Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Dec 1931, p. 3

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.'l"; v-.f : "V_, "I " ; . -V:;- ,*r. V'-', -V^.-4 ', ,V >„• - " rt.-r-y%K- '.^ fv,' THS M'HENKY PLAIHD SALES, THURSDAY, DBOEMBKB 8,1(M •o ••*K. f • *<w?;0 W-v", J<%vSS! W/WfP Our «i|rJe'; f SfrashingUm^rJZ ' Letter - -By- National Editorial Association Washington, December 2--Practical liticians as represented on the Reublican and Democratic National mmittees have a college problem on heir hands- These directing groupill meet this month and next for the urpose of shaping the 1932 Presidential campaign. If they have consulted jthe reliable political almanac the, Jmaster minds will realize that the [ ^session of the Electoral College which, nder the law, must convene the i - ^-Msecond Wednesday in February of i , *-'U933, may furnish them with trouble ' - trough nullificatioln *6f their Tjest v,' ^ ..laid schemes of conquest. Those with ."?V . 'an ear to the ground say the prospects .',l,.vv;'lJfor formation of a powerful third jA'r ^party are excellent. The predictions , ^are that a strong independent ticket i fidence. Every one has experienced * ',v '» „jwill serve as a wedge and drive the] great sorrow scmve time, perhaps 36 W" - ^Presidential contest into a deadlock j great we felt , we could AMERICA'S WORLD RESPONSIBILITIES By H. J. HAAS President A m eric an Bankers Attfdstitm W® are in a changing world, with " many new financial problems lor which! we have no precedents, and many old prob- ' lems which have so changed as to bo unrecognizable. American bankers have been called Into world affairs to blaze new trails o f u n k n o w n finance. We may expect these calls to be more numerous in the future than they H. 1. haas have In the past. ' t V e a r e t h e world's financial" leoider and we must Accept, the responsibility which goes with it, Let us look to the future with com '?|and probably election of a President «. •. iand Vice President by Congress. * ?v| Not one out of a thousand persons Hknbw3 how the Electoral College ^functions. It is sufficient that the; & system has stood the test of time. The ' latest development in politics is the effective recruiting in the states west of the Mississippi River. Indications are that a third party may project itself into the political arena within a few weeks. At present the drganizers are Republicans branded .^"Progressives" and in rebellion against the G- O. P. There is a plan to draw on discontents within the Dem- " ocratic ranks so their influence may be felt at the nominating conventions .of the two major parties in June. It is claimed that the 'organizers have financial backing and are making good ; progress. The claims advanced are "that the independents will muster a I strength greater than the Bull Moose under Roosevelt in the clash with Taft which, brought Woodrow Wilson to the White House. With a political youngster--a third political party--pitted against them, the veterans iri the Republican and Democratic camps will undoubtedly trim their sails. Compromise in granting planks acceptable to the discontents in their 1932 platform has been suggested as a way out of an embarrassing situation. The leaders of the "third party" insist that they will not be turned aside from their main objective - electing a Presidential ticket, or at least dictating the selection by throwing the election into Congress. Punishment of the Senate's in- ' corrigible "•Wise-cracker," Moses of New Hampshire, may give the Dem- ^ ocrats control of the Senate. Many * Democratic Senators regard this pros- ,: pect with alarm because they prefer . to let the Republicans take the helm and the responsibility over an unruly Senate. As one leader expressed it privately, "The victory will belong to the party that has the most absentees < when the votes are counted". Progressive Republicans and a few of their conservative brethern cherish the hope of whiting a fitting epitaph for Moses' epithets. They would unhorse the sharp-tongued president protempore to keep him from taking advantage of his position as presiding ~ officer when the Vice President is absent. Hence, the roll call for organiz- > ation of the Senate will tell a significant. story- Government scientists have discovered the cause of your old love- Tetters, books and even newet wall ^ paper becoming stained and yellow. No matter how pure the air in your " neighborhood, there are certain at mospheric chemicals present acting as deteriorating agents. The Federal Bureau of Standards has been poking around libraries and store-rooms to trace the effect of atmosphere on different kinda of paper. The investigators found that papers containing crude fibers, such as ground wood and unbleached fibers, were generally brittle and yellow. Documents made from paper well purified by chemical treatment stood off the weathering much better. The chief destructive agent is acid polution of the atmosphere, particularly "sjulphur gases from conbustion of foals, fc%h temperatures and dust. never oyefrcome it, but time Is the great healer and eventually we have come out of tL As it is with Individuals, so it is with nations. • Our nation has bad much Sorrow in the 155 years of its existence. In that time we have passed through the major depressions of 1837-1857-1873 to 1879-1884-18ft3-1896- 1907-1914,-1921 and, the present. I venture to state that in each_ of these periods there were those who had doubts of the future just as we have tlienL today, but what happened after each depression? Our country recovered, to be better and stronger than ever. Its people were introduced to modes of living°they never dreamed of, until today, notwithstanding bur depression, we live on the highest plane of any nation in the world. Should we not judge the future by past experience? Surely our people are better, prepared, financially and intellectually, to cope with even greater problems than they have been in the past, so why not look to the future confidentfrthat fundamental social and economic problems will be adjusted satisfactorilyt Confidence is not established by any one thing but by an accumulation of things. If we can get confidence started on its way, gathering a little here and there, it will accelerate its speed as it goes along. This is not the work of any one man to perform but is the cumulative effort of each and every one of us. What we are in the future is not the result of what we have done on any one day but the result of all that we have done for all time. The American Bankers Association is endeavoring to do its part. Individually our efforts may not count for much, but they are part of the whole plan and taken in the aggregate they amount to the sum total ot' ill our efforts. PUBLIC INJURED BY BANK GOSSIP National Association Declares Community Interests Demand Protection Against Idle - ftumors in Java <xv-vv:. VOLO B< Beajaala Tkoapioi'i RtmtiM Benjamin Thompson, a poor New England boy, became, in England, a cavalry colonel, undersecretary of state and Sir Benjamin Thompson; In Bavaria, he became Count Rumfort of the Holy Roman empire, minister of war, chief of police and elector; in France, the husband of a famous woman ; and died, in Paris, alone and friendless, though he Uud been honored by the great Napoleon himself in that very city. ft Is considered among ?Tew England sword-fishermen an exceedingly food omen to haul in a "skillagelee." Perhaps this is because the blllfish, as it is more widely known, is even more belligerent than the swordfish and can be landed only at great risk, and also because the species is rarely found in New Kngland waters. It usually prefers a southern habitat, but occasionally one travels with a school of swordfish as far north as Georges bank. Billflshes range from 6 to 20 feet in length, and in weight from 100 1*000 pounds. •K3M4 I"'- a psychologist asked a number of children what clouds are mads of, some gave correct answers but others said that clouds are mads ot cotton, feathers or soapsuds. H. Jeans, British aftluacalculates thst tiie sun Is diminishing at approximately 250,000,- OTft In their advertising and In their direct contacts with customers and others, bankers should "consciously and persistently devote more time and thought to keeping people mindful of the fact that while the bank has many obligations toward its customers, equally is It true that the depositor also has certain obligations to the bank to enable it to properly maintain its position in the community," a recent statement of the American Bankers Assciation declares. "A bank admittedly is a semi-public Institution and there is a mutuality of obligation resting upon both the banker and his customers to maintain the effective functioning of that institution that Is superior to the personal interests of either," it says. Bankers might well consciously devote greater effort to building up the public viewpoint in their communities that due to their public obligations and burden of public interest, the banks are entitled to protection against ill-informed or malicious gossip and rumors, the statement says. "As to banks in some states, bank slander laws afford this protection," it points out. "We recommend that this protection be availed of by definite action Wherever practical both as a matter ot immediate expediency an also to awaken public opinion as to the dangers of Idle gossip about s community's banking institutions." ' Java Youths Selling Bamboo Musical Instruments. I What Csn Be Done Farmers should rid themselves of any false hope of outside aid from legislation. The only recourse left lor the producer on a reduced price level is to produce his goods at reduced costs, and nearly every farmer can likely put nto force a few economies in production. Farmers must produce as largely as possible the materials they use, and get away from cash purchases until prices come down proportionately on the things they buy. The cheapest way in the farming business Is to raise your owa feed and net let the other maa get your dollars. tW» Vegetables Pafly vegetables from the gardsa every day in the year" is the slogan adopted by members of the year- 'round garden dubs of the Gulf Coast states. ^ *; Bv*a4ea by Trawl Ths nse of traveling is to rsgviisfcs by realky, and. instead « •My ba, ts ms (Pr*p»red by the National 0«ogr*j>h(e ~% Society. Wash'ingt.bn, D. C.} " NSTALLMENT buying,has invaded Java, accprding to United States trade reports. Tiie Javanese like American-made products. American exports to the island annually, amount to .more than $30,000,000. Picturesque, horse-drawn carts with wheels from six to seven feet in diameter how must compete with speedier American-made auto trucks; and native two-wheeled passenger carts, once the only passenger vehicles in Java cities, are bei«2 crowded off the streets .by'Shiny, American-made pleasure cars. Ti^e-Island, which is aboutmTh*. siie and shape of Cuba, Is. traversed by anetwork of fcood roads and railroads. While traveling on either, the American tourist is seldom out of eyeshot of American products or products of American machinery. A tr- -elermay« engage an Italian, British, panisli or French automobile for a tour, but a portion of the road he traverses is apt to be the product of American roadbuilding machinery. Should a blowout occulr on the highway, it is likely that one of tiie thousands of A merican-made tires that are shipped to the island annually would be as readily available as one of for-, eign make. And the new tire may contain some of the rubber which a short time before.rflowed frein -one of the trees on a vaj^t rubber plantation nearby. The traveler who prefers to see the island from a train window is unaware that machinery and tools bearing familiar trade marks help to keep his train running on schedule. Rice farmers whose watery farms rise like a series of silvery lakes up the sides of Java hills, cling to antiquated wood implements, but here and there the blades of plows and harrows from American factories and waterworks in agricultural regions reveal American-made machinery. With more than 700 inhabitant^ to the square mile, the natives must be efticient farmers to feed the population. American fertilizer is the farmers' crop Insurance, and when crops • contract disease, American chemists furnish the medicine to bring them back to a healthful state. Situated but a few hundred miles below the Equator, Java is hot, but the traveler often finds his hotel room mado comfortable by an American electric fan. The power that runs the fan may come from one of the many electric generators ^ Imported from America. Hotels Are Comfortsble. As a rale the hotels' in Java are clean and well designed to meet the needs of a tropical climate. Usually, they consist of a main building openly constructed so that there is no hindrance to the slightest breeze. The service, complete in every detail. Is enjoyed by foreigners. One takes his seat in a spacious pavilion and Is brought soup by an army of beturbaned Malays. Then large, deep plates are brought, on each of which Is a supply of rice, one of the favored foods of the island. On top of the rice, two inches deep, the diner is expected to place a variety of vegetables, curries, dried fish, eggs, fowls and meat flavored with peppery condiments. After eight of the dishes are deposited on the rice, the diner's appetite, if he is a novice, usually calls a halt and the remaining half of the sixteen varieties of rice "coverings" are allowed to pass untouched. No wonder the great majority of the resident Hollanders- sre Inclined to corpulence when one takes a glance at the Java festive board. The streets of the larger Java cities tjhat are often filled with American automobiles and bicycles, have their oriental bazaars where a gay array of goods ranging from cheap trinkets to fine metalware and fabrics are on sale, but there are also modern shops In which American cement machinery had a constructional part. There, too, American-made flashlights, batteries, spark plugs, and other automobile accessories, are displayed under the rays of American-made electric light bulbs. Sometimes the same ships that take American products to Java return with many native products which are popular In this country. Many head colds and cases of malaria are treated with quinine extracted from the bark of the Java cinchona trees. The rubber heels oil one's shoes or the titas on one's automobile may contain Java rubber. Perhaps ydur morning coffee and your afternoon tea originated on a Java coffee or tea plantation, while there Is a bare possibility that some of the small quantity of Java sugar Imported by the United States may have been used to sweeten tTSe.se beverages. ' What Batavia Is Like. Java ranks among the richest regions of the Dutch Kast Indies. There are more than rut.ooo.ooo native inhab- William Rossduestcher of Joliet spent his Thanksgiving vacation here with relatives and friends. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher, Messrs. Milton, James, Lloyd and Ellwood Dowell, John and George Passed and AlVin Case attended the turkey raffle arid dance at Ivanhoe Tuesday evening. Esse Fisher -and Mrs- Xloyd Fisher were Waukegan visitors Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield were McHenry business callers Tuesday. Miss Vinnie Bacon drove to McHenry Monday on business. Miss Edna Fisher of Waukegan spent her Thanksgiving vacation at the home o£ her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Esse Fisher. Mr. and Mrs- Wayne Bacon and family of Slocum Lake and Miss Emma Bacon spent Thanksgiving at the Bacon home. Mr. and Mrs. Sherman Davis of Roqnd Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bacon and family were dinner guests at the home of Mr. artd Mrs. Lloyd Russell | Thanksgiving day. Mrs Lloyd Fisher and family and Mrs. Esse Fisher called on Mrs. Albert Ilofer Wednesday at Fremont. . Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and son, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield and family drove to Elgin Thursday and were dinner cruests at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Frank Dowell. Mr. and Mr?-, George Vasey and family of Waukegan, Mr. arid Mrs. Sylvester Wagner and son spent Thanksgivinjg at the home o^ Mr-, and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. Arthur Wackerow attended the show at Woodstock Wednesday evening. Mr and Mrs. John Molidor, Mr- and Mrs. Joe Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Eddy Rossduestcher, Miss Emma Vogt, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser, Mr. and Mrs. itants with a sprinkling of Europeans Lloyd Fisher, Mr. and Mrs- Frank and Chinese and other Asiatics. This jHironimus and family, Herman Brawn, population requires systematic Iculti- - William Wagner, Ellwood Dowell, vation of the soil. .*• •-••j When the Dutch settled Batavla, the largest city*on the Island, they brous'ht (heir love for the lowlands and built their city of European type, closed houses on canals which coursed a broad swampy area. But as trading men and soldiers died by the thousands from malaria and other diseases aggravated by the swamp vapors around them, the settlers eventually learned that tropical Java was not a temperate Netherlands. European ^atavia, now on higher ground, is a healthy city, a great emporium of trade' and the metropolis of the island, sprawling oter a wide area The old town is almost entirely given over to the Javanese, Chinese, Indians. Arabs and Malays. The new city has spacious parks, made colorful by myriad flowers and the luxuriant growth of the Tropics^ Near one of the parks rises the impo* Ing facade of the Museum of the 1W tuvian Society of Arts and Sciences with a copper elephant, the gift of the king of Slam, in the foreground. The Batavld museum has one of the finest! ethnological collections of any lnstlv tutlon'in the Far East and its publ|». cations rank well among the learned societies of Europe and America. A sail of slightly mo-e than 30 hours from Batavla brings the traveler to Soerabaya, the most important seaport in Java. Although the busy landing stage and bustling crowds in the streets impress the traveler of the cltyvs commercial importance, it is tot the most part hot and presents few attractions. v A few hours' ride from the city's back door, however, brings the trav eler to Pasourouan where he may get the real flavor of Java's "interiorwhere the dos-a-dos, Java's curiou# little high-wheeled covered wagoni rumble over"the roads behind sturdy white bullocks. Tosari a Pleasant Resort. Nearby, but reached only after hours of roughing, climbing on donkeys and afoot, is the delightful resort Tosari. A walk aiong'the village's single street reveals the mode of life of Javanese mountaineers who are quite different from their neighbors In the lower valleys. Here are the homes of the Tengr gerese, a hardy tribe which at th# time of the Moslem invasion of Java retreated ^to the mountains and suo cessfully defended themselves against the invaders. Tosari is perched on s flank of the Tengger massif 5,480 feet above sea level where invigorating air makes mountain climbing much mors pleasant than In the torrid regtons is the Javanese foothills. Situated In the midst of the great East Indian volcano region, Java has Its share of active and extinct craters, In fact the island Is volcano-made. It ia estimated that there are more thaB 100 craters op the Island. Everywhere in Java, in the huge crater lakes, in fissures that now are river beds, even In ancient temples, half finished when interrupted by some fiery , convulsion, are evidences of cataclysmic forced The "treacherous Klot," as the natives call it, all butfj wiped put the town of Britar in 191& More recently, Mount Merapl, situated at the extreme eastern tip of the is" land boiled over and took the lives of 90 natives. A volcano is not always considered, a calamity in Java. In fact most of the larger towns and cities of the lsx land nestle around the base of active craters, although thousands of inhabl* tants have been lost in violent erup*r tlons. Much of the prosperity ot the island Is due to the constant enriching of its soil by material coughed front these great smokestacks, and from the medicinal value of the hot mineral springs and highland resorts slong the slopes. Miss Helen Vasey and E. Townsend all attended the wedding dance St Round Lake Wednesday of Miss Helen Oeffling and Charles Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser drove to Waukegan Tuesday on business. Mrs. Joe Passfield and Mrs. Charles Dalvin were Waukegan shoppers on Tuesday- Mr. and . Mrs. Joe Wagner entertained friends Thanksgiving evening. Miss Helen Vasey of Urbana spent her Thanksgiving vacation at the borne of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jay Vasey. Mrs. Esse Fisher spent a few days the past week in Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen, Mrs. John Rossduestcher were Wauconda callers Friday. M*r. and Ifea. Lfcoyjd Fisher , and family called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis at Slocum Lake on Friday. Mrs. Mary K. Lenzen has infection in her hand- Mr. and Mrs. Henry Krtftger of Wauconda spent Tuesday at the home of the latter's father, John Walton. Miss Sarah McEmeel of Racine, Wis., called on friends here Wednesday. Mrs. John Molidor is spending a few days at Kankakee, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen entertain, ed friends Wednesday evening- Mrs. Pete Stadfield and Philis Mae Johnson were Wauconda callers recently. Mijss Alice McGuuge of : Highland Lake spent the week-end with Mrs. A. Lusk. - t Mr. and Mrs. William Dillion, and family, Mr. and Mrs. George Waltoh and family of Libertyville, Mr- and Mrs. Albert Kottenberg and family of Waukepan and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kreuger of Wauconda spent Thanksgiving-^ at the home of John Walton a n d s o n , J a s o n , . . . Mr. and Mrs. John Capoller afid family of Chicago spent the week-end here with relative®. , Mr. and Mrs ,.J. D. Williams &nd son. Junior, of. dinner guests 'at' ••the". Esse.. - Fisher home Saturday. \ ' Henry Stoffell received word from London,. Wis., that one of his nephew's had passed away recertify. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Eddy Rossduestehct entertained friends ahd relatives oh Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and fam. ily were McHenry business* callers cn Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John Rossduestcher, Miss Adaline Rossduestcher, Paul O'Larry, Herman Rossduestcher and Miss Mary McGuire attended the dance at the "Ireland Garden" in Chicago Friday evening. Arthur Wackerow Was a Woodstock caller Saturday evening. - Miss Stella Langworthy. Miss Adeline Rossduestcher of Libertyville. Charles Dahier of Barrington, Paul O'Larry of Chicago, Mr. ' and Mrs. Charles Rossduestcher, Sr., Mr- and Mrs. John Rossduestcher of Chicago, Herman Rossduestcher, Miss Mary McGuire and Orville Bird spent Thanksgiving at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker and family, George Fallon and Martin D£- vitt were Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G- A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldman and family spent Thanksgiving in Chicago with relatives. Frank Hironimus was a Grayslake business caller Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George will 'i entertain the five hundred club Mon day evening. • ,, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Leffleman, Leo Lekampe, Miss Vera Granite/Mis* Regina Lekampe, Mr. and Sirs. Lloy l Fisher and family all enjoyed turkey^ 4 - dinner and supper at the home of Mr^V" and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser Sunday. f Mr. and Mrs. William Dowell, and daughter of Elgin spent Tuesday afternoon at the home of-Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey and son and, Lloyd Burgeff were Thanksgiving "; guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Herman Dunker. Walter D&vis of Round Lake called: at the Lloyd Fisher home Sunday. Mr- and Mrs. Frank Hironimus at- - tended the funeral of a cousin, Gordon Rentier, at Fremont Center Monday;1 morning. . Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield and family were Sunday dinner guests at th home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield J Arthur Wackerow. spent Sunday afternoon at the home of . Mr. snd Mrs- Joe Ddwell at Slocum Lake. Roy Passfield and son Donald were f Mc Henry business callers Saturday. ; . -Miss .Adeline- Rossduestcher an«$\< Paul 0. Larry were Sunday visitors a the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe. Lenzen* Miss Vinnie Bacon motored to; McHenry Saturday. . . •» ^ r "i .. / Esse Fisher and- son,-;-^pyd^irtphfe'- Wauconda callers Tu€&day< ' ••-"•-v MrS. Arthur KaiSer was a'McHenryf^^p ^ shopper Saturday. ' *•* Miss Hazel J1 cwnsend of Round.': Lake . spent a • few days with Mrs Beatrice Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kaiser and soC Junior of W&ukegsirt spent Thanks-*"^ giving at the home of Mr. and Mrs* John Kaiser. Mr. and M*s. Amw LefFleman and f son .Leonard of Amboy 'til., spen Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Wiser. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie_T family of Wauconda spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bert Pad*; dock. j Frank Gould and friend of Libertyville spent Friday evening at the home® of Mr. and Arthur Kaiser. The Seahorse • The tiny seahorse gallops along over,, --^'9' the Coral of the warm tropical see'- ^ >;•/' safely incased in a bony armor. Municipal aquariums throughout the country have specimens of this ln-i teresting little fish, w hich must hekep1 In salt water similar to Imat of it sea home. It Is so called because ot •' its .startling:, resemblance to ou#'^' equine friend. It, too, feeds on grass;, A..> . of marine character, and disports itself as lively as any colt of the pastureland. on gtmna S *Wkat P--fU wm Say" What people will say--In these words lies the tyranny of the world, the whole destruction of our nsturHl disposition, the oblique vision of our minds. These four words bear sway everywhere.--Berthold Auerbach (tJerinen Novelist) in "On the Heights.* SM Right op to the middle of the lest century scientists spoke of the deep lea m belnc 4*voM of llfia ... -.^7, Ge-Oyratloa -- W»iil«| Maidens weren't so bold In €tie old days, perhaps, but a lad who could1 drop the reins on the dashboard dldn'tf. need so much co-operation.--Los As* geles Times. Uade Ekra man thinks tee well ef hlsself," said Uncle Eben, "lt*s a stgni, dat maybe he is forgettin'a few thing* he knows about hisself."--Washingts* Stiffs f DNCE upon. Urn. who lived In. a pleasant honjj Community in Northern Illinois. A man iiirly well-to-do, with a charming wife a fine family and a fine OMCw : Christmas was drawing near. Yuletide tongs were in the air. The happy spirit of good will was abroad in the land. this man went forth and hought Beautiful gifts for all in his familjr. And substantial presents for poor aop| *eedy people. Then he bought another gift. This OQ£ for his home--and for all m his horn#. The gift of GAS HEAT. And it seemed » Jtiat of all the marvelous things thai Game at Christmas, this^as the oaf most priced. Many of the others wetv and of short life. But this gift endured, sod brought comfort and happiness to every tnsmW of the family. in tl^is home, through all the days Inter, the And of winter, there was the sunny warmth of summer. New comfort, fuller enjoyment, greater satisfaction--an appreda* tldn of this gift's great value that gpew mon keen with every passing day. • • • With new reduced home-heating rates now in effect, it costs nearly one-third less to heat your home with gas. Here is CLEAN heat, measured, controlled, always just right. HEALTHFUL heat, triform, dependable. No soot, smoke or ashes. No work to do. You can have a gas boiler or furnace connected With your present heating system, or a gas burner installed in your pfresent boiler or furnace. On request, our representative will caB < and give you an oeHmeAe of ooaL GAS and ELECTRIC COMPANY. C- E. COLLINS, District H V* '.mM '-4

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