Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Sep 1941, p. 4

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lMMd «s second-class " V the postoftiee at McHenry, ths act *f May 8, 1879. raim i itw if'" .m Om Tear ... Six Months MM Canine Wired for Sound; ^1*. Receiving Set on Back rf ' Zoe, an Alsatian police dog at* •;? tached to the Bourke Street police barracks, in Sydney, Australi •i id NOTICE--With prices increasing, now is the time to order your Pull-O-Pep Feeds and Hudson Poultry and Dairy supplies. Urbandale Poultry Farm. Phone McHenry 680-R-l. *16-4 HOUSE FOR SAJLS--Located at 406 John street, McHenry. Telephone 71-R. l?-2 probably is the only dog in the worl who play* the role of four-footed radio car. This highly-trained animal is equipped with a light-weight receiving set, which is strapped to her back. At a recent police show in Sydney, .fZoe and her master, Constable Denholm, put on an act that attracted !£ric^SeSt^uTtwrta FoR h sAL5r CoT,7rd Jfsrsa^ta ; clump of trees, where he talked into £' ,bu 0 Als0 tfp^;|L0® *** 1 the microphone of a small portable j ^ioLe^I>,nn^:,?rc^^_on broadcasting set. Zoe took up a position more than a hundred yards ; away in the center of the big field IFOR RALE--Concord grapes. Arthur where the maneuvers were being StilUng. Phone McHenry 636-R-l. 18 > staged. The radio set on her bees j was tuned in to the wave-len|jth vt FOR SALR--Chicken nests and other FOfc FINER QUALITY-1n Poultry and Eggs call <* iHslt the Uitanlale Poultry Farm, WMtef new management. 3 miles east and % mile south of McHenry. Henry Veldinisen. Pkone McHenry 480.R-1. *16-4 FOR SALE--Lot, 50x132 ft., on North Park street Call Catherine Schneider. Phone 78-R. 16-tf I line between Richmond and Wiimot. *17-3 the broadcasting outfit and she took a series of orders from the master she couldn't see. Denholm told Zoe to break Into a trot, then commanded her to stop and sit down. She did. She also rolled over at the command of the 'voice that came out of the box on her back, leaped over a low wooden barrier, climbed a ladder, filled a can fr<?m a tub of water, fired a revolver by pulling a lanyard with her teeth, and did other sttmts-- all by remote control. It would be possible, of course, to recall dogs on a manhunt to headquarters and to direct their movements, to a certain extent, so long as the broadcasting officers could see the dogs, either with the naked eye or through binoculars.. Early History of Sacred ' Music in China Traced Interesting facts on religious singing during the early days of Christianity in Chins are revealed In an article in Renseignements of the : Sinological Office of Zi-ka-wei. The article points out that although there are no authentic documents on the origin of Christian sacred singing in China it is believed the early missionaries in that area used an adaptation of the Gregorian chant. It is understood .the chant was introduced without fixed rules and used with many variations, according to the tastes of those In the different localities. The writer recalled the famous Christian pillar of Singan-fu in Shensi, which dates from the year 781 and bears this inscription: "The wooden things which they perceive give forth a sound of mercy and of charity." It is believed that this refers to a wooden bell used to call the faithful to prayer, or to a wooden musical instrument for accompanying the chanting. It is known that the Franciscans tat the Thirteenth and Fourteenth centuries, sang the liturgioal chants of the Credo, the Ave Regius Coelorunri, A Solis Ortu, Veni Sancte Spiritus and Vex ilia Regis either to their companions or the Court of the Grand Khan, or at Peking, CSDJtai of the Dynasty of Yuan. poultry equipment. Also steel cots and single beds, cheap. Kirk's Kabins, phone 661-Jd-l. 18 FOR RXHT FOR RENT--'Year-round cottage in Fair Oaks subdivision; five rooms, gas and electricity; completely furnished. Phone McHenry 634-M-l. 18 FOR RENT--Six-room flat. Inquire McHenry Bakery, Green Street. Phone McHenry 287. . 18 WAJVTBl) WANTED--Girl or woman for "housework and cooking. $10 per week. Home nights or stay. Write Box "K," care of McHenry Plaindealer. 18 . . . f o r t h a t * a f M y e a r l y c o s t o f feeding a ral l"nls startling fact Is discloosdin an article in Coronet which declares that the modem Pled Piper needs more than a pretty tune to bring the rats from their holes. To prove it, Coronet tells about Chicago's "ratzkrieg," the latest move in that city's rodent warfare. One of the biggest difficulties in fighting a rat war, says Coronet, is to convince peojrie it isn't only the poor' in the slums who have rats. The rich haip them too; perhaps sleeker, fatter rats, but they hive them, and most people don't realize the amount of harm a rat can do. He starts" fees byeating away insulation and causifcg short circuits. His worms may pass on trichinbsis. He leaves hii excreta everywhere and through that his" parasites and germs. His fleas spread bubonic plague and perhaps infantile paralysis. His lice carry the typhus germ. The interest in eliminating rats in Chicago began when the commissioner of public works became interested in rats as part of the, city's sanitation problem, and he selected Charles S. Eaton to be Chicago's Pied Piper. Mr. Eaton chose a bait made from red squill, a dried sea onion and from the eastern shores of the Mediterranean, because it will not kill cats or dogs or humans. The squill was mixed with crumbs or coarse meal, moistened to a dough and squirted with oil of anise to remove the human odor. FARM WANTED -- Individual wants half-section, grain or dairy, for cash. Must be going farm, good land, good buildings. Give size, location and conditions in reply. No agents considered. Address cSjre PHrindealer, McHenry. 17-2 RELIABLE PERSON WANTED--to call on farmers in north half of McHenry county. Steady work-, good pay. No experience or capital required. Some making $100.00 a week. Write McNESS CO., Dept. S., Freeport, 111. . !\ *17-2 MISCELLANEOUS GARBAGE COLUaCltfotS -- We have bought out the Ruwft-garbage route in McHenry and1 >wn Founding territory. Our trucks will make daily trips. Call Staines Bros., McHenry 6S8-M-2. *11-7 DEAD 1100 to $15.00 Cash Cows - Horses - Hogs v'^No help needed for loading! Prompt and Sanitary 8arvioe Day andM^irt, Bandogs and ITuHmyi Pfc-- HAVE YOUR ODES MADE at Katt- . ., , l Woman Killed Witt Ptre Catherine Bevan, the youngish wife of a 90-year-old New Castle farmer, George Bevau, who was the central figure in a notorious "irftr case of the Eighteenth century, Is believed to have been the only white woman executed by fire in America. In the early summer of 17S1, Peter JKurphy. manservant of the Bevan household, announced to {he neighborhood that Bevan had died "in a fit." Rumors of family discord gave rue to direct suspicion when it was discovered that Bevan's casket wfis nailed shut. When it was ordered opened, Bevan was found to have been badly beaten to death and his widow and Murphy were arrested. Murphy was hanged and Mrs. Bevan died by fire, because an English law of the period provided that wife who poisoned her husband die by fire. ner's Cidi Please call ingapplea. CLIFF"S RA erside Drive all radios ai ances. All FORD WI GARBAGE dispose of or oftenei rates. Regul formerly Smith. Phme MEN AND Jy for a 50. No $1,200 to mation. Write McHenry, D1 Electron Mieroseope The greatest extension of human vision since 1677, when Anthony van Leeuwenhoek first focused spermatozoa under his crude lens is the electron microscope. The electron microscope turns a beam of electrons on a world invisible to Ugh*, and in experimental tests, has magnified it 25,000 times, 10 times the top power of the best microscope. First electron microscope available for immediate practical use in acientific research was announced recently by the Camden, N J., laboratories of the Radio Corporation of America. The 2,500 useful magnification limit of the best light microscopes is imposed by the nature of light itself Microscopic details smaller than one-half the wave length of vi&ible light are literally submerged from sight FALL Delaware Auto Tags Are Permanent: Renewal Only The new permanent registration plates issued by the Delaware state motor vehicle department have a black and white motif. The plates, considerably heavier than the present tags, have a black background with raised numerals of white, which can be read at a distance of 100 feet. The name of the state appears at the top. Car owners whose vehicles already are registered will not be affected until their present license expires next March, but if a car is sold before the present plates expire the new system will be applied. Thus two types of license plates will be in use. In addition to the black and white, insets placed in either side of the plate will be of other colors. In the upper right hand side is a small slot in which will be an inset lMs by ^4 inches, which will specify the year. This will bear the state colors, blue and gold, carried by the present tags. On the left side, a larger inset, 2V4 by IV* inches, will bear the expiration date and will be of a color to represent one of the seasons of the year. Under the new system, a registration number remains with a car throughout its existence. The law creating this system provides that any time within three months prior to expiration of the period for which • vehicle is registered, the registration may be renewed for an additional six months or one year. ifing Grove, HI. before bring- 6c per gal. *14-4 107 Rivl pairs on home applied. CLIf- 9-tf , -- Let us jfaeh week, iff round rente, Ben J. 11-tf quickge 18 to Salary list and infor. Plaindealer, *18-2 Rags Do Not Fade Most modern rugs and carpeting will not fade except under direct exposure to sunlight because manufacturers use fast dyes which will last as long as the rug. When customers complain about light rugs fading in color it often happens that thl rug has actually become so filled with dust that it seems grayish and faded. A dry cleaning will almost always restore the original color. Naturally good rugs should have f«Dd c*r*< Ikn't iuatput them on, the floor and forget them. Use adequate rug pads under them. Turn them every few months so they won't wear In spots where traffic Is heavy or heavy pieces of furniture have set. Don't beat the rugs violently. It is likely to break or loosen the fabric. & \ Wv*" ^ *• . • .IK ksd' **>- Bond Follows Old Tral jJscob's Ls^er trail, the cttmMng highway which crosses the beautiful lower Berkshire hills, is U. S. Route JO, between Pittsfield and Spring Arid, in Massachusetts. As the trail ascends, mountain vistas are opened to the tourist and near the top a white pine forest which was destroyed during the ice storm of 1820, is restoring itself. At the summit, a wooden tower has been erected, from which the mountainside may be viewed for miles around. Jacob's well, along the trail, is a well-known wayside spring which dates from oxcart days. Medical authority today has reverted the age-old decision that frostbitten ears, cheeks and fingers should be rubbed with snow. Condemning the fact that rubbing with snow or even ice frequently is used as a first aid measure in cases of frostbite,; the current issue of '•Michigan Pidslic Health1 Corroborated the findings of top-flight medical authority by recommending the use of body heat to renew circulation. . ;*?Use of the warm hand or othjef sotqrets of body heat has long bctefr recogifized by physicians as the proper treatment," the journal stated editorially. "Yet," it said, 'the old popular notion of rubbing with snow or even with ice persists " of coemte Importance, for without whfch_makes,posheavier thai hydntgfa. universe woUld dissb**- into a cfcod of hydrogen fas. In strange contrast to this service of the mesotron is its ability to shatter the atom. - Scientists long have observed in the cosmic rays what they have called the "stosse" or burst, an atomic explosion. Samthing hits an atom hard enough to shatter it, and on some occasions there are chain reactions in which the particles from the original explosion hit, other atoms and explode them. J6 same of the singis>hit exploekmftbe particles fly jpnly a few inches^ but in the powerful chain reactions the bursts will spread over wide areas. A 30-foot spread has been measured. Hie $1,800,000 cyclotron being built by Professor Ernest O. Lawrence at the University of California, at Berkeley will develop a disintegrating ray 127 feet long, made up of protons with an energy of 100,- 000,000 electron volts, and if it succeeds in Speeding alpha particles to the same velocity they will have energies up to I00,G00,00(S volts. With -bombardment particles of these high energies available it is expected that Professor Lawrence and his associates will be able to shatter the heavier atoms, reducing them to their component protons and neutron^ or at least small fragments. ' ^ v Thought Should Be Given In Choosing Fertilizer When the need for additional garden fertilizer has been* determined, some thought should be given to the kind of fertilizer to use, and never should we grab up anything without consideration of what can be accomplished by its application. Previously heavy manured ground is generally in good physical condition. Chemical fertilizers are the ones which give quick results and stimulate growth. Among the offerings are dried blood, which is essentially a nitrogenous fertilizer with marked solubility. Dried blood is valuable for top dressing leafy crops of vegetables. Blood, when mixed with bone, is a better balanced fertilizer, although we are not likely to derive the benefits from bone as rapidly as we do from dried blood. Bone meal, by- itself, or mixed with another fertilizer, decomposes rather slowly; and while it is a long-lasting material that adds potash and nhosporic acid to the soil, it should be applied well in advance of its need. The complete fertilizers available at dealers combine the essentially needed elements carefully blended and reduced to a form which makes for most immediate solubility. Because of this* they can- be highly recommended. One of the- most rapidly acting nitrogenous lattBi i n n is nitrate of iOjU. Bc carafcri with its us*,--.,. 'Men live Longest Although scientists assure us there is no physiological reason why the average JwaHhy tnan or woman shouldn't live to bo a hundred, centenarians are so rare that most people have never seen one, A statistician reoentfer compiled figures showing that of the 40,€00,006 people or thereabouts, who live in Germany, lass than 100 are more than a century old. The saine authority reports 146 centenarians in 211 in Frances mod 410 in Spain. It would seem that where life Is less •trenuans longevity increases. Hm most astonishing figures come from that tmUMQOM and turbulent region, the Balkan peninsula, where it might be supposed that Ufa is less secure than olsewhere in Europe. Jugoslavia reports S73 people who am 100 years did or older, Rumania* M04, and Bulgaria, M00. rTSF&Sl A Wide WM and alligator parse set* J« the e»? •emMe,'which was maMai by rat Panish. Cat "Til give you a cent lor them, said the recipient of a pair of exembroidery scissors which had been tendered as a gift--thus evading the law of lore. Far it is written into the archives of superstition that a present of knife or scissors cutteth in twain the love or friendship between him or her that giveth and receiveth. Among the middle classes during the reign of Elizabeth in England, the staple lor wedding gifts was s pair of scissors. Object--to arm the prospective husband and wife with a weapon t< •ever the knot If it binds too tight Jfhn Bolger and John M. Fhalin spent Monday if Milwaukee, Wis., on Traffic was *}aMned 4or l0 minutes recently in Washington when a motorist attemptedto drive between street cars fnovlngln opposite directions. • - I !) I "I • "• I ' AdhfesM sy»%lai» - To remove adhesive taps stains from fabrics? anphr herosins or carbon tetradbSri$raMthen wash tha stain with warm sada. The Forgotten Man lbs term "forgotten man" which was so popular a few years ago was coined mora than a century ago bf William Graham Sumner, American sociologist and economist (1040- 1919), « littla ^ook called. "What Social Classes jpWtoJfcach QjMr." It was taken ~ -i- -- -- Ttw r . . . . . > * * in a radio as follows. "These unhappy times call for tht building of plans that rest upon tht forgotten, the unorganised, but the indispensable uoita of economic power, for plans Ilka those of 1917, that build from the bottom up and not from the top down, that put their faith once m&a In the -- man at the bottom of the economic pyramid." ...-- iHro boys, prlfjttd 10, accuasd.of thefts, rfead flva vetiiwiasTaf-^aoper's Xeather msnllng Tales" within three months ahd review' the books before a probation officer. He said the sentence may cause tfcem to keep thdn out of .future trouble. Search 20 Years for Mad Slayer Biased Trail of Death Prom Utah Into Mexico. . First V. •. Caasaa . ^ Hie first census HB f» United Statea taken in 1790, and it covered the. area now occupied by the District of Columbia and the following statea: Maine, New Hamp Aire, Vermont, Massachusetts Rhode Island/ Connecticut, Ne« York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania Delaware, Maryland, Virginia. Wes Virginia, North Carolina, Soutl Carolina, Georgia, Kentucky am SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH--A 18- year search for a murderer who blazed a trail of death from Utah into Mexico has not been abandoned, although passing years have dimmed the meager clues, according to the sheriff's office. A faded poster in musty office files, bearing the likeness of Ralph Lopez, Mexican rodeo performer and expert rifle marksman, is the chief memento of Utah's greatest manhunt. Thosi! who took part in the manhunt remember best the trademark that identified eacft of Lopez' 25 supposed victims--a single shot from a rifle through the center of the forehead. Lopez' jeglousy and hatred vof Gringoes" first took murderous form on a November day in 1913. Supposedly crazed with jealousy, Lopez shot and killed a man at Bingham, Utah. He sent a note to officers threatening: 'Don't follow me. FD kill anyone who tries to catch me.*' Authorities admitted Lopez' prowess with a rifle--he always fired from the hip and was a de&d shotbut they organized a manhunt that spread over seven of Utah's mountainous counties. Hundreds of men took part in the search and the Mexican chose his next six victims from them. Perched sometimes on a lofty mountain crag, sometimes on a tree, Lopez had to fire only once. And each bullet claimed another victim. Through cities, abandoned mines, mountain passes, tunnels the trail led, but the crafty murderer was always one step ahead of his pursuers Estimated cost of the Search for Salt Lake county alone was more than $100,000. Finally the trail vanished completely and posses gave up the search. A reward of $3,500 was posted and still would be paid. Sheriff's office reports, however, the manhunt had a curious sequel. One year later a train was traveling through Mexico below file Rio Grande. It was stopped by Mexican bandits who killed 19 of the 90 Americans aboard. One escaped and swam the R|p Grande river to safety. He reported each of the victims had been *hot once--through the forehead^ ^ H -r- 'ri ,:.iV a «A» i cat If Mm stayed at BARRAGE BALLOONS Grandma Drops First1* Stitch; There's a R DALLAS.--Mrs. D. R. Weyand, chubby great-greatrgrandmother of 91^ yearn who knits 9 sock a day for the British, dropped her first- stitch in years whan die received a letter from Buckingham palace. Written by Katharine Seymour, lady-in-waiting to Queen Elizabeth, the letter said: "The Queen commands me to write and say that Her Majesty has heard that at the great age of 91 you are' stiU kafttlttg isodk* for 4ha Red Cross, and the Queen desires me to send you a word of cordial appreciation for all that you are doing to help Great Britain at the present time." Mrs. Weyand, who learned to knit on broomstraws at the age of six, has knitted for soldiers .of four wars, Civil, Spanish - American, World war and the present conflict. The British wo--sa above are training ta service England's protective barrage Wilsons Their duty will be ta lower and fise the hage gas bags, samstlnies under ire front Nasi planes, aad repair bags aad equipment. Men now engaged In this work wiB ba-jreplaoed by women, enee they prove they are capable of the heavy labor Involved. •"" ' fu;v? Bead the Want A«s M&Safci • X OmI AUCTION FROEUCH Aacttaasors Collector Keeps Registry Of Old and Rare Violins SELINSGROVE, PA One of the finest collections of violins in Pennsylvania is owned by Guy H. Moyer, Freeburg, owner and manager of what he says is the ooly violin registry and information bureau in the United Bastes. At his work bench, Moyer, formerly a solo violinist, fashions violins. He uses curly m*nle and silver spruce wood, stesSobed for {0 years. All of the wotfc is done by hsnd, with the average -time for completion ot one violin about six months. Included in the rare and interesting violins that Moyer possesses in his collection is s Nicholai Amati model valued at $10,000. Clark's Six Worries Are Five Woman, $700 Cash FORT DODGE, IOWA. -- Court Clerk Hugh D. McMahn haa f problems and they are all women. McMahn's Job is to give fTOO to one of the five women, but he doesn't know to whom it should be given. The money waa an unclaimed deposit in an. Iowa savings Ha decided to disclose that h^ was the money, ful wotild women, all with the same name, that the money ia fx- > Sfc. V • Mr. and Mrs. Frank Block and chil dren of Marengo were visitors In the Fred Feltz home Bonday and they also attended theHftMOi f&fflflversary celebration of the ZInt flfosngOHeal Lutheran church. * Thomas P. Bdtger and Charles J. Reihsnsperger wars smang those from McHenry who mended the American Legion conventia^ in Milwaukee, Wis., Sunday. Mrs. Clifford Sherman has {purchased a lot on Center street in West McHenry and work trill begin in the near future on a new home for her. Mrs. Lawrence HAdatroia of lodfville, Kyt, returned to her home Mem. day after spending a week at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Payne. Ruth Bouril has returned to Washington, D. C., where she holds s government position after spending two weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Bouril at South Elgin. The BourUs were former residents here. Gfeamseya springers; fG . uI'MH" h •w II ille niI n air..' _ 1W».iwihe in Ufa Watties sobMion at the end of Center street.. Tbey ntoved from a house near the McHenry Golf course. The Ford Jackson family move# Monday from Johnsburg to the Weldt place on Main street which they Hf centiy purchsssd. Mr. and Mrs. Harold -Dickow of Gkkkgo are now oecnpyfiif ttair hosso near the golf course which was recently vacated 1>y Dr. and Mrs. R. Q* ChKwberttn. < - McHfBEY. IUinoig FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Rady Vallee and Orchestra Three Stooges AM Miller Rsseaary LasM (1) "TIME OUT FOR RHYTHU" ., . -- Plas -- -r, 8UNDAY -- MONDAY September 21 - 22 : Greer Gersea - Walter In now tedurileolar "BLOSSOMS > 'JSTHSDOSr^l P; --- Also Walt Disney's Cartoon - News and CooMdy TUESDAY r Adalts 20e (1^ Officer and r ^ ® the Lady" I (2) "Two in a ^axi' 1 . WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY PriodUs Lane 7 Jeffrey Lyns "MILLION DOLLAR LADY" SSI A•W **1 Ksy'.i i"1 - Relax at Tke Beautiful IrovAn , CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. kmy CVa- Leadin* Theatre FRI. - SAT. -- SEPT. 19 - 90 Sally Ellen • Dm Woods in "I WAS A PRISONER ON DEVIL'S ISLAND" -- Also -- TIME OUT FOR-RHYTHM" with Rmeaiary Lane Rudy Vallee SUN. - MON. - TUBS. September 21-22-20 Baa. cent, from 2:45 p. m., 25c to 8 P- si.; 30c after. Children, lie, John Wayne . Betty Kield «ad Harry Carey in "IVB 8HEPHBRD " THE HILLS" Made in Glorious Technicolor! Romance . . . Adventure . . . Tragedy ... Also---Cartoon • News and Novelty. WED. - THURS. -- SEPT. 24 - 26 Mary Martin.- Don AsMche in "KISS THE BOYS GOODBYE" with Rochester and Oscar Levant Ceadng Sanday! . "HOLD THAT GHOST" ' i" ' % "a -J rc .'•vS * ' ^ jt'if'iX*'- * WICK, Phone Lake Zatteh 3S31 -- Wheeling U-M On account of poor health and the firm labor situation, I will sell at Public Sale on my premises, 1 mile aouth of Volo, 4 miles northwesterly of Wsuconda, on U. 8. 12, on -- Saturday, September 27, 1941 at 12 olelock noon sharp 88 -- Head of Livestock 88 CASTLE --- 26 head of High Grade seys; 18 cows milking and _ Tx 7 heifers; 1 Guernsey Hull. HORSES -- 4 Good Work Horses. HOGS -- 52 Head of 4 months old Shoats. FARM MACHINERY Farmall tractor, plows and disc; Ideal manure Spreader, new; McCormick drill, new; McCormick mower; McCormick corn binder; potato digger; 2 sets harness; electric churn; DeLaval cream separator; roller; 2 cultivators; 1-horse cultivator; grain binder; 2 scrapers, one dump and one barnyard (all of above machinery in good condition, some nesrlv new). FEED AW> GRAIN 25 acres of good ripe standinf corn; 20 acres of soy beans; 10 acres of soy bean hay. Other Articles. TERMS: All sums of 016*00 snd Wider, cash. Over that amount % down with balance % months' time wOl be given on good approved notes st S% interest. Longer time ipay be arranged for before the sale. 8. J. SUSSBLL, Prop.|j:! ru. u . .. >3 ' W 'A '-j',-1 10PTU1EDT •*': I - •- . 3 Bolger's Drug Store ~i Grosn Strosl To Save Money? ths bast --d saaisst wayi to do so is to Imy |ov tirst now Mora the new tax bill takes effect Wo out give JOB • food aUowasos for yvnr old tiros oil tbo C&AMPWW, HI-SPUD, 8TAKDABD AHD OONVOT. . ' • ; :'l ' " . (;::•**• '• .f• I • - *<{«& ^ . v* "-r * B.kve, t Bowd* also-a qtksffld to to b«y- Hmos ^Traetor Tires; A^d don't forget to oonsfdor a aew FIEBSTOMS i are aone hotter! -u M If , ' "• Ooms fa and tot's talk over jour tinprMun. 7-fT Walter J. Freund 586 Main Street Phone 29# West McHenry l\-+Zr. ' '-i. ^ r«. J S; £ . t i i ,- i - J » 2 3 . '^ ; _ j V ® ' r •• - - • - • W " t j - : - • < " j . . .: . . . . • ' / • _ ^.rrrr wm .ait-iiAlii

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