Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Feb 1938, p. 6

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^ V* "* *T-- ». t* •* &»• F » ,'*t*Ji. -£ ' - * * ' ' • ' ' * ' . ' MODERNIZING THE PAST By LEONARD A: BARRETT y v7%t^*\*S ww"r^rrTi f ;£sccCflP .V/**?{7^ *£«fi ^ f# ,V- . -3}u * " _ «&.&« ' *" *"* ^ *• ^ ( ^ vW a «v •»'-•» |1 ^ _ ^f1^? ; • " - f , ' w ^ . - , . ^ - ^ ' . v r ^ . ^ S ; Man is a traditionalist by nature. In spite of his desire to be modern, he is a product of his ^inherited past, rlje may, and frequently does overcome hereditary tendencies which are a part of his blood stream, but it is not without struggle and, in many cases, intense suffering. However, when we permit ourselves to»become slaves to the phi- *lok>phy pf past ages, we find that we aire outwitted in the effort to live comfortably and happily in the Twentieth- century. In numerous Twlc« T o l d 1fm» ef hilerset Taken Froin *• FOee of Ik^ Flalndealae j* Years Age SIXTY YEARS A0<* C. • T. Eldredge had the misfortune while butchering a calf on Friday last Thursday, February 3,1988 VOLO SLOCUIVTS LAKE Mr. and Mrs.. Wayne Bacon of Grys- Mrs. Celia Dowell and daughter, tal Lake called at the Bacon home on, Ethel, were callers at McHenry last Monday. Tuesday afternoon. A number of friends gathered at; Gordon Granger of Chicago visited the home of Mr. , and Mrs. Joseph' at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Lenzen Saturday .evening in honor of Brooks Sunday. Mr. Lenzen's birthday anniversary I Mrs. Celia Dowell and daughter, The evening was spent in playing auc- Jennie, visited at the homqhof'gill*" and tion five hundred. Prizes were award-j Mrs. Frank Wilson at Void; Sunday ed to Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. Joseph afternoon. ' Passfield, Mrs. Arthur Kaiser, Lloyd! M$ and Mrs. Homer Cook of Wau- Fisher, Alvin Case, and Roy Passfield ' conda spent Sunday evening at the A very delicious lunch was served at home df Mr. and Mrs. "Harry Matthe close of a very enjoyable evening thews. Mrs. Sarah Fisher is confined to her j Mrs. Wilbur Cook spent Saturday bed at this writing. [afternoon at the home of Miss Neva Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield and. Toynton at Wauconda. family, Mrs. Lloyd Fisher were Wau-j Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett spent . . . . , . ' I k e g a n s h o p p e r s S a t u r d a y . last Friday afternoon at the home of ner hand i "| Miss Gladys Vasey of Waukegan, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Litwiler at Round n rr t ji.- . . • spent the weekend here at the home Lake. +v»- iioJi nno fim® l»7wJ irw-d of Mr- and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. | Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping, In com- • i?% V Ho Hnnco i nt ! Mr. aiM MrsiDonald Waldmann of pany with Mr. and Mrs. LaDoyt Mata ? 1%€ fi!- v ]t„„' S j North Chicago visited Mr. and Mrs |thews of Forest Park attended the s oppmg m is 1 g . I Herman Dunker Saturday evening.- [National Power Engineers Association We understand that James Walsh g Joseph Wagner 8pent Thurs-' banquet at the Sherman Hotel in Chief this village, took some $10 in pre-! , . „ . ' . * A ** tt- • ^ i ways we -are living in a dUfcwrtl&tai,, .fthil.trKuUry.Aw l«.CIa.;^mC,i,c3*i I m n ,, , ,o»go last Saturday. Mr. Esping took WW than did our ••torefeOler. to caEo, on his g»me fowls. * > I .M^and Mrs. James DoweU and son m the program ^ ,, . wliom, the todlo, .electrie retrigera-. Shedd 4 Co.. of Chicago commenced Wauconda, Joseph Dowell ajid Mr. and Mrs. Bill Krumpin spent . tion, airplanes, aiitomobiles, and letting ice from the Mill Poni .t-tllis da"frb*e,? SL°C^S ?Un I daI °£ Mr' MrS' rrianv, nthf>r mnrl^rn i ^ j .' ; ^ and Mrs. Uoyd Eddy of Grayslake^G^. J. Burnett. / • ..-v.' ". spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. John; Mr. and Mrs;;!'9e«^ Passfteld. , (Wauconda wer^ callers Friday inorn- CONGRESSIONAL VfEWS By Congressman Channcey W. Reed 4m V ' • ,wre ufi t taown- " fn„the book'• ing about fortj*hands. • tors on/Horseback, ! we reaq of the j, - •> ^ , ^ early attempt? at surgery when.' ^ ' modern anti'septife ftiethods were urt-1 •' y. Known. . Such experiences - made . , j • •* ^ .. «... . '.•niedtical: history I The wicked and the ^pd alike have FIFTY YEARS AGO • . MisS Edna Fisher ing at the home of Mr and M*s- John ispent a few days here with her moth Bl'omgren. , T'er, Mrs. Sarah Fisher. . | Mr. and Mrs., G. J: Burnett were • jiicux>.di in&i.w.v. Scientists refusing ju.^ +ti •. * ^ . ttn.' Mrs., Bruno Grimillie, Mrs. Nick dinner jguests last.y;Thursday at the .to! be enslaved by the environment A™ Molidor, Mrs. Joseph Wagner! Mrs. L home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. VanNatta of their age, forged forward with I ®lipP^ ° ^ ^ jLittlefield, Mrs. Frank Hironimus, an'd at Crystal Lake. the result that today, we are living ' P*st 'fe* da>s- . . . . . in a period more advanced than I ^ ^ran<l tin>e is expected at the tobany in history. Curious as it may 1 ogfran -slide'tonight.' Parties are ex sj»em we witness today a very prp- | P^cted from Richmond, Woodstock and nounced effort to restore the past. : Nunda, and everybody will slide. The The deman'd for antiques is an illus- McHenry Military band will be prestation, also Henry Ford's museum tent and furnish music. in Michigan, and other similar at- j The wife of Larry Durney, who lives tempts like the replica of the his- j in the north part of the village, drop-, Sunday, They also visited at Mrs. Frank St. George attended the the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mort Ritt. ' birthda^anniversary of Mrs. Richard Mr. and Mrs. Axel Nerstrom and Cronin- in McHenry Wednesday aft- two sons of North Chicago spent Sunernoon, . . (day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. William Hironimus Blomgren. and Mrs. Rose Dunnell of Round Lake* Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett called oil visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hjronimus Mr. H. L. Grantham, Sr., at Wauconi da last Saturday afternoon.^ toric "North church" in Boston. This church was in the Colonial village in the Chicago's Century of Progress exposition. It has been removed to one of Chicago's suburbs _ ... . ,• . , . , «i. p. oiane, ,10 jusien j press the spirit of colonial anstoc-,^ furniture dealer8. ped dead while around «bing her|„L- Peterson of JVauconda, Mr and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping were housework on Monday morning last I JaLVaSey,' JJr- Art£IrCalIers at WaJ^kegan Tuesday evening We did not learn the cause of her sud- F3'8eF; Mr. and Mrs. Alvm Case, Mr where Mrs. Esping attended the Exden demise and Mrs. Joseph Lenzen, Mr. and tension School Course Class pfSsented We learn that E W Howe has re- ^rs" ^^ar^es Miller, Mr. and Mrs by the DeKalb Normal. and is used as a place of worship, ' t^e furnjture business bought of ^ranlc ^t. George, Mr. and Mrs. Frank | Harold Brooks left last Tuesday for situated in surroundings which ex-; j R f Tnqi-pn T?m= tho Hironimus and daughter and Herman Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, where he nrocc f>"* -- * ' ' •» Dunker attended the "Wear Ever" will spend two months with friends. luncheon at the home of Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Fisher Tuesday evening. Dr. and Mrs. Elmer Kochens of Maywood visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hironimus Sunday. The effort to keep' alive the spirit of the past is both interesting and profitable; yet few of us would be willing to have those days replaced at the sacrifice of our material scientific advancement. FORTY YEARS ACO L.: l>. Lowell, of Nunda, has been appointed Master in Chancery for McHenry county, by Judge Donnelly. *t . . . _ , - , Mr. Lowell is well known here, and trf nf fre an e^°^0n ^e has plenty of friends who will be pleasirt of many to restore the past ^ u; K ^s^^eM,^ her»this rmo,io" snow and years visited TRAVIS GETS READY SPRING GROVE Clarence Pierce motored from Chithe Church of the Holy Sepulchre in thi section on Tuesdav and a ireneral' ca^° on Sunday to spend the day with Jerusalem saw a marble statue of ^ Tuesday and a general hi8 8 parentS) Mr and Mrs Mark PierCe A team of bowlers motored to McHenry on Tuesday night for a match Amount £ame with "The Irish," a team from the Virgin wearing a wrist watch Iblockade of railroad and other travel Could a more crude and grotesque IWAS the ^sult on Tuesday evening, - effort at modernization be possible? I Statement <>{ the McHenry Cream- We can no more modernize the past! ery Co*' for December 1897. Amount tt than the past could have lived in 'received, 227,432 pounds. Amount McHenry. Our boys won the mtach lis" environment, the liftf* of the ' hutter^^ fat, 8,872 pounds, amount but-! by only seven pins. Twentieth century. What we need j *er made, 10,609 pounds. Amount of Mrs. Edwin Freund was hostess to to preserve is the spirit of the past, J money received, $2,264.06. Average the members of her club on Thursday for much of it has been lost,in the speed and strain of today. Our study of history convinces, us that we can go forward in direct proportion as we go backward. The plunge of a piston rod is equidistant in both directions. We are what our fathers made us. The future generations will build upon the materials we give them, so on ad infinitum. Confucius said, "Study the past, if you would divine the future." That does not mean, however, that we should try to modernize it. The growth of a civilization is a cross section of different cultures, each contributing its spirit upon which succeeding cultures may build. To reverse the process or substitute one culture for another would be a foolish and ruinous process* The past not "the sepulchre of our dead emotions." It is a valuable sculpture of human life set up in the paths of human Experience. Reverence the spirit of the past, but discard its trappings. No past is •^'wholly wasted, wholly vain, if rising on its wrecks, at last, to something nobler, we attain.", C Western Newspaper Union. tABBY QERTIE price received for butter, 21% cents. Average price for 100 pounds of milk 90 cents. THIRTY YEARS AGO afternoon. Cards and visiting were the afternoon's diversion and the lovely prizes for high scores went to Mrs. A1 Schmeltzef- and Mrs. George W. May, while consolation went to Mrs Clarence Amann. A lovely lunch was The saloon keepers held a meeting! served at the close of a pleasant aft in this village one day recently to consider plans and means to fight the local option move. Borden/ expect' within a few days to cut their second crop of ice. The second crop will be shipped to houses where ice is not too be had. The Armour Ice company at Round Lake is now working 325 men and putting up 5,000 tons of ice per day. E. J. Hanly will some time in the ernoon. The club will meet next at the home of Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer on February 24. On Thursday meYnbers of her club met at the home of Mrs. Frank Sanders to spend an evening at cards. Two tables of five hundred were in play and prize winners were Mrs. Frank May, Mrs. Math Nimsgera and Mrs A1 Schmeltzer received consolation. A dessert lunch was served at the conclu- . , , , 4 Banks (^ee recently finished hearings on the According to recent reports of the request of the Railroads for a 15 per Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation cent increase in freight rates. Oral bank failures throughout the country arguments will soon begin and briefs during the last six months have, for j will be fiJed. During the hearings sevthe first t'me since its organization, jeral of the large steel producers recut into the reserves of the Corpora-1 quested the Commission to exempt tion. Prior to the last six-months, iron ore in the event the 15 per cent period the Corporation had been able rate increase was granted. to pay off depositors and make oper- [ Relief atin* expenses out of the income: Accent report of the Social Securearned from investments without re- ity Board shows that public relief pay- S?JSn r i PnnCft°; the $385'" mente increased approximately 15 mil- 000,000 fund accumulated from assess- lion dollars duri the ^th of Noments upon banks. During the last vember as a direct result of the new six months the expenses of the Cor-, depression. From a perusal of the reporation totalled in excess of #5,600,- port the payments for the month of Tn™fn^hlCh am«u"t> approximately, November total in expess of $189,681,- $4,200,000 was paid to depositors. Dur- 000, compared with $174,835,000 for ing the past six-months period, 48 in-October. The payments were for Fedsured banks^ failed compared with 23 eral, State and local assistance, wages during the first six months of 1937. |Under the work relief prograni farm It was pointed out, however, that many security and general relief. of the failures were due to the fact i_" that there was an excess of banks in REPORTS the community in. Which , the failure riuvi took place. The Corporation furthe?!J „* ^ HjIWG FOR reports that, failures were avoided in.j • 4. , j STATE OFFICES over 180 other banks through mergers|N ^ • ••• and voluntary liquidations. For the ; Springfield, HI., Jan. 29--The 1Myear 1937, the number of insured bahks pois April 12 primary election will atwas reduced by net 176 member tract the largest number of candidates From a perusal of the report it ap- for state and districts offices in hispears that since the Federal Deposit tory, if requests for blank petitions Insurance Corporation tvas founded it are an indication, Secretary of State has pWd or assisted in payment to EtlWard J. Hughei announced today. f82^?0^°JrPOf!t?rS L°f aPP50f mat.e" * With February 5, the first day petily $71,000,000 which.they had deposit- tions may be filed still a week away ed in 179 closecf)banks. ; usuaiiy sufficient supply of blank Army ' forms is nearly exhausted, Secretary By a vote of 114 to 82 the House Hughes said. recently defeated a bill, which if en- The increase in salary of State Senacted into law, would have restored ators and Representatives from $3,500 3,200 World War and emergency offic- to $5,000 biennially by the last Gen- % disability eral Assembly is considered by some Wat* \ v authorities as a major reason for the Agriculture unusual interest shown in the spring According to reports the Senate arid election. House Conferees who are attempting Filing of candidates, will continue to adjust the differences on the favm through February 21 at which time bills enacted by the respective Houses withdrawals can be made up to and have agreed to rewrite the Dairy-Live- including February 26. stock Section in the bill so as to per-, Secretary Hughes urged all persons mit the farmer to maintain his normal mail their petitions instead of perand ordinary production of dairy pro-1 SOnally bringing them to Springfield, ducts. The original amendment orj It has long been the rule that petisection would have prohibited farm j tions received on the first day of filing payments, subsidies or loans to farm-lat the Secretary of State's office ers who utilized their acres which had through the regular mail, be filed been removed from the production of ahead of those personally delivered or major crops and who were^ using them gent special delivery or registered for the production of livestock or mail. ' dairy products for market. " j * ^' Railroads j Order your Rubber Stamps at The The Interstate Commerce Commit- Plaindealer. ^ .. M.E.CBUBCH . Ton are invited to attend serrieea at the If. E. dmreh every Sunday. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning warship, 11 a. m. , "'.fir 'j Epworth League, 7:30 p. m. <,5* > * < Pastor: Rev. Minar Gerrard. "f* ; * •:-. One Firm Makes Jews' Harps A Birmingham, England, compa- , ny is said to be the world's only ; .- manufacturer of jews' harps. The • /. family controlling this company haa been producing the instrument tor ||5|, 200 years and no effective competi- -- tion ever has developed. < « < HOUSE GALL OPTICAL SERVICE ill YOUR OWR BOffE NO EXTRA CHARGE GLASSES COMPLETE (O CA AS LOW AS $0.dU For appointment, Phone Chicago, Franklin 8510 -- McHenry 60-W or Write to -- Dr. M. M. Kagan OPTOMETRIC EYE SPECIALIST 108 N. State Street^ Chicago .»«•* >. t near future, open an auto livery andi5*00 °f cards. garage on the West Side. He has al ready purchased a Cadillac car of the Three Manly Brothers of Harvard which will arrive as soon as the weather will permit. If business warrants, Mr. Hanly will put on a second machine. TWENTY YEARS AGO Wm. Pries is moving his family here from Wauconda and will occcpy the fiat of the Searles resilience on Pearl street. The country roads are becoming worse and worse each day, many tip Miss Arlene Nett, who is employed in Chicago, visited friendk in town on Saturday; Miss Eleanor Freund of Chicago spent the weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Nick Freund. Miss Isabelle Meyer has returned to her home, having been employed il) Lake Bluff the past few years. Mark Pierce had the misfortune of Etetate of William Bonslett, Cecil Travis, slugging shortstop of the Washington Senators? gets in shape Car his drive on the American league batting championship next season,, with lots o( wood chopping on his farm near Riverdale, Ga. Last season he batted .344 and finished among the first five hitlers of 'the leagpft. D. T. Smiley, Atty. ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTTCK breaking several ribs when he slipped and fell on the ice on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Andy Straub of Chi cag-o spent Sunday with her mother Mrs. Bertha Esh. Glendale Esh re turned to Chicago with them, where TABLE-TOP HUMORETTES TWephone No. 800 Stoffel A Reihaiuperger 'teaamnee agents for all classes of . property in the best eompaniea. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS Smakfast! A simple, humorous Idea, simply and neatly told. The spotlight <-ti.a two-Inch hole In a piece of eardboard, held in front of an amateur-* floodlight bulb. Exposure /% seoond at f.16. overs have been reported of late and h© is under doctor's care, having brokone instance a farmer, residing his ankle while at work. south of town, lost his entire load of white fluid while on his way to the factory here. LILY LAKE Milk was being sold about town during the past week at a dollar a can. This is the ^cheapest milk that our Mrs Edward Weisbaum entertained people have been able to buy in a longjthe members of the Lily Lake Ladies* 1Tr-e' _ . ' . , I League Tuesday afternoon. Prizes TT ,°T , ' ®_18 J10^ with were given. The serving of a lovely nee an^8 ^°J"ce* at Ft. Bctij. Har- iunch concluded a most enjoyable aftnson has just been released from the ernoon camp hospital, to which he has been! Christine Wegener of Chicago spent The undersigned, Administrator of the Estate of William Bonslett, deceased, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court Hiouse in Woodstock, on the 7th day of March, A. D. 1938, at which time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested' to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 7th day of January, A. D. flDTER M. JUSTEN, 35-# . - *; Administrator. " M0ST confined through illne&s for weeks past. several' Yukon River in Alaska The Yukon river in Alaska flows for 1,765 miles through Alaska and is navigable for 1,200 miles. • "The girl who never would mention her bows, now allows them to gpeak for themselves." Church and state in France have keen separated by law since 1905. f -- The double hull type of submarine fe sometimes called "submersible." ADS the weekend at the home of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. George J. Wegener. Frank Harder and son, Robert, of Vernon J. Knox, Attorney EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of John J. Buch, Deceased. The undersigned, Executor of the Chicago spent Monday at his cottage w Win and Testament of John J. at Lily Lake. Buch, deceased, hereby gives notice Mr. and Mrs. Edward Marsh of Chi- that he will appear before the County cago visited the home of her mother, Court of McHenry County, at the Mrs. Jack Wrublewski Sunday. Mrs.'Court House in Woodstock, on the 7th Wrublewski has been ill for the last day of March, A. D. 1938, at which week, and her friends at Lily Lake time all persons having claims against hope to see her up and about very soon. Mr. and Mrs. Peterson of Chicago spent Sunday at Lily Lake. Mc^-and Mrs. Hanson and Mr. and Mrs. Gray of Chicago were visitors at Lily Lake over the weekend. Need Rubber Stamps? Order at The Plaindealer. said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to dersigned. Dated this 11th day of January, A.D. 1987. _i_ GEORGE JUSTEN, 36-3 Executor. amateur camera workers wait until they find a picture situation ready-made before they snap the shutter. Others have found 1 that they do not have to wait--that jjlhey can often create a picture opportunity by selecting and arrang- ' ing materials already at hand. 8tlll-life studies, of fruit, of .flowers, of the play of light on tex- JtileB and glassware, are all examples of this creative method and a still-life expertly done can possess -extraordinary beauty. EHUl-llfes, however, require a keen sense of •pictorial composition, Judgment in flighting and a willingness to arrange and rearrange until every- (thing is exactly right. "Table-top" photography permits more latitude, particularly when (the central idea is humorous. Here the emphasis is on telling a story, rather than developing an Ideal arrangement of lights and shadows and textures. In consequence, the "table-top" worker can limit his labor to the story-telling essentials, and let supplementary considerations go. Small toys, comical in themselves, are easy subjects to work with. Dolls are also convenient to use. The clever worker can construct " funny figures from vegetables--for example, a carrot appropriately dressed and equipped with tiny wire ectacles can become a very presentable old lady. Cotton-and-w'ire pipe cleaners can be bent and combined into Interesting action pio> tures--an Instance would be adagio3 dancers on a stage. Good characters can also be made'tyf modeling wax-- and often the cruder the modeling the funnier the effect. Scenic materials, when needed, are easy to get. Flaffy cotton makes excellent snow; small twigs make good trees; light brown sugar serves nicely for sand and a piece; of glass laid over a dark cloth will; do for water. Doll furniture is use-) ful in realistic indoor sets. Some amateurs build elaborate ; miniature stage, settings for their "table-tops'* Just as If they were producing a professional motion picture. This can be fascinating work and often well worth while. But it is not Imperative and can be avoided simply by selecting a story idea that does not demand realistic background. "Table-topping" requires that the photographer work fairly close up to his subject. He can do this in two ways: either by using a portrait attachment over the lens of his camera or by using a camera with double-extension bellows. Cameras of the latter type will allow him to photqgraph small objects In their actual size and they usually have groundglass backs which help in focusing and arranging the picture. When a subject shows up too small on a negative, it is good practice to have it enlarged, with surplus mar-_ gin masked out. Try "table-topping." You'll-llke it. • John van Guilder.. NATURE'? WAY Of TELU^GNOT TO 6E AFRAID GROW OU> E 7SPRlA/<t IS WUTH* AUTumti is MEUDW OLPAQB I WOUDBR WMy AUTUMK1 IS MORE BEAUTIFUL "THAW SPRING? 7m A/ATUR£S Lesson >*• m MONEY TO LOAN I have clients who have money to lend on first mortgages on real estate and others who want to borrow money on read estate. If interested either way, I will be glad to talk it over with you. Joseph N. Sikes Waukegan National Bank Bldg. 4 S. Genesee St., Waukegan, HL TEL. MAJESTIC 103 i kl ?*, t. » ii + i fcN,- ' .-v.' 'JS i * . • t *' : j"" ' 1 *1*' . A. P. Freund Co. Excavating Contractor micking, Hydraulic and Grant Service fto&d Building TaL 204-M McHenry, 111 FIRE AUTO INSURANCE *££ R. WALSH = Presenting Reliable Companies you need insurance of any fedai Phone 43 or fl-M ies Bldg. - McHenry inwiW r&ETT BROTHEBS - CONTRACTORS «WM, Brick, Plaster and * Stucco Work Bnilding, Moving and Raising Telephone 625-M»t1 ILL. Phone 41 VERNON J. KNOX -ATTORNEY AT LAW Pries Bldg. \ OFFICH HOURS Tuesdays and Fridays : Otter Days by Appointment McHevy > ' • 'V 7 . . : S. H. Frennd & Soo CONTRACTORS AHD BUILDERS Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience it at Tour SoiVioe in bnilding Your Wants SENT A COMPAHY AD Kiads of • INSUR ANC1 ••• > HiSeed with the most reliable Con pa nice ^ .i-JfjSaate hi and talk it "bene McHenry S Chtrtte's Repair Shop Next Door To Hoot Noonan's On U. S. 12 RADIATORS REPAIRS) [BODIES AND FENDRBS Straightened Sign Painting Truck Lettering Furniture Upholstering CHARLES RIB*

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