Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Aug 1931, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

V • f „: r .fr -N _ - 1 ' ^ , ' - • . , v* '". fr t* - :--^ - - r f - Hr, f\ r . ^ . - ' r ^ ' . - ' -: _ >* ^ „ /4> *"*.4. * » *» i. u t * **» * m ^ v" *"£ *ItL** ' * »*.. ^ , o»4 * * « _ «M> „f * ^ t - •* i ' -•• * * 1>4 , .:W v ,r.V;Wii;^ i»S' : ; r ""."'."4>*r-i%^A. ^,^^a J e^JTHE MTOa^^tAINDBAMS^ THtmiXAT, AUOpr 27, 193fj jsNA-S «**MSf X K -i <••• j ••• .£..«. *«£ 3> •*"*"' „•% ~^V*t:i!,:.:• •%•- '.' -k:.. '.• • r Xf v'- y ^ w THE 3VTHENRY PLAINDEAUfcR Pabliahed ewy .Thursday at McHenry, I1L,' bf Chaxlm F. lUaidi. Entered u aecond-clasa matter at the postofics at XcHenqr, OL, m> 4tr the. act el iUy S» 1879. 41 i % i . : ""• • "'. 1 , '" '" 1 1 On« Year • ,.- ' ' - - r . . . : T . - - , 4 2 . 0 6 Six Months- A. H. MOSHJSR, Edit* and Mamafer - "•* ' '--:-- Famous %i(Jc(te oif RoaiT House Moved by Statfe Harrisburg, Pa.--"The House in th« ^Middle of the Road" will have to chanpe its name for it isnt in th£ road any more. Famous since 1025 because of its. location In the-; middle of the highway between 'Sorairt on and Pittston, the hoase yc-ill no longer cause motorists to detour through a harrow alley as it has been removed to anotlter Uwea- . , ^ v tidn and the road opened. ^ ' Wh<*n the section^ of the htghwily, "* * was ooiistrwted in 1925, the: borough "officials, who had reachfd: the limit oj their bonded indebtedness, were ; i /Biaafcte'-to1 i»ay., for the removal of the "".n i-': 'r^;/ r i * t i v e ' c e l l a r w a l l i n t h e " r e a r " o f t h e ?>}- house and t* ^^toifesty'U|»\in ' ;" front. izf*7"£ 1 v" ^ Hei'ei^Uy tfre Lackawanna county _ commissioners, under authority of an act of legislature passed in 1929, , came to the aid of the borough offi- • dais and provided the necessary damage funds for the removal fit the bouse. During the "legal fight a few years ago, when.John Garvey, a son, was - \* playing on the football team at Yale, a i>ew York newspaper published an -- article christening the house in the - • ; 1.. headline "Johnny Oan-ey Holds Down ; 'r---. v/: Line-at Yale While His Mother.Holds Down the Line ip the House to the Middle of the Road." • - Jefferson Monument in ' " Black Hills Ready Soon S--Kansas City, Mo.--The Jeffersoij aiokument in the Black Hills of Smith Dakota will be finished' some time tirts summer and unveiled next year, GBtzon Borglura, Belgian and American sculptor, has announced; Borglum, here on a short vacation, will go to Poland during Jun'&fwith Ignace Paderewski to attend the unveiling of a statue of Woodrow Wilson. While there. BOr&ltim will model a portrait of the pianist. .He wtll return in July. Borglum exhibited^to Kansas City bronze busts of Theodore Roosevelt jWdi ^farroer United States ^ Senator James A. Reed. " WOMAN MAYOR RULES BY DIRECT ACTION Want Ads FOR SALS PICKLES FOR SALE--Any kind you want at reasonable prices. Only a short time left to secure your supply. Wm. Staines, R-8, McHeiwy. Fhone Richmond 842. 13 FOR SALE -- Potatoes, $1.25 per bushel. Martin Stoffel, Pearl St., McHenry, IU. *18-2 FOR SALE--Dining room set, in fine condition; 6 upholstered chairs, one large table, one large buffet. Inquire at Johonnott's Variety Store, Rivertide Drive, McHenry. *13 F{>R SALE--One Lincoln ram, age 3 years. Reasonable- Ed. Bauer, R-3, McHenry. Tel. Richmond 488. *13-2 FOR SALE--Three-quarter ton truck, panel body. Good condition. Marshall's Bakery, McHenry. 13-2 FOR SALE--Packard Sport ca r, 6- cylinder, 5-pass. Taken in tradef 125. G, Hopkins, '.'0» ]BoX 27i, West 'McIIeniy., Ill<.~'"-' , •" ;• --*13. Ft R.NITURE FOR SALE~-Inquire at The Wv-si Town Cafev comer Main street and IL S- 12. West McHenry. ; 18 FOE SALE--Lot on paved street, asesssment paid for. Bargain if taken at once. Ben Stilling & Son. *13-2 FOR SALE--500 bushels rye. Frank Hironimus, P. O., Round lAke, 111. Tel. McHenry, 628-W-L *12-3 t'- r" is -- - Sattter ^ . Hay den, Ar iz.--Uoy, Charley and T " Allen Bishop arid Ciafence Morrison of Tinyden claim the rattlesnake hunt- \ log championship of Arizona as the rerult of a recent excursion during which they killed 258 diamond-back rattlers, in addition* to trapping eight altre. Wields Effective Axe When Axe Is Necessary, "^Pacific Grove, Calif.--Mayor, Jtflla B. I'latt, su'venty-three, olde'st woman mayor.in tlie United States, may rule this seaside eorumunity With scientific lopio and she may rale it with a crusading axe. Shp smiiinjrly admitted recently that, though she regards the task <rf city government Just another scientific problem, she has- known, the -expedj; enoy of direct action aiid wouM not hesitate Again to employ It- She re1- ferred to two, oecasions~r-one<e when she protested against an attempt to .aggrandize public beach property for private gain by smashing a baihhop&e barrier with an axe; another' time, when she urged beautification of a scenic spot and,'falling to get quifck action, led a crew of volunteers wi|th's spades and wheelbarrows until the jittered spot was cleaned and planted* in flowers. ; Trained Biologist. Miss Piatt was a practicing biologist in Germany and Naples before settling here 31 years ago. - •"My training in the laboratory," she said, "gave toe a fondness for a problem. I find this training very valuable on this new Job. I hope to work out this town^s problems as I would any problem arising in the laboratory. ! Sometimes that can't be done; then we'll try something else." She laughed. V She ran for mayor, she said, because politicians were threatening "to undermine her favorite reform, the city manager form of government, established here four years ago,, mainthrough her e'fforts. Staunch Humanitarian. She doesn't mind seeing anyone take , a drink, but hates to see anyone get drunk. She does not object to -women Smoking, though she feels it is unhealthful in excess. She is a staunchhumanitarian and her-arch hate is the "eye for an eye-' theory of punishment. She believes that many are thus penalized for hereditary and environmental accidents beyond their control. She believes instead iti correctional and educational methods, which are, she said, in their infancy. . She is a New Englander, born in P.urlinpton, Yt. She was graduated WANThiD--To get in touch with a fmpi.-lhe. CniTersltjr irf.-' Ygrmont-' fn jparty. who has $4,000 to loan on a 1882. v » - first mortgage real estate proposition. Address "R," care Plaindealer, or inquire at office. ' ,*13 WHEN irOUTH FANNIE HURST I PLAYER PIANO BARGAIN FOR SALE--Player piano, only used a. short time. On account of purchaser bein$ unable to complete payments, we will transfer the account to a responsible party for balance due $66.61, and arrange easy terms if desired. This piano originally sold for $675 and is guaranteed the same as new; a genuine bargain for someone. For particulars address P. A. Starck Piano Co., 228 S. Wabash Avenue, Chicago, 111. 12-2 BEFORE YOU BUY SHOES see our bargain counter. B. Popp. Expert shoemaker and repair shop. Main Street. Phone 162. . , 3o-trf FOR SALE--Well secured 7% First Mortgages on McHenry Residence Property. Inquire at Plaindealer office. 19-tf --; -- JOST LOST--TAN/AND WHITE FOX TERRIER./ LA ST SEEN ON RIVER ROAD, WEDNESDAY. FINDER PLEASE'CALL 605-R-l. 13 ((E) by McClure Newspaper Byndlptte.) (WNU Service.} . • T SOMETIMES seemed to Estelli Winters that she could reckon almost to the day, when the first realizations that she had reached a specific milestone In her life had rushed over her. It \Vas not so much that her mirror told her that she was fading and that the jonquil-yellow of her hair was running to pallor or that her blue eyes were weakening, but there was a tolling note inside the heart of Estelle which said "youth is done," "youth is done," "youth "is done." A conspiracy of circumstances brought about this conscious terminia-, tion of the golden glow that, had always Characterized EsteRe Winters Life had! net been easy for her. Twenty years of singing in the cafes of the large cities of the Far West had exacted their tribute. Twenty years of the solitary struggle to' rear in integrity and innocence, a «0rl-child with the beautiful name of {Rosalinda, IJiad told in strain on Estelle. The latter she had accomplished and the latter she was willing to regard as her life work. Indeed, Rosalinda was a fair enough monnment to anybody. At twenty she was like a flower, slim, lovely, fragile, And so it was that when Rosalinda was in this early bloom, Estelle Winters, her mother, taking inventory, so to speak, of her own face, her spirit, her vitality, came so poignantly to realize that her youth was done. The following year, Estelle, instead of flitting like a tired bird of plumage from one cafe to another, established herself quietly in^ a San Francisco cafe of first-rate landing as cashier. It was a let-down, but it was a letting- down that somehow warmed and eased the tired, bruised spirit that was Estelle's. The struggle against the ever-widening crack in her voice was finished; the uneven race against the flesh of years, as it settled on her hips and shoulders, was over. . Estelle cduld sit back quietly, now, noticing but unnoticed, and let the years roll In. And more than all of these, Estelle could now keep fastened more firmly, her watchful eye on Rosalinda. ^ WANTED ttflim's quality work shoes, $2.50 per pair and up $t Erickson's. 13 Woodstock's BtautifidPlay House SATURDAY ' r Guest Nite 2 for 50c ~ Buck Jones . - ---- in ' . • "The Fighting Sheriff" Comedy and New® SUNDAY-MONDAY Continuous Sunday, 2:30 to 11 50c ^Family Mat. Sunday RUth ChattertMi Sunburn Is Blamed for . ' • $1,400,000 Annual Loss .New York.--Hope that a-realization of the grept economic loss resulting from the sun tan fad might discourage the fashion was expressed today , hy Dr. Charles F. Pabst, chief dermatologist of Gi-eenpoint hospital, Brooklyn, in his annual warning against the dangers of overexposure to the summer sun. The doctor P5Un?8t?d that an annual loss of 200,Ood working dajr« was caused" by- Illness from sunburn, in many cases "deliberately and inten- ?K'K°"5' acquired." Placing the money loss frop this source at $1,400,000 a j-far. he predicted the wiring of thg fashion Mid with it a reduction In th« number of caseB of severe fcthburn. WANTED TO RENT--Four or five room house, or housekeeping "-rooms, near Catholic church. Give location and price. Address • O. G, M., care Plaindealer. 13 WANTED--Part time maid at Pista- *kee Lake for balance of season; do dishes, get noon meal, clean up hopse, 4 hours day, 5 days week. $8 per week. Address E/ G. care McHenry Plaindealer. 18 FOR RENT "The Magnificent Lie" Featuretts Bobby Jones / v No. 8--<"The Brassie" Cumedy -- News -- Cartoon TUESDAY WEDNESDAY .; Guest Nite Tuesday ^' 2 for 50c Winnie Llghtiter .• in "Cold DustjCertie" - Comedy and News THURSDAY, v FRIDAY Cl" Barbara Stanwycks in "The Right Nurse" COMEDY AND NEWS Csning §«m>M«B'Tiiei. . r Sept. 6-7-8 [Z. . ^Maurice Chevalier in] Fake Apaches Put in Cells by Paris Cops Paris.--The Paris police authorities j have made up their minds to clean up all fake Apache dens. For some | years many tourist agencies have included visits to the Apache quarters in their itineraries. On the arrival of the "innocents abroad" unemployed actors and actresses have 'Been giving "thrills" in the form ot fights and hrandishings of knives arid daggers. The other day M. Prjollet, tlie commissary of the Brigade Mondaine, walked into the district with his fifteen plain clothes police officers and gathered In 200 of these fake male and female Apaches. , •FOR RENT--Furnished cottage for rent Sept. 1; three rooms and sunporch, near park. Mrs. Andrew Miller. *13 FOR RENT--Five-room modern house with gasage on Riverside Drive, jteaaonable. R. P. Conway. Phone McHenry 107! 13-tf fcrintdk to cultivate a voic* fkat was •Jready showing a fluty resonant quality. That was #hy Estelle so passionately desired to save her from the wear and tear of performing in the cabarets. That was why, without the slightest sense of renunciation, Estelle was ready to fold away the days of her most garish kind of successes, for the more stable remuneration of "her work behind a cashier's counter. Estelle and her daughter were hoarding for the day when Rosalinda might go abroad tb prepare her voice for opera. ~ One night in the restaurant, a man well beyond flfty, big, irresistible as a personality, known the country over as a millionaire sportsman and art connoisseur, fastened what were frankly ddttglited eyes on Rosalinda. For the first time in her life, swept by 8omething_liiat was stronger than she waa.ygtie arranged a rendezvous that did'not include Estelle. For the first time in her life, Rosalinda was impelled to agree to see a man without the presence of a third party--her mother. « . v It was not unnatural ic the face of things, in fact it would have been more unnatural if it had not happened so, that the youthful and beauteous Rosalinda should finally And herself confronted with one of the emoUonSl clhnaxes sure .^o befall fc creatinine; ot her caliber. • y ', Curious, but across the room, Within her lair, Estelle Winter^ knew everything that was happening, Just as concisely as if she were present there beside the table of the well-known figure of the sportsman-art connoisseur, Hiram Bridges. ^ From he*- lair, Estelle with her hand to her throat, saw this happening ; wi(h her eyes dilated saw this happening. What Is more, she saw happening across the sweet face of Rosalinda, the first faint flushes of awakening. When Hirain Bridges left the restaurant that night, elated with his conquest of a type that was alluring to him, there confronted him in the corridor the pale, washed-out figure of a woman who caused him to stare. "Xes, Hiram, it's who you think it is," said Estelle, a little tiredly, none of the melodrama of the moiL^nt in her manner or her voice. "Why, it's twenty years, since-- he said stupidly. One of those feetodramatic incidents that can seem tofcboie out of a clear sky was -happening icftthat restaurant. "Twenty-one years," she corrected, her glance^sliding way toward the re-" mote figure of Rosalinda. "That makes her twenty." ' . '""Who twenty*?" *" 1-V "The girl you * are meeting" later-2- This girl, whom her mother yearned;K^ir daughter,'* said Estelle. to protect from the disappointments ilosalinda radiant, more beautiful MISCELLANEOUS BURGLAR ALARM -- Guaranteed best on market. Price $20 to $25. No upkeep. Money back if not satisfied. Address ¥G," care McHenry Plaindealer. .. 13-2 Playful Cockatoo Costs Theater Owners $350 Syracuse, N. Y. -- A cockatoo's "lunge" was worth $350 to Mrs., Julia„ Chambers, Ju%e B. B. Parson decided. Mrs. Chambers, in her suit against the Salina Jefferson corporation, operators of a theater here, alleged that the cockatoo lunged at her while she Was watching it in the lobby of the theater; that she fell backwardj that she suffered, a severe head Injury and fracture of a wrist. ANNOUNCE THE OPENING of my office over Mrs- C. F. Pich's Millinery Store, Riverside Drive, ^IcHenry. Hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 8, except Sunday, by* appointment. Mrs. Florence Ray, Chiropractor. 13-2 SILO REPAIRING--Don't waste good silage. Will repair any make of silo. Build solid cement ones. Work guaranteed and prices right. No phone. Write or see D. W, OvMton, Solon Mills, 111. < £11-3 Buffalo Councilman Seeks Repeal of 200 Blue Laws Buffalo, N. Y.--Among the 200 "blue la\ys"' which Councilman Frank E. Freedman seeks to have repealed from the Buffalo city code are those prohibiting beer drinking on Sunday; prohibiting the parking of bicycles within five feet of a street intersection, and defining the proper method of hitching hqrses on. public streets.! 1 I111 II 111 Hill 1 11 It 11-1 ^ 11 PATENTS Sell your patent or invention by exhibiting your model or drawing at the Second and Greater International Patent Erposition, Chicago. Thousands of manufacturers and patent buyers will inspect new devices and patents for marketing. Very low rates. If you have no model, drawings and descriptions will do- Send for free pamphlet. B. Hamilton Edison, Managing Director, International Patent Exposition, Chicago- Thou- Chicago. 10-1 'The Smiling Lieutenant' Bolt Opens Big Hole in Automobile's Path !! FislikiU, N. Y.--Itov and Fred- [[ + erick Ketcliain Jiurrowly escaped ^ serious injury when they stopped ! •; their automobile just on the edge^ of- a huge hole in the roati ! \ [; eatfeed by a thunderbolt. •• • • The bolt struck the highway !! 20 feet from the automobile, " 4- rendering Roy unconscious. ! •V?, y *4 DR. W. A. LABRON, O. D., Complete Optical Service • Private Examining Room at Shuler's Crystal Pharmacy Phone 860 Crystal L^ke, 111. SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED Rag Rugs M ad« to Order All Work Guarantee# ^ B. POPP Phone 162 Main St. McHenry protect frofi the disappointments that had been hers, was now also, employed in the same cafe where Estelle* held the throne of cashier. Rosalinda's duties were light. At noon she arrived, attired herself in* a peasant costume that enhanced her loveliness, and moved with a tray of hot rolls in among the patrons of the cafe, offering her dainties as she slid by the tables. At six o'clock Rosalinda came on duty again, and was free to leave the restaurant with her mother somewhere shortly after ten o'clock. It meant that through all the Workaday hours her mother's eyes were on her. It meant they arrived together and they departed together. It meant that whatever secret ambitions lay smoldering in the heart of Estelle.for the daughter Rosalinda, for the ^resr ent> at least, her plans for the future Were held in abeyance. Rosalinda wifl literally , under her mother's thumb, as well as her eye. And the girl, sweet and submissive enough at twenty, and at the same time regarding her occupation as only a stepping stone toward the thing her heart craved, submitted because of the peace she realized she was able to afford Estelle. 2 ' They, were rather a pathetic l5alr. The hushandless Estelle, the fatherless Rosalinda. There had never been a husband. So far as Rosalinda could remember there had never been a father; just the two of them, playing their humble roles with a certain submission, and yet the younger of them with a quality of rebellion flaming in her blue eyes that had long since died down in the eyes of the older woman. , It was hard to realize, Sfter beholding the loveliness tha! was Rosalinda's, that this child had kept her innocence to a degree that was perfection. At twenty she Jived like a little girl. At twenty, she had never been out in the company of a man without the chaperonage of her mother. \ ° * And it had not all been clear sailing. The eyes of men veered quickly to the loveliness that was Rosalinda's. Her presence in a room made them conscious. N Seated In her corner, behind her cashier's desk, the eyes ©J Estelle were relentless in their watchfulness. • ' Vj • If ever a girl was protected by the bulwark of fierce loving, jealous, panther- like watchfulness, that girl was Rosalinda. \ There was not a recess of the being of this girl that Estelle did not feel herself capable of understanding. As Rosalinda sometimes admitted to hpr mother, it was as. if the older woman sensed, almost before the girl herself, the nature of her ambitions* secret desires, yearnings. iAnd the secret desires of' Rosalinda's were not just those of the average girl becoming aware, of her loveliness. Rosalinda wanted to sing. Sh than ever in her innocence, is studying for grand opera in Italy. . An internationally known sportsman and art connoisseur, who has never, seen her since that night III the res» taurant, is educating her.---^----r<--1 Fantous Danish Castle ' Notwithstanding its rather r%B|pte position on the Island of Jutland in Denmark, on the barfks of the Limfjord, Castle Spottrup has lured many visitors to its walls of recent years. Although its age and builders have been forgotten, it has been there for many centuries, and is one of the best double-moated castles of Europe. Its dividing bulwark of earth on the eastern side reaches almost to the eaves of the structure, and, with its grassclad ramparts, adds immensely to the impression one receives of* it» ancient formidable strength. It is only restored in part and the visitor can easily visualize its ancient extent and tommr/ • -c. Vvr-'.- Altar Ovarhaag• $e# ; About 12 miles from Kjoge, iii Denmark, is an ancient church In Hojerup, built on the famous Stevns cliff, which Jias been undermined by the sek In the Fourteenth century an, old sea - rover was threatened with disaster off Stevns cliff, and vowed should, he reach land safely, he would build a church on the cliff. Fortune favored him and he fulfilled his vow and set his church on the very edge of the "beetling crag, so close, Indeed, that the <>roslon of the rock during the centuriesTihs brought the altar actually hanging ®ver the fsea. A legend says • that evi*ry New Tear night the old chutph "no^yesli cockstrldt back from the sea." \( • i l l 111111 umijHniM1 1**"1 UPHOLSTERING--^-All kinds of fur niture reupholstered -and repaired. Good work guaranteed. Work called for and delivered. Chas., Rasmussen, S. Center St* West McHenry, 111. Tel. 107-M. 12-tf Ancient Well Discovered The discovery of an ancient well during excavations for the terminus of the London Tube railway extension from Finsbury park has revived stories of the notorious ghost of Sir Geoffrey de Mandeville, earl of Essex, vho, according to local legend, was drowned in a well at Barnet, in 1144. Sir Geoffrey's ghost is s§id to haunt the district every Christmas. Freqhent attempts have been made to discover this well, at the bottom of which, the legend says, is a heavy iron chest ocntaining precious stones. At this spot is laid the scene of the murder of Lord Dalgarno in Sir Walter Scott's "Fortunes of Nigel." =' R»p«rt*n to th* RescuS When Isadore Eazle, of Brooklyn, N. Y„ was fined $10 for beating his horse he tried to pay with $5 and the borse. Magistrate Casey said his court "wasn't taking any houses today, thank you. Eazle, ager counting a collection of quarters, dimes, nickels and pennies, reported he was 3 cents shy of the necessary amount. Reporters broke the deadlock by presenting the required 3 cents. 11- JOS KVIDERA, CARY, ILL. Livestock Dealer r , Dairy Cows a Specialty ' Satisfaction- Guaranteed Phone Cary ,37-J Dead Animals Dead and Crippled CoWs, Horses, Hogs, and old Hugs Prompt Service ~ $1.00 to $10 a head' - • Telephone Barrington 256 ' Reverse Charges , ^ ' Plaisdealers at Bolger's." ii,; , r~:k Stan Vat4o«»ly j ArraagW In the first .American flags sometime* the stars were) arranged in a circle, sometimes scattered and sometimes in a circle of tw/ive with, eae in the center. -- * - W O i l ' W r f l The "Fountain," the first flowing oil wall in the world, was struck in the Pennsylvania oil region In June, 1801 It averaged 900 barrels daily. ^'«»«1'«»«««. Every step in the selection, the preparation and the serving of food here is pianned with but one idea in mindr-to please you and your fiends. If you would learn exactly, what this means try our daily special plate lunch. " , ... . • i~> v •-V-« "< 'jiiL" , JOHN KARLsl ,. r.i, on Riverside Dri, ve *'**?< -y v tJLt ; MCome in Go ou t p l e a s e d * . JOHN FISHER & CO. Special Fri. and Sat. Only JELL-O, All Flavors : * 3 pkgs. 19© SOAP, P and .G Naphtha 5c bar 3c ON $ALE ALL WEEK APRICOTS, Blue Front, Large No. 2 1-2 Can selected fruit in choice syrup 21c COFFEE, Royal Blue, 2 lh. can 69c CATSUP, Ar-Be, 2 Large Bottles 23c Modern Up-To-Date Meat Market Full Line Fresh and Smoked Meats For ftUAHTY and SERVICE Plpou* 49 . -- FL^EE DELIVERY V % "this is the way we ^ . wash our clothes'* * ",r -n: ,AK»;L 28® ^22® t>K Laundry Soap4BAR,19c Lax Toilet Soap 3 C*K" 22c 'v W^URE BULK ^ tCLf\o ' Can® Sugar .10 aut " « 8 a m " „ N - . . ' » 9 5 Coffee SEAUEDQp!vN « "'^AH 33c THOMPSON'S » M _ • Malted Milk F SAN 39C PREMIUM SODAS Oftv ^ L • • Graham Crackers caoov24C ENCORE MACARONI OR Spaghetti • • _ PKCU 5C EIGHT O'CLOCK - ^. Coffee . . . 55c RED CIRCLE COFFEE .16. 23o BOKAR COFFEE . . . 4b. 27o SUNNYFIELD VImim X4 1-2 lb. «ack 45C ff lOpr 49 lb. saek 89c PILLSBITRY GOLD MEDAL «ji| ^lllt 24 t-2 lb. sack 65c " 1 vlir 49 ib. sack $1.29 PRODUCE SPEOIALS New Potatoes 15 pk« 27& Illinois Elberta Peaches, per b®. „• --- $1.29 .Fancy Duchess Apples --..0 lbs. 15^ CHEF BOY-AR-DEE Instant SPAGHETTI DINNER , - . * r s» - • u:. Ready M 5 12 minutes 1 FAMOUS SAM* l^uctous %H^ANtHWt SfiHEin i' : v'ti . • .tasLii,-' I**,.: • bin. fc'f . r r? • / > 3 . Waldorf Tissue . . . . 5^319c A&P Food Stores M I D D L E W E S T E R N D I V I S I O N . r i l l - <; ri',11 \ I Lull !<• i l l ' I < <>iii|>;i in

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy