S.W ' , '* "AT ; 4'? -•%' a;* T.Sr <'**v; •°vfe 5*!i"8r ^4*i: r, SOT. 18, Y . t f i - ^ V T r ? ' ' < : v > ' '< 'y * j * ^ X ? 4wif'i J F-W; Miss Emma Vogt returnee! io ^®r duties at the Brick School Tuesday Mrs. Alvin Case and daughter w^re • Waukegan shoppers Thursday, Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter Vinnie spent Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon at Slocum Uke> Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser and My and Mrs. LIpyd Fisher attended Hie show at Crystal Lake Tuesday , evening. Mr. and . Mrs. Frank Wilson attended the fair at Elkhorn Thurs day. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hafer of Frei mont Center spent Friday evening •with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Misses Alice Russell and Helen Vasey have returned to De Kalb this week to take up their studies. Mr- and Mrs. Esse Fisher, Mrs. : X»loyd Fisher and family spent Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs Leslie Davis at Slocum Lake. Mrs,. Richard Dowell and Mrs. George Scheid Jr., spent Thursday at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Albert ; Hafer at Fremont Center. School election was held at the Yolo : echooi iSaturd&y evening, to elect a • new director to fill the Vacancy of Peter Stadfield. The new director ' that was elected was Mm. Frank King. Mr. and Mrs- Frank St. George were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kruppa at Lake Villa. William Chamberlin and Miss Edna Fisher 0f Waukegan spent Thursday here with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Esse Fisher. The Fahopcha 4-H Club held a picnic at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson Saturday, it being the last day of the 4-H Club for this season. The following members were present, Ada, Olive and Ethel Dowell- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hironimus an'i family of Grayslake spent Sunday here with the former's parents Mr. And Mrs. Frank Hironimus. Herman Dunker is the proud oWiier of a new case silo filler. Mrs. Richard Dowell, Mrs. Esse Fisher, Mrs. George Scheid Jr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and daughters spent Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ravin at Slocum Lake. Mr., and Mrs. Frank King and daughter were Saturday supper guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs Brockman at Wauconda. Otto Klemn is entertaining his brother from Kenosha this week. Billy Elizabeth Waldmann returned to the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann Friday evening after a trip to Detroit Mich. Mrs. Herman Dunker attended a hoard meeting of the Lake County Home Bureau at the home of Mrs. xiiiaisuxy o St vreTu^S, xTiuay. Mr. and Mrs. G- A. Vasey and son visited George Benwell at the; St. Theresa's Hospital, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St- George, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann were McHenry callers Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Brockman of Wauconda spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank King. Mrs. Charles Dalvin and daughter of Wauconda spent Thursday afternoon with her sister Mrs. Roy Passfield. Mrs. Mae Loftus and Mi?!. Garnet of Waukegan spent Wednesday with Mrs. Eva Ames. Mr. and Mrs, Eddy Rossduestcher returned to their home recently after a trip to Missouri. Mr. and Mrs. Otta Klemn entertained the tatter's sister the past week from Kenosha. It being her birthday Friday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Klemn gave a surprise party on her. The evening was spent in play-, ing five .hundred, and prizes awarded to Mr. and Mrs.- Frank St. George. Consolation prizes to Herbert Waldmann and the latter's sister. Mr and Mrs. Frank Dowell and daughter of Elgin, Mr. and Mr#. George Dowell and family spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield. Mr and Mrs. Frank St. George spent Monday with relatives at Berwyn. Charles Wrightman of Grayslake was a business caller in this locality Thursday. Charles Rassumen of McHenry is now employed for G. A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Walter • Crook and daughter of Barrington spent Sunday with the latter's parents Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Russell. Misses Thriza Houghton, Shirley and Marjraret Daley of Wauconda spent Saturday at the Bacon home- Mrs. Herbert Waldmann is on the sick list. Mrs. George Scheid Jr. and daughter of Wauconda spent Saturday with her sister Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Sunday visitors at the home of Mrand Mrs. Frank Hironimus w^re Mr. land Mrs. William Hironimus of Round Lake, Miss Bertha Hironimus and George Hironimus of Fremont Center Mrs. Elizabeth Dowe of Waukegan, Drf' and Mrs- Kochens of Chicago, Wendell Dickson of Wauconda, Mrs. John Karls and daughter Evelyn and Harry Nicholas of McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Nicholson entertained company from Waukegan Sunday. Chester Hiropimus of Round Lake visited his grandmother Mrs. Rose DtapneUr Saturday. Ughtsof * WAITER YORK TRUMBULL LONG HUNTED GOLD BARED BY CHANCE Joe has been for years the official bootblack of a large magazine publishing firm In Manhattan. Years ago when the organization was further downtown, Joe was chief of the shiners and when the business moved he moved with Jt. He knew every foot of the editorial departments. As becomes a gentleman of polish, Joe always bas bad literary ambitions. He had an idea that, starting on a shoe string, he could as an author reach financial affluence. Customers, he maintained, showed him not only their soles but their hearts. But hardboiled editors could not see the pictures he painted with a shoe brush. They kidded Joe in moments of leisure and aushed him sternly when they were busy. One editor put his foot down firmly. To retain his patronage, Joe had to promise not to mention the subject of writing. One day he broke the taboo, and the editor roared : "This is to© much! Never darken nay shoes again 1" Bet, after many years, Joe found a listener who was sympathetic, "I can't write," he told him, "but I have seen much and I have Ideas." The listener was Jost young enough to believe him. So he and Joe went into partnership. Joe furnished the plots, the other man did the writing. The stories were accepted by the editors who had laughed or sworn at Joe so many seasons. They were glad i to print them. They were real stories. A?good bootblack apparently learns to read footprints In the s|pds of time. • • • I see by the papers that at Los Angeles the.Rainbow division pinned a colonel's eagle on the shoulder of Ann Harding, in memory of her father, the late Gen. George Gately. The Thirtieth division should pin another eagle on Miss Harding's remaining shoulder, it was the Thirtieth division which General Gately trained at Camp Sevier, near Greenville, S. C. It was the Thirtieth division which he took to France, and which referred to him fondly as "Good G--d Gus," and would have bled and died for him. It was later that he went to the Rainbow. And on his arrival that division was richer by one first-class fighting man. j Bob Sherwood, Arthur Sherwood, Donald Carlisle and Norman Stevenson came out of the Ritz and started to walk down Madison avenue together. The shortest of this foursome is Mr. SteveBson. He stands a mere six feet four inches. A studious looking little chap, who was strolling along in an absent-minded manner, bumped into the four guardsmen, took one startled look, and scurried down m street Is evident panic. Friends think it would be a great idea if these four friends could be induced to show. dachshunds at the next dog show. • • *• • A bladr leopard is no gentle playmate. One of these beasts with a circus reached out and dragged a dog through a space not six inches wide, killing the animal before anyone could do a thing about it. The dog was one of the 4>e#t trained collies with the show. • -'Vv ii.- * ' •' When CaMn Coolfdge W*s Pre«!- dent, he sent for a congressman who had introduced a certain bill. "Is your bill going to get by the house?" he asked. "Yes, Mr. President," said the congressman. "We have all worked hard on it and I think there Is no doubt it will pass the house." "Will it get by the senate?" "Yes, Mr. President, I have assurances from powerful committee members and leaders. Yep. I think It will get by the senate." ••Well," said Mr. Coolldge, "it won't get by me." 0, mi, Bell SyndloU#.---WNTJ ScrvtMk _ Heat Swells Bank Vaults Water Lift Unattended Ifocovert Idaho Vein.. "Bujgin|" Babies • Bobby, aged three, had been ill and could not have his usual outings be* canse of that apd inclement weather. One day he looked out of the window, then turned to me and said wistfully, "There are two mammas 'bugging* their babies." Two neighbor women J bad passed with their baby carriages. ~4S>icago Tribuna. ' ' '»'«:* ** • jwliwjllSFirst CroM-Word Idea ^flihe oldest known cross-word pasdte^ was found on the Island of Crete mnA is about two thousand years old. Jl copy is In the archeological mnseum at Johns flepfciaa, aalveratty, Baltimore, Md. : TpfUane, Wash.--An unatten draulic stream, pla. ing on a hillside, uncovered the Crawford vein, Idaho's most promising recent gold discovery, after prospectors had sought vainly for it for nearly 17 years. T J. R. Crawford, owner of the land through which part of the vein runs and one of the most persistent searchers, told about it when he brought many samples here for an analysis. As far back as 1915, he related, indications of a vein were seen in a float near Orofino, and mining men quietly poked about nearby hillsides. They passed over scores ©f scars left by early-day '• miners, who recovered millions of dollars' worth of gold during and shortly after the Civil war. A few months ago, about 11 years after he be&an the search, Crawford was examining a float. He Jet the hydraulic nozzle swing Idly toward a bank. After 20 feat of the bank had been washed away, a young landslide roared down the mountain upon another miner's cabin. Crawford ran to the miner's aid, theft returned to the nozzle. Gleaming gold caught his eve. The vein had been uncovered. Rushing to his cabin, he obtained a pan and foundfree gold in the gravel that lay close to the vein. Keeping his discovery secret for months while he explored, Crawford traced the vein to state land. When he applied for a permit to mine on this! state land the public learned of the discovery, and hundreds of amateur prospectors working nearby streams and experienced miners rushed to the locality. They were disappointed, however, because much expensive development must be undertaken before much gold is recovered. Stewart Campbell, Idaho state mines Inspector, known for his conservatism, spent some time on the property, picking samples of quart* from the vein and panning the gravel. Then he said: "It is valuable enough to be developed." Other mining engineers, including F. W. Callaway of Kellogg, expressed belief development would reveal a rich deposit Door; Cash Is Borrowed Macomb, 111.--The Macomb National bank operated on money borrowed from other banks and shipped in from Chicago because the door of Its vault was stuck. Heat expanded the vault door and nobody could open It. There was ample money in the vault to care for the bank's needs and It still was safely in "reserve."* Mystery Woman Returns Cash Given by Kreuger Stockholm.--A mystery woman who shared the largess of the late Ivan Kreuger, Swedish match king, has become conscience-stricken and returned a large sum to the estate. The action of the woman, whose name is not revealed, was made public by M. Forssner, an attorney. ' She asked that the funds be turned back to benefit the manx^Jhousands of Kreuger & Toll stockholders who are threatened with loss of their life savings as a result of KreugerV suicide and the collapse of companies in which he was the dictator. She turned over one hank note of $10,000 and many of smaller denomination. A letter with the money explained Kreuger had given It to her only a month before his suicide. A Mrs. Ingeborg Eberth demanded $135,000 from Kreuger's estate shortly after his death, basing her demand on an alleged will, which, however, has not been found. She claimed to have been a friend of the match king since 1916. Greta IJndgren, Swedish opera star, was said to have been financed for her musicnl studies in Paris by Kreuger. One of Kreuger's latest checks, it is said, was one made payable to Margit ManStad, Swedish actress. Kreuger never married, saying he "could not trust a wife," . Giraffe* Ar« Mat* Washington.--Despite the" great length of its neck and tongue, It is said that the giraffe never utters a sound even when in great distress. This tallest of all animals apparently is an absolute mute, according to the Smithsonian institution. Texas Cops to Let Women Do Talking Houston, Texas.--Pity the poor policeman. Regardless of what they do qr don't do, they may be considered rude. Believing a policeman couldn't be rude if he didn't say anything, the police department here passed a rule that policemen were not to speak when handipg a woman a ticket for traffic violation. And now City Judge Fred Turner reveals women violators think the police are rude when they hand out a ticket without a word of explanation. And if the women are inclined to bawl out the policeman he has to take it. •tjWMfc--» ' ------ Cotton in History Cotton was originally cultivated in China as a purely decorative plant; it Was used in the ceremonial drapings Of Buddhist images; and Persian princesses preferred it above silk for their ml , • •% • ' • x* • I Ufh! Pygmies in the Ituti jangles of Cen-^ tral Africa hunt animals with arrows poisoned with decayed human He*. - ~ m , 2 ^ ' / . : Tiny Electric Motor Can Be Put in Thimble * Otiveland, Ohio.--John I^kota is what could be called a "fine tooth" Inventor. He has built a tiny electric motor that fits snugly in the inside of a thimble, it purrs smoothly and despite Its diminutive size can pull a pound weight across a smooth surface. Walk* Out on Own Trial Nashville, Tenn.--While lawyers argued over a compromise verdict which would have brought him ten years, Curley Draper, twenty-five, got up and walked out of the courtroom where he was being tried for murder. World War Dog Hero Gets Life License Wilmette, 111.--lielaied recognition for valor in the service of his country in foreign wars has just come to Goldberg, homely Irish terfier that was overseas mascot of the One Hundred and Twenty-second field artillery. Goldberg, holding honorable discharge papers from the army, Was granted a life-time dog license. No dog catcher can arrest him. Goldberg went overseas in 1917, a trembling puppy In a doughboy's overcoat pocket. That was strictly against orders, but Maj. Gen. Milton J. Foreman, then colonel,. In command of the One Hundred and Twenty-second, took no action. Goldberg was. gassed, shell shocked and received a - bullet wound in one leg. He returned to America with his, regiment after the war. Waibiaiton'i Ceat-of-Armi* The Washington coat-of-arma constats of a shield with a silver or white background, on the top of which are three five-pointed stars in red, With two red bars below. Over the shield is a coronet, above which rises a black raven. This Swedish Housewife Bakes Only Four Times a Yean BiggMt Rattlecnak* The largest rattlesnake of whieh there Is record is a diamond rattlesnake caught In Florida whlcfc was 8 feet 5 Inches long and 15 Inches t^roiyh tta thickest part ? ; ? Uac{e Eben "De mnn dat wastes his time brag* gin',~ said Uncle Eben, "Is Uke an inline dat uses up all Its steam oe 4® whistle."'--Washington Star. ChMMtaf tor Mfttteaal a«esra»ltl«i Soetaty. Wa«hin*ton, D. C.)--WNU 8«r»lc*. HIS year all Sweden is celebrating, with memorial rites and exhibits, the three hundredth anniversary of the death in battle of Gustavus Adolphus, the Swedish hero king. : i Many are the ways of celebrating, for as the traveler moves about Sweden by canoe, coas£_ steamer, river barge, motor car, railway or airplane, he is confronted with many peoples with customs and dialects unalike. The differences, however, fade in retrospect and the outstanding Impression one gets of Sweden today is of a closely-knit and homogeneous group. In its population an unusually pure Nordic type predominates--tall stature, long face, light complexion, golden hair and blue eyes. The blond coloring gives the streets of Stockholm a quality of lightness. In contrast, Paris seems somewhat somber and dark. t The one exception to the homogeneity of the population of Sweden is tne Lapp. Some seven thousand of them, a race apart, dwell in the Arctic wastes of the Far North. In some vague past--their racial- memory is short--they wandered in from tj>e East, possibly from Mongolia. They have not stopped to carve their names on the eternal hills. They are deaf to the tread of the centuries. For them the music of life comes only through the singing of the wind above their nomad tents of bark and through the velvety tramp of fleet, vagrant reindeer hoof. As protected wards of the Swedish state, members of this alien race roam securely over the tundras and snow-capped fjelds of the North. For mote than a century Sweden has not been embroiled in war, At no time in its history has a conquering foe invaded its territory and left the customary aftermath of .mixture of blood. During the past six years Sweden has entered more actively upon its humanitarian purpose of trying to outlaw war altogether. Sweden has no colonies and so avoids entangling alliances. Its nest for empire and empire-building was worked off in the flush of youth. In the Viking days brave adventurers went West, and traces of their wanderings still exist on the coasts of England and FVance, Iceland and Greenland; but in many of the lauds they touched they left no enduring record of occupancy. Sweden's Intervention in the Thirty Tears' war saved the cause of religious liberty for Europe. Then came the brilliantly tragic reign of Charles XII. With his death in 1718 ended his gallant defense, as he alleged, of western Ideals of statecraft against the threat of Muscovite anarchy. Sweden had lost Its Baltic possessions. Its prestige as a world power dlmlnlshted. The energy expended on extending empire has since been directed toward the more peaceful pursuits of developing internal resources. No Immigrants There. Sweden has no immigration problem, about 99 per cent of its six millions being native-born. Not immigration, but emigration, once threatened the national welfare. Before American immigration quotas were known, nearly a fifth of Sweden's population was represented in the United States. Love of country dominates the Swedish people. Their ^songs reveal a passionate love for the beauty Of the land which has b&n an unending source of inspiration to Swedish poets. The Swede's reputation for melancholy may be attributed wholely to his susceptibility to the vagaries of the weather. He is gloomy at the very thought of autumn, harbinger of the dark winter months. All the russet gorgeousness of September and October is wasted on him. He is quick to lament the briefness of the season of light Pemind him of some event in the past and he is likely to say reflectively, "Oh, yes, that was the yfear the summer fell on a Tuesday." In that respect he is the arch pessimist Stockholm, to be sure, is in very nearly the same latitude as the southern tip of Greenland. This means that approximately two-thirds of the country lies in latitudes generally considered unfavorable to habitation and growth. But the climate-of the Scandinavian peninsula, wit^ its jagged coast line sweeping dow\ mp^ttieally from polar regions into^uie Noith and Baltic seas. Is tempered by the warm Atlantic drift, which follows the western coast of Norway and dips also into tJb£ SUamerrack. There is *t joyous glamour about the way spring and summer come with a rush. Almost overnight, in the South, one sees the beech forests turn i$to low ranges Of Jade.. The islands the transatlantic visitor sees first, as he nears the Swedish coast, are those that encircle the harbor of Goteborg (Gothenburg), chief shipping center and commercial port of the country; for the usual approach to Sweden is by the "lonely passage" that rounds the bleak northern tip of; Scotland and then threads down among the islands In the Kattegat. Goteborg and Stockholm are linked by a road of water, the Gota canal. This connects the North and Baltic seas and the large inland lakes, Vanem-- the largest lake In Europe excluding Ladoga and Onega, in Finland and Russia--and Vatern and Malaren. The series of locks .that provide for th'fe varying levels in the route--the highest point is 308 feet above the Baltic-- were an engineering triumph wheal constructed nearly a century ago. Through Gota Canal. North of this belt of water is another "lake district" including the Fryken lakes of Varmland, Lake Siljan in Daleqarlia, and Dellen in Halsingland, along the eastern coast Farther north come the extremes of summer and winter. Where tjie Arctic circle cuts through the fjelds along the Norwegian boundary the sun Is visible for 24 hours of the day for seven weeks in .Tune and July. From any of the accessible mountain, peaks the midnight sun is a breath-taking spectacle of magnificence. With a few outstanding exceptions, there are no striking extremes of weiiith and poverty ifi Swpilon. There are no slums in Jonkoping, for instance, though it is the home of the world-famous safety match, one of the most Important manufactures of the country. Eskilstuna steel, an equally familiar trade mark, has not produced a Swedish Pittsburgh of vicious volumes of smoke. The miners at Kiruna, north of the Arctic circle, live in ,a model community of neat, modern houses; and Falun, center of the Rergslagen mining interests, suggests neither luxury nor squalor, although one corporation, generally said to he the oldest in the world, has held continuous possession since 1284 of the great mine, Stora Kopparberget, with Its vast Underground pit Nearly All Live Comfortably. The ordinary comforts of life ate within the reach of the majority. With a highly developed telephone system, business arid social matters are handled largely over the wire. At the hint of a delay, when a call is made, the Swedish operator answers, not "Just a minute," but "In the wink of an eye!" and she means literally and expeditiously just that The main railway lines, like the telephone. are state-owned. Private lines supplement rather than rival this service, which includes about a third of the total railway mileage of the country. Sweden has a more extensively developed railway system, in proportion to population, than any other European country. Third class is cheap and clean. Second far outranks the ordinary European second, and first offers luxurious- means of travel. The electrified railway that Is farthest north in the world runs from Boden, below the Arctic circle, to Narvik, Norway's always ice-free port, through which much of Sweden's iron ore is shipped. The electrical current is supplied from Porjus, a modern industrial town that has sprung up In the wilderness of 25 years ago. The machine room at Porjus is sunk into a blasted mountain wall at a depth of 16T> feet, a precaution that gives a hint of the low temperatures of the Arctic winter. Electricity, derived from waterfalls and rivers, is being substituted by modern Industry as fuel that In time will supplant the black' coal which Sweden lacks. Black coal heads the list of imports and keeps the balance of trade unfavorable to Sweden, but white coal Is beginning to take Its place. From the depths of the forests of Sweden--they cover approximately 'three-fifths of its land area--come the commodities that head the exports. Wood pulp, planed and un planed boards, paper, beams, spars, mastwood, and box boards provide nearly half of the qation's annual revenues from exporta- Works Both Ways *Tf you don't never worry 'bout nobody," said Uncle Eben, "don't he surprised tf you find out some time dat nobody's worryin' 1>out you."--Wash- Ingtoa .Star. Grading Politicians , Jud Tonkins says a good politician knows how to talk and a better One knows how not to.--Washington Star, Highland "E«gli.fc* "English as she is spoke" In the remote Highlands is not exactly the tongue of the South. The fact is illustrated by a brief conversation which took place between th>ee Highland gbillies, who had a sup each of the laird's own mountain dew. Said Tougal, "That was the fery pest whuskey her nainsel ' neifer tested in all her porn tays!" "So did I neither" agreed Tonait and Aa^is CQCTOboraM. ther dld l tool*'"" ^ of the Chiefs By Editha L Watson is a scrict * of fact article! more fascinating ; £ttioii| " ^.;g\which" give a new insight into American Indian history* • / * * Watch for these articles in The Plaindealer Music ef KiaJsui Kind words are the music of th«f would. They have a power which ' seems to be beyond natural causes* T as If they were some angel's songilp which had lost Its way and come t aMv earth, and sang on undylngly, smiting} ^ the hearts of men with sweeteH^.') wounds and putting for ,awhile aat-,v-• angel's nature into us.--F. W. Faber. Fiaoish Athletics - -~~- Organized gymnastics did not tMn come known in Finland until the !at^' .. 70s of the last century. The most pop* plar branches of athletics are skiing* 7- iong-distafice running and other tradt$£ and field events and" wrestling. Re» ; cently rifle shooting and a game adapt# ed from American baseball ItMiflB achieved popularity. Old New Tc»rk School / Tfce Oollegtate school of New Terlc, three hundred years old, started 1# the old Dutch fort in New Amsterdam* CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHESt *< - • •••• "Substance? was the subject of Lesaon Sermoa in all Churches ot '* Christ. Scientist on Snaday, Sep- "JjS tember 11. f-' • ' The.. Golden Text was,' "Labour for the meat which perisheth, but "•n-"*; ~Kr * that meat which endureth unto % lasting life, which the Son of maw .-A shall give unto you: for him bathuu^L^j God the Father sealed" (John 6: 27). ' Among the citations which com* prised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: "In th» , beginning was the Word, and tb#*: Word was with God. and the Wonf'.' ^ was God. The same was in the be*.\ ' ginning with God. All things weitl.-; made by him; and without him wa»; not anything made that was made'*.. (John 1:1-3). . . J The Lesson-Sermon also in* . f"'- eluded the following passages front the Christian Science textbook^ ^ "Science and Health with Key to th#--is Scriptures." by Mary Raker Eddy: "Spirit. God, has created all in anf of Himself. Spirit never create* matter. There is nothing in Spiritout of which matter could be madefc>t ... Spirit Is the only substance, th#" 7 J invisible and indivisible infinite Qod* . (p. 335). ;• "It Joes i k •* •f -t%»4 1' *•*." ^ «i •' Jr., : 'tv ' , * " "" S" J&Sm When you try sellingby- telephone, you'll be pleasantly surprised at the quick, efficient way "It does the job". After clos* ing several sales by Long Distance calls you will be enthusiastic about a "new-found'! sales-aid that is inexpensive and yet com# pletely satisfactory. Use it todayi Measured by what it does/ft yen--wb+t, in heme or ^ -i' •*'V ' '• S. V •. > '•:V- - MAIL A CLASSIFIED AD TO THE McHenry Plaindealer '4 TI1E13 LT YKES' G U 1D£" RATES--Two cents (2c) per word for each insertion* Minimum charge of 35c for each insertion Name Number of Times. Post Office Amount Enclosed. dQl WRITE ADVERTISEMENT PLAINLY, one word in each space, including; your name, address or phone. AD ABOVE and MAIL TODAY I j Classified Columns Close 1(1:00 a. jn. Thursday All Cash A\