Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Oct 1938, p. 5

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Y>y4,#i" ': r'fwVW^ 77; Tharbdajr, October, 6, 1938 "SO I HEAR" 0i-^.rS,','..^ S b. * /*V "r l~'£* & . :-;ri tARLWAISfl • V :, Dear "Mose": Among your "residence change*" items you can pat down that your ;4> S. I. H. and the Mrs. are now in the whitest House out on Richmond Road -- just this side of Ringwood- We moved in Saturday night, but that isq't the half of it. Let's go back a few weeks. The Mrs. keeps sayingwe fcavent so much to move. Oh Yeah! If we haven't we've done right well in picking up a box-carfull "of stuff from the neighbors. have Asked other students about the game,^Aut none have much to say. They, prefer to forget and start talking about trimming Marengo on Sat~ urday afternoon of this week. --I-*-- That's a large order, but Coach Reed sayswe are going to win. Ho wouldn't give us the wrong dope. ' --1-- The game will be played in McHenry and should draw more than an average crowd. Marengo takes football quite seriously and they have a hefty squad to get them places. --I-- Marengo has one end who stands over six feet, and tops the scales at 210. That gives you some idea. But, McHenry is going to win* boys say so themeslves. The „ „ . , ... The team will prance tftft 111 new Honest, Mose, I got so in the habit, uniforma this week That ought to of walking from one Pl»c« to»no*,|er! pep them up for action. with arms extended and full of bundles I find myBelf --I-- We hear that the tennis tournament has been finished, with "Tike" Miller the winner. "Tike", defeated A, Ramp * • 5' \ ; /v,V that the habit's got me, walking along the street now with both hands outstretched--just imag- ^ inary loads. Might as well put « orUGrange in the ftnate. cup in each mitt and pick up a little j ^ ex£a cas^ i .j McHenry saw sonde classy tennis . This married li^ is aU that said the past summer. Let's not it would be and more. forget that we need more courts be- You must come over. ^ _ » . fore next season falls upon us. Teri- That den we were taking about jg courts attract summer visitors as hasnt materialized just yet -- buU asour ownenthusiasts. wait! r- j _g_ The Mrs. says, "den"? - .> i The dead line to go to press is near We says, Yes (pet name nere). j |>ut we can't forget to report that And we sorta blamed you. fS. I. H. is taking a merry panning for We put it up that you thought a , n0^ growing up last Sunday when the den would be a fine place for us to do j Married fellows played golf. Our only our writin' for you -- that maybe we rival for «worst golfer" honors, Aldcould concentrate more. ermen Freund, waited long and impti' "A den!," says she, "I suppose you tiently for us to show up. want to put all your old junk in there, j | *. and clutter up the house." We failed to show. Our headhaftgs She had xis there'cause that s about'(oW> :' * : what we had in mind. j ! |-- Well, it isn't as bad as it sounds,' All excuses that we were tod busy Mose. The Mrs. has a nice, little room' moving, mowing lawn and what not all picked out and is getting real help-! have failed. ful about the plan. ( --- Bring your pipe and come over any-j Tell you what. If some of you feltime. It's 'roomier than that tdog >iOW8 can arrange a special match, house you and I got in last December j weH take on the Alderman -- with a 28rd when we had that Christmas j friendly little side bet to liven up the Cheer. | match. If the gallery isn't too large, Bob Weber thinks to make the room i the loser could set-em-up after the complete we ought to have a rope lad der. He's been a wedded man these past six years and ought to know the ropes. One thing went wrong in the moving jamboree. I couldn't lose the alarm clock. That thing would wake dead -- and does. '* We have a nice basement, Mode, but the Mrs. thinks bai&nents are meant lor hanging up clothes. Well, you can't have everything. How's your basement? There's quite a patch of land around this place. We may keep a cow. All the furniture^ is set in place now, Mose. Bring Mrs. Mose over for a visit before we start shifting It around. We hated to leave that Court street match. -IThink we got into something there. --I-- Let's hope that Dizzy can "Flatten 'Em." Can't help liking his spirit, the You and I know the Cubs are coming in for the losers share, but it would gladden our hearts to see 01' sDia "Flatten 'Em." MANAGERS OF VARIOUS SPORTS NAMED B7 GIRLS 'ATHLETIC ASSN. After waiting patiently for three weeks, you will finally hear who the managers for the various sports will be during the present school year. The neighborhood. The neighbors were real j managers must be responsible persons good about bringing in things. We're I for there are certain duties they must right next door to the Petie Schaef er's \ carry out. now. 1 Each manager should help to stir up Everybody's been real helpful. Tom t enthusiasm in the sport she is leading Bolger gave the Mrs. a box of tacks. She must see that the tournaments Maybe this is enough. Maybe too are run off in the best fashion and is much. Little things start big wars,! also responsible for checking attendthey tell me. I ance during practices. Every girl who Yours, "SO I HEAR." •--I-- expects to get points toward a letter must be out for practice a set number of times. These activities occur Reading about these World Series j after school and are a good means for cuts makes u$ wish we had stayed at keeping young ' people busy after our firstrbMing. (Can hear Sib Whit- school hours. ing.) Aldenpan Ferwerda his- had the tough luck to be put to bed for a few weeks. Think that Florida fishing is what he needs. Like SiU Pries, he has sand in his shoes. Dreymiller and Carl Rietesel are in the duck-blind business. Last week they built one and the cows ate the whole thing. ' ; --I-- It looks like the Cubs are making a lot of friends -- for Charlie Grimm. --I-- "Canopy John" says "Gabby" will have to produce or he won't stay long. Of course, he hasn't done so bad! , Here is the group of managers nominated by the board. Their appointment will become permanent when they agree to the proposaL. ... Ethel Althoff--Hockey. Shirley Butler--Badminton. -- * Kathryn Coyne--Tumbling. Shirley Colby and Dolores Wagner •--Basketball. * Laura Denman--Tennis. Marjorie Duker--Volley BalL Jane Durland--Folk Dancing. . ' Dorothy Krohn--Archery. Jane McAndrews--Loop Tennis.' Lucille Weingart--Shuffle Board. The managers for Aerial Dart and Ping Pong have not yet been chosen. Last Wednesday at a meeting, the board decided to hold its meetings regularly on Thursday evenings after The Canopy man also says that school. Plans, for the cur.re nt tourna- Tony Lazzeri isn't waiting around m^>ts were also discussed. there for his health. But -- wait! He has" more dope. Wrigley had Bill Jurges in mind for the manager job. Now, he's gone too iflf witli his inside dope. --i-- How'm I Doin'f So swing has got you, you jitterbug I used to think you were just a lug But now that you've made this complete confession. V* Come on, join up in qtor next jam session! 'I AVNT PRUNELLA. Dote' O. K., Prunella. Or shall Tuesday night after school, a number of G. A. A. girls undertook the sale of Football tickets for the remaining games of this season. Thanks to all who so graciously bought one for the good cause. The sale of booster buttons is coming along in a splendid shape, in fact, we should be all sold out by the time you read this column. DOROTHY LAY, Recording Secretary. GIRL SCOUTS Monday we had planned for a hike l ' but as the weather was disagreeable call you Prunie ? Am still a lug and get in enough jams of my own. The Plaindealer: Got some inside dope on the Cub's great drive foT the National League pennant. They were driven with the fear that they would have to play the White Sox in a city series, if they didn't play in the World Series. You might tip our friend Walsh off on this. EMILE DeCROIX, Woodstock, Illinois. P. S.--Don't get me wrong -- I'm a 100% Cub fan and am going in to see them1 play tomorrow, Wednesday. --I-- Thanks, Emile. I t looks like you've really got something there. Now, we think more of the French. --I-- A kind expression from Harry Eckland on our article about the Cubs last Week was and is appreciated; --I-- We were unable to attend {fait* St. Mary's - McHenry football game at Woodstock last Friday, but hear that it was St. Mary's game all the way. FOOTBALL NOTICE! The McHenry - Marengo football game will be played Saturday afternoon on the local field. Time - 2:30 p.m. Advertising indicating that the Marjorie Duker was first to report ^game will be played on Friday is intiiat our team got licked 25 tf A. We correet. we had formed our patrols and elected patrol leaders. We have four patrols -- two with six girls and two of seven girls' Next week we expect to have bring-your-own-lunch hike if the weather is agreeable. Nadine Schaef er and Mitzi Durland will blaze the trail to a new picnic place for us. The patrols are as follows: PATROL 1--Patrol Leader, Esther Althoff; second, Elaine Landren; Betty Kramer, Agnes Bell Miller, Elida Page, Mary Margaret Douglas. PATROL -2--Patrol Leader, Nadine Schaef er; second, Mitzi Durland; Sally Carp, Marilyn Schaefer, Lucille Nickels, Betty Wirtz, Charlene Mertes. PATROL 3--Patrol Leader, Bonnie Page; second, Eileen Jewell; Elaine Schaefer, Joan Durland, Shirley Patzke, Jean Huck, Betty Edstrom. PATROL 4--Patrol Leader, Gervaise Belling; second, Doris Thomas, Clare Freund, Kathleen Klapperich and Dorothv and Patsy Mc- Guiggan. BONNIE PAGE. ^ Feats of "Telepathy" Explained by Highly TrainedPerception - t London.--Science has probed the apparent telepathic powers of a well-known vaudeville performer, Marion, and found that there is nothing occult or super- natural about them. Neither are they due to extra-sensory perception. Instead, they a're due to supernormal development of the ordinary power of perception. A preliminary report of the investigation by S. G. Soal has been made public by the University of London Council for Psychical Investigation. Marion, whose real name is Josef Kraua, had two especially significant accomplishments. One was the finding of a hidden object. There was absolutely no tirickery to this, Mr* Soal reports, and it was done without any physical contact with anyone in the room. It was due, Mr. Soal found, to Marion's unusually sharp observation of the footsteps of a person walking behind him who knew where the object was. If all the audience was seated, Marionls ability to find the hidden object depended on his keen perception of involuntary head movements arid changes of facial expression. " How He Recognized Cards. The' other unusual accomplishment of this performer was his ability to recognize any card he held in his hand. His skill at this was unknown to Marion himself until Mr. Soal tried it. Mai-ion thought it was due to clairvoyance but after Mr. Soal's experiments it could be accounted for on the ground that Marion's acuteness of touch and his. general alertness to sense stimuli are exceptional. These findings do more than merely dispose of some claims to the power of clairvoyance and telepathy, comments the editor of the English medical journal, the Lancet. They show how highly perception may be developed. The supernormally keen perceptive powers of Marion are of the order of those possessed by the great physicians of earlier days, the medical editor suggests. These men who practiced before the development of X-rays and laboratory tests had to rely almost entirely on their senses and their keen powers of perception in order to diagnose a case and foretell its probable oi come. Gorillas and Hyenas Aw* . Sufferers From Arthritis Philadelphia. -- Grandpa Gorilla has his bad days with "rheumatiz," no less than his human nth-degree cousins. Hyenas have it, too--presumably they don't laugh then. It seems to be the same kind of rheumatism-- arthritis -- most common and most painful in human beings. Occurrence of arthritis in wild animals was'described by Prof. Herbert Fox of the University of Pennsylvania to the American Philosophical society. Professor Fox, as pathologist to the Philadelphia Zoological society, has had ample opportunity to diagnose the disease in many living animals. He has also examined skeletons in several museums. Total number of animals examined was 1,749, of which 77 proved to be definitely arthritic. Occurrence of the malady among animals appears to be as little governed by rules as it is among us suffering humans. It is not correlated with climate, location, food, focal infections, or kind of animal. It was most easily detected as an affliction of the spine, but was also found in other parts of the skeleton. Animal families. afflicted with arthritis include cat, cow, deer, bear, hyena, baboons and the anthropoid apes. It was not found among oertain carnivora, notably the dog group; rodents and bats seem likewise to be immune. " i. --T" Bends in Rails Caused by High Speed of Trainft Chicago.--Higher railroad train speeds, particularly of freight trains, are causing extensive damage to railroad tracks, A. A. Miller, maintenance of way engineer for the Missouri Pacific railroad told the Western Railway club here. Irregular kinks and bends in the track, with consequent rough riding for passengers or sufficient damage as to necessitate renewal of track, have occurred to an increased ex tent during recent years as a result of the greater strain imposed on the track by more rapidly-moving loco* motives and cars, he declared on the basis of reports from railroads throughout the country. Principal blame for the damage, he indicated, rests on the locomotives. Copper Pays the Freight Copper Cliff, Ont.--"Copper pays the freight and all the gold is gravy" is more than a miner's catch phrase here, where recovery of gold, silver, platinum, palladium, tellurium and selenium during the necessary refining of copper not only has increased the value of the finished product, copper, but brings added income from the sale of the byproduct rare metals. Not a Perfect Circle The orbit of the earth around the sun is not a perfect circle, but is slightly oval. The mean distance from the earth to the sun is 92,- 900,000, but the oval path of the earth around the sun causes this distance to vary 3,000,000 miles. Oxygen Required by fid Fish need less oxygen in cold water than warm. They breathe less to cold weather. Co"semn Inaifwated la A. D. m1 The Coliseum, in Rome? repaired j by the Italian government, was be-' gun by Vespasian on the site of part of Nero's famous Golden house and inaugurated by Titus in A. D. 80. It consisted originally of three arcaded stories of stone and an upper gallery, originally of wood, which was rebuilt of stone in the present form sometime in the Third century. The Coliseum probably seated between 40,000 and 50,000 people. It it elliptical in plan with its long axis, 615 feet, and its short axis, 510 feet; its arena is 281 feet long and 177 feet wide. Its total height to the top of the Third century stone screen wall is about 160 fefet. Compass Points to 'True North' The gyro compass is a mechanical compass, the principle of which was adopted from the gyro top. It is a Wheel weighing 60 pounds and revolves at the rate of 6,000 revolutions a minute. This compass always points to the "true north" as it gets its directive force from the earth's rotation and the force of gravity* This is perhaps the most important instrument >>n the bridge of an Ocean liner. Vapor From Bush Will Burn The burning bush or gas plant, Dictamnus fraxinella, is unique in that its stalk, branches and leaves exude a resinous or oily water that is so volatile its vapor ^an be ignited on a hot, dry day. The bash, however, is not harmed by the fire, says a correspondent in Collier's Weekly, as the flames do not come in contact with the plant itself. ' Heroine of Revolutionary War Molly Pitcher was a heroine of the Revolutionary war, who distinguished herself at the battle of Monmouth, June 28, 1778. She saw her husband, an artilleryman, killed, and took his place at the gun, continuing through the battle. Washington commended her bravery and gave her a warrant as a sergeant. Use of Term Tuberculosis Consumption, phthisis, T. B., and tuberculosis are one and the same disease. The first three terms are used when speaking of tuberculosis of the.lungs only. The general term tuberculosis has to be qualified by mentioning the part of the body affected. Stings the 'Good Samaritan* Under British law, a "Good Samaritan" who summons a physician for a stranger who has been taken ill in a public place is obliged to pay the doctor's bill when the victim cannot or will not assume the obligation, says Collier's Weekly. v Tornadoes at Night According to the weather bureau, the occurrence of tornadoes at night, even near midnight, is not infrequent; such storms are most frequent in the afternoon and early evening, and least frequent from midnight to noon. 'Flower Fond' Aids Poor " When a person dies in Sweden, his (friends often send the money they would have spent on funeral wreaths to the "Flower fund." This fund is used to support and care for poor, elderly people. ' Know Value of Time Know the true value of time; snatch, seize and enjoy ©very moment of it. No idleness, no laziness, no procrastoation; never put off till tomorrow what you can do today.-- Chesterfield. Islands That Belong to Denmark Islands that belong to Denmark include Zealand and Funen, with about 200 smaller adjacent inlands in the Baltic; the Faroe islands and Greenland. Origin of Ward Plagiarism The Latin word plagiarius meant a kidnaper, a stealer or abductor of a slave or child. It was first used in the modern sense of appropriation or copying by Martial. Ocean Surface Water Temperature The temperature of ocean surface waters varies from 28 degrees Fahrenheit in the polar regions to 85 degrees in equatorial regions. Naming Perth Amboy, N. J. Perth Amboy, N. J., settled in 1683, was first named for James, earl of Perth; then the original fav dian name, Amboy, was added. Forerunner of Parliament The Anglo-Saxon Witenagemot was the forerunner of parliament, which originated after the Normans conquered England. Braga, Romanian Beverage Braga is a Rumanian beverage obtained by fermentation in water of millet flour mixed with bread crumbs. Castor Oil 20M B. C. Castor oil was known to the ancient Egyptians, and used - as a remedy 2000 B. C. Boston Fire Covered Sixty Acres In the Boston fire of 1872, sixty acres were devastated, with a property loss of over $60,000,000. Raccoons Found Everywhere Raccoons are found in most of the wooded parts of North America from southern Canada to Panama. Oldest Spanish Settlement Cartagena, Columbia, is the oldest Spanish settlernent in the Ncav world. ADS Mich. She will return today (Thurs- ,d»y). , Mr. and Mrs. Adam Brandenburg) and Mrs. Led"Winltel spent the and friends of Chicago were Sunday weekend at Balf Club, Minn. John visitors in the E. R. Sutton home. I Thennes, who had enjoyed a week's Mr. and Mrs. Joe N. Miller left] fishin£ WP there, returned home with Wednesday for Almena, Wis., whero |themthey expect to spend several weeks at1 Mr" an(* Harold Aim and son, their cottage at Turtle Lake . 1 Stanley. of Chicago spent the week- Mrs. Wm. B. Tonyan was a Chicago' her .mot{l®r' Mrs" R°y Smith- Tom Thn^iNau. Tbm Thumb was a tachea afid his real name an Stratton. siv.:, vanstm visitor a few days the past week Mis,s L?1™"6 EnSe,n " enjoying a Mico„ irioonn- * , few days vacation from her work at Miss Audrey Rothermel, who is at>] Misses Evelyn Weingart and Marie tending the Illinois State Normal Unl- Steinsdoerfer and Elmer Steinsdoerfer i versity at Normal, 111., spent the week-" spent the weekend in the home of Mr. end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. and Mrs. Dan Gilseon at Maywood. j W. Rotherme1 She was accompanied, Joe Regner, Ed Smith and Dar to Normal by Mrs. Rothermel, daugh-; Granger are enjoying a two weeks', ^t"erin®» Freddy Meyers and fishing trip at Ball Club, Minn. They! toss Betty Richards of Woodstock expect to return home Saturday. Sunday afternoon. I Mr. and Mrs. Henry Wegener and Mrs. Richard Stenger of Waukegan son, Donald, of Humphrey, Nebr.,' visited in the home of her parents, spent the weekend in the home of Mr!' Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Spencer, Thursday, and Mrs. Tony Blake. Mr and Mrs. Howard Phalin, Mr.' Cletus Althoff, who is attending ^nd Mrs. Jafties Mahoney, Miss Ruth school at DeKalb, spent the weekend aim and Harry Anderson of Chi-' with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis cago were weefend visitors in the J. Althoff, j M. Phalin home. j Misses Mareta Blake and Gladys Mrs Fred Schoewer spent a few Justen of Elgin and Donald Holmes of o pa3t wfeek in Chicago. Miss Minneapolis spent last Sunday after-! tdith Scott returned home with het noon at the Brookfteld Zoo. i for the weekend ! Miss Gladys Justen spent the week-' Mrs. Robert Thompson accompanied end in the home of her parents, Mr. Mrs. Harry Alexander, Mrs. Arthur *nd Mrs. John R. Justen. Miss Jusmes and Mrs. Eggert. of Hebron to/ten has been ^employed for the past Alexander ItcCalum was found dead on the doorstep of his summer home at Sunset lane, nockburn, recently, by his two sons-inlaw, Walter Wright, of 1900 June way terrace, and Wallis Mcllwain, both of Qhicago. McCallum, according to Wright and Mcllwain, had. left his home alone about 10 fc. tn. in the morning for Bannockburn. On such visits, they said, he was in the habit of returning home about 5 p. m. When he failed to return, the sons-in-law came to Bannockburn in search of McCallum about 9 p. m. When they reached the summer home they found their father-in-law dead on the door* steps, apparently from a heart attack. seven months as Secretary in the law offices of Attorneys McNerney and Perce located in the Elgin .Courier- Who Is It? Elgin Monday. Miss Ethel Jones and Mrs. J. E. £rhSle^ Gran i d. ChaP-,i-e«:e .uca^u tenof the 0. E. S at Peoria^this week.! News building. v Ray Page and Fred Schoewer at-1 tended a county meeting of the American Legion, held at Union, Thursday evening. * ^Ir. and Mrs. Edward Welch, grandson and friend of Milwaukee, Wis., were visitors in the Ed Young home on Sunday. „ William, Charles and R. J. Sutton, James Wolfe and John Stangerone attended a birthday party given for Ragnar B«rnas in Chicago Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. William Elverman and family of Silver Lake, Wis., and Mrs. Louis Kleive and daughter, Ida, of Capron, were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Althoff. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond VanHeirsleo and family of Waukegan visited her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Michels, Sunday. , Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Hagemlm and Miss Olga Brefeld of ChK|^ were Sunday guests in the Brj/Brefeld home. & Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith of Har- A <(W _ . „ vard visited relatives here Sunday. . Another Ba<* ™en Plcture, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vales, Henry 118 pr?,se 1 nted thls veekJ that 0 and Robert Stober, Frank Kovalek and! t ^ y°Ung ,farmer« we^ °f Bill Beran of Chicago were weekend1 ^Henry, who is also engaged m guests in the Albert Vales home. I TX^ring'. . „ , . u Mrs. Katherine Molidor of Volo and L ^ P'^ures last week were Miss John Molidor of Mundelein were din- Carmen Freund and Edd,e Michels ner guests in the John Scheid homo Monday. Mrs. Harold Tacki of Kenosha, Wis., was a visitor in the home of her sister, Mrs. Thomas Kane, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Anderson were Sunday dinner guests in the Carl Anderson home at Barrington Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Carey visited Chicago friends Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Page and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Spencer were Chicago visitors Sunday. Oscar Forsland of Chicago spent the weekend here. Miss Alice Sutton, who has been spending the past month with relatives in this vicinity left Mbnaisv for her home in Pasadena, Calif. She was accompanied- by her niece,, Miss Eleanor Larkin, of Elgin who expects to spend the winter in the west. Mrs. Alfred Vales spent several days in Chicago the past week. . J. C. Klein of Waukegan is spending several days with his daughters, Mrs. Ed Young and Mrs. Fred Schoewer. Mrs. Peter Frett of Spring Grovs called on old friends in McHenry on Sunday. Lowell Nye of Libertyville and Miss Armella Haines of Waukegan spent Sunday in the A. E. Nye home. Mrs. Betty Nielsen left Monday for a few days visit in South Haven, HITS ALL MARKS * V NEW EMPIRE McHENRY, ILLINOIS San. Mat. 3 p. m. Gmtinnoos FRIDAY -- SATURDATf October 7 - 8 Wayne Morris -- Priscilla Lane.. ^ Hugh Herbert -- » "MEN ARE , 1 SUCH FOOLS" » • Also--Selected Shorts " * SUNDAY -- MONDAY O c t o b e r 9 - 1 0 Robt. Taylor -- Maureen O'Sullivaa "THE CROWD ROARS" Also--News . Cartoon and Comedy 10c -- TUESDAY. OCT. 11 -- 2fc (1) "BullDog Drnmmo&d in Africa" (2) "Broadway Bill" WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Double Feature • Don Ameche -- Arleen Whelan (1) "GATEWAY" Laurel & Hardy v . - . (2) ^BLOCKHEADS" Joe Hiestand, 32-year-old farmer of Hillsboro, Ohio, broke 2M targets at the Grand American trapshoot at Vandalla, Ohio, to run np a string of 986 without a miss. It was the greatest performance ever toned in sa the traps. MILLER Theatre Woodstock Free Lace -- Friday -Mischa Auer -- Wendy Barrie "PRESCRIPTION FOR ROMANCE^i Saturday ----Continuous from 2:30 Giant Double Feature---- JOE PENNER •I'M FROM THE CITY' Hit Number 2 LEO CARRILLO "CITY STREETS" SUNDAY -- MONDAY Year's Greatest Musical Irving Berlin's "ALBXAHDER'i JUOTIKE BAH"" -- with -- Tyrone Power AJice Faye Don Ameche TUESDAY -- lfe and ISe "MURDER ON --4- DIAMONDROW# Painter and Decorator Phone 106-W Riverside Drive McHENRY . S v'-'v . ! . \ ' . \ NO JOB IS TOO LARGE OK TOO SHALL FOR ME TO CONSIDER' AND ESTIMATE ^ It makes no difference whether yon need an inside decorative piece of work or an outside paint job, suoh as your house, barn, etc., I am prepared to handle it satisfactorily! ~ Modern Equipment for all Kinds of Spraying Work 1 F U R N I T U R E R E F I N I S H I N G CALL McHE NR Y 1 0 6 - W

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