Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jul 1941, p. 2

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

% -5A'Ate*.*- 1' ?.*••' ' ^*5. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Engler, Miss Elaine Peterson and Thomas Keho of Chicago spent the weeknd at the home edf Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George •pent Tuesday evening at the home <£f Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hanke at Evanston. Jean Hironimus spent Thursday with relatives at Grayslake. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey and son were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William VanNatta at Crystal Lake. Miss Delia Hansen of Madison, Wis., spent a few days the past weekend with her sister, Mrs. Fred Casper. A large crowd attended the St. Peter's annual summer picnic and chicken dinner Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Witts, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Case, Mr. and Mrs. LJoyd Fisher and Mrs. Dora Vasey attended a 4-H party at Snetsinger's park at Lake Zurich Tuesday evening. Mrs. Sarah Fisher received word Wednesday from Minneapolis. Kan., stating the death of her sister, Mrs. Grace Burger. Mrs, Burger passed away at her hone Wednesday morning at 6:25. Mrs. Burger visited- her sister, Mrs. Fisher, several years age and has many friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thorsel! met with a serious accident Wednesday while they were returning to their home here from a ball game in Chicago. Hr< and Mrs. Thorsell are patients at the Edgewater hospital in Chicago. Their many friends here hope for a speedy recovery. On Thursday evening the following 4-H club members, William Hook, Keith Russell, Burnell Russell, Fredrick Vasey, Bonnie Vasey, Clifford Peterson. Richard. Arvilla and Lilah Fisher, Mary and Harry Case, Marvin and Marion Wirtz. attended a weenie and marshmallow roast at Sneteinger park at Lake Zurich. Each club furnished some sort of entertainment Arvilla Fisher represented the Volo Sunshine Queens with an oboe solo j and "Activity" was given by Harold Bennett. The Wauconda-Volo 4-H club band furnished two numbers, "Military Escort" and "Activity." Miss Shirley Ritta of Mundelein spent a few days here at the hone of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ritta. Clifford Wilson of Milwaukee, Wis, spent the weekend here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson. Mrs. Pearl Do well. Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family and Mrs. Sarah Fisher called at the home of Miss Edna Fisher in Waukegan Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey attended the wedding and reception 3f Miss Yvonne Benwel] and Mr. Stanley Charles Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Benwell, west of McHenry. Marv Case. Arvilla Fisher and Marion Wirtx are attending the district 4-H camp at Camp Rotary, Rockford, 111. Patricia and Donald Hook entertained a number of their friends at their home Tuesday afternoon on the occasion of their birthday anniversaries. Miss Doris Gadgen of Chicago spent the weekend here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Sirvestka. Mr. and Mrs. William Wirtz and daughter, Marion, attended the funeral services for Mrs. William Trust in Chicago Saturday. Many from this community attended the Friendly Neighbors society at the home of Mrs. Herman Raeburg at Island Lake Wednesday. Junior Raven had the misfortune to fall and sprain his arm Friday while visiting his grandmother, Mrs. Pearl Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Parson, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Engler, Miss Elaine Peterson. William Alton, Thomas Keho, Wesley Sater and friends of Chicago, Misses Evelyn Hass, Harriet Snyder, Neda Baocn, Bernice Mikitus, Martha Mikitus, Messrs. Leon Paneck. Miles Paneck, Charles Fisher, George Reid, Ollie Hart and Joseph LaPrise, Grayslake, enjoyed a weenie and marshmallow roast at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Baton Saturday evening. The Volo Sunshine Queens and the Volo Busy Bees 4-H clubs held their fourth joint meeting at the home of Helen and Virginia LaCroix Thursday afternoon. Lilah Mae Fisher gave a talk on "Pressing;" Helen La Croix, "Hems," and Bonie Vasey, "What is a Good Rolled Cookie?" Mary Caae gave a reading, "The Flower of Liberty," and Arvilla Fisher rendered an oboe solo, "Military Escort." The Volo Sunshine Queens judged the rolled cookies. Dainty refreshments were served at the close of the meeting. Mr. and Mrs. William Wirtz and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family, Henry Wegener and family, James Davis and Burnell Russel] attended the state black and white show at Mooseheart Saturday. Mr. Wegener exhibited some fine cattle at this show, receiving blue ribbons on his two-year-old cow and junior bull. Arvilla and Richard Fisher and Marvin Wirtz repreesnted Lake county in the state showmanship contest. Arvilla and Richard Fisher held third and fourth in the state showmanship contest, receiving the silver and bronze medals. Raymond Wegener received first prize in the judging contest. Burnell Russell second, Richard Fisher third, Rita Wegener, fourth, Arvilla Fisher fifth, and Marvin Wirtz J*® ***** are 8,1 members at the Wauconda-Volo 4-H club. The eh»b members received fifteen dollars in cash for judging. Shrinking by 100,000 a Year And Should Vanish by '55, Census Bureau Notes. WASHINGTON.--The excess of males over females In th«r United States it being reduced, according to the census bureau, at the rate of nearly 106,000 a year. In about IS years, according to the census table, the United States should Join the majority of nations in showing a female majority. She excess of female population in Germany In 1937 was nearly 1,800,000, in Prance about 1,500,000 and in England nearly 1,700,000. The United States, along with (Other new lands like Canada and Australia, has consistently had a male majority. In 1930, the excess of males was 2,600,MS. In IflM H had fallen to 1,489,114. Preponderantly male immigration contributed to retain the male majority status but, during the last decad*, immigration has ceased to be an important feetor. Peak ItaiM la Itti The peak of male excess population over female in the United States was reached in 1810, when it was 2,682.208. Tbc excess had consistently increase# imh evefir decade except that between 1888 ffl ISM, AHhwigii lm to 106 males are born to every 188 female births, the higher <!*ath rate among males is offsetting this fact. The trend toward a female majority is being materially aided by the fact that women now live three years lon^Cf tla* Average death records of fhfe*cerisus bureau covering the last five years show that deaths among males exceeded deaths among females by 155,598 per year (787,881 made deaths to 632,322 female). To offset this annual male deficit, partially, there has been during the same five years an average of 56,770 male births in excess of female. Eliminating the effects of immigration, therefore, the annual approach to a point of feminine majority is 98,789. Heart Disease Takes ML Heart disease takes 47,073 more males than females annually; automobile accidents take 19,732 more males; influenza and pneumonia, 17,168; suicides, 10,172 <14,528 pnale to 4,357 female); tuberculosis, 8,694; congenital malformations and diseases of infancy, 9,488, and nephritis, 7,427. The common killers in which the deaths of females exceed those of males, with average annual excess, are cancer and tumors, 10,818; and diabetes, 6,862. Maternal deaths average 12,000 annually. The one common killer which seems to show no sex favoritism is cerebral hemorrhage, embolism and thrombosis, which annually takes approximately 110,000, with only 300 more females than males. Loss of males as a result of war has not been an important factor affecting sex balance in the United States. Total war losses through 150 years are not much greater than the excess deaths of males over females from accidents alone in 10 years. In fact, war losses of males, averaged through 150 years, do not approach the present male excess over female losses from suicides alone. ^ Diseases of the heart are now taking a toll in three years equal to war losses of 150 years. Prison Band Master Has ^ Constant Worry on Job * OSSINING, N. Y.--Prison pardons, paroles and completion of sentences give Bond Master Angelo Baccari a constant problem. As Sing Sing music teacher, Baccari directs the prison's concert band of 39 members, and two swing orchestras. Baccari's problem is replacements when prison band and orchestra members are released. The prison's broadcasting system, connected with each cell, enables inmates to listen to regular «gh«duled concerts. Baccari said the musk was appreciated and that it "diverts their thoughts." Ta»iH Removal Doesn't Always a# Prevent CoWs By DR. JAMES W. BARTON fRcleastd by Western Newspaper Uni*n.) WHEN a youngster has frequent colds, parents may feel that removal of the tonsils might prevent these colds. Experience has amply "jproveri that'the removal of tonsils does not prevent colds except in some -oases where the cold always •begins with a sore throat. Ther^ is present throughout the world today a feeling that tonsils should not be removed unless it can be definitely shown that they are to blame for the symptoms present. Thus in the Hospital for Sick Children, London, 2,729 operations for removal of tonsils were performed in 1838, as compared with 4,738 operations Dr. Barton ^ 1830, _ iMnihpJik disdujung the TemovaJ of tonsils and adenoids, Sir Lancelot Barrington-Ward at the Royal Society of Medicine, said that the tonsil was in his experience much the more dangerous element. The structure of the tonsil allowed organisms to remain dormant or quiet, but nevertheless active, leading to chronic general pdiSBtjing of thl system or flare-up into acute in* fiammation from time to time. Adenoids, on the other hand, acted simply as an obstruction to the breathing or by a low grade infection causing inflammation of thenar or tte glands in the neck. T Sise Net Important. In discussing tonsils it was stated that large tonsils might not be septic (pouring poison into the blood Stream) and septic tonsils might not be large. Mere size is not important unless it is causing obstruction. How can it be known that a tonsil or tonsils are septic? The appearance doesn't tell much, but if there are certain noticeable conditions the physician usually decides to have the tonsils removed. 1. Repeated attacks of tonsilitis which can only be stopped by removing the tonsils. 2. Chronic or persistent enlargement of the upper deep gland of neck, without enlargement of the other glands, always means infection of the tonsils. 3. Middle ear diseases followed by mastoid infection and deafness is due to infection from tonsil and adenoid in most cases. Infected tonsils should be removed when there is a history of rheumatism accompanied by heart disease or chorea-St. Vitus' dance. ^President Samuel Harden Church, «f Carnegie Institute, now 88, has returned his decoration as an officer of the Legion of Honor to Marshal Petain, head of the French Vichy regime, to whom he wrote: "Under your recreant government it has lost its value." The number of horses in the United States declined from 19,888,113 in 1910, the peak year, to 10,086,971 in 1940, according to the Census Bureau. Mules reached their peak in 1925, when there were 5,680,897, their number being reduced to 3,844,560 in 1940 Drinker's Lucky Number Is 13, but It Fails Hfti BERKELEY, CALIF. -- Thirteen an unlucky number? Edward M. Fitzgerald, 58, can't quite make up his mind-on that score. Appearing before Police Judge Oliver Youngs, on a drunkenness charge, he explained that he was born on the thirteenth day of the month and so was his wife and it was on the thirteenth of the month that he was arrested while celebrating his wedding anniversary. Judge Youngs sentenced him to work 13 hours for .the city or $10 fine. Facts Regarding fvV Angina Pectoris A NGINA pectoris--breast pang not only frightens the patient but frightens the entire family, as these "heart attacks" are distressing to endure and even to watch. There is a strangling, vise-like pain ?iin the chest over the heart or under •the breast bone which is brought on "by physical effort (exercise) or emotional disturbance. It lasts but a short time, during which the patient stands in whatever position he happens to be in at the time and as he stands he has the feeling that if he makes the slightest move it may be his last. Angina pectoris is often caused by the heart muscle (the muscle which pumps the blood from the heart to all parts of the body) not receiving enough blood from the little blood vessels which supply the heart muscle with blood from the general supply as it circulates throughout the body. Naturally, if the heart muscle does not get enough pure blood it cannot work, that is, pump the blood from the heart to all parts of the body, and so no movement is made by the patient to make the heart muscle do any work until it gets a little more pure blood into it with which to continue work. These attacks of angina pectoris are really "life savers" because the individual learns what is likely to bring on an attack--heavy work, excitement, a fit of anger or other emotional disturbance--and so by living carefully he is enabled to live a useful and often a loftg lite. , Most angina patients carry little pearls (thin glass tubes) of amyl nitrite, that can be easily broken in a handkerchief and inhaled, which the attack. C. Mayer of Chicago is spending the weak at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E; 3ttd*t MyliA Bark. Mrs. A. V. Mason of Mylith Pack was a business caller in Chicago last Thursday. Mis. Bert Ruthenberg of Mylith Park was a shopper in Chicago last Friday. * Mr. and Mrs. J. McGrath and grandson, Junny, of Chicago spent last flatwday at the A. V. Mason home at Mylith Park. Mrs. KafUiCNi and daughter, Lillian, of Chicago were weekend guests at the hone of Mr. and Mrs. J. Panteles at Mylith Park. Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Mason and lfr. and Mrs. Charles Rodene attended a "fish fry" last Friday evening at Sam's Place at Burton's Bridge. Mrs. E. Held of Mylith Park entertained th* following members of Ate Mylith Park Sewing Circle at a 12:80 luncheon last Wednesday: Mrs. E. LovsfpMB* Mrs. H. Krueger, Mrs. A. V. Mason, Mrs. C. Rodene and Mrs. B. ftutheaW*. Mr. and Mrs. John Snieg of Ch!- *•» fee Urn MtlaM turtle while on his farm. FWdtCSuicliPelli CHICAGO.--John Booth, a handsome youth who has lived off magic the last six years, transfers his tricks and fancy talk from night club floors to the church pulpit to pack the pews" for Christianity. Ha has promised to "rekindle enthusiasm for the church if I have eago a#ia Mr. and Mis. A. V. Matos> i to pull Jackrabbits from the organ of MyHth Park a visit after a "honey, j stc~ Parachutists Sn Army To Be Given Eitra Pay WASHINGTON.--The war department announced recently that its new parachute troops will receive extra pay because of the hazardous nature of their jobs.' All officers and enlisted men of the regular army and National Guard assigned to the newly formed units will be rated as "parachutists." This is generally 50 per cent more than the man's base pay. Mrs. Z. Perez of El Paso, Texas, owns a Persian cat which has a special taste for roses, and will one around in his mouth withers. ill carry until It Jadk Ohle of Benton, 111., has smoked the same pipe for thirty-two years and insists that it is just "getting mellow." Playing cards were designed by crazy artist in 1392, and they have been driving people crazy ever since. raooe'r spent at Bangor- Mich. Mr. and Mrs. A. Eisner and Mr. and Mrs. C. Franz, who have a cottage together at Mylith Park, entertained Mr. and Mrs. C. Gutzmann of Des- Plaines and Mr. and Mrs. R. Bouds of Chicago last Sunday. • \ i Carl Franz, Jr., of Chicago, but, who is enjoying the summer with his parents at MyiKh Park, enjoyed swimming in Steum Lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Klass and son, Leonard, ef Chicago and who have just retained from a two-weeks' vacation in the Smoky Mountain region and in sections of Georgia were Sunday visitors at the, home of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Mason at Mylith Park. Frank Mellon of Chicago was a Sunday guest at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mariett Henry. Mr. and Mrs. Roy PfannenstQl of Grayslake and Mr. and Mrs. Loy Pfannenstfll of Mundelein spent last Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Burkhart of Chieago were guests last Friday at the home at Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Burkhart. Mr-, and Mrs. Mariett Henry called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pape on Pox river near Burton's Bridge Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Staggs of Wauconda were callers Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. Mrs. Mariett Henry and son, Mariett. spent Tuesday at the home at Mr. and Mrs. Bennett in Chicago. Mr. and Msr. Wm. Burkhart of Williams Pl|rf| were honored guests at a surprise fRrty at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hulska in Chicago in honor of their thirty-third wedding anniversary. The party was sponsored by relatives of Mr. and Mrs. Burkhart. Chesney Bteoks was a supper guest Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Rosten Walker at Gurnee. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner were callers in Chicago last Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Brown and two daughters of Griswold Lake were callers Sunday at the home at Willard Darrell. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Merritt and daughter of Barringlon and Mrs. Clifford Pamalee and two children at Palatine were guests Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank LaBelle. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney, attended the party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harris at Wauconda in honpr of their twentyfourth wedding anniversary last Thursday evening. Willard Darrell, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping and guest, Charles Leonard, of Amboy spent last Friday with relatives at Oak Park. Chesney Brooks attended the Passion Play at Zion last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Webster and daughter, Gertrude, moved from the Standard Oil filling station located on route 176 near Slocum Lake school Tuesday. Mr. Webster has been proprietor of the station for the past two years. They will spend a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Baker at Williams Park before entering into a new business. Mr. Matthews of Williams Park, who owns the station, will conduct his own business. Mrs. C. H. Hansen was a caller in Chicago Sunday morning and mis accompanied home by her mother, Mrs. Jennie Morgan, of Tulsa, Okla., who will spend the summer with Mr. and Mrs. Hansen. Waneonda-Velo 4-H Ck* The Wauconda-Volo 4-H club met at Wauconda high school Monday, June 30. The baseball game which was scheduled for that evening was called off on account of rain. The meeting was held and refreshmenta were served. The next regular meeting will be July 15. The next basebail game will be July 8. QUESTION Q.--Please suggest another treatment other than Whitfield's ointment for athlete's foot. A.--The symptoms are those of athlete's foot--ringworm of the feet --as yew physician has pointed out. It is called eczematoid ringworm of the feet. Whitfield's ointment half strength is considered excellent treatment. The dusting powder prescribed by your physician is likely sodium thiosulphate parts boracic acid. I part jto « Louis Chevrolet, maker of the original car bearing his name, who died recently at the age of sixty-two, v, one of the early racing drivers. In his first race in 1906 he beat Barney Oldfield, setting a record, at sixty eight miles per hour. H. L. Hager of Oakland, Calif., earns his livelihood out of holes in doughnuts. He fries the cut out centers and coats them with pnt# and sells them by the dozen. - j'. r, Nail A patent lor nail making machinery was received by Esekiel Rood of Bridgeport, Mass., in 1788. The first steel cot nails was* manufactured in 1883 by the Riverside Iron Works of Wheeling, W. Va. Australian Seaweed flat Fiber A special kind of seaweed, Posh donia Australia, will provide a valuable kind of cellulose fiber, according to the Australian Council for Scientific and Industrial Research. Coxey's Army Ray Stannard Baker, the author, first attracted attention by his reportorial work on the march of "Coxey's army" in 1894. Correct Method to Waft The correct method to walk is with the feet parallel and the toss pointing straight ahead. made a lot of mpaey amusing crowds at theaters and night clubs from Canada to South America," he said, "and I'll pack the pews tor Christianity, too.'* Booth, 28, is a theology student at the Univertity of Chicago. He said he Tedded ID lectins7? minister when hf realised thit "something constrictive ghojild be done with his powers of ^taptainment, For six years afte* MS grs&stion in 1934 from McMMttr university, Hamilton, Qnt., be p9u$ded the footboards af a career conjurer, winnmg^ reviewed* ^jMgSrffom scpres tional traoe jPKt&aTrates mn "one of the nine foremost magicians of the day," and, SddRienSUy, he has written three books of instruction in the art Tall, dark and mustached, Booth said he learned early that presentation--" gift of gab" he calls it--was "80 per cent" at any trick. "If I could make presentation pay with mere tomfoolery I figured I could make it do big things for truth," he said. Booth long had nurtured an ambition for the ministry because it was as a child in Sunday School at Cleveland that he learned his first "magic" from Carl Germain, a prominent showman and a teacher in the church school. "Of course I cannot hope to make the money I made on the stage," Booth said. "But I will have become useful to myself and to mankind." He said he expects to bring magic and logic together in the pulpit "in a modern, sane setting." In ancient ritual, magic and religion were united in ceremony, he said, to impress the congregations. Whistle of Train Luaue Baby, Mother to Death ^ GASTONIA, N. C.--A funeral bell Ibid not the locomotive bell that he liked so well tolled for 16-month-old Lawrence Chavis and his mother. Lawrence, so the neighbors said, liked to watch tEe train roar by his home; he'd cock his head when the bell rang and imitate the whistle. He apparently decided that such a friendly thing as a train wouldn't hurt a little fellow. So while his mother was busy with the housework, he slipped away and headed for the tracks. His mother*saw him there, saw the train bearing down upon him. Screaming, she ran to his side, threw her arms about him and there they died together. A . ^ Alarm Clock Sounds Off And Cat Goes to Work ADRIAN, MICH.--City Surveyor Kurt Franke, with the aid of a cat, his found a "winter" method of getting to work on time. During the summer, Franke, the "sleep ing est man in town," had his alarm clock connected with a pail of water placed above his bed, but cold weather made this scheme unbearable. Franke's cat, which may be allergic to alarms, starts pulling his hair now whenever the clock's bell rings, and Franke says he must rise in self-defense. The suitor for the hand of a movie actress should never despair. His turn wiU \ -i1, Woman Gives Birth to Second Twin Set in Year ST. LOUIS.--James and Jacquc lyn Jones, twins, are only 11 months older than Franjclin and Henry Jones, their twin brothers. Parents of the two sets at twins in less than a year are Mr. and Mrs. William Jones. James, and Jacquelyn were born December 3, 1888. Franklin and Henry, born the day after the election, were named after the President and the vice president . One Shot in the Rabbit ^ Worth Two in Appendix RENSSELAER, N. Y.--The gunshot he used so often to fell wild rabbits finally "felled" Charles. W. Weston himself. v Stricken yith severe abdominal pain, Weston was taken to a hospital where an appendix operation was performed. X-rays disclosed bits of buckshot lodged in his appendix, leaden souvenirs of rabbits he had slain and consumed. Time reports that David Bowes- Lyon, brother of Queen Elizabeth of England, is expected to come to the United States shortly on a mission connected with the British ministry of information. He is described as "handsome., intelligent and good-humored, strongly resembling the queen." Johifo. Andrew Heb., Is the ctafc of a flsnr annrm oc riad it hocne 46 years been meshing to mafl loos time, but he toft," John Astfrsvr • •mini "He's ftBklori got arouad TfcBest Tree TS* Foundex* tree, a redwood In ******* is the tallest known treeT It ,r feet high, with t eifcuBBlsrenee of feet. There are approximately 85,700 bqfss in use In the United repstts the Automobile Chd> Southern Califernia. Twice ifltr •nlinnt Stetes. ofiwt AHgiset} sobool day, these buses 006 miles ef highway. Given Move Power As twin tegjnart boshbers that are now the haeMwmo of the British royal Sir force are beta* *elJOMntifr 1 1 supplysome in kft us show yon this quality rope aad quote fsioes. t H. TWCF KKELS Impossible Taik 0$ tn time of great sorrow, wpbody can erase the pain .. . but we feel it our duty tojlo all we can to ease the load. Our funeral Services are designed to accomipp lish that # end. * *'• " £* JAOOB JUSTEN ft SOMB Funeral Directors Phone 103-R < McHe&ry £& * 3 ^*>yU, After studying eighteen yean at n|gbt school, Anthony Mac, 88, of Pittsburgh, has been awarded with a degree of bachelor of seience from a universit s prices quoted are good nntil Jnly a • ..V on stock on hand. "•*>•'•»• •• Wii "* *75-B-OtatB !: ;*sjotalC4£.„- •\' i 'M »5i| 6*1 with , hv* •"•W- '<^yV (and your old tira) Don't miM this opportunity to equip your Firestone Convoy Tires!' ,*.> «'•. ' (».• *-4 . -3*1 - SSLv. VWn •"T How Sam-Bored DeLUXE CHAlCPTOWTIttB Bore is the world's first and only tke that is Safti-Snred. It is Salti-Bnred against blowouts and skidding and is Safti-Bured for long non-skid mileage. A complete sot will cost you very Utile with the big trade-in alloWfcnoe we'll make for your old tires! * First Quality ^ * FIRESTONE HIGH SPEED TIRE* > . '• *&•', , -;v., _ ' first quality Firestone High Speed TirM s^ tirsI choice of millions of motorists for long, safe, non-skid mileage. % With today's oondttions, the tires yon buy now may have to last a long time--so it's good judgment to buy the best. FIRE8T0HE STANDARD TIRES ^ ~ 400x16 -- " .5?.; * A Low prices on lifetime guarantee. (and your old tirs^ other siaes. carries a Walter J. Freund :V Phone 294 -- pppppH West McHenry fWPWP 526 Main Street .... VVli-v 1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy