Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Jan 1932, p. 3

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! > / - . . " • * - jgXf % > * ' ;• * * * ,! * '*•» v »*-, "7 t' •,?- - A-ft »vt> '•« V-t " -**V* . t. ' ^7 " y-""V:"y>'- •'• fy™"' *»V» \ <•«#£! k/\ rv >».' 5^S»S5SSW«5«»SF umpi^F* FLAINDlUJLMt, THITiaD AT. J A1TUAET 28, 1S&* s 'ywss 3^ B«4Ais« Rmvt B--<» 1 ;: f Rotary beads have been tfaeai to ivMlfce earliest Buddhist* » KENT & COMPAmr jpfj. %V All Kinds of IftSI" **s u R A «jt • - v-*.=. / • ' " 1 , '"-r "5- J* *7 *'l'« -MjS* iT" * t'Vv. 'V* ** V*< ^ lfc» •' • ^-4~i the awt, Companies (feme in and talk it ovsr Pinne McHenry ft GOOD IDEA TO CUT OUT POORER HENS •rfii ;jU v*r- :-••• - • ^ "' Florence Ray, D. C.- Chiropractor and Massetiriit, # ^ Sunday by Appointment . , , _ , \ X-R»7 Sanrk* > ' - - located .over H*- llairfciatt Bros. Grocery 'A'j|Uil|et:- '^5 f i-f;-4 RIVERSIDE DRIVE V.H- i-- V' :i ' •> i-" kf^c •J. vjhiOM Riebncnd 18 '/ \ ^ Dr. JOHN 0UCET VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing RICHMOND, .... ILLINOIS 1 ;•••":f"1: .'.1 HENRY V. SOMPEIi ' ^ General Teaming Band, Gravel and Goal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract of Every Description or By Day* ^ jpbone McHenry 649-R-J McHenry, 111. 0. ^Address, Route ? ^ WM. M. CARROLL • Lawyer OBce with West McHenry State Bank Every Friday Afternoon Ffcini 4 McHenry, nHnob Why Keep Non-Producers in the Flock? x * *\ _ It Is economical management to go over the flock frequently for the purpose of removing the hens which show signs of . having ceased production. The feed consumed might be put to more profitable use if fed to the young stock In order that the birds going on the market may be well finished and the pullets properly developed and in the best of shape to produce heavily during the winter months, when newlaid eggs command a profitable price. When culling, each hen must be examined carefully. The head furnishes valuable indications in picking the high layers. The long, crow-headed individual, or the bird with the flesh of the face in wrinkles and the eyebrows overhanging, is seldom a good producer. The high producer has a comb which is bright red, with a soft waxy texture, as opposed to a dull, dried, and withered appearance. The face is clean-cut rather than beefy;; the eye is bright and prominent rather than dull and small. The abdomen of the producer Is soft and pliable. The keel is forced down, away from the pelvic arch, and the pelvic bones, sometimes called the "lay" bones, are thin and wide apart. A shrunken abdomen with pelvic bones covered- with fat, indicates slow production, or none at all. A laying fowl uses up the surplus fat ill the body, and, In the case of the birds of the yellow-skinned varieties, the rate at which the fat is used can be determined by the fading of the yellow pigment from the vent, - eye ring, ear lobes, beak find shanks, in the order named. At this season, these parts on the heavy producer are usually bleached white. When a bird ceases production, the yellow pigment returns rapidly in the same order as It left. The best layers generally molt in October or November, when they shed their feathers much more rapidly and grow them in more quickly than the early molter. CONN EL M. McDERMOTT - ATTORNEY- AT-LAW "Boors--Every evening, 7 to 8:39 All day Saturdays Pries Bldg. Cor. Green and Elm Sts. Tel. McHenry 258 . McHenry, I1L McHENRY GRAVEL * EXCAVATING CO. A. P. Freund, Prop. Boad Building and Excavating Eetimates Furnished OB Request High-grade Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small orders given prompt attention. Phone 204-M McHenry Telephone No. 108-R Stoffel & Reihanspergor Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McHENRY ILLINOIS Insure-In Sure--Insurance WITH Wm. G. Schreiner Auctioneering. OFFICE AT RESIDENCE Phone 93-R - McHenry, Illinois S. K. iTeufiu & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building Your Wants Ed Vogel GENERAL U-frf AUCTIONEER FARM SALES A SPECIALTY* P. O. Solon Mill*, 111. Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED THE CHOCOLAfB SOLDIER" That ever-dalightfol Oscar Straus operetta, "The Chocolate Soldier," with Vivienne Segal and Charles Purcell, two well-known Broadway favorites, co-starred, comes to the Erlanger Theatre, Chicago, on Sunday, January 31. The libretto of the operetta was adapted by Bermaver and Jacobson from George Bernard Shaw's "Anus and the Man." The English translation was made by Stanislaus Stange: Shaw wrote "Arms and the Man" long before the late World War. His opinion of martial heroes and hero worshipers might have been altered by what he learned during and after that conflict, but his earlier attitude was such as moved him to {ten a caustic satire on military operations and commanding officers. His Captain Bluntschli or Lieutenant Bumerli, as he is called in the operetta, ridicules the bravery of a21 men at arms. Straus' score is tuneful--never trivial or commonplace. His famous "My Hero" ,number is one th^t is en-, cored and encored. Mjiss Segal and Mr., Purcell, the two stars, are wel] fitted for their roles iri this, international favorite. Miss Segal has been one of Broadway's real prima donnas for several years. She has played leading roles in "Oh. Lady, Lady," "The Little Whopper," "Tangerine." "The Yankee Princess," Ziegfeld's "Follies" (four editions), "The Florida Girl," "Castles in the Air » ««The Desert Song" and "The Three Musketeers." She lately returned from Hollywood, where she did considerable screen work. Mr. Purcell's attractions in which he has played the leading male roles include "Maytime," "Oh, Please," with Beatrice Lillie; ""Oie Magic Melody," "M<mte Cristo, Jr.," "Poor Little Rich Girl," "The Rose Girl" and many others. Others of prominence in the cast include Allan Rogers, also a Broadway favorite; Sarah Edwards, Marion Palmer, Edmond Mulcahy, John Dunsmure and Theodore Von Tassel. There is also a mixed group of choristers totaling thirty-six in number and a special orchestra of twenty, uhder the direction of Max Fichandler- Matinees will be given on Wednesday and Saturday. T IDENTIFY MURDERED' WOMAN WITH X-RAYS What Early Hatching Means Early hatching means chicks less troubled by lice and disease. Early hatching means a~ longer growing season. Early hatching means better grown chicks. Early hatching means higher prices for the surplus cockerels marketed as broilers. Early hatching means well matured pullets which begin to lav In the fall. Early hatching means eggs from the pullets while the hens are molting. Early hatching means eggs in the fall apd winter when prices are highest. Early hatching means early maturing pullets that become broody earlier the following spring. Early hatching means greater profit Preservation of Eggs PuT down some eggs in water glass to be used when egg prices are high. (Only about two-thirds as many baby chicks were raised as last year.) The procedure In putting down eggs is simple. First candle all eggs and remove all spots and cracks. Then place them in a crock. Next make up a solution consisting of onfe part of commercial water glass and nine parts of copied boiled water. Pour this solution over the eggs so that there is about two or three inches of solution over the top layer of eggs. Place crock in a cool place. To Help Baby Chicles One of the "tep commandments" of chick raising is to "clean and disinfect the brooder house before moving it to clean ground." First, clean* with hoe, shovel and broom. Second, wash with boiling lye water. Third, paint with carbolenium or other strong disinfectants to prevent mite outbreaks. Fourth, move the house to clean ground and brood the chicks on alfalfa, or sweet clover poetture if possible. How He (Sets Winter Eggs The best Way to get a high producing flock of hens is to use as breeders only hens that show a capacity for continued production, R. T. Tarlton, Ellis county, Texas, says. For several years. Mr. Tarlton says he has used for breeders only hens that con-, tinned in 70 per cent production up to September 1. He has been able to get from these hens pullets which average 70 per cent production in the winter months when egg prices are highest.--Capper's Farmer. Intensive Chicken Raising A great flock of chickens may be raised on a very small piece of ground by keeping the birds confined in coops. This plan has been successfully followed by 'several western chicken raisers. The birds are transferred from one coop to another as they grow and demand more room, but there is no chapoe for them to waste energy In #Wrcise; they mature more rapidly and are ready for the market several weeks In advance of birds that are allowed to run.--Washington Star. Central Garage Fred J. Smith, Prop. Johnsburg Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work Give us a call when in trouble w Expert Welding and Cylinder Reboring Day Phone 200-J - . Night Phone 640-J-2 FANTASTIC 83 Persistent m By Fannie * I ; ; v 1 •>' ' t J f;V>*; . n\ V -v : ((E) by McClur# Newspaper Syndicate.# (WNU Service.) Ti Detectives Turn to Science to Solve Mystery. Copenhagen.--How sensational clews to a murder mystery were obtained by the use of X-rays has Just been revealed here. Following the discovery of a woman's legless body in the moat .of the old fortress of Lengelenje, the cleverest detectives of the] Copenhagen force found themselves baffled. Th£re was not a single clew to go on--no marks on the clothing, nothing. An examination of the people missing in the district failed to produce any information which would clear up the mystery. It4 was then that a woman reporter suggested that X-ray photographs be taken of the body to see if some distinguishing formation or tissue otfgjit be discovered. Photographs Take** These photographs were taken, and the developed plates showed that the victim had suffered from a badly infected tubercular lung. Her condition revealed by the X-rays was such as to suggest that at one time she had been a patient in a hospital. Armed with this information, the police made a search of all 1 <• hospitals in the district and ex fined all the photographs which hac been taken in recent years 6f patients suffering from tuberculosis. Among them they discovered one of a lung which tallied in every detail with the X-ray picture taken of the dead woman. Name Revealed. .Examination of the hospital records reveale3 the woman's haine and address, and when inquiry was made it was discovered that she had occupied an apartment in the city some two months before, but had not been seen since. Photographs of fingerprints on the furniture and door knobs established beyond all doubt that the for-* mer occupant was the murdered woman. With this information in their possession the police were able to discover that the woman had been the sweetheart of a man with whom she had quarreled. He has since been arrested and charged with the crime. We May Soon Be Getting Food in Frozen Brinks Weir York.--A new development in the meat and drink problem indicates that soon well be getting many of our principal foods in brick form. Clarence Blrdseye, an American scientist, recently has perfected a process that uses 50 below zero cold to freeze perishable foods as hard as paving blocks. His idea came from his experience* In the Far North, where the intense cold kept his meat and fish in good eating condition for months. According to reports on experiments and tasting tests, meats, ( seafoods, poultry, vegetables, and fruits frozen by this new method retain their original fresh qualities as long as they are kept hard frozen. v Scientists explain that no change In flavor, appearance or texture takes place because the Intense cold congeals liquid content so rapidly that ice crystals formed In the products are too small to cause damage. "Pre««nt»" Thrown Away A tribe of Indians on the Alaskan coast have an odd way of paying compliments. When a distinguished vis-' ltor appears he is Invited to a feast, after which the tribal chief goes to the edge of the cliff and solemnly casts into th»«4ea as many of hi5-^ossesslons as he thinks he can afford. This is held to be the highest form of compliment, and much superior to merely giving presents to the guest X HE fact that life was married to Gladys Cowper was to remain a phenomenon to John Bayley. That the lovely Gladys should ever have found In him sufficient attributes to claim not only her interest but her lore, was something that even in the second and third year following their marriage, was to remain a miracle in the eyes of John. First of all, Gladys, above everything, was so alive. She radiated a vitality that seemed to demand so much more than the sedentary life in a cottage which the young clerk In a large wholesale floral and tree nursery was able to provide her. Gladys, before her marriage, had been the center of a group of youths eager to provide her with more than John could.- She had lived her girlhood so recklessly in the spirit of dance,. frivolity and adorable nonsense I It gave a man pause to have come Into the vast inheritance of a creature of this irresistible love-of-llfe. It gave him pause and more than that, It gave him the urge of high r.mbltlon. A man had to Justify his good fortune In having won a wife like Glady's. More than that, If a man. wanted hold her, he had to earn the right John realized all this. - It gave him a sense of pride and at the same time filled him with a sense of torment. What If the turn in the tldei of his affairs was not to come In time? Gladys was so young, so unconsciously keyed to attract all who came within her orb. Even on the streets, heads swung after as she passed. In a group she predominated. A young husband had to look to his p's and q's. ° Not that Gladys herself ever gave off the slightest awareness of the extent to which she kept her husband pitched to tiptoe. The first years were Just happy, love-in-a-cottage; an adored wife and an adorable, goodlooking young husband, who could be serious one moment and play-boy the next. True, resources were low. The position of clerk In the tree nursery was not remunerative and Gladys was filled with little wishes that tugged at John's heart. "Darling, do yon think we'll ever be able to afford just a second hand little coupe? Wouldn't it be too heavenly having one to rush around in?" "Oh, John, fancy being able to buy the mink coat In that window. Honestly, If I had Just an Imitation one. I'd curl up like a sardelle and die of happiness." "Oh, honey, would I love a duck of a bungalow like that! Do you think we'll ever be able to afford one half as nice?" John did think, A great deal. There was, of course, much to be said in behalf of his work at the nursery. The oflires, within walking distance of their tiny suburban cottage, were set in the insist of acres of growing roses, aisles of spicy carnations, glowing riots of] fuchsias, marigold, phlox, gladlolas and madonna lilies. From the window beside his desk, far as the eye could reach, there billowed the shining, tender green of young leaves and the windswept waves of color. It kept a man a little drunk with Just the sena^of rising sap and growing vegetation. It kept him somehow young, and in a strange ashamed way, reverential toward the beauty of the worfd about him. AH very well and good from John's angle. Pleasant unhurried work. The delightful proximity of his small home and lovely wife. The days that ended peacefully with Gladys waiting for him at the end of the floral pergola that led from his offices to the high road. All very well and good. But It got a man nowhere. One hundred and fifty dollars a month earned In the heart of a gardgn, got a man's wife nowhere. Not that Gladys complained. Of course they talked and planned for a future, but there was something frlghteningly indeterminate about that future? At best he, John, could only hope for an increase of from fifty to seventy-flve dollars a month. Unless, of Course, the unforeseen happened, and he managed to wangle his way into th£ firm. That, h.owever, was unlikely. Only calamity or catastrophe could bring that about, and there were two husky young sons between him and the ultimate dream of, membership In the firm. Be that as it may, It must be said for Gladys that while she hankered for so many of the good things denied her, there was not in her attitude either rancor or bitterness. Just a wlstfulness, and It was that wistfulness which, somewhow, broke John's heart, and at the sam? time filled him with fear. There was a country club set In the suburb where the Bayleys had set up their home. While not part of It, Gladys had opportunity to observe, from' the remote vantage of sidelines, the gay-spirited existence of the poloplaying, huntlng^golflng, dancing and * i 1^ *' *• * ^ -r -i•' v-. •• i . j - . . 1' motor doings of neighborhood couple* about their own agew Evening after evening, the strains of dance music floated to them from the adjacent club house and sometimes, over the top of Ms newsapper, John could see the foot of Gladys, seated at her handiwork, tapping, tapping, to the rtiythm, as if It were all she could do to hold herself in leash. Never a word, dear darilhg, but John grew afraid, particularly as never an evening that Gladys did not meet him with this or that recital of what hearsay she had been able to pick up about the country dub crowd. Well, John decided to himself, It was Just as well it was happening and above all, it was good that he was realizing it before something concrete came along to Jeopardize his happiness. This way at least, he could take the step while there was time. Without this stimulus, he might be content to go OA to the end of time in the pleasant fastness of his position and the perfection that was his In his martial relations. „ It was about this time that ha decided to take the situation In hand. Wall Street seemed to present the first rang in his ladder. Not l» the gambling sense! John was too shrewd for that, The' way to wedge ik Was as bond salesman. Various of his friends had worked thfir way to brokerage positions and finally wealth by way of that intermediate step. 1 John did not Intend to risk one penny of his two. thousand dollars savings. Rather, he would get out of his rut and Into a business that prdmlsed a future. The way to hold "a beautiful, restless youhg wife, was to widen her horizon. The way to keep pace with the yo.unjrer generation around them was to live a little dangerously. A man was a fool not to realize that. Gladys, at first quite bowled over by the prospect of the radical change In thoir llyes, admitted however to seeing the wisdom of a young man's alertness to his future. Of course a small apartment in New York would be more diverting, and then there was John's future to consider. Naturally, a vigorous, up-andcoming young fellow, fairly bursting with amhitiotl, must, have his chiince. Curious, she told herself, how well John had kept this ambition In leash during those first few sweet peaceful years of their marriage! She,had been lax and absurdly bovine In not discovering this latent restlessness in his makeup. It was not easy dismantling the house. It was an absurd little affair, Ijuilt like a gingerbread cottage and almost burled behind foliage and shrubbery that the nurseries had bestowed upon yourg Ilayley when he married. » „ It was not until they were stripping the little garden of the furniture that together they had built and painted, that there arrived the moment whjpfi^ the equanimity of Gladys collapsed. There were more tears than she had ever in her life shed and all In a volley, a revelation out of the blue. "Oh, John--must we--must we--of course, I know It' is for your good--a young fellow must have his chance-- his future--but can't you stay back here, darling--and work toward It-- quietly--just us. I haven't wanted you to know It, dearest, but it Is breaking my heart to move Into town, as just another wife of Just another nervous, harassed bond salesman In Just another flat" Of course, the cat was out of the" hag then. The most joyous bouncing elated cctt Imaginable. The Bayleys still,live In their gingerbread house. . 1 . It seems fantastic, but then life can be fantastic. The two sons who stood between John and membership in the floral company's firm were tcagJU^Uy killed on the same field at pflle. ; •0L0 Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter Vinnie, end Mr. and Mrs. Esse Fisher visited Mrs. Mary Ames, who is seriously ill at her home in Waukegan, Tuesday of last week. Mrs. Ames was an old neighbor 8 years ago. Arthur Wackerow motored to Crystal Lake Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield, Elwood Dowell, George Passfield, William and Herman Rossdeutscher, Herman Brown, Robert Fuller, Mrs. A. Lusk, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher, Misses Laura Wiser, (Catherine McGuire, John Kaiser, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Etten and Miss Florence Etten attended the wedding dance at Ivanhoe Wednesday evening of last week for Edward Behm and Mary Katherine Obenauf. Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter, Vinnie, witnessed "Mac and Bob" at the Lake County Farm Bureau at Grayslake opera house last Thursday. William Rossdeutscher of- Statevillo spent the week-end here with relatives and friends. Mrs. Lloyd Fisher anil family wete Waukegan callers Wednesday of last week.!./ \ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and son were McHenry callers last week Wednesday. • •' Mr. and tyrs- Esse Fisher spent the week-end at the "home of their daughter, MJrs. Leslie Davis, wt Slocum Lake. / John Rossdeutscher - of Chicago spent a few days here the past* week with relatives. ® Herman Dunker was a McHenty business,caller Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family and Mr. and Mrs. Esse Fisher motored to Wauconda on Thursday., Earl Donley of Volo and Joe Mofidor of Roun<l Lake returned home last Saturday evening after a two weeks' motor trip to Los Angeles, Calif- They visited the Coolidge dam in Arizona and were taken all. through Hollywood and Beverly Hills. They saw the homes of Marion Davies and Harold Lloyd. While there they witnessed the filming of a picture at the Metro-Goldyn-Mayer studio. They also attended the western coast auto show and enjoyed trips through the orange, lemon and date groves and visited the marine barraVks at San Diego. Mr. Donley visited his mother at Los Angeles and Mr. Molidor visited at the home of his brother-inlaw, Mr. Riley. Arthur Wackerow motored to Des- Plaines on business Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., 4 - i j- .r and <fim*$iter of Wauconda were Sat*. urday supper guests at the home of^V*^ Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. A James and Lloyd DoweU attended', * the basketball game at Wauconda J Friday evening. „ f ',i Miss Vinnie Bacon motored to Mc- " A Henry Tuesday. v. ^ Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter, Vin- ' 1 nie, spent Sunday in Waukegan withr -^'1 ^ friends. __ G. Burnett of Slocum Lake spent . Sunday at the Dowell Bros, home; Frank Hironimus and son, Eai!,' * , made a business trip to Chicagd Thursday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Otto Klemm and fatn«>; . j r..*s ily spent Tuesday at Kenosha witlt\ •* ^ relatives. •' Mrs. Rose Dunnell is spending a J* • , \t few days. at-. Elgin with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann?' - j entertained company from Chicago" ... V"'" the past week. v ^ George Hironimus of Fremont and' •' John Hoffman and daughter of Ke*" -, 5,^ nosha spent Thursday afternoon af-; -1"-~~ the home of Mr. and Mrs- Frank Hi*'.**•, • Tonimos. Ira Smith of Libertyville was » --"J* Volo caller Monday. , ; Mr. and Mrs. Eari Hironimus and--;. - son and Mrs. Frank Hironimua ancr Vi^'u\ daughter spent Tuesday in Chicago. " ' •' with relatives. r "r'i'j'r^ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dalvin of - » Wauconda spent Monday evening aftthe home of Mr, and Mrs- Joe Pass^.,^«tv; field. \ •. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and sow .* spent Friday evening' at the home of \ Mr. and Mrs. Clark Nicholas at Wau- ; _-J conda. ' _ ' ^ Esse Fisher and son, Lloyd, Algonquin callers Monday. Wax Models of British 1 Rulers Going to Decay Probably the most Interesting "waxworks" in the world, and possibly also the oldest, are threatened by decay. They represent the great kings and queens of England and, unknown to four out of five Londoners, are In Westminster abbey; They are more valuabie, more historically accurate and more lifelike than any waxwork models ever exhibited In the galleries of Mme. Tussaud. - These figures, which are hundreds of years old, provide fascinating likenesses of England's sovereigns from the time of Edward III to the beginning of the Eighteenth century. Most of the effigies were modeled from lifeand carried In royal funeral processions. Nearly every figure Is dressed In clothes which were actually worn by the royal personages depicted. The older figures, which are most rapidly disintegrating, are made of wood, plaster or boiled hides, the more recent ones of wax.' The latter, which luclu'Ve Queen Elizabeth, Charles II, William and Mary and Queen Anne, are housed in the loft of the Islip chapel; near the north transept of the abbey. , . ' The wax portions of these figures are in a fairly good state of preservation but It Is doubtful whether the clothes will hold together much longer. Aaomalone • The elderly mountaineer was heafy ing.a radio fo^ the first time. He expressed great surprise when a barytone solo issued from the loudspeaker, but when this was followed by the clear tones of a soprano he seemed pet rifled with astonishment. After the instrument was switched off, he turned dazedly to the owner. "Say !" he exclaimed. "What's thet thar. critter pnyhaow--m$le, er feemale?" Chinese Americana UntH the treaty of 1882, prohibiting naturalization of Chinese, immigrants from China, on becoming naturalized, were permitted all the privileges of other citizens, and at the present time Chinese born In the United States have the right of citizens. The treaty of 1882 was not retroactive and Chinese having the privilege of voting at that time continued to do so. ;, Plaipdealsrs at Ikatttpa Above the Atmosphere The stratosphere is the upper portion of the atmosphere above 11 kilometers, more or less, depending on latitude, season and weather, in whieh temperature changes but little with altitude and clouds of water never form, and In which there Is practically no convection or distribution of the atmospheric equilibrium causing winds. It is often called the isothermal region ; that is, region of equal tempera* tore. Island Group The name "Polynesia" is applied to a region of the SoutkJSea islands Including Hawaii, New Zealand, Chatham Islands, Itapanui or Easter Islands, Marquesas, Rarotonga, Tahiti, Tuamotu, , Samoa, Tonga, Uvea and Futuna. The name is derived from the- Greek "pojiys1'--many and "nesos"-- island. --•. Temperature to Order A Cincinnati physician predicts &at hospit&ls will some day have con-' trolled Indoor atmospheres, " so that5 fever patients may be kept In cool rooms, moist chambers, and other patients in temperatures suited to their eoediltotiw.• t , ». •«. vi Briefly Told Silence and speech are both, as they are used, either tokens of indiscretion or badges of wisdom. HE HAS TOO MUCH REFRIGERATION i'VM? Keeping foods cold, b« not too aid, is a problem during the winter. Unless, of couise, you have an eledxic refrigerator. Then there's no danger of your'milk and meats freezing--or fruits and vegetables becoming frostbitten. (As they're almost sure to do if you store them outdoors.) n <Aq electric refrigerator keeps just the right tcmpctamie- Automatically. Foods stay crisp and palatable . . . last days longer than they do in an outdoor "cooler". You'll find the mpney you save by cutting down food spoilage helps to pay for an electric refrigerator. And more savings result when you buy perishable foods in large quantise* whenever prices are low. Why ooc investigate today? See the new models *c y<Mf!.: NEIGHBORHOOD REFRIGERATOR DEALER'S or yoqg PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY STORE. Convenient time payments easily arranged foe. • -VfR-' " ^ * w'-v-CS

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