crossed'- ' the lipa of the demure little mothe# < upstairs, living her life tranquilly lif t ". the warm protection of her son. VI • ;y. . Life sometimes seems to have auV, most a persistent pattern. There cam^l • - ' the day, finally, when Ben found th«]^:; strength to take into his hands a sit*]- J'; uation that was rapidly becoming unf? " bearable. He resolved to take Alme*. to a motion picture theater that evening and on the way home stop at aifc.'„.v ice cream parlor they sometimes flreMf quented, and try to find the words t<p£ ^ tell her the heart-hurting facts of hit r enforced renunciation. At six o'clock Ben closed his atom "as usual, to go upstairs for the steamsf--~~~ ing hot meal his mother was sure have waiting for him. Foods that liked, delicacies that had been espeg.* ., . dally thought up for him. There, sure enough, on the tabl steaming and fragrant, was his disiK of soup, and opposite it his mother's^'! She was already at her place, a smil<|l on her lips, but her head so strangely -backward, in a lolling position. ^ The mother of Ben was dead. H*<| f died of heart stroke while she sajv waiting for her son to arrive for dlnf ner. f': The smile remained, even after shfc. was tilted In the front parlor in tt softly lined mauve and black coffin. That smile somehow became a bea con for Ben. It helped him, througl the pain and bewilderment, to find hi way to a decision that he came flnall to realize liis mother would have ma had she lived. What further afded and abette#1 him In this decision to make the llttlf' elf Aimee his wife was a small objec|, he found in his mother's lower dresseiKi drawer, tucked under a five-dollar bi# and a little Envelope of blue sachefe* It was a bit of his mother's hanc}»- work. An embroidered piece of trouei sean lingerie, with the name "AIMEE?* worked into the hem. Miss Marie Mertes motored to Chicago Monday morning where she wiU spend a few days with her sisters. , Or Things He |s 4 nisi la a maiip who lp' Getting Up # Getting' U: frequent day ca ousness, or Burning, al Bladder Irritation, In add conditions. makes you feel tired, depressed and discouraged, try the Cystex Test. Works fast, starts circulating thru the system in IB minutes. Praised by thousands for rapid and positive action. Dont give up. TryCystex (prolounceri Slss-tex) today, under the ron-' " V-'iarantee. Must quickly • v Vj .c, 1 ' ^ r nditir mo>n- s, Improv'e r out- Hr»U;ER*S DRUG STORK The American public today is in the grip of the ancient fear of the mob fear of the future. And that fear has so paralyzed the initiative of the public tjjat we are standing still, anxious to move forward, eager |fe, lift ourselves out of the depression--and yet afraid. View«d sanely the pitiration is a ridiculous one. Bank savings ,had a rapid increase during the last eight months. Life insurance hithad more than the normal increase. Inventories are depleted everywhere in every line. People have the same desires they have always had. Well, then, why don't we go ahead? Simply because the buying public is moved bjr the principles of mob psychology. f / The public has worked itself into * ^te o^ mifid which 1ia& til in^ption following the stod^ market crash a year ago. The wave of dark rumor and doubt which spread over the country following tipt crash served to instill a fear, a feeling of hesitancy in the hearts of thp baying public and, conversely, the widespread fostering of a feeling of confidence in the public will bring us out of the depression. . 7 SI • • ^ ,> : - •>.. r-- 7^- •' Corner Plialin & Konnebeclt CO. A. Stilling Garagt) - ^5^ St^rag€"Uepairing^Oil"Qreadi^t ^ *[f 7 -PkoBe28 '-.^4 ...J b>: V >- and Riverside' fiilve on Route 20 ar4'; \. Again WE REPEAT COMPARE mm*?St; •. US' • ^ Compare the values, prices and service we give you with those of any other tire dealer or distributor of special brands. •v•-* The low prices of rubber and cotton give Firestone unusual advantages due to ^their world-wide facilities in securing these raw materials and their efficient manu* picturing. With Firestone*! most economical distributing system, with over 600 v;*Jbranches, warehouses and service stores, we can secure a complete line of fresh '^Firestone tires, tubes, batteries, brake lining, rims and accessories within a lew ^minutes' to a few hows* tune «nd giv* omr customers values and service that are not duplicated* ^ - iM* COMPARE VALUES flrcMOM has thU year addsd more rubbsr to tha tnad' which glvw 20% to 25% mow *afe wili|i btfan the (Mad wean Miiooth. The Fimtona Double Cord Breaker gtoea yarn SIX and" EIGHT plie* under the Ireedi ipnaih road •hocla Iwmm punctures--givm over 50% cttonaer union tween tread and tire bodv which enaurM lon«er tire 1Mb and sreater aafaty. Live rubber penetiatee every cord and coata every fiber by the patented Ouak-Dipping proc-- thu» not only COMPARE CONSTRUCTION m • '7:- . • :,rn Pi f t I I L A I I - - f Jaat *M the Marl 4*5®*11 Tire |e.«»ari«.B. *« «ii Ldwe yea at Mr atoraj Oar Tire •MsUOrdwTtn Rubber ydUuee sr w-•»*,/,; a.,'w'i7*v • Weight a a . £ ','M .e" * .a . wid* . . Plies at Tread • a- •» |a Thickness ol . Price 41^5 cu. in. ^li;>7f in. . 4 plies ^1^. > .599 In. S5®9 If® cu. in. j ^:J.7*in. ^ :•;# plies *5-*9 I'A "Maii OtAii^ or ^Special Brand" tire is made by a name that does not identify kim to the pnliHt, smelly beeaase he bnilds hi*s" ""ffilr-s*t g--radJ*e*w tires under his awn name. COMPARE PRICES * : Vx * •V;« Made Potato Unpopular The potato, when first Introduced in Scotland, was regarded as the original fruit which caused all the trouble in the Garden of Eden and was depounced as such. ' But It Mutt Be High . If the stipend is attractive enough, a small boy can rake a lawn so thor eughly as just about te eliminate it from the Immediate vldnlty.--New QuUe News. Yet We All Want It : Personal wealth, It may be observed, is a hard master, Imposing many wetv. ries. burdens, fears and distractions.--^ American Masrazlne. .IK lsiirntit CoHeetlon A collection of old plantation dla« rise, journals and secords and Coo*' federate banknotes, dating from 184(1'- to 1000 Is In the Louisiana 8tate nnl» h verslty library, the gift of the De» CLmat fuollj nf LifAirctta r OLD FIELD TYPE Oar Mall Onltr Our Oaak PriM Tin Cuk Prta SIM EmU MmEmI PwPitlr 4.40-21 S4*fS $4.98 (9.M 4.50-21 _ f .49 5.69 ll.I# 4.75 19 *.*f 6.65 It.9* 5.00-20 7.10 7.10 1M* 5.25-18 7.90 7.90 1S.M 5.25-21 8.S7 8.57 X^-7* 6.00-20 11.5® 11.50 U.S6 H.D. H.D.TBITCK T1MKS 30x5 17.95 1795 14.9® 52x6 #9*75 29.75 «7-9® Otbar aimaa pric#4 piavaiUaaataly lev GOURIER TYPE Oar Nail Or4w ear eaAPrtw Tin CariiPlMe Dm tuk Prlc« Eaak ParMr SOk^H W-97 $3.97 •7-74 31x4 ®«9® 6.98 1S«S9 4.40-21- 4*f^ 4.55 4.50-21.. f«H 5.15 f.H 5.25-21- 7.7* 7.75 IS.09 BATTERIES Wa acll and aarricc (lie complete Una •f Flrwton* B»tterie»--Corae in and •aa the EXTRA VAI.I E we sire roa. Wa aaU yon an allowance Xac year oM battery. ANCHOR TYPE 4.50-20 4^0-21 4.75-19 4.75^20 5.00-20. 5.25-21 5.50-20 6.00*20 6.50-20 7.00il Otkar CMIiMii Tin Cm* PrinM M.<S $8.60 9l*.79 . ••75 8.75 9-7® 9.75 1®.S5 10^5 -11.35 11.50 11.95 13.05 1S.7® 13.75 If.a® 15.20 17.1S 17.15 ao.i5 21.80 11.91 19.99 19.9® *1.9® a5.3® 16.7® 19.5® S).)® 39.1® riaaa »riea4 »rap.rttMuUaly Imt Si J*' *&<: ' DoilMt OlMBNBltid.--Every tire we sell bears the Firestone name for the protfO* tion of our customers. Every tire carries the unlimited Firestone guarantee and ouaa* "W« Ism After W« leU" mm fmr pmnrMOf fhm EXTRA VALUMS mm ghw • • JSvr '_•- "' , ' r!* • ' . v r- #* •'iV;?-" r . , / v - & J# W . C'BP « .-ft'