s"«?e 'MtiSS^smSsM^Mt '}ivT* THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, 111., by Charles F. Benich. Entered as second-class mattat at tie posto££ice at McHenry, 111., *' "? the act of May>8, 1879. , under FOR SALE One Year ... Six Months |2.»0 -.. $1.00 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager Lillian Sayler, Local Editor -- -- -- Telephone 197 GOOD ATTENDANCE AT ART EXHIBIT The art exhibit held at' the home* of ^ Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontz Friday aft- ' ernoon and evening was a big success, with over 100 persons attending not only from McHenry, but neighboring v u, '* towns as 6ejl. / Over sixty oil paintings* done byj I"? .^} ^ Mrs. Klontz, were on display and are,j v<*'*7 < ideed, a beautiful collection of Which! ,, <•.- ^ '"i, he may be proud. Mi"s. Klontz has v w* tafcen only a few lessons in art, hav- •vy vV,;np a natural talent for the work and a'#» many lovely studies before ever .<*•'» * t v taking a lesson. * The display included pictures Of all "C '•' ' ,-^'Vizes and kinds, including landscapes , / and lovely. Studies of flowers. Among *:'• others -is a picture of the Bad Lands * v, "with its unusual coloring and make up.: "•*Yv ' During the afternoon cards, were in '} ""Stay on the lawn and during the afti: \V" r'^ .Wrr,oon and evening home-made ice T'l. *kream. arid cake were served. " , h" • , Small paintings made by Mrs. " Klontz were given as prizes, the win- ~ Hers considering themselves most fortunate in winning one of the lovely pictures. •.. ; , > In cards prizes were merited by Mrs. Henry Greeley and Mrs. R. C. Burton of Richmond and Mrs. Nick t • Freund, McHenry, and a guest prize •; . .went... to Mrs. Marian JPretzman of -• Richmond. - , - » 1 The ladies of the Methodist church Dog "Shoplifter" Is Annoyance to Owner Seattle, Wash.--Boy, Mrs. William Dixon's 10-year-old Airedale dog, has her worried about his tendencies toward burglary. His latest feat was bringing home an overcoat. His mistress, after a diligent search, couldn't find the place he got it, and Boy was reticent on the subject. He has a particular fancy for axes, hatchets, hammers and other tools with handles, which he brings home whenever located. Usually Mrs. 2)ikon can find the owner.. Hr. and Mrs. Earl Brown and Mm Henry J. Miller and daughter, Maurine, left Friday on a ten-day trip through the east. Miss Helen Althoff of Kenosha is the guest of Miss Clara Miller this FOR SALE--Dr. Salisbury's Poultry! week. Remedies. Bring us your poultry j Evelyn Kraft of Richmond is spendproblems. Farmers Mill, Phone 29. I ing the week 'with her aunt, Mrs. Geo. 14-tf. Lindsay. FOR SALE--Pure Bred Duroc Boars.! Mr* andMrs. George Chamberlin, Inquire st Pine Tree Dairy Farm, No.j Jfr-\ L 21 inf J*"10 ^est m j ; * 14-4 rnie Peterson of Milwaukee visited fur traders has just LIFE IN WEST TOLD PRIME'S NOTES Explorer Tell. of 1840 VUH to Sutter's Fort. Mrs. Joe Mertes at Pistakee Bay,' APPLES FOR SALE--Bring your own! Sunday. j container. Paxil Brefeld, Center street, | Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Moritz of Chi- West McHenry. 14-4 cago are spending a two-weeto'_yaca- j FOR SALE-Morton's Water Softer,.' h°me °f her br0ther> HeMy j Mr. and Mm. John Heisler of Ci^rs- Washington, D. C. -- The manuscript journal of a royal explorer and scientist of the first half of the Nineteenth century which is expected to throw new light on the life of the "wild west" in the days of the come to light er Salt; four different kinds. McHenry Flour Mills, West McHenry. Everything for Poultry 15-2 tal Lake visited Mr. and Mrs, George| Lindsay Thursday.* Mr. and Mrs. Louis Althoff, daughter, Esther, and Clarence Thennes appreciate the fine attendance during the day as well as the generosity of Mrs. Klontz in opening her home for the occasion. Mandolin of Italian Origta The mandolin is of Italian origin, but is ccmmon in all civilized countries. Socks That Wear! YERMONTER SEEKS VEHICLES AS HOBBY American and Foreign Conveyances in Collection. I;: Buffer Hose wit^ti Triply Re-inforced Heel and Toe. Plain colors and fancy patterns. '35* • - t. McGEE'S Open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings •LUC LABCU I&-OAL. KARO SYRVP CAN CHOICE MAJ NAVYkms4 WHITE NAPftTHA P*Gsoap10 HAND-PICKED IONA BRAND TOMATOES jm NO. 2 A AC ^ CANS Kitcktn "Teitedl ^Toodi IONA BRAND COCOA . . . 2cLABNl5fc PURE LEMON OR VANILLA EXTRACT . . . \19c OCLICIOUS : EGG NOODLES . )>& ISC BREAKFAST CEREAL MELLO-WHEAT. '*»• 10c CIDER VINEGAR \ 10c WMtATCARO . bVL 29C rr. BLACK ' - BTL*C PEPPER cr foucno TABLE SYRUP PURE GRAPE JELLY WHITE HOUSE EVAP. MILK . 5 cans 33c SULTANA PEANUT BUTTER OR ANN PA«T SRLRD DMMINO . J°a TR 28c LIMA, RED OR RED KIONEY BERnS . . . 4 GLSSS 10C CA% IBc s^cIAL Whi mjglf>Sr * "KGS. 15C FREE! I Can of Sunbrite Cleanser with ths purchax of 2 p«cV«g«t of Quick Arrow Soap Flake* At the regular price of 2 ^OR 34c rtMQ>.;& A«p MILK BREAD Bananas, per pound Lyndonville, Vt.--Vermont has a collector who may become a rival of Henry Ford in the uniqueness of his collections. Earle Brown, who took up his residence in Vermont fast year after living in Minnesota, has, as his hobby, the collection, of old vehicles. He has gathered dozens of ancient horse-drawn conveyances of different types and periods. Mr. Brown's interest in vehicles develops naturally from his larger interest in breeding fine horses. During the ten years in which he has been collecting old vehicles, Mr. Brown has accumulated some very interesting items. His list includes a victoria, brougham, tally-ho, hansom cab, Irish jaunting car, English dog-cart, a hunting wagon, a country doctor's two-wheeled gig, four - wheeled racing carts, highwheeled sulkies, a breaking cart for educating colts, a tandem cart, a Cape Cod cart, a Russian sleigh, a tote sled, cutters and a swan's peck pung. Mr. Brown's most interesting experience in obtaining an ancient vehicle came when he acquired a hearse some years ago in Peacham, | Vt. He tells the story like this: "I was looking around a shed in I Peacham when I came across an old hearse, which I think may be the only one-horse funeral coach in captivity. " 'Do you suppose a fellow could get that?' I asked the caretaker. " 'What in the world would anybody want that for?" he replied*. " "'Oh,' I said,.'I'd kind of like to-be buried in it.* * " 'Well, you're welcome to it,' he exploded, 'and if you like it so well you can have 'em push it in the grave after you. It certainly ain't no use around here.' " So the Peacham hearse waa shipped to Minnesota. When it arrived, Mr. Bfc-oWn wiaa.surprised t© find that it conUnnfcd imitation grass mats and other burial equipment. It appeared.-that the people of Peacham were making him a present of all the equipment he would need^br a first-class funeraL But a few days later came a letter: "Please send beck our burial apparatus," it begged. "We can't hold any funerals here without it." It developed that the old hearse had been used to store the equipment regularly used at funerals, and the custodian had forgotten to remove these before the vehicle was shipped. Mr. Brown sent the apparatus back to Peacham as quickly as possible. FOR SALE--Circulating heater, burn wood or coal.- Price, $20. Phone Mc-^ took their son, Cletus, to Milwaukee Henry 215-R. •16 FOE SENT/ FOR RENT---One Modern 5-room apartment and garage; newly decorated ; steam heat. Tel. 17, Mrs. John R. Knox. " • • Tuesday, where he entered St. Francis Sleminary. Mrs. Etta Reed of Pistakee Bay visited her sister, Mrs." George Lindsay, recently. Miss Dorothy Althoff of Chicago spent the'weekend at her home here in the vaults of the state library at Stuttgart, Germany, where it had lain undisturbed for more than seventy- five years. This manuscript has just been examined by Dr. Charles Upson Clark, acting for the Smithsonian Institution, who ^found the fifteen bound notebooks replete with valuable information on aboriginal life beyond the Mississippi during the second quarter of the Century. The journal is that of Prince Paul of Wurtemburg, who voluntarily forsook the lukury of a European court for the hardships of travel in what was then primeval wilderness and desert. He went on his journey at a time when very few men of FOR RiOT-My 90-acre farm, good!.»£•; J „ T . ' _ buildings, soil and location. With alii * & Mrs. Joe Compagna of Elm necessary farm machinery; immediate j ^wereiag^kend guests of Mr. and p o s s e s s i o n . H e n r y A t w e H , L a k e V i l l a , : W. I # B » e r m e l . . . . . 111., Phone 36. *16! Mr. and Jjjr§. Joseph Adams of Johnsburg and . Mr. and Mrs. Arthur WANTED Wagner of Slocum Lake, attended the WANTED--Medium size farm to rent. Possession as soon as possible. Earl R. Walsh, Agent. 14-tf HELP WANTED SALESMAN WANTED--A Reliable Dealer for HEBERLING ROUTE of 1500 to 2000 families. Write quickly. G. C. HEBERLING CO. Dept. 409, Bloomington, 111. 16-2 MISCELLANEOUS GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 157, or 631-M-l. 2-tf DISCUSS And PROGRAM--Your life insurance with this office. Do not "carry" life insurance -- "Own" it. EARL R. WALSH, Agent, Represent- *®"^iand attended the Elkhorn fair Labor] scientific training were actually pen etrating the great west and when accurate knowledge of the country and its savage inhabitants was based largely on the reports of the Lewis and Clark expedition. He saw the country with an accurately observant eye before it had b e e n greatly altered by white penetration. First Visit in 1823. Because of the numerous sidelights thrown on the life of the aboriginals, an intensive study of this long-lost manuscript is planned by the bureau of American Ethnology of the Smithsonian Institution. ~ Prince Paul first visited the United States in 1823 and was granted permission to explore the west by John Quincy Adams, then secretary of state. In 1828 he wrote an account of this expedition, only one copy of which was ever printed. This is now preserved in the Henry E. Huntington library at San Marino, Cal., and contains hundreds of marginal manuscript notes written in German script by the prince himself., In 1829 he came again and was granted permission by John Eaton, then secr§tary of war, to visit "the Indian lodges in the north." He penetrated as far as the Mandan villages in what is now North Dakota. marriage of Miss Hannah Scaling and Mr. Charles Swanson in Chicago Saturday evening: ' Mrs. Thos. Mills of Kalamazoo, Mich., spent several days with her father, John Mertes. r Mrs. Arthur Wagner attended the bridal shower of Miss Hannah Scaling in Chicago Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Adams and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner motored to Chicago Saturday evening and attended the wedding, of their friend, Miss Hannah Scaling. Mr. an Mrs. Earl Snyder of Libertyville spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner. I Mrs. Arthur Kennebeck and daugh-j ter, Gale; of Chicago visited her par-' ents, Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Chamberlin,! and friends here the first of the &eek. | Mr. and Mrs. George Heimer and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Neindors of Sagi-1 naw, Mich., visited relatives here the first the week. Mrs. L. C. Benwell and Mrs. E. A. 452-tf. 16-3 ing the Mutual Life of New York. 14-tf Thomas attended a district member- AGRICULTURAL LIMESTONE--The \ ®UreaU atj Pr.inc® keP**a. complete jour- McHenry County Lime and Stone Co., Georire Kamholz and children of! xr/t expedition but, despite ha* purcWd the Garden Prairie a, pa«„ts ^diy. l TheSr he STwe are prepa'rTd 'T'^rTnd" haul ErMst Kamholz and sons, Chicago, paid three more visits to the United j ' ® , ! ,1.g . ' u! j are spending the week with his par- States, traveling extensively through and ^spread agr culturall.mestone of ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz. the west from 1839 to 1841 from Wwo£od£sto£ck£ 3t96$-M'-, aor. Marengo 465^ ^oMdJ ' aw"edr eM rSSu' nAdartyh uerv Benoignegr ovf isitors ! 1849 to 1A85 G6'u easntd o ff rSomut t1e8r5's7. *o 1858. VETERINARIAN--Dr. B. C. Hunt, ^ MlJ\ f,*- » and ^wWch^h? maC West Hillside Road, Crystal Lake, inJ faniily of Ctystai Uk^ere guests in script examined by Dr. Clark re- All services cash. Tel. Crystal Lake *he "• J- Schaffer home Suhday even-, iates, was especially interesting. w „ T , J He went through west Texas, across ~ Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson and Mexico to Acapulco, thence by family spent Sunday, and Monday in steamer to San Pedro in California tne Burns cottage at Hickory Grange, : and up the Pacific coast to Sutter's while Mr. and Mrs. Burns were at fort near Sacramento. In his journal Ludmgton, Mich. ^ J he records in considerable detail Mrs. Adah Smith of Elgin and his life and experiences while a daughter, Villa, of Cleveland, Ohio,! guest Of Sutter. From Sutter's fort visited Mrs. Robert Thompson Thurs- he returned to New Orleans early day. I in the spring of 1851 by way of Miss Barbara Eder of Glencoe was, Panama and continued on. to St. a recent guest in the George Johnson Louis. He then traveled up the home. Missouri river and thence, accom- Mr. and Mrs. Martin Cooney and; panied by an artist named Moll- 6ons v i s i t e d r e l a t i v e s a t A u r o r a S u n - j h a u s e n , f o l l o w e d t h e P l a t t e a n d day. Mrs. James Burke and children and Mary Coffey of Chicago called en relatives here Labor Day. Mrs. J. P. McGlave of Chicago was IT MAY BE TRUE A baseball derailed a street car in Pratt City, Ala. A species of stingiest bees lives In South America. Among New York thefts in recent months were 15 baby carriages. Patients in a London hospital rebelled against an "overdose" of mutton. \ Five thousand members comprise the Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels. Tokay Grapes 3 lbs lor 25c A&P Food Stores New Hampshire Requests Honor for Samuel Morey Concord, N. H.--The New Hampshire legislature has passed a bill asking that the new $212,000 bridge between Vermont and New Hampshire be named for Samuel Morey, the "true" inventor of the steamboat. Morey, a native of Orford, N. H., held a patent dated March 27, 179S, and signed George Washington-^ the% president--for "a new and useful improvement of steam" with the idea of making it propel a boat. Morey, according to the New Hampshire story, went to New York to obtain financilil aid for his invention, and therfe met Robert Fulton and Robert Livingston, whom history credits with being the inventors of the steamboat. They showed a deep interest in his invention and offered him $100,- 000 to make suggested changes in his model. Morey returned to New Hampshire to perfect the craft anfr was dumfounded when he found Fulton had built a bigger and more impressive steamboat--and he him, self was advised to forget steamboats and steamboatin'g. ' On his deathbed Morey described Fulton as his one-time friend who gained his "unsuspecting faith as a true companion and fellow worker, only to supersede him in obtaining a patent and stealing honor and emolument of the invention." "Cat-Tails" Used in Quilts Groesjbeck, Tex. -- Mrs. Pres-' ton Lloyd has a new filler for mattresses and quilts. She uses "cattails. Cat-tail lint is light in weight, can be laundered, fluffs up like a feather bed when sunned, and is as warm as wool batting," ibc qt. plained. " Mrs. Mary Lindgrseii, a wealthy widow of Skaane, Sweden,, left $50 to a kitten. A soundproof crying room for babies is installed in a movie theater at Gosford, New Zealand. After flying 5,312 miles from Budapest, Hungary, a ringed swallow was found at Koloyama, South Africa. Husbands in a tribe in New Guinea buy their prospective wives for an average price of 25 cents in native coin. SETS NEW RECORD North Platte rivers by way of the old Oregon trail into the far west. Besides the manuscripts H e r r Bauser also discovered a pencil _ __ sketch of a surprise attack by Inthe guest of Miss Anna Frisby over j dians on the Plsftte river. The Inthe Labor Day weekend. dians are shown in the act of threat- Mrs. J. Comiskey and Lee Hughes' ening Prince Paul and his'-artist companion. Another picture was labeled "Race of the Cheyenne Maiden8i** of Topeka, Kan., and Mrs. Minard,' Chicago, spent the weekend with James Hughes. . Mrs. Andrew O'Keefe and son, Eugene, of Chicago visited in the home of her aunt, Mrs. Jacob Thies, Sunday and Monday. Martin Heckman of Chicago spent Labor Day in the John Kelter home. Fur Trappers Busy Inside ' ° New Orleans City Limits New Orleans.--In this historic city of odd contrasts, one of the last Mrs.JVlary McCabe returned to Chi-j frontiers is within sight of skyscrap- ~ spending the ers---and scores of trapper families run their lines inside city limits! cago Saturday, after summer here. Mrs.. Stacia Malone of Elgin spent a few days last week in the M. J. Walsh home. Mr. and Mrs. John Kueny and sons The city of New Orleans includes Orleans parish. Within 20 miles of downtown Canal street men battle icy winds in winter, pit their skill 5c Dog Is Bitch Hiker Butte, Mont.--Pooka, a mongrel belonging to Douglas Bush, who lives in the suburbs, has' become an expert hjfech hikerr Catherine Fellmeth cracked the Central A. A. U. discus throw recjj ord at the Central A. A. U. track meet in Chicago with a heave of 115 feet, one and a half -inches. It bettered her mark of last year by .about two feet. • ; Odd Head Decorations Aristocratic French women, sTlortly before the revolution in 1789, vied with one anqther in decorating their headdresses. Their large wigs were adorned with such toy ornaments as windmills, ships, animals and houses. One of the oddest, says Collier's Weekly, was the "Kitchen Coiffure," in which the headth, a bunch fo of Kenosha spent Sunday and Monday against treacherous, bottomless with her mother, Mrs. Helena Degen. marshes, and periodically unlimber Henrietta Diedrich spent last week their rifles in battles against poachin Chicago. ers. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lawrence and It's riot a suburban life--it's fron- Irene Anderson of Chicago and Dr. | tier. Men fight for their existence F. J. Kennedy of Buffalo. N. Y., visit-; the marshes. Their homes are ed in the home of Mrs. Mollie Givens' set on stilts. They have no running Sunday. t I water, gas, electric lights or com- Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and forts of civilization. Their rude daughters of Elgin, visited relatives shacks are heated by charcoal in here Sunday. Mrs. James Mahoney and Genevieve Maguire of Cleveland, Ohio, spent a few days this week in Chicago. braziers. The pelt of a muskrat brings $1; that of a mink, $10. There are some 20,000 licensed trappers in Louisi- Terry Phalin „f Erie is viliting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Ph&lin. Miss Anna Dwyer of Chicago was a Labor Day guest of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Walsh. Ruth Phalin spent the weekend in the north woods. something that continually makes outsiders try to "muscle in." Confused Schoolboy Star -- Competes in Wrong Race Cleveland. -- Leroy Gassaway, n,- ir„ . . „ .. . Central High school athlete, found M ri^i ^JrS?p0 J r^ I himself in an embarrassing situa- Gladys Kirchoff of Westchester tjon jn a recent indoor track meet, were Sunday guests in the Henry Kin- Gassaway, entered in the 880-yard sala home. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kin-1 event, ran several laps of the halfsala and son of Chicago also spent the ! mile before he discovered he was weekend there. j in the wrong race. Fatigue defeated Mrs. Alice Wood of Elburn, Mr. and • him when he finally competed in the dress included a dishclotl of onions, a knife and fdrk and scrubbing brush. Mrs. John Aylward, Minnie and Jean Conway of Elgin spent the weekend here. / Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson and Maud Granger visited the Elkhorn fair Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Murray and children of Chicago were Sunday.evening guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. J.; Sehaffer. I Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Foley and daughter, Miss Genevieve Maguire of Clevf ^ *au.s f relate, W In con^ny Mr., gg ^ and Mrs. Phalin and son, Harold, they' ;- motored to Lake Geneva Monday. i ; right race. Speed in Seine Net Fishing Speed is all important in seine net fishing. When a school of herring is sighted, small boats encircle it with a huge, small-mesh net. Then the main boat hauls the net shoreward,^ trying to reach shallow water before the fish dive under the net. In shallow water another net is "shot" un- 8FB1NG OKOVZ The Pleasure Seekers enjoyed an afternoon of cards at the home of Mrs. Eldred Johnson near McHenry on Thursday afternoon. Auction five hundred was in play and the lovely prizes for high honors went to Mrs. Clarence Amann and Mrs. Arthur Kattner, while Mrs. Edwfn Freund received consolation. At the conclusion of cards, a delicious chicken dinner was served by the hostess. Mrs. Margaret Bowers, daughters, Carol and Ellen,, and. Miss Jeanette Hergott enjoyed a trip to The Dells in Wisconsin on Thursday. Mrs. Michael J. Freund and Miss Margaret Waspi enjoyed a baseball game at the White Sox park in Chicago on Wednesday. Mrs. A1 Westman and son, LeRoy, j time, of Woodstock spnet Sunday and Monday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sanders. A group of friends from this vicinity enjoyed a picnic dinner and baseball game in Peter F. Freund's woods near Johnsburg on Sunday. Among those from here who made up this happy gathering were Mr. and Mrs Thursday, September 9,1937 Charles Freund on Monday. A buffet supper was served, after which card* *'ere enjoyed. Prize winners were Mrs. Charles Michaels, Mips Lucille Weber, Mrs. George Freund, Mrs. Paul1 Gerasch and Mrs. George W. May. Mrs. Charles Michaels was also the • lucky winner of a grand prize. • ^r- and Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer visited her mother, Mrs. Edith Cleveland, in- Round Lake on Monday. t Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimegern and sons, Arthur and Lawrence, motored to Chicago on Wednesday, where they were called by the death of her mother. The last game of the softball league has been played and the Fox Lake team came out on top. A game between Fox Lake, the league's winning team and The Brown Bomber's, a colored team from Chicago will be played under the flood lights on Thursday night at 8 o'clock, central standard ATTENTION, PARENTS f Paul Yarnda, teacher of music in th* McHenry schools, requests the parents of school students interested ilt music to meet with him in the music room at the high school between 2:30 n . , and 4 p. m>., Friday, to talk Over plazftt Ben May, Mr, and Mrs. Jake Miller, for the music program son, Daniel, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Ghristensen, Charle& Freund and A1 Schmeltzer. " . '-. ";-.;' •' Those employed outrbf town who spent the holidays with home folks were: Louis Huff, Donald McCafferty, Clarence and Edward Karls, Nick Wagner, Dorothy Klein, Catherine Freund, Agnes and Marie Lay, all of Chicago, and Edward Shotliff of Rockford. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Madden of Rockford visited relatives here over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kattner entertained friends from Rockford Sunday and Monday. A party of friends spent a pleasant evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mr. Yanda is especially interesfedT in the beginners and free lessons Will be given to all beginners. It is hoped that a large number will take advantage of this offer. . Y The band is being organized and will include about twenty members, but Mr, Yanda is hoping for morestudents playing string instruments as the orchestra needs them. If you are interested in free musSff lessons for your childra eee Mr. Yaods» Friday afternoon. ' ' Tears as Germ-S3Hers Crying is healthy, according ts one medical expert; he says teafi are perhaps the - most powerful germ-killers in existence. i; ; -GIBBS1 and Market West McHenry ;• . •' -• PhnfIA 1 see what good service we * AIOIlC JL DO will render in delivering to you the quality meats and groceries that you need. We carry a full line and ask for a trial order. C. W. GIBBS, Prop. of PA'S PEACE Friday - Saturday Nights September 10 and 11 / FRIDAY NIGHT----Fresh Smoked Fia* ^^iSATURDAY NIGHT---Baked Hun Have you met "Pa"? -Well, he'll be waiting to greet you Friday and Saturday. OUR USED CAR PRICES HIT BOTTOM FORD DEALERS LOOK AT THIS '• 1935 FORD TUDOR SEDAll- Factory Reconditioned Motor Reduced to only $345*°0 m JUST A SAMPLE 4 to MmJpl « pi • teM ffhe pick of the lot it yours •••&yon get here in time.' fe've set out to move oar need ear stock by tike end of September, and believe us--we will! Our prices are on bed rock and the boom in new Ford V-8 sales has left us with the finest collection of used cars we have ever had. Many are Renewed and Guaranteed, R AG, carrying written money-back guarantees. Ibu lose money--as well as a rare opportunity To pick yourself a really swell car -- if you delay. Your present car will bring more taken in trade today than ever again! Liberal terms. Your trade-in Value may even cover the down payment so you won't need cash now. ||on*t hesitate--this isjopportunity knocking! Phone 1 West McHemf • V. •