Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Mar 1936, p. 6

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iffrt MeHENBY PLAIKDEALEX ffTOMORROW BY LEONARD A. BARRETT |Vi A wording to Grecian mythology, Pandora possessed a box said to contula .all the blessings of life. In an hour of uncontrollable curjosity, Pan- "•dora opened tlils box;--And all the blessings e x c e p t blessing hope. Hope has always been appraised as one of the cardinal virt u e s . " A n d now ANOTHER NEW MEMBER / ! barn to the east of the schoolhouse, MAKES REAL CONTRIBUTION whenever I visit McHenry. ; ' *r . Waukegan, 111. March 10, 1936. on the Plaindealer staff, always sang in a lovely voice, which was just suited to "Away in a Manger," and the lullaby songs in which groups of little girls with.-their dolls joined in the chorus. ' » One program Which I remember especially well was opened by my cousin, Mildred (Stevens (Mrs. E. L. Francisco of Woodstock), who sang "Come Holidays All, Come Answfer Our Call," Mrs. O. W. Owen was one of my and there followed a pageant of the ,4rk , Sunday school teachers and I have a holidays which were (supposedly) O Time and.Change!.--With hair as card which she gave me with my competing for honors. I remember abideth faith, hope, and love." Hope al ways looks forward. It Is to the future, untried and undiscovered, that hope persistently directs our thought. Hope is never introspective. It would have us Interpret the present as trn opportunity to be completed in the future. Hope wotild banish regreta and worry over past failures and disclose to os new possibilities which Ue Jnst beyond. We are admonished to live one day gray escaped ! As was my sire's that,winter day, one, .the |How strange it seems,* with so much gone Of iife and love, to still live on! Ah, brother! Only 1 and thou Are left of all that circle now,--- The dear home faces whereupon That fitful firelight paled and shone. Henceforward, listen as we will, The voices of that hearth are still; Look where we may, the wide qarth o'er Those lighted faces smile no. more. We tread the pfths their feet have • worn, . We sit beneath their orchard trees, We hear,-like them, the hum of bees And rustle of the bladed corn; v- *V We turn the pages that they rejtd, • Their written words we linger o'er, - But in'the sun they cast no shade vname neatly typed on the back with that Lettie Stevens, Mildred's sister, what, I presume, ,wag the first type- (now Mrs. G. A. Ehrke of Richmond) writer in town. j and Edith Cfurtis represented The Reverend Mt. Holmes Slade Thanksgiving day and Harold and was a welcome visitor in our home. He was pastor of the Universalist church and -the only minister who ever came to town who refused to argue about the Bible with my grandfather. Lynn Cristy were the Fourth of July. At last, of course, Mr. Cristy as "Santy" came walking up the center aisle singing: "Here am I from the land of snow He went serenely on his way with And I've travelled many, many miles such a calm reflection of his own' to meet you. truly Christian spirit in his kind eyes' But I'm here at last with a glad heigh and his bearing that he brought out oh, the best in others. This seems true J And a merry, merry «niiIfe"of 'cheer to me also of Father O'Neill. Today! to greet you," etc. V I recall his wide, beaming smile and Of course Christmas day was his swinging cane. Each of these men awarded the place of the most loved borve ovvu*"t tWh4Ve •audumivoin«intivo*ni,| "DA-'ovr all you'holi'7d1a*y/ .• Ov ne g^r*ouuupu ovfi s91mXMaUllI ctlhllillUdir veinl • _ _ _ _ _ 1 • • • . . can-where you ar*-with what you sang a song in a shrill treble which nf hftw lowed to help with the whitewashing chase. The clerk ("on his toes") says, of their "summer kitchen" and the 1 "By the way, Mrs. ESinith, I'd like to job he got driving a horse on a horse- j get your opinion on a shipment of power by the city hall. j yard goods we just received and pulls Mabel, do you remember when your a couple of bolts of cloth for visiting cousin, Milton, asked tis why ^er inspection. It takes a woman to President Harrison wore red,. white }cnow <3oth and I want to know if we and blue suspenders? Also the time we rubbed tar all over our faces? Frank and Herbert Bennettr--my husband fought in the Spanish American War with the 13th Minnesota Company I. You can find a lot in common should you meet this summer. He served in the Fhillipine Islands through the war and the insurrection which followed. I'm winding up with notations of rjmembered things: Johnny Farr's celery bed in the rich black slough loam next to the little west side schoolhouse, where J. H. Burger was my first teacher and Etta and John Kittle followed. The picture painted on the sides of the depot busses ? What ever became of them ? Minnie-Felt'" loom and the fascination of watching the shifting frames and the flying shuttle. George Hanly, Sr., went west and Yejt Love will dream and Faith, wih trust,- - •. who knows: a time, "Take no aqxlous --thought ;.M - • j • fpr tomorrow. Sufficient unto the day I ^ . , ' 0 sign is ma,d^, i» the evil thereof," True, but such admonition does not mean that we should disregard the future. For, there Is a Tomorrow. As the' sunlight dispels the darkness'of the night," Just so sure are we that "new chances. one more chance" may come to us in the "tomorrow." In Browning's poem. **Plppa Passes." Pippa had one one diy In which to sing her songs. If'was her annual holiday. Little did she dream the night before that the mornin have.'", . | went: The Reverend Mr. Brill, who was "We are little tiny totsj tiny totav tiny for some reason called "Elder" Brills! r came to town wearing a High silk^hat We are little tiny tot# and, after the manner of town people, We'll vote for Santy Clau.s." we labelled him hat" and he! Mrs. of how therfarmers had to "navigate' the land out there in Kansas ? Asa'hel made me what turned otit to be one of the best sleds, in town ? One day he and Harry Eldredge had pulled i.r-,, . 1 r , Cassie Eldredge and me down to this » . 5 Tt ^ UP *,Hanly blacksmith shop and When we i ^e most intolerant permdence and I have had some 1 J son that I ever knew, not intelligent, have made a good buy, You get the idea? Put a name to it and call it ENTHUSIASM and you will be right. The customer may not purchase some of the yardage, but she has been pleased at the compliment of her aske^ opinion and happily goes forth to tell her friends of her find. Now, suppose, that a salesman has witnessed this little episode, and if occasion demands, he is going to tell the credit manager that the firm of Fight and Win" are live merchants. The great thing in business is LIVE PUBLICITY. Now, let us get down to brass tacks. McHenry is having a birthday this year whether it is celebrated or not. That is entirely ap to you, Rip Van Winkle. Are you going to tell the world that your city is 100 YEARS OLD and capitalise, on it, or are you going to let the Jobbing House say, "Nice town , but DEADER THAN H--"? . .... f So, I'll be seeing you at the Centennial. What say? la all kindness, ' , Your Old Timer, : FRANK W. BENNETT. P• -i said that that doctor friend '2"V Henry for gang fights. Lots of fi AH on account of clean bubbli youth and tihe joy of living. "Long" John Thelen got into an ar| gument in Pete B.'s saloon with Nicl Colby? Long John sat in an ami" chair and whenever he tried to gel up, Nick would sock him and back h# would go. Nick ran out the front. door and started for home. John x .. 'i grabbed his skates and skated across < t „ j the pond, headed him off, caught him "" J and then, poor Nick. FRANK W. BENNETT. v *7® '••vftv; had a hard time to make his true self, correspondence (Since He just,) j Sunday morning, That somehow, somewhere, meet we, caught fire. He was must. Alas for him wfeo never sees The stars shine through his cypress trees! • : Who. hopeless, lays his head away Nor looks to see the breaking day would usher into her life the happiest j Across the mournful marbles play! of all her days. "Wherefore repine I-Who hath not learned, in honors of which really characterized hi with her to lead me, O day of mine." faith, t Our dreams and ambitions demand a our need. is, known until as he was preaching one;fine visits With her. Last fall when 1 . came back a freight train blocked our as you read it. Himniel verbotten! No 'man is intelligent who is' intolerant. grandpa's house1 called' Upon her in .Lake Bluff at the ^ *7* s on the rostrum Agard Deaconed Home, I made the' CYTTL d J >, J 3 ^ ^.an ,n and was, therefore, first to see it. He ! acquaintance of Miss Dora Andron, I "1^1 t J ? I ^ ' called to the congregation that Mr.' whose brother was once pastor of the ^ !• make out REMEMBER WAY BACK WHEN-- Gage's house w.s burning .nd „ he Methodist chureh. Mrs' Cristy was "WeTy^ didrt'tavTto 1 ^ ice IhJSTL rushed out he automatically jammed »n Santa Monica, Cal., when I last stav on the' , . vnil " mill pond, also skate sails ? Jim Berrv the silk hat down on his head and heard from/her, but Miss Adron lives i p I c? , ran over to join the fire fighters in in the Agard Home and I hope to see 1 u3^Sd the vi^us .nd thorough manner her .gain Mon. It is hard for us to' "tomorrow." Our blearest thinking is done in the morning and not at the close of the day when we are fatigued. It takes a tomorrow to continue the , Greenleaf Whittier. Berry had a speedy "boat," and on a cold, windy day, invited his sister, Agnes, • . u » two in wie summer' and, was it Kate HowB or Lois Baldlm. The v,s,t because she is not very strong! -pue «torv of Hank ^ w^n ^or a the pond they , silk hat label proved only an'outward and cannot talk loudly and I am quite «no ? * 1 j went, luffed and back again at high The truth to flesh .nd sense unknow,, symbol. | *«* »f Hearing. Ifs'a bad eombina-1 it y.ffoMhe S T C " " "** ^ jammed th? tiller o?er That Life is ever Lord of Death His sister, Myrtle Brill, as I re- tion. I shall have to ask my dajigh-1 Thd.e werp f" . ' v,',' nf „a „ , | when he neared Old Black Mucck and And-Love can never lose its own 1 j member her, was the envy of the ter to again be a go-between as she' tjves rieht toeether two ™ wh " me" Overboard went the girls and I From Snow Bound, by John fashionably-dressed women of those was that evening. L* 1L. ^ ~ ® -e never have seen such a display of red yisks of today.. : Great living is motivated by as unswerving hope In tomorrow. Because Dear Old Timers All I have quoted a portion of my feth- :inf tka »„,i M" „ , i days; a breezy, unaffected person. I 1 ^member the team of chestnut fami,v nnH TVrWa flannel since. NOTE--that stuff made Homer Clemens had. Their names rf^ uCJai'ty*and,• ^&U\e there . - • , er s ff<r°rite Poem in this letter of. cousin, -was a voice teacher. Do you wei"e Polly and Dolly and they would' onv^nnr ® 1 i^r:^lTLC,Ub' TmSirm\nIb€r h0W She sang SOlOS With Shake KhandS and bo-' etc. I cannot remember it ' 6 timers Will I j _ especmllj, fitting at this time, her hat on and the doctor escorted. remember the name of their, carriage i Our mnthi.r T l » ; j . n d I o f f e r i f i n m e m o r y o f t h o s e ! h e r t o a n d f r o m , t h e p l a t f o r m , thus horse, but the« used to drive -- gone before. v - >A,iSin«r « t(j in the evenin/W1- - - 1 y ' ' Snd We became scattered the unseen with a cheer." "Out of the yesterdays many and great, we row strength for today and tomorrow, but If is hope in the tomorrow that makes tip understand and evaluate th^ past. When we are discouraged and our nerves are taut, our problems may be much nearer solution by the setting Of tomorrow's sun. I 6o not fe«r th« ro«d The great adventur* into track* unkiowB, My' questing spirit wanders not aloM Wbot other (eet hire trod. Yes, "Hope springs eternal In the b»nian breast"--there Is a "tomorrow," Q W --term Xewaotpcr Union My Neighbor SAYS: Applet, peeled, cored and baked In fibeapple Juice until soft, are de- Htfoos. . - She was a teacher of instrumental horses with white faces which Uncle rnrht^ next to^fWlw1 viYn* the very finest bait for bull frogs and music and Miss Tobey, Dr. Norton's ^fange"! We had^» Zply lit£ wl! ,there>as plenty of ifc- A clever book-agent landed in McHenry in 1893 and made many sales? Lool^in your old bookcase and, good as new, you will find the complete works of J. Fennimore Cooper (in black covers), Charles Dickens (in to Editor VanSlyke's family, so I an-j good reason to hold the latter opin-. h»nd work in sewing. SuclT^lmme-1!^? ^nd ^8^ E Aneeome' . (about cost $18 a set, $1 ^down and $1 per swer that--to our knowledge-- he is i ion. Dr's.Aiother was my first object1 mad^ ice cream as they used to brihg I As Frank - month. not, although both families came, lesson in someone who seemed strand-! down! L„i f + ^ Beniiett from New York. " ed-so pitifully heart-broken and Mr. Tom Walsh, Mr. O. W Owen ' S v , I was born in the Georee Gaee1 alone after ti„> death of! Mr. W. A.. Cristy and-who else' 50r any of S! ° , .. . . , , . causing a division of opinion as to in the evening* with a lantern hung on1 * «, n . I ? J1 k tha^ the first question many! whether it was "showing-off" or na-1 the rear axle to light the way. Guy came back for I short tfme TnH' at! sen eis will ask as they read my tural courtesy. Knowing Dr. Norton ; Clemens had the first jig saw arid Nell tended hio'h <5phrwnl fnr- t™ ' " utaK-n- aj, v>nai i name^wjll be, Is her husband related J as we near neighbors did, we had was awarded prizes for her beautiful HeMr^'Pr«^1/°^ green), and Scott (in brown). I sure had to struggle, but I only started to write .fto^e . " '"St my Kt 01 Co<>I>er Chamois fftores should ao^1w Urung oet when washing. Squeeze them In the hands and press In a dry towel • • • A damp cloth dipped in baking soda jpd' rubbed over brown stain* on the Ittide of tea and coffee cups win remove statu. • • • All vegetables should be put on to with the family „ _ Spring Grove. Father continued to supervise his store in West McHenry, driving back and forth daily until overtaken by illness, when wfe moved bacW to what was then known m the Raymond house, in town, where on May 1, 1890, he passed away. Before we left the farm, Grandmother and Grandfather Gage celebrated their fiftieth wedding anniversary on July 4, 1888, and relatives and friends gathered from far and near. Mr. Bennett took two pictures of the people who were there; one general group, which Asahel has and one family group which I have. At dinner time, Which was then in the middle of the day, sawhorses and planks were made to serve as tables COpk In boiling water. This holds the | an(1 were set up on the lot where Mr. mjor portion of the mineral matter jan(* Mrs. Robert Thompson now have aid sUrcb within. - - . self wool which comes in the loveliest colon, or make up an afgbaA. a 4e*en different shadesL -;:»C their home. When covered with snowy tablecloths and loaded wit^i more food came of her? I was about as deaf as I am now, would How I should love to step into my sing "Who Built d 4Ahk'?" and the father's store this minute and pass j rest would chorus, "Brotheh Noah along, fascinated as I was then by the Brotheh Noah." goods on the shelves and in the show-1 Jack Walsh was my special affincases, and to see the people coming in ity. He could swing me around at the to get their mail from the postoffice, end of an outstretched arm as easily which he also managed. To have ®s I can manage a flat iron. One Mike Walsh, who clerked there, greet time when Paul Richardson was drivme in the same sincerely friendly way' »ng through town at a smart clip Jack that he has today. jwent out and said, "Paul you'll have Sometime® when business lapsed, to stop that, boy. I'll have to arrest during the day father would step out,y°u if you drive much faster." Oh onto the store "stoop" and give a ®'Gosh, Jack," said Paul, with an incharacteristic whoop, whereat three fectious grin, "don't worry I can't other nearby storekeepers--Mr. John J drive much faster." Jack was natur- Evanson for one,--would appear. aIIy kind and just with everyone These four men would form a quar- Uncle Will Stevens, father's brothtette and sing with all their hearts er* who lives with Lettie near Richuntil duty called again. | mond, would ask Aunt Sarah to steep After father's death, mother sold some thoroughwort tea for me when her interest in the store and moved 1 visited there, as he contended that the postoffice into a little building, I the amount I ate wouldn't keep a canwhere Mr. Walsh, Mr. Thomas ary alive. pleasant memories of all of them, tattered covers ? Tjfusm '.'WAS THE I enjoy all the letters of all of the DAYS." old timers and should likef very much.) -. - to see each of you. Hlattie and We slept during evening Church Charley Grangers daughters keep us service8 and wished we were at home informed and interested about and in'on the corn husks? McHenry. I had .dropped the subscription to the Plaindealer because 11 i„ school, we held up one finger or knew so few of the names, but shall: two? No comments, Miss Clara now be well acquainted again on the Wightman, please, for two bucks you old timer's page. Icmn get ^ for a o w?S wua nC ChanC€ t0, Vi8it A bi* value' tl»e whole paper. When r»n ^enmnagementfor it. weTgo to Florida, we will be seeing Call Ontario 5619, Margaret McDonald, and tell me When we may expect you up. best rei am, Sincerely yours, Lenora Stevens VanSlyke, 405 Powell Ave., Waukegan, 111. you. Frank and Ed Cobb were altar boys for Father O'Neill ? - --- LIVE PUBLICITY St. Paul, March 10, Frank Bennett "sang" in the M. E. choir? Woe is me. Mary Wentworth dryly. commented, "He keeps good time." It has been stated that a crow loves his own rancous caw. Me, too, but the babies kept on crying and people exchanged glances for Mrs. Ben Dietz was I Chicago visit* o r T u e s d a y ! . . . . . . . Mr. and Mrs.' Carl Weber, Martin Knox and John «9utton were reeen Libertyville visitors. FIRE AUTO INSURANCE mv FAM IJFlf, EARL R. WALSH § Presenting Reliable Companiw 3TW Med iannttM ef aay Phone 4S er fl-M Pries Bldg. - . McH Pfcoae a MM J. UIOX ATTORNEY AT LAW «. Pries Bldg. OFFICE HOURS Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment McHenry miiMe JlLFORD H: POUSB " ATTpRNEY-AT-LAW 107% Beaton St' Woodstock, IB. Phone Woodstock 191 McHenry 278 i Telephone No. 800 " Stoffel ft Reihanspergir laanrance agent* for all rlassrs el property in the beet companies. WEST McHENRY ILLINOIS S. H. Freuod & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS line 127-R MeHmry Oir experienee U al Your Senriee in bnildinf Tour Wants p A. P. Freimd XxcavaUng CkNttraeler Walsh's father,had his harness shop. | 'Some of the young people went to " ' appiest memories is of i Elgin to attend the Academy My impromptu pro^m followed! In ' ?W <" the'^sidVoo^hTn^" PU""i °Ut °"t01 ^.,[other. Howird, who ni workintr in1 acquainUnce of the Ch.n.11. ft ,L.We."" .K' 'I1).,?ay' . s<! he said, and .rrivine, he i s,de Porcn and someone, probably Chicago sent 5 .1. than TW possibly he 0^f* ^"iappTe,. "memS f5 C « SSSLT11 Cl^ Tf Ok. «-«•, ^.13^ To remove candle grease from s polished table, lay a piece of blotting selection was "Columbia the Gem of grease and press paper 1 the Ocean and I know that we sane - hot iron. Heat melts that as well as "The Star Spangled paper over with a heavy grease and blotting paper absorbs It C AaBocUted Newspapers.--^WNTJ 3ervlc*. QABBY GERTIE Banner." Of course the older people j reminisced as much then and enjoyed it in exactly the same way that we do today. There was a windlass well and a cistern pump on the porch and here' climb up (lVer' " "singing" joyously, God bless her. with a bright red tassel hanging it'J*nnie forgot her fan ' wiavc'| apathetic that w* r„ Maybe that is why I hate the turn, the side I T A u\ ^ I ®P8thetlc that we cannot visit with turn, turn, turn of the radio What if! wiu* . . „• L ' ^rd Asahel telling Grace how confidence. Now, isn't it? ' you thinkt ^ What do Mr. Walsh took to calling me the hard it would be for him to take it! Lets go back (I never knew just, cim^inTom ^ a manufacturing com^y Brother Herbl^s nickn.me of nd as a little nd fox. ^it up here the trip I told him how kind I had considered and McHenry had excellent I * I would; been and I can still see the look that advantages, BUT, while the 'ites were' troekSaff,^Hydraulic and Orase Serrioe • Road Building Tel 204-M MeHenry, 11L while I black them a bit." So the large group picture' w.s ^„"a^ | wluid K he^! tiyinfftomake a FINE BARGAIN the pump was toward the front of the! How delighted he was when one of P form. Someond thought it should: the songs which we learned in Miss be covered before the picture was Etta Kittle's school, "Gather quickly snapped and proceeded to drape a gather quickly while the bell is ringhuge white cloth over it. Cousin Willi ing clear," turned out to be written Wash, Sr., who was noted for.his ap-1 to the tune of the Hank McDonald's infectious smile was a pleasure? • * Harry Fay's nicknj^we was "Geegan" ? I wonder what ever became of their shouts of laughter. land, they lost their opportunity and nr. Osborne used to play chess with with it, what is now THE ELGIN grandpa, and Willie Osborne would be , WATCH FACTORY. sent down to tell his father that Ijher&i. When the Bennetts landed in McJrhim? Either dead or d^sn't "read"the was a call for him. The chess-board ( Henry in '81 the population was about! Plaindealer, * ** , would be set on the top of the book- 1,000. Today, after fifty-five years | ' -- petite and always remarked after-a -Green " He Wearing of IthTe • c^ase w"i'thT s.tr'iJct orders that the men ' it has grown to 1,354. There must! (Wouldn't it be u,ue? ine men jt nas grown to l,3M. There must] (Wouldn't it be splendid if all the feast that he had three kinds of cake', postoffice as I was singing °it for' Archie EHreW^ad lease on Fa 'to LETHARCY "^S..may,be ,ifc is Jue survivinP 01(| Timers would register -chocolate cake, cocoanut cake and mother with his eyes shining like the 1 nv Osborne who bv tlIf ^G^B«~r-.1°°k UP ^t-s? we can visit with confidence.?); 'stomach (c)ake< stood directly behind' candles on a Christmas tree it and in the picture appeared to be Sneakintr of Ch,i,f .u 1 S"1? rfd hair and Fred I Years &go ' when 1 was ® salesman,' Someone asks i wearing a huge dinner napkin tucked j are ^ever m^re^ like The ^au^s we ! was^'also a Ted^head! Some r^und flght in the front of his vest. What a good- had in the Universalist church. who «rop the one- , , .„ , , . , , - - with Pete Rothermel. d- electrified the of them knew that the representatives Well, it was this way: When we arcitizenry by saying, "My hair isn't. of manufacturing and jobbing houses riVed at the bridge, Pete told me what mi, it s- Osborne-^my mother said so.! were their begt friends and treated he thought of me and when I tried J0"*?6 EV^ad said auburn- Ithem as su<^h and *ot the "PLOMS." to express my opinion of him, he jab- Myrtle Childs, Dr. Child's daughter, | Others took up the salesman's time bed with a left. I ducked and sent J 1 i h a d a s i n ey" on h e r w r i s t a n d V a s by l o o k i n g o v e r a c c o u n t s a n d e v e n f o u r l e f t s t o P e t e ' s f a c e . We w e n t ^ ^if°ile W! fandl^so annoyed by its appearance as she broke up boxes or even ran out on into a clinch and Pete got both of my on one end which he always lighted, played piano that she insisted that the them. shirt sleeves in the br^k-awav iCn IT _ , . , - -- V..W.. and then lighted all the candles -on. doctor should remove it, although he' You know the unwritten law t-Vmf he tnok fr»nr mnm l .FTC 4.,.*p.a!ne 0 me the little tricks | the tree with that. Mr. O. W. Owen; told her that it would go away of its "THE CUSTOMER IS ALWAYS and °e . _ .. vtl. Mr. j natured joking he had to take. W. A. Cristy was always Santa Claus I carried the links and chain for my : and the costume was kept in a "cub- ! fr!ai^ather when he laid out "Owen's j by-hole" under the loft stairway. Mr. jHiH" for the brick schoolhouse and I Walsh was generally useful. I think that was his last job of surveying. No child ever had a more interesting or companionable grandfather. Downs Motor Express The Pioneer Line Operates daily between McHenry and Chicago Phonee: Wabash McHenry 7518 * 256 KENT A COMPANY - • AU Kinds of I I I S U R A N C B Placed with the most reliable < Companies Come in and talk it ever "bone McHenry I of the compass and the -need for ac- helped also in the candle lighting. The' own accord if she would be patient. RIGHT. Ahhh! that went up as the topmost Doctor C. '^performed the operation," took it all and was agreeable. BUT, Pete,, or I will foul you," and he says, "When wifey asks for the pay e»u velope and hubby doesn't know the answer he usually gives up." ^ • ' - .' ' ALWAYS and we clinched again, with Pete's The representative smiled, arm around my neck. I said, "Let go POTPOURRI curacy. I was making mental calue! TorLhoolhliSTs a3Pthf colorful ^ f , (breaking down the tissue ; with a he might have helped" that" merchant "Frank we had lTtte7quitrhereCc^iJe0s Kickanoo TnHin« t f i? . ^ Walsh drilled us for weeks be- shingle and a. hammer and Myrtle t6 greater success. He might have Mat Niesen" We broke clean and ?ot?C.bir? ZJUnde i ™ °n the. We st«rt nearl" i» bulwark between his house and found aS forty Xle c„m"nB . es and the s'Menv Go t1 V'"* 1®° "" ®"<l theL MaM Cran(rer' Frank and Maggie that merchant in times of distress . (running from their supper tables t ami the Meny-Co-Rounds, wh.eh Dull r.heanu.1, were hdd in eh. Sehreiner were rrt^A. . May I Kive you , bit of illustration Pet. a?d I shook h»d. 4ril««w had any hard feelings. 1 • . Cure of a King sfc-Sv. A form of tuberculosis known as scrofula Is characterized by swelling of the lymph glands. In early English times the disease became known as the King's Evil because the Idea abounded that It could only be cured if the king himself touched the patient This practice is said to have been started by Edward the Confessor, &'W*e!>t»rn Newspaper Ualon. had hitherto decorate mi T , w"re , neia in en® { ocnreiner were treasured Tnends. l i give a bit of illustration for short stays. Qwens^ Hill church. Toward the last the tree used to have a way of showing up at in succeessful merchandising? Sup- Incidentallv I still «,!„•«,. JI be in place and the young la- { Schreiner's v^hen Mrs. S. was frying pose a dry goods dealer receives a initials Ett,. «M»' ^D (Edw.in M__ nrti"m't®^ dies woul^ d ^be ssttrrjinnpgninRg ppooDpCcoorrnn iinn ssoommee ooff hheerr ddeelliicciioouuss npnanncrnakkepsi aanndd sshhiipnmmeenntt ooff vynarrHd gcrononrdlsc aonnHd lhinaos it on ' The friendly gang fights Owen), which stood out on the red M T ^ au<?ltoru^L , J |she oft i en {r1^ a plateful for me. I his shelves. In comes a lady to look the Old Towners and the Ga between Ethel McLeod, whose father worked remember when Frank was first al- around and maybe make a small pur- ers? I never knew a place^like Mc- Charlie's Repair Shop Just Bast of Old Bridge Over Fox Rive*' Cftear Schaefer's Tavern) , RADIATORS REPAIRED BODIES and FENDERS Straightened Sign Painting Truck Lettering --- Acetylene Welding CHARLES RIETESEL ia Tanm Armenians are a considerable eleiMit In Tarsus, birthplace of Paul the \VO\T VA SOW "TO PE >JAAEKA YA (?RDW UP V^OOAliOR?, 6 SUCH ^euu \ waktt to BE IS LIFE MAM WORK v/^ By CIitI-- f ughitt

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