& <f,\ S-'^r'^ **" -•< *»;-,' 3* .•-.' -s}; y^s4V"- -"fc ^q ^ * v *"* ** *** ^ 'T *' *. * e , v t *% -» !**» \ v *t ** 4 '*"* ' ^ « * * ** * > -> * • « , * • ^ , :v - *% - ^ J * /** • * « •>** * v •*• 2 4 * *7+* - ~ r ^1 ^ * f ' *' ** '* * 7 «, ** % * * * * * V vfrhmS&f, PLAINDEALER rage Serea IPRJSE MOVIE AT EMPIRE THEATKEE & BIG STADIUM TO FEATURE AUTO CHAMPIONSHIP RACES Chicago, May 6 -- Small car auto- > » It isn't often the public, is given mobile racing^ll assume tmjor pro '/the privilege' of free admission toji P°rtl01?s w.lth th° f^ T ' • 'rioture show lasting two fiours, com cha^7shlPs at 1Q Sol^e^Fiel t d ,herc furable to many steged in the movie on Sunday May 19. Theb|g stadium i ;iakcc,s of the largest cities, gets a whlch s€ats more than I00'000 and Chance to win one of a wide selection if merchandise prizes. That, however, is the case in Mc- VOLO has been the scene of many events of international importance including the Dempsey-Tunney fight classic, Army- 4, - ~ --- • Navy and Notre Daftie-Southem £enry' A^bere The J°bn Idling Tire California, grid classics and the Euch-< ghop, dealers for the B. F. Goodrich aristic Congress lias been leased by J® __,US* *J™ng,e* th® the Midwest Auto Racing Association for a series of meets to be held during the summer. Miniature tax racing places automobile competition on a plane with baseball, \traek athletics, football and , Sponsorship of an excellent bill of entertainment to be presented at the JEmpire Theatre on Friday evening, 1 ^lay 10. Hours of the performances 'Till be 7 p. m. and 9 p.m. Topping the show wiU be a smash- other ^orts that ma viewed " it ig, full length talkie drama, "The - 1 • -- * • ^ iighway Patrol.' close range. The promotion at Sol- . , , . ,!t Portmys^ the dier Field is under the same auspices eangers and hardships of this force -• -• • 7 f . . . . . as that at the 124th Field Artillery V'2^ - me^i 'Wr.-° >y a • Armory in Chicago where indoor • luMim rnn hu*h ttrorrc snrvn«on>« ° COUNTY COUNOIL MEET AT HARVARD FRIDAY I>r. and Mrs. Elmer Kochcns of Maywood spent Sunday evening at the home of the bitter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hironimus. Mr] and Mrs. Bernard Hankie and son of Evunston spent Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George . MIrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grayslake visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs: Hpnry Passfield, Thursday. . MtjP. Belle Pairweather; of Chicago spent a few days here with her "mother, Mts. E. Bacon;- James Dowell had° the misfortune to break his thumb Wednesday. Mr." and Mrs. Clarence Hironimus i Mrs. Fred" C. Sehoewer, president of the McHenry County council of the American Legion Auxiliary pre sided at the regular monthly meeting of the • county organization held at Harvard, Friday evening. Gold Star mothers were honored, RINGWOOD CARE or THE EYES DURING MEASLES Every child with measles has an acute catarrh reserpblifig pink-eye in which there is inflamamtion, swelling and discharge from the eye.,' As in every inflamed eye, there is unusual sensitivity to light, but it is -a fallacy to shut out every' ray of light Wm. Giddings, former Cashier of the Ringwood State Bank, passed'awaly at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Donald Weter at Dixon, 111., Friday evening from a heart attack. Funerf tit j x , ' ia? services were held from the Pres- - --- i«y o* ugni m • « "*k' byeriaf Church at Hebron Sunday i»«i« the imprrssion that light will with burial" in the Linn I i* 'he eyesight.; K An imnr €r • i • ' Hebroti cenetery beside his wife. I discharge itsielf; which cort-. - ^",, T^e Q=^e m^monal u service ,james Rainey and S. ,W. Brown were [ains mucius, white corpuscles and w? m' who passed among the pall beared ^ Wf^ ' ' " •• away during the year, was directed „ , ,, ^ , by Mrs. Clyde Arp of Hebron, Cour-1 „Mr-T,,and Mrs"- George Young and ty chaplain. ' witi. McCannon were visitors at * Officers for another year were I Wednesday. nominated and election will" take i and Mrs. George Shepard and , •. _ . . ... .place at the next meeting. Mrs. Ejlarni,y' spent Friday afternoon at 'El- 'M (Nevin Of - Woodstock was nominated ' S'n- ' Geonffl Kn^irfP »r Wimz-nn^a11 , r3*!^o^ty chaplain' «nd" Mrs..; E. Kjdl-| , Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and sou -- Istrom endorsed as jBilly of Chicago spent Wednesday In county chaplain «nd Mrs, E. Kjell-: , Mr. and Mrs, Max Beth and ,r , , ""^"'7". , , [strom of Hebron was end . . : the hieh Wys, ™i erim;, ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ • V eternally on the alert to pr*. ct0^ sinc'e ,a;t November. Thi i hursd° Fiv© t&Wf1 *f fi' l ^ 'i |: S •c Uul.lvy vofi ^Ar1v*i^°uunv<iiumiun was endo1^ Billy Dodg>e, of- Wobdstock' sp^nt association controls the \*xg*airplane I ^ Sunday ^ith Howard |oll of death ahd injuries. !<(!st"circuit devQ.ted to minature car j were played. Prizes were ^'on by I "^ f Interspersed throughout the drama racing in America including Chicago, i Mrs. Frank Hironirnus, Mrs. Charles j Miss Jtilia Fpff«in - - is ft charming love story,saftd enough. St.L©ys- Indianapolis, Cincinnati and jMiller, .Mrs. Arthur Kai§er, Mr§,i,-i,- v* iv *k .•j.^vwivm unug* u«vu nvf nuiue *yeu -<omedy relief to keep aildiences in up- i^o^t Wayne, Indl N^ank Wilson; Mrs. vRieharti P^welF')^^. fnr -j.^' hf^0"r>.f Itnt# riian^?n" i"^da>' aftei^'oon.' Prizes were laughter as the hero jSOes^>'.^^es ii«€^t.j',«><I'Mfsi;Geoj,ge DoWeH.. '• V/ ' ' "ion s'fl ^ r "n "in •,'^v;j!rom one tense situation to another. 1 close May 12.; Aimortg the notable | EllWood Do%elI of ; FoVfc received the Mrs. Roy Neal entertained" - t^e, Scotch Bridgi club at'har home "Wedty for..the'toffico of state chaplaiin. to Mrs. Kenneth Cristy and Mrs. S^it J n^^5^ £ Played- Dy professional actors, well drivers already listed are Tony Wilt: jflan vi&fted Mr^_and.B^.-S4(biy^;^al|«r;fj^^--e " e Wgr ma e fit- ^. Hitch&ns entertained the Announeenient of "open house"Her hojrne Thiipday uj. v / - . 1 . 'OTrdmAA« Th1irnfo f/ifti* tahlao at Itnowli fn- the talking lecture and man of Milwaukee, former, national ' Itage world, the film lifed won plaudits dirt track champion ; Ronney Hoyise- ;.'•/|iverywliere it has been shown. It holder of Cos Angeles, west coast ;'%->^irill be seen by approximately 15. mil-'; champion; Bill Holmes, indoor chamfcon people during 1935. ^ jpion of New ^fork; Marshall Lewis, It is in connection witn tne comedy, champion of St. Louis and Jim Sny- "Love, Honor, and Obey-The-Law," •tarring Harry Langdon, internation- . *lly known comedian, that the prize Contest, with its merchandise awards, fe being staged. Blanks given to audiences list 32 *. -traffic violations. Langdon, as the Comedy progresses, commits 12 to 17 Infractions. Members of the audience ,tion. "Several fast cars of miniature *re asked tc> check off the roles they : law violated and to write a 200 word ' essay on safety. Prizes are now being displayed ii the windows of the show sponsors, *nd winners will be announced as soon »8 possible after the entertainment.* Hazel block chamlee DIES IN CALIFORNIA Word has been received by relatives In this vicinity of the death of Mrs. Hazel Block Chamlee at Atladena, Cal. Death occurred after many years of illness. The funeral' fcekl Monday at Altadena, Cal. Odd Remedies Uicd Toasted hawk, monkey's heM, dried Bewts, and baked sparrow are some of 1 the primitive "cures" still to be pro- ! cured In some chemists' shops In. Tokyo. • der, Class A champion of Chicago. "We are encouraged to stage the races.on a major scale in Chicago because of the great interest in thfe sport in Los Angeles and Southern California where open air meets draw the multitudes," said Noman W. A1 ley, president of the Midwest Associa proportions have been built and are being prepped for the races. The thousand foot track will permit speed of 70 to 80 miles an hour on the staightways and the sharp angled, unbanked turns wi^l try the mettlf of the drivers." '• Wednesday evening. Mrs. Earl Hironimus and sons' retUT^ ied to her home here Saturday after spending the past two weeks in Chicago. , Mrs. Frankie of Joliet visited. Mrs Anna Lusk Friday. The ; Volo cenetery society will meet at the home of Mrs. Frank St. George, June 6. . Mr. and Mrs. Johil Rossduestcher the #gin ' S.t4te hospital ph M^y 15 f«fternoon. There^vere fbur tables of was mad> e. J*a- cki_ \Nt el> son, s. erv..isc.e' • o-fi. bridge in olav. Prizes were awardficer stationed at the hospital, invites members of both Legion and Auxiliary" to attend and visit the recreation rooms, hospital and occupa. tion department. An interesting bulletin from the play. wete award' ed to: Mrs. Rothermel, and Mrs. Louis Schroeder. Mrs. Jennie Bacon returned home Saturday from a visit with her daughter in Elgin. Charles Coates of Qenoa City spent bacteria is capable of doing the greatest harm to the eyes. The care of the child's eye is not primarily to shut out light, but to keep the ey£ clean and free from bacteria and dW chargcs, so that these dp not injur.'- the cornea of the eye. /Jo give the child that proteeejop the e^#s should be. thoroughly cleansed* and the windoy? shades should be partly lowered -to keep out, .the' direct - sunlight, but by no me^ns shduld ail the-light-be kept out. ;:'r ;• .>. Considering the number of Cases of measles throughout the country each year, practically contr/ict there i*re relatively few eye complications ih-; measles,•'which caus? .Serious iinpairlehieM of the. vision; bjcerati<^'; of-;.^e;.^0rn^.'9^\^$i^ibut.:lt fs rai'e. Proper hygiene of ^he eyes during measles includes the use of boric acid solution. solution should be kept in a sterilized bottle and should be administered warm in a sterilized boric acid flush bottle. „ tt! PROPHECY OF : MOTHER SHIPTOH Every now and then for 400 years or more, someone has brought t<>. light the prophecy and memory o$..*r Mother Shipton. As event follows doggered verses fall in so adeptly that they must needs be quoted. She made many prophecies and ev«. eri persons of note consulted her. He%Li fariioa* prophecy was" said to have been published in her. lifetime and / again 200 years later. These are her lines: Carriages without horses shall go, , And accidentsvfijil the'world with woe, Around the world thoughts shall fly ^ In the twinkling of ari eye. , " Water shall yet mqre wonders do - Now strange but yet they shall b« ' '..true,; J- , , . - V; The world upside d«Wn shall b^ -. V • And gold - be fotind at the root of &, - tree. . - . * * " . ; ' * Through hills man shall ride • " And horse n6t^' Is^lfe at his: side; Under water men shall walk , »- j ! *2 rvii mwresimif uwueun irum inn 0 , .. . _ _ * jl child welfare chairman was read, tell- ?f(i J ay /'tl! his- sister, Mrs. Fred » . -L-j _ ... . i ing of the joy of forty hoys at the of Mr. and Mr,. CharL RoidueS" " N»™al »<>« cher. Mrs. A. Martini and Mrs. J. Wegthey were presented with a gift of baseballs and bats, five hundred marbles and books, as a gift of the d!s- PREVENT DIPHTHERIA This is "Stamp Out Diphtheria Week in observance of the Child Health program in the state. A child can receive no better present from his parents than immunization against diphtheria. TheVe were 2,092 cases in the state last year, of which 153 died. These children should have received the treatment to prevent diphtheria. • Lucky Beetle - > A beetle is said to be able io dtapeVise with food for three years. Have the Oddest of Jobs Hv > 'i! * ner visited relatives in Chicago .... .. ... . , Monday ' tnct in which the units participated. Mrs. Joseph Lenzen.and Mrs. Joseph Wagner spent Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Joseph Freund in Spring Grove. Mr. and Mi^. Lloyd Fisher and family and Mrs. Sarah, Fisher were Sunday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and M2rs. George Scheid, Jr., in Wauconda. ^ Mrs. Joseph Lenzen and Mrs. Joseph Wagner attended a bridge party A sum of five dollars was sent to the Girl Scout fund and will help defraiy expenses of some Girl. Scout who will make a visit to Chicago. Mrs. William Carroll was appointed general chairman of the Auxiliary for the May party to be held at Woodstock, May 9, when guests from the district will gather foY this annual event. Presidents of units in the county will assist Mrs. Carroll. .. An invitation was received from at the home of Mrs Harry Maypole unit to attend ^eir public Mi»s Peggy Robertshaw; and Miss C. JDavies of Liverpool, England, claim that their job, is the oddest in the world. All they have to do is to walk 12 miles •very day In a new pair of shoes. Each attaches a pedometer to her leg. After fhelr day's walk .the pedometers are checked and the girls go home. They are testers of new shoes and it is estimated that they walk 3,000 miles (luring the gourse of a year: They are shown here having their pedometers checked at '~V*e end of their day of walking. TUST A TRUNKFUL! THREE smiling young stowaways demonstrate the ample space available for luggage* golf clubs or trophies of a shopping expedition, found in the trunk compartment ot the new Ford V-8 Touring Sedans, two of the new de laze types recently announced by the Ford Motor Company. The trunk compartment •--with 13 cubic feet of space--is an inherent part of the design of the Tudor and Fordor Touring 1 dan body types. All the space is used for luggage, the spare tire being car* ried conventionally at the , rear, while an inner compartment undef the floor provides space for tools. The trunk compartments may be locked. With the same key that fits the tire lock. The new touring sedans were designed to provide ample luggage carrying facilities for families doing extensive traveling who wish to utilize the car interior for passengers. They have proved thus far to be among the most popular Ford body typee. in Fox Lake Wednesday. Miss Vivian I^blett" of Wis. is spending a few days at the home Of Mr. and Mrs. Russell Magnussen. Mrs. Joseph Schreider and family of Chicago, is spending a few days here with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hirotoimus. Joseph Wagner and Carl Rowan have taken over the Ritta Barbecue station. Mr. and Mrs. Charles.Jones moved into the Dunker bungalow Saturday. Earl Freund of Griswold Lake spent Sunday evening here ^ith Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield. Miss Inez Bacon returned to the bome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Bacon in McHenry Thursday, after visiting her grandmother, Mrs. E. Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Craig; of Michigan City, spent a few days hene with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Roe. Mr. and Mrs. Heifbort Waldman and family of Chicago spent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. Wiliam Waldmann. Miss Vinnie Bacon and Mrs. Belle F&irweather visited Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bacon near Round Lake, Tuesday. Mrs. Belle Fairweather and Miss Vinnie Bacon called on Miss Emma Bacon at Fort Hill Tuesday. A daughter, weighing seven pounds was born Monday morning to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hironimus. Community night wijl be held at the Volo school on Friday, May 17, in- •tttd Thursday, May Id. Wiedrich and family. Fred Wiedrich and son, Roy, spent Sunday morning at Johnsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Beck of Chicago spent the weekend in the Charles Carr home. Mrs. Joseph McCannon and son* Loren and Mrs. Viola Low Mid daughter and Mrs. Jepson were visitors, at Elgin Saturday afternoon. Kenneth and Russell Franzen spent Spnday in the home of their grandmother, Mrs. "B. Ip. Orvis ut Spring Grove. • Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Sunday evening in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pester and daughter, Leatrice, called at the Leonmeeting, May 6, when Mrs. Paulina home Monday.' Rinaker and Commander Armstrong were guest speakers. District officers will be Ipieetsat the next county meeting. . A program was presented by Harvard talent and refreshments served. Those from McHenry who attended •wter<e Mrs. Fred C. Sehoewer, her secretary, Mrs. Leste Bacon and the local unit president, Mrs. Anna Howa r d . . V V ; ' - ' ' ' • NOTICE The following letter of interest to those seeking employment has been received for publication by the Plaindealer from the employment office at Woodstock. ^ May 6, 1935 We have been adivsed by the Federal Government to get our files to date as soon as possible. Each and every person seeking employment, should get in contact With our office in order that their registrations may be in our active file. Unless a person notifies us every thirty (30) days that they are still seeking employment, thefr registrations are transfered to our inactive file and are not eligible for employment from this office. Persons that have not been in our office since the first of the year to register on our new forms, must do so ait once if they are to be considered for work coming through. Those having registered since the first of the y^ar, who have not been in our office for thirty (30) days must also let us know if they are still seeking employment. However, to make sure that persons are in our active file and eligible for employment it is advisable for everyone to get in touch with this office.. Our office is now located in the New Post Office building, second floor, Woodstock, Iltinois. Telephone 193. Office hours are from 9 A. M. to 5 P. M. (D. S. T.) Do not call at the 6ffice on Saturdays for this purpose. -.•• National / Reemployment Service For McHenry County R. B. OLSON, Manager True Giiost Exiilss By Famous People Qopyrlffht by Public Ledger, In* WNlT8urvlc«. » Maple Square school closed Wed* nesday for the seniester vacation. The pupils and parents enjoyed a-picnic Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich and daughter, Mae, spent Saturday eve^ ning at McHenry. - Rev. and Mrs. Collins of Lanark, spent a few days the past week here. Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Wagner of Spring Grove visited in the Leonard Franzen home Sunday afternoon, v" Mrs. S. W. Brown was an Elgin visitor Tuesday. Mrs. Louis Schroeder and daughter, Jessie, spent Saturday afternoon at Woodstock. MVa Frankie Stephenson wa^ a caller in Woodstock Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. James Rniney and Gold shall be* found arid In 'land"; thafs riot now known;/ " * ' ,VN| 'Fire "and water shall wonders ck£-" V , .-3 ""-J**'. England shall at last admit a Jew, " * ' The world to an end shall come ' • ' . 4 In eighteen hundred, eighty one. . First Steamboat in St Loab The first steamboat reached St. in 1827. By JOAN LOWELL Author. ft'*HE Christinas after the Santa Barbara earthquake, 1 was In Hollywood, having a place in Charley .Chaplin's 'The. Gold Rush.' Tills whs to be my first Christmas °n land. During my seafaring days I never had a Christmas tree. This Christmas I was going to have a tree for father and me. Dad was expected home from a voyage he was making in the Oceania Vance. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown attended the funeral of Wm. Giddings at Hebron Sunday afternoon. Fred Shotliff of Hebron and William Patterson of Chicago called at the Leonard Franzen home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannqn and family were visitors at Woodstock Saturday afternoon. Andrew Jepson is visiting relatives at Wauconda. Ringwood will be represented at No end of preparations were made for I ^e Curtis Class May Festival, at the that tree. "Christmas morning 1 dreamed -not Studebaker Theatre, Chicago, on May 11. Two thousand children will play a cheerful holiday dream, but a dread ion 8'x grand pianos. The program dream--that I saw mv father under f®"11 1x5 amused in hour groups. .Between groups will be special numbers. A band, an orchestra, a string quartet, a vested choir of tiny boys and best of all Rudolph Ganz, the world famous pianist, will play twice. There is no admission fee. If you top of the first page was the fatal"are fond of music and children plan to be at the Studebaker on Saturday. Sadie McCannon is the local teacher of Curtis Class Piano methods and is presenting a group in Chicago. wafer, saw him struggling to get out. Restive, I went downstairs early. "In the kitchen I found no gifts, but an unusual article for our house, s tabloid. I never buy them; The cook must have bought this one. Across the j The famous sealed-in-steel mechanism that defies time now in both G-E Monitor Top and new, beautifully styled G-E rlatop refrigerators $ Model Description and Price or Terms Here A GmmtoI EUctric costs you $50 TO *100 LESS TO OPERATE than most other electrfc ^ refrigerators The mechanical performance of the refrigerator you buy is more important to you than all other refrigerator features combined. G-E Refrigerator mechanism is sealed-in-steel, requires no attention, not even oiling. The only refrigerator mechanism with forced-feed lubrication. Carries 5 Years Performance Protection. Carey Electric Shop PHONE SSI McHENRY headline. 'Los Angeles Captain and Crew Lost.' The captain was my father, the boat was the Oceania Vance. My father was not with me for Christmas. "I kept the candles on the tree burning for him. New candles were inserted as the old ones burned out. I kept repeating,' Til keep the • Christ- SALES TAX INCREASE LOSES IN HOUSE Representative Thomas A. Bolger, Democrat voted for the bill to lnmas tree, daddy; you will have your '!"crease the sales tax from two cents,, Christmas tree." • \ ! to three cents at Springfield last week, "By the« New Year the Oceania while William M. Carroll and Richard ! Vance was found at the bottom of the J. Lyons, other members from this ocean. It was overturned there, with- 'district voted against the bill. i The bill was lost in the house when Governor Horner found it had only ! 88 supporters, while 102 were needed ' First Iron Vewel Built ia U. 3. The "TJ. S. S. Wolverine was the first Iron vessel built by the United States navy. • She was launched at Erie, Pa., in 1844, as the Michigan. Her name was changed to Wolverine on June 17, 1005. She was constructed by Stackhouse A Tomlinson, Pittsburgh, Pa., between, 1842 and 1844. Her length (B. P.)-was 164 feet, 11 inches; beam, 27 feet; mean dfcaft, 9 feet; displacement, 685 tons. Condition of ^ Race Tracka Officials of race tracks do not know the exact Variation of the track from day to day. A fine, dry track Is called fast and a Wet, soggy track la called heavy. A track half-way, between these conditions is called fair. out any sign of the crew. The distance of the vessel from shore was too great for any human to swim; the length of time since the disaster was too great for any human to endure ..Without food. "I kept the Christmas candles burning. T"1 "Eighteen days after Christmas my father walked Into my house. He and his crew had been picked up by a Mexican fishing smack aiid ta.keo.-to southern Mexico, from where he could not communicate with us. "He has a strange sense of foreboding. All seafaring people have It. They are superstitious and augurous. You can imagine how annoying this Is to ship owners. One tliing they never do is to talk about a wretfk. "He greeted us. AH he ever said about his absence was said then: 'I didn't want the Oceania Vance, I told the owners I didn't want to take It. Before we started I saw a shroud over that boat.'" to pass it. It was a stunning setback for Governor's forces, who saw their relief financing program go down to,defeat after two weeks of intense lobbying. Belief in the Hortetho* 'Belief .In the liorsPKhoe Misses Dorothy and Mary Althoff Were Chicago visitors Saturday. , Mrs. George A. M^ine has closed her home in the Mrs. T. Culver house^ on Waukegan street and has gone to the farm home of Dr. and Mrs. Brand at Greenwood, where she is the housekeeper. Misses Mary Althoff, Dorothy Larkin, Rita Freund, Caroline Bauer and Mildred Thompson of DeKalb spent the wleekend at their homes here. They returned Sunday evening with Pill Sheehan of Chicago. Mr. a»<f1Vfrs. Harvey Damm and sons of Kenosha, Wis., were weekend guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Bacon. George Kinsala of Chicago spent the weekend at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Burns of Oak blem or hiirbinger of good luck up pears to be as old as metal horseshoes themselves which date back to about the Second century A. D. Explanations differ as to the origin of this su perstltion. but one of the common ones Is that the horseshoe Is supposed to owe its protective powers to its fan Cled resemblance to the nimbus or halo pictured about the bends of saints or angels.--Pathfinder Magazine. HERE'S A TIRE YOU CAN RELY ON--Lifretime READ THESE LOW PRICES FOR TOUR TI$E SIZE 30x3'/, $ 4.45 29x4.40-21 0 29x4.50-20...... : 30x4.50-21 • ' ' ' 28x4.75-19 29x5.00-11 ^_... 30x5.00-20 _...._ 28x5.25-18-; V..._ 30x5 truck--8-ply HD 32x6 truck--8-ply HD 32x6 truck--10-ply HD 4.95 5-25 545 575 6-20 6-40 685 18-64 2580 Walter J. Freund Battery Charging, Fan Belts, Radiator Hose and Spark Plugs, Etc., to Fit Every Car or Trudt'-v^ TIRE REPAIRING AND VULCANIZING P^ione 294, West McHenry, Illinois FOX RIVER CHICKS 45,000 Chicks Hatched Each Week -Northern Illinois Largest Baby Chick Market -- ALL LEADING VARIETIES Make money by buying Fox River Chicks this spring. The best chiclefi! pay in the long run. Come in and see our ehicks before buying. Complete Line of PURINA Choice Feeds - FOX RIVER HATCHERY man, IU. 104 S. Grove Phone 15» ' v.,-k