*4iW' r - * - -s ^ jprrr' j^r j.-«; - \ r5?;/ f •F^lg ^t%^,r3P\r^^ <• *6 ^ THI M'HIWBT WJOITOEALEE, THTJMDAt, 5,1031 & *tr Radio R«cor«linf - "Electrical transcription" Is a radio f^rogram that Is recorded/either on 'j| dislf or film, which Is designed exclusively for broadcasting, and the #sk"s are not sold for any other jptfr- Jpose. The records are made In stu- «os and sent to the broadcasting stations. T^he word "electrical", does not Mean much, because even regular pho- «Hograph records are made and tran- «Wiin»Ul)y electricity.. ;, BELIZE DEPENDS ON MAHOGANY INIMrSTRY % % Poiaon Irjr Mi»namit< * The poison ivy, like several other jpjants with similar names, is not an fty, but is merely called by that name feecause of Its resemblance to the real ivy. Poison ivy\,belongs to the same family and genus as the sumacs and Ir" *a totally different plant from the English Ivy. '• & i • ; •• Tkink. It 0¥®r _ / Worrying is the one game !n which, ? # von guess, right, you don't get &ny . . •* aktisfa'ction. out of your>smartness. • "r-^loreftcc Ray, D. C* *v- y•' ' Chiropractor and Masseurist \ * r ?f '<• * vfN®4*r ?. ' .'•••. ;,;>vV.Vy X-Bay Service froan McHwy ea Route 2® T»l.pho« N*. IW-K Stoffel & E«ihanap«rfer Ivurance iftnti far, all classes of property in the bMl dcoavpsniet. WEST McHENRY ILLINOIS CONN EL M. McDEBMOTT ITT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Haurs--Every evening, 7 to 640 . All day Saturdays Pries BUg. Cor. Green and El* fits. Tel. McIJenry 258 McHenry. IIL i&ii C':~: '• Hone Richmond M Or, JOHN DUCEY VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing fttCHMOND. ILLINOIS m i - ' * , McHENRY GRAVEL ar : EXCAVATING CO. JL. P. Freund, Prop. r Eoad Building and Excavating Estimates Furnished on Request High-grade Gravel Delivered ii any time--large or small orders given prompt attention f!£one 204-M McHenry HENRY V. SOMPEL J%" General Teaming Band, Gravel and Goal for Sale iiradingr. Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract of Every Dwcrip|iwj or By Day Phone McHenry 649-R-J McHenry, 111. /* P. 0. Addreu, Route 3 WM. M. CARROLL ARTIFICIAL LIGHT BRINGS MORE EGGS Hens Found to Respond Jo / Lengthened Day. IJsp artificial lights to give Ihe hens, about a thirteen or fourteen-hounlay, advise? F. E. Andrews of the New York state college of agriculture. If lights nre used to increase the length of da.V to seventeen or eighteen hours, hens lose weight and org production decreases. Ivights are njsed 4n laying houses to lengthen short days of fall and •winder so that the hens will eat enousb to maintain their. Weight flint egg production. This is merely pinking a TJOr^ pial condition in an abnormal time and is not a forcing process, if used with reasonable Judgment. Ordinarily, the poultryman should try to malie . in fall and winter live same length of day mid night 'that the birds normally ; would have' in the springtime. This i$ fobouf a thirteen to fourteen hour day and a ten ; to eleven-hour nigM. The length of time of artificial light' ing will vary according to the quality, age. and condition of"the hens. Hens use lights more efficiently In tfie morning than at night. In the morning they are usually hungry after several hours on the roosts, but In the evening their appetite is not so keen and' many of the birds will go to the roosts and wait until the grain Is fed before they eat. Morning tights have another advantage over evening lights; no dimming device Is needed for the lights are turnecL_off after daylight. In the evening it is necessary to dim the lights for ten or fifteen minutes before turning off, to send the hens to the roosts. Ordinarily the combination whereby a portion of the lights ^are given in the morning and balance in the evening Is most satisfactory, both for convenience to the poultryman~ an"d to the lighting system. !b the 'Least Known Bit of British America. - Sorting the Flock (1) A broiler is a young c-hicken of either sex weighing two pounds or under. (2) A spring is a young, softboned bird o£ either sex that, weighs over two pounds. 1 (3) A fowl Is a hen (female over one year old), or a pullet that shows too niuch harness in the breast bone (keel) to be classed as a spring. (4) Stags are cockerels that exhibit too much hardness of bone, development of spurs or comb to be classed as springs, but .not enough to be classed as roosters. . (5) Papons are cleanly castrated male birds. (6) Slips are birds upon which the operation of castration has not been entirely successful. (7) Roosters are cocks (male birds over one year old). ^ Ofite with West McHenr y State Bank Every Friday Afternoon ffcoM 4 McHenry, Illinois Hmm 12*-W Reasonable Kates A. H. SCOAEFE* Mtffinter UXIN01S r.;., Insure--la Sure--Insurance Winter Eggs Bios! Profitable Poultry flock records kept by North Dakota poultry raisers last year show that high producing flocks averaged several cents per dozen more for eggs than those of lower production. This higher return was brought about hy much higher production of eggs during September, October, December, and January, last year, when »»gg prices are nearly twice as high as during the other months. Nearly all hens laid well during^pring and summer, so It is evident--that increases in production which come at periods of high egg prices* are most important. Mites* Woric at Right ~ A real "thief in the dark," is the common red mite of poultry. During the day mites stay hidden In the cracks and crevices around the perches and nests in the poultry house. At night they come out to feed on the fowls. Red mites appear in all poultry houses as warm weather approaches. A good way to control them is to paint the woodwork in the poultry house vrith some strong, oily, penetrating .material. Carbolineum; creosote, erudt farbolic acid and kerosene mixed in *"ual parts; \vlLUexvasl1: waste crank •^tiur, ami nicotine 11,1 ?>**& . ciise oil; lime sulphate are all recommei.: '"Washington.--A hurricane in British Honduras swept into the front pages of the country the name of Belize, capital of this Httle-known bit iff British America. "Belize, the' city, with a population of only 13,000 people, would be a small town elsewhere, but it Is the metropolis of England's section of the dense .tropical jungles in the southeast sector of tfhe Yucatan peninsula," says a bulletin from the Na tlonal Geographic Society. "Although Belize is unmistakably British in appearance, the houses of two and three stories that line the main residential streets being of accepted British architecture,- many of the British leaders of the colony complain that It is becoming 'Americanized.' "Newspapers and magazines from .the United States far outnumber those from England, while the official money unit of British Honduras Is the American gold dollar^ " f British Flavor Diluted. ^The British flavor of the .country is as much diluted by tropical influences, however, as by American. Coalblack policemen are cWtbed much like the London 'Bobby,' and speak wltto the -same broad, Cockney, accent. «*The mahogany industry, justly corn- , memorated on the flag of British Honduras by the tools of the trade, lured the earliest„sett1ers to Belize In the Eighteenth centuij. ptrt money In their pockets, furnished something for them and their backer. <!reat Britain, to fight the Spaniards; and today Is responsible for the main industry of Belize and British Honduras--lumbering. f "The people of Belize even tell solemnly how the lowest portions of their city, once a seemingly bottomless swamp, have been filled in and made usable by the millions of mahogany chips hacked there from logs which must be roughly squared before they are ready for market. Assisting the chips in the work of stabilization --they relate with equal solemnity-- were the thousands of empty rum bottles thrown aside by the axmen. "Belize was settled by British 'squatters.' Spain, from the days of the earliest explorers claimed the entire 'Main,' or mainland, but she was Interested chieQy In gold and silver* mere trees seemed beneafh notice. So the British, cutting trees on the eastern coast of Yucatan, the present British Honduras, and in the mosquito country, farthest south, were fiot molested at first. ' Becomes Crown Colony. **When the settlers were seen to be making a good things of their mahogany trade, the Spanish changed their policy and began harassing them. A series of wars and treaties between Spain and England followed, in 1798 the Spaniards, attacking Belize, were driven off by British settlers with ean- ,..Bpn mounted on rafts and flatboats. In 1832 the 'settlement' was declared a 'colony,' and was given a lieutenant governor acting under the governor of Jamaica. In 1884 it became.a separate crown colony. "In addition to mahogany and logwood Belize carries on an active trade with the United States In bananas, coconuts, citrus fruits, cacao, and thousands of bales of chicle, the latter the raw material of chewihg gum. Great Britain and Canada divide the small part of the colony's trade that does not go to the United States. In addition British Honduras is one of America's best Central American customers, bjuying nearly $2,000,000 worth of our products in 1929. jturawooD This Fellow Really Was Waiting for Cwr Buffalo, N. Y.--'H'm not kidding you," 12 policemen were told when they doubted a young man's explanation that he was "waiting for a trolley car" at 3 a. m. The policemen, answering a burglar alarm, had found the young man crawling on his hands and knees over the cellar grating of a store. , "Honest, I'm not kidding yon," the young man pleaded. "I dropped "my carfare down the grating and I. haven't any more mohey. I'm only Waiting for a trolley car." The policemen helped the young man find his carfare aftjj gent him h o m e . ' . . . i . WITH W m. G.Schreiner Auctioneering OFFICE AT RESIDENCE Phone 93-R McHenry, Illinois ' , S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Phone 127-B McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building Your Wants Reducing Tuberculosa® one county of south Dakota where practically all the flocks In two townships were tuberculin^ tested, «ays a writer In the Southern Farmer, only 1 per cent of the pullets reacted whereas 33 per cent of the birds over two years old reacted. ; This would indicate that if a farm flock is infesteJ and the -practice Is followed of disposing of all birds at the end of the first year of egg production, that in Itself would reduce very greatly the losses from this disease. * £ ***** t * " wv • tefc • : gff* f '"'"i •*' ./ I." *. Ed Vogel <. GENERAL • AUCTIONEER FARM SALES A SPECIALTY P. O. Solon Mills, 111. Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Caring for Baby Chicks One of the things to watch when raising baby chicks on the floor is to provide sufllclent protein and mineral In the mash. Plenty of hopper space is also necessary, so that for the first two weeks a hopper four feet lougr with feeding surfaces on both sides, Is provided for each 100 chicks. They should have twice as much space from then on. $t Is best always to have enough hopper space so that not less than two-thirds of the chicks era #at at one time.--Exchange. rueblo Happy Hunting Ground for Husbands Pueblo, Colo.--Want a husband, good, bad or Indifferent^ girls? Come to rueblo. It has the second largest surplus of single men of any town In Colorado. It's bargain day for husband hunters here--and open season. There even are a goodly number of widowers for the older girls to cast their nets. Statistics reveal ^76 divorced men among Pueblo's Inhabitants and 457 divorced women. There are 950 widowers. •• -A • • • % Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Bruce announce the arrival of a daughter born Wednesday Nov. <25th at the Woodstock Hospital. Mrs. Bruce was formerly Misa Virginia Carlson. She will answer to rtame <of Plryllis Virgene. -- Maurice Boutelle of Lake Geneva is visiting his cousin, Stanley Young. Mr. and MIrs. George Young and family spent Thanksgiving Day w^th the latters parents Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith at McHenry. Mr- and Mrs. E. H. Howard of Woodstock and Mr. andi Mrs. Clarence Howard and chidren of Elgin spent Thanksgiving day ith Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and family. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Peters and sons Robert and Vernon and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ray and two daughters of Belvidere, Clifford Peters of Urbana and George Peters of Chicago spent Thanksgiving Day in the Ray Peters home. Mr. and Mrs. A. L.. Laurence spent Thanksgiving Day with McHenry relatives. Mx. and Mi's. Raymond Harrison had as their guest on Thanksgiving Day, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake, Edward Harrison and Rut!i Owen of Elgin, Mr. and'Mrs. Charles Peet and daughters, Mr, and Mrs. Walter Harrison and son Earl and Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Moska of Broadhead, Wis. spent Thanksgiving in the Edgar Thomas home. p. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Claxton and son William and Mr. and Mrs. John Dreymiller of McHenry were Thanksgiving Day guests in the George Shepard home. v, Mr. and Mrs. fGlenn Jackson and family of Solon Mills spent Thanksgiving Day in the S. H. Beatty home. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter Jane and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch, Mr. and Mrs- Leon Dodge and family and Mr. and Mrs. Fred. Gilbert and son attended a six o'clock dinner in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge, Wednesday evening. Mrs- Lewis Schroeder spent Wednesday afternoon in Woodstock. Zura, Helen, Vivian and Jean Whiting attended the class play at Richmond, Tuesday evening. , Miss Jennie Bacon is visiting in Elgin . * Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Thanksgiving Day in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. Alec Anderson and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clay Rafeer and family and Mina Lawrence spent Thanksgiving Day in Genoa city. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Shuetze of Monroe Wis. spent Thanksgiving Day in the Dr. Hepburn home. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family spent Thursday afternoon in Woodstock. Among those from here to attend the dinner at Greenwood on Thanks Walter Harrison Wednesday, Dee. 9. Each one is requested to bring a 10c gift to be put in a gralvlMff. Miss Luella Krumpen spent Thanksgiving Day with relatives in Genoa City. Miss Mildred Jepson of Evanstion spent Thanksgiving Day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jfepson. Mr and Mrs. Roy ^Teal spent tha week-end with Chicago relatives. Shirley and LeRoy Neal returned home with their parents. Mr. and Mr«. c. J. Jepson and faia-r ily and Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCannon and family were Sunday guests in the Roland McCannon home. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young sjSent Monday at John Young's near Spring Grove. The members of the Home Bureau, Farm Bureau and A-H club girls and boys and their families held a party at the M. W. A. hall Saturday evening. Miss Graves presented the 4-H club girls with pins and Mr. Harvey, Farm Advisor, presented the 4-H club boys with pins. Games were played and a jolly time was enjoyed after which refreshments were served. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and son, Lester, spent Saturday afternoon in Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Saturday evening in Crystal Lake;.. Dorothy Carr and Dorothy Beck of Chicago and Mr. and Lester Carr, and family spent Thanksgiving D%y in the Charles Carr home. - Fred Wiedrich was a Chicago visitor Friday. Mr. and Mrs Harold Wiedrich spent Friday afternoon in Woodstock. Miss Eva Williams of Oak Park spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Williams. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nimsgern of Spring Grove and Barney Keller of Burlington, Wis., spent Sunday in the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich and son, Roy, attended the show in Richmond Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Thanksgiving Day in the Raymond Porter home near Hebron. Charles Coates of Genoa City and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and family spent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mrs. G. E. Shepard and children spent Sunday with her parents at McHenry. Mrs. Edgar Thomas and children spent Sunday with relatives in Woodstock. Mrs. J. C. Pearson spent Saturday in Elgin Mr..and Mrs. Wm. McCannon visited relatives in Woodstock Sunday. The Home Bureau held an all-day meeting at the home of Mrs- Edward Peet Tuesday. A pot-luck Jinner was served. There were thirteen members and one visitor present. Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Harrison and son, Robert, of Muskego, Wis., and i Donald Harrison of Chicago, Mrs. A Brituk Pol * In parts of China persons sentenced to be executed can buy thejr freedom. A ease of head* of taala.--London Humorist. Ambition'* Result Ambition often puts men apes .doing the meanest offices; so climbing Is performed In- the same posture with creeping.- -Swift. '•/ "• * - ^ \ Geological Term . - - .<•*: In geology Is the science that treats of rocks as mineral masses, especially with reference to their microscopic character. ^ f;, 0*e Point of View ' ' J ", tt'S good to have money and0 tW . things that money can buy, but It'* good, too, to check up once In a whll#>,'pi' and make sure you haven't lost the ,(Mass money can't buy. -- Sw' t"7*: Work in Extreme In the Yerkes observatory In Call^ ~ fornia, astronomers sometimes worljfj / **' In an atmosphere that, 4s 2? tin grit below sero. ' London Wins Again Science .finds that New York nofses are 10 per cent louder thanthose in I,ondon.--Collier's Weekly. u . Yj, t t l ' l I I'l'if |i| i| | I'i4"»4"|ii|,i|ii|'ii|ii|,i|,f •» . < > «» f «» «• ja » Carload off Extra Fancy Roman Beauty Apples ! . $1.25 bushel * 3 bushels for $3.50 -" mis price It «t ®t the car. Car an track near v V" : McHenry Depot' ,;k - DAVE * n«ae fl-J West MeHenry DR. C. KELLER Optometrist and Optician > tHe winter months I will examine at my summer home in Lasch Subdivision, on Riverside Drive* one block North of city limits of McHenry, on West side of river, OA Sundays and Mondays only. Phone McHenry 211-R »»"I'l- •!"!• •>••»»» -t- -t- >t"I' •#••••••• ••• giving Day were; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis | Mayme Harrison and son, LaVern, of Schroeder;,J. V. Buckland, Miss Flora; McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. Gust Taylor, Mrs. Mary Hodge and Mrs Nellie Hodge. Mr- and Mrs. Joseph Weber and family of McHenry were guest in the Nv Young home on Thanksgiving Day. Pearson spent Thanksgiving day wit)} Mr. and Mrs, J. C. Pearson. - The M. E. church choir entertained those that took part in the minstrel show, the play, "Mrs. Plodding's Nieces," and also the Members of the Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley spent orc}iea^ra) numbering sixty in all at Thanik sgiving DT*ka --y. . andJ TFTrwii dAa a y«* nwriitflhi ttnhAe • i , * « _ _ latters, mother at Lexington, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hitchens of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens were guests at a 6 o'clock party at the home of Mrs. Ray Peters Tuesday evening. Cards and bunco furnished amusement for the evening. Lunch was served. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and chitdinner in the Warren Thomas home | (jren an(j Mrs ^ Dodge werti in Woodstock on Thanksgiving Day. Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter Mary of Evanston and Mrs. Lillian Stevens spent Thanksgiving Day in the Charles Steveits home in Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Lenard Franzen and family of Carpentersville were callers in the Edgar Thomas home, Friday morning. William Beth spent Thursday and Friday with relatives in Chicago- Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Freund of Spring Grove spent Thursday afternoon in tfie Nick Young home. Miss Mildred Rae Dodge of Beloit spent the week end in the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hawley and daughters spent Thursday evening at Crystal Lake. Shirley and LeRoy Neal spent from Wednesday until Sunday with Chicago relatives. 1 ' Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Wright and children of New Holstein Wis. spent' Thanksgiving Day with the formers mother, Mrs. Mary Wright at the home of Mrs. Mary Wright. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon and son spent Thanksgiving day at Greenwood, .A Mrs. Nellie Hodge of Lake Geneva spent Thanksgiving Day with Mrs. Mary Hodge. Miss Maud Curr of McHenry spent Saturday here with friends. Mrs. Ed. Peet and daughters, Dorothy and Lucille spent Saturday afternoon in Woodstock Woodstock visitor? Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gilbert left fofr their home at Brockville, Canada^ Tuesday, after spending several weeks in the W. A. Dodge home. Mr. and Mrs. John Young of Spring Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Youn(| spent Tuesday at Burlington. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Pearson attend* ed the theatre at Woodstock Sunday evening. Mrs. Emil Johnson and son, Arthur,' of Chicago spent Friday afternoon ij| the Gust Pearson home:' JOHNSBURG Only True Sportsmen^#s Perjured Liars to Hunt ' Washington.--Before hunters can procure a license to shoot deer in Michigan this fall they must go before a notary and swear they have not violated a deer law of the state In the past three years nor shot a person while hunting during the past five years, says a bulletin of the Ameri can Game association. This require meat was adopted by the legislature to make the* «port safer. Miss Marie Oertel of Chicago is spending a vacation with her sister, Mrs. George Michels- Mrs. Peter Schaefer visited her son and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schaefer, Friday, Miss Helen Schaefer spent Saturday and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. N, Lee in Chicago. Mrs. Henry Stoffel and daughter, Marie, of Volo spent Monday with her sister, Mrs. Ben Schaefer, and Tuesday with her father, John Pitzen, Mrs. George Miller of Volo ^pent Thursday with Mrs. Ben Schaefer. Mr- and Mrs. Richard Guyser and children of Chicago spent a part of last week with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Oeffling. Miss Mildred Schaefer of Grayslake spent Sunday with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Ben Schaefer. Miss Isabella Freund visited her Phalin's Garage ;\v;: Phone Storage, Repairing, Oil, Greasing Pearl Street, McHenry The Holiday Season IS HERE AGAIN We will be ready and waiting for you with a full line of -- Christmas Candies Cigars and-Cigarettes Jr. packed in gift boxes. Look over tms assortment before making your purchase. v- JOHN KARLS on Riverside Drive Come in please--Gp out pleased" WEST SIDE GARAGE : . Otto Adaiiii, Prop. . % Tel. 185 General Automobile Repairing Res. Phcme, 639-11-2 -- i aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs- Joe Mil- Charles Campbell of Woodstock and jer> in McHenry, Sunday. Bethel and Joe Draper of McHenry i Sunday night the children of St. were callers in the Edgar Thomas | j0hn's school will have an entertaiffl- •bome, Saturday. j mefit. All children are invited to come - Rev. and Mrs. Weber, the members an^ st. Nick and receive a little of the orchestra and choir of the package. gospel church in Genoa City and the • Irt Your Light SIum* Be a pattern to others, and then all will go well; for as a whole city is affected by the licentious passions and vices of great men, sb Is it likewise reformed by their moderation.-- Cicero^ 1 What "Off" Mtui When the average golfer says he's off his game he means the best game he ever shot.--Arkansas Gazette. Ocaap Depths • The average depth of ' alt the oceans and peas is supposed to be from two to two and one-half miles. Soundings in the Pacific average about 12,960 feet; in the Atlantic, 12,200 feet; In the Indian ocean, 11,136 feet, and, in the Antarctic 10,800. The Japanese sea averages about 7,320 feet, the Gulf of Mexico 4,632 feet, the Mediterranean a little less, and the Baltic only about 122 leet. • members of his Sunday School class: very pleasantly surprised Cecil Rager ,at his home, Friday evening. The occasion being in honor of his sixteenth birthday anniversary. Games were played and songs were sung. At the close of a pleasant evening, luncheon was served. Mr- and Mrs. F. A. Hutchens entertained the 500 club at their home, Friday evening. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. George Young and Edward Whiting, first; and Mrs. Ray Peters and Bruno Butler the consolations. At the close luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. George Graves of Woodstock were guests- Mrs. Stanley7 Carlson and trenf Anderson of Woodstcfck spent Satur» day afternoon in the home of their fatl.er, Alec Anderson. Harold and Olive Jepson of Urbana spent their Thanksgiving vacatio* with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. C J. Jepson. The Home Circle will hold their Christmas party at the home of Mi* ConJuct Rufof t.ear patiently of evfl, nefr speak'that which Is mischievous and wicked; utter no lies, prevarications, or hypocrisy; use no deceit nor over*- reaching in trade or dealing; never oppress the weak and humble, nor offer ( any violence to your neighbor^--*5^ change. \ ^ Teattng Metal TJie hardness of metal is tested by pressing a diamond into It and examining the resultant tpiarks andwt a erful microscope. GeologuU "Dirine" Oil A geologist us . s his science as an Oil "divining1 rod." He knows the richeat source in old marine rocks and ca* trace nitsration. i' The Velce Telle ^Pb^e to a* of chagwiir^i sure as the volceVDlsraell In "xancred." Because it saves so much time . . ..does so much work the MIXMASTER it q gift any woman will appreciate The Mixmaster's electric beatef whips cream, mashes potatoes, stirs batters, mixes drinks. ltd electric reamer squeezes oui every drop of juice from oranges and lemons. Its mayonnaisa. dripper drips salnd oil while th« boater is doing the mixing. All. . these tedious kitchen chores thd--- Mixmaster does without ever get*, ting tired. Finished in white, com* plete with two green mixing bowls#;' - Only $21 cash--only $2 down; You'll find 100 other desirable* glits that "work for a living" at". ypur Public Service Store or* your neighborhood electricaJ""' "Stealer's. Come in. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY ; OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS ^ . , E. J. LARK1N, Dist. Mgr. ;Jl J* 101 Williams SU Crystal Lake Crystal iAke'l^&n^tld Onlv $2 down ,A. . »tS^ V-V