Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Aug 1942, p. 6

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A'i.' ;• f\f«. <» « .«*»•« >• . i ' i0M00H"" • )i«i .»£> •*> '1*1' ui»< 5^- - ;/.' "•"•»' * .* ' k ' -- J.x n%" *v>\; £'***' f** ' 1 • "t v 1 t f- n X j> ~~ «."* . +. /" . -* "* ' -» » ^ ^ i'. HmSU i ". ' '• .' . .'".. . '"; ' . 1 1 , . "V >.'".•«> "\ *>."s-' Our | Washington L~. Letter • **^BS ,, iditorit! AwoAttdl fet' _ " • - -/^s" ' ^Washington," August ' 26 -- While * (^teaching the need for an "all-out for -war policy," it is difficult for many of these nationally-known advocates to live up to the doctrine. Politics -- continues to creep into the average conversation in official and leprislative . circles. Mingling political matters with urgent war issues is glibly explained as a necessary, function of the democratic process., As a consequence It is hard to draw the line where the ' ' political realm ends in this war-tinu. ^;:'1capita]. ' „ *• ;The New York Democratic hotninv X tidti for governor, consi'defed a rebuff for White House interference in locm . political feuds, stirred more £hah ordinary speculation. ©fTi^'-seekers ant* * " their backers are wondering whatis . next as voters are subjected to perrf" suasion by rival candidates.; T^»e ovei ! seas battle? in which our Army and , Navy participated have gradually « e turned to Number One; place in" topk* J^tH^cussions. Heavier calls are . » made to local draft boards to send men to camps replacing trained troops s«nt to coastal and foreign posts. Ranking1 high in public interest'is ' the revamping of the War Production JBoard recently subjected to a heavy fire of criticism. Chairman Nelson, no Jongt-r affable to the point of tempos * izing with the internecine scuttling of the vital war agency, is doing housecleaning to the consternation of hign officials. On the other side of the llfreet O. P. A. Administrator- Hender- •v.V- -fcMi is running., up against political Y^'ipolicy danger signals in demanding Workers forego wage raises. He predicts prices will skyrocket unless a halt is called to increased costs in the fbrm of wage boosts. A spreading -epidemic of strikes in vital war industries has government"Tabor experts on ; 'the defensive in taking over plants so Struck by union action. O. P. A. data showed wages exceeding a billion doli':'.'.."'-.- ni|rs a month have been granted this , jhsar. Early pledges of no strikes durr f feg the war have been dusted off but apparently ignored. If there were no ; elections, this year it is believed the r',;-• irtministrativ^ officials would display , . tougher attitude toward labor disployed would migrate to other industrial areas where hundre3s of .thousands of jobs are open. It is t!i«. old story of the city man who refuses to "move otHJnto the country, districts where emploWnent opportunities art plentiful at gorfii wages. Federal estimates are that five million persons will he required for war industries during the^ six months enuing January 1. Offcial figures show that by 1944 aircraft factories alone will be employing tout times as manyworkers as in 1942. Similarly, workers in ordnance plants will be increased 300 per cent and 500 per cent "i'n Navy yprds, air depots and Army arsenals. The wages paid; in these war activities, afe so high that they automatically draw Workers from factories having a lower wage rate. The ratio of turn-over in the aircraft industry is exceedingly high. The proposed wage scale. stabilization program (jjriay eliminate the constant shift in the'working forces from factory to factory where employers try to outbid their competitors fop,, the services of skilled workers. . * V« j, August 27, 19# ,13.. l THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER TURl^EB WORM k»t." -vj- --V Tester '$?• •u j \ ; sfcf"J * y At Aberdeen proving grounds, in Maryland, women of all ages now test guns, drive tanks and trucks, add in general do the work formerly done by men. The idea is an experimental one being tried out by the- ordnance department* and already it has proved to be a tremendously pppular one .with the women. - '--7"-" •. . ; Phantasy Gift Shows in Writing of Novelists In most run-of-the-mill novels the scenes that deal with childhood are better done, more convincing, more real and alive than the other parts. Novelists seem to find it easier to write about childhood than about g^irbance, farm price parity and other maturity, as if their own adult life, v-pressure politics. I had proved less important than the - Few people realize the gravity of j enchanted years, or as if a compul- : problems which the War Manpower ! sion lingering on from cKiMhood was "Commission is desperately attempting ! stronger than their adult will. Is so*.ve" Tfcey have the anomalous J Furthermore, the characters of a ptuatiotj of serious labor shortages j mediocre novel are sometimes pre- •nd unemployment in -various sections I posterously simple in motive and be- •f country now threatening the i havior, as simple as a child thinks auccessful development of the war production program. How to bring Idle men and beckoning jobs toget.-- lr without disrupting the economic . ind social life of the citizen is somer4hing requiring a quick answer on the part of the federal government. The llfanpower Commission has plenty of Ideas but refrains from taking a ijtrong position at this time. Farmers adults afe. Or they seem to have a child's emotions when a grown-up's are called for. Or they seem to be not warm, fallible, and contradictory human beings but just creatures in a fable, in a child's phantasy of virtue, heroism, villainy, danger or destruction. What happens to them is asr uncomplicated and as little related to what actually happens in this world as a child's image of Bill f was a regular at, the local pub, ind for some reason or other he usually came in .for a good deal of chaff. • • This particular evening he turned up as usual; but instead of hie cus tomary cigarette he was smoking a handsome cigar with the band on. This was too good to be missed, and the leg-pulling was even worse than usual, especially on the part of the landlordr' anugly ensconced behind the bar. Presently a tramp carhe in, and, approaching the landlord, inquired if he might ask the customers for assistance. Usually the landlord was pretty hard on the "gentlemen of the road," but this evening hfe grinned and said: "Don't ask me. , That's the guvnor over there smoking a cigar." It was Bill's turn at .last. : With., a flourish of the cigar he addressed the tramp. "O.K.." he said. "Tell my man behind the counter to start off with a ^qbj^rom the till." IMPERATIVE "You must be operal once." "Is it urgent, doctor?1 "It is. My office rent' is overdue riotf." ~ Rejected j . Author--I am glad, that out old friend de Wealth has bveen made to suffer--as I have done. Friend.--In what way 1/r - • Author--He wrote a neat little check and the campaign treasurer told him that his contribution, though possessing meritf was declined wHtfi thanks. Hydrophobia ' ^ Little Billy (at the beach)--What is hydrophobia, ma? - Mamma--Fear or dread of, war ter, Billy. iLittle Billy (after thinking it over) --Have all those pretty girls in bathing suits over yonder got hydrophobia? nigh cost ""Why don't you take your wife to the races? They don't cost much." "Don't they? The last time I took her there she picked the swellest gown she saw and made me buy her one just like it." • • "1' . -V Courage It is easy enough to be pleasant When everything goes just right, - But the girl worth while - ' Is the girl who can smile When her shoes are much too tight. Pagan Indians Favor One White Man Idea-- "•fjre appealing to their legislators to '::";:^V|}tain their assistance in recruiting • what will happen to it if it |e* : - Agricultural workers to harvest crops. I presses hatred of a parent. f>< The lawmakers blame the absence I Is short, the peril of one who has an affirmative policy on bureau- j an unusual gift of phantasy is that IfTatic red tape. The scarcity of farm j he may be emotionally fixed at the Workers is so acute that even the lead- j level of childhood, and a bad novel tog trade unions consented to an S:reement between the American and exican governments allowing for the importation of upwards of 50,000 lahorers in the emergency. The solons convinced that there is too rnireii. diversion of authority among government agencies with the result that the labor supply program is a botched /pattern. Mass meetings of farm own- •«rs have been held in various states, ^particularly in California, appealing ior an aggressive federal nianpower loiay. v On the other side of the picture, is commonly ^ form of regressicm toward infancy. You Own One ^ Airplane mechanics state that' a careful airplane operator who ha# a good airplane engine overhauls it at the end of every 250 to 300 hours. (Every airplane hour represents N0 to 125 miles of flight for the average types bf plane.) At the first overhaul it is usually necessary only to replace rings and grind valves. By the time for the second overhaul it Prepared Mr. Brown--TViey had their wedding rehearsal las', evening. ° Mr. Brown--Yes, they are now supposed to be prepared for the worst. '-•r/r? COLLECTION V ir to usually is necessary to replace pi*1 ^Congressmen from New York City! tons, rebore cylinders and replace City are demanding more government j some other parts. At the time of the Contracts to absorb the tremendous •oiume of unemployment and to take over factories shut down because they were engaged in r.on-essential activity. Most of these plants are not susceptible to conversion to war produ,- 1 to get old and- requires ™re atte£ tion. Estimates are that close to a tion. ^ ™ay Ja_st_ up _to 1,500 ^or half million residents of the New York metropolitan area are walking streets seeking jobs. Government employ- . ment experts state that the jobless crisis could be relieved if the unemthird overhaul probably the main bearings will have to be reground or replaced and the knuckle and wrist pins will have to be replaced. After 1,000 hours the engine begins 2,000 hours, factors. depending on other .Percy--I find it dooced hard cbllect my thoughts, you know. Miss Keen--Father say» it's always difficult to collect small amounts. Need Rubber-stamps? Order at The j on Sunday?" Plaindealer. ^ Conviction "My efforts to keep a diary convince me of one thing." "What's that?" • "That there are Very few days in the year on which ohe does anything worth recording." Answer That One "Cleanliness, remember, is BfXt to godliness.'? \ "Then say, teacher, why is wrong for us boys to go swimmm Isolated Tribe in Northern Michigan Adhere tot Ancient Culture. * - 'a WATERSMEET, MICH.--Paganism and the Indian culture of the days before Columbus are making a determined stand in the wilds of northern Michigan. They'll have no truck with white men, or their swing bands, or their marriages, or their divorces, or their priests and preachers -- those resolute Chippewas of Lac Vieux desert, an isolated spot whose nearest white town is Watersmeet, Mich. But there's one thing the white men are doing that the steel souled tribesmen go in for With a will. They have laid aside their pipes of peace and have declared war for- '^mally on the Axis. 'Americans-jFirSt,' " The young bravfes are more than willing to enlist, and a conscientious objector is as rare as & redskin divorce among the solemn facet! aborigines. : * "Any land good' enough to live in," says George A. Cadotte, tribal interpreter, "is good enough to fight for. That is our creed. Vfe are Americans, first and last, and war is our inheritance." • Sacred drums beat a rhythmic tattoo in the night and you can hear the chomp-chomp of moccasined feet around the fireside. Primitive powwows, weird medicine dances and fantastic rites are as much in vogue in this lake studded Michigan- Wisconsin border paradise as bene- <fits, bargain days and ball games are in Chicago. •/* There are no glittering shops, gyp joints, theaters, churches, night clubs--not even a post office--in this strange remnant of the frontier. Newspapers and radios are rarities. No one ever heard of a formal marriage ceremony and the Indians have no word for divorce. In fact, the rules of the outside world just don't go. Back in 1854, when Indian lands were ceded to the government, scattered bands were assigned to various reservations. The Lac Vieux desert band found itself at the L'Anse tract on Lake Superior. in sharp contrast to the fertile soil their forefathers had defended against the Sioux in the "l£nd>.ttt lakes," the new homeland was a marsh. They Just Turn Rebel. The band rebelled, returning to Lac Vieux desert--only to find that Uncle Sam had taken over. In desperation, the leader* appealed to President Lincoln--in about 1863-- and the "Great Emancipator" promptly signed over a 40 acre tract to the band without reservation privileges. Since that day, generations of rebel Indians have revered Lincoln, even though their knowledge of n&ttest Abe begins and ends at Lac Vieux desert. la 1870, President Ulysses S. Grant added 46 acres to the original tract* giving the band 86 acres of primitive wilderness in which to hunt, fishv and tra/p^^ven though ".white man law is boss." Life among the pagans is a medley of ancient and modern. Homes are crude--white man style--but worship is by tribal tradition. At home the tribesmen speak Chippewa, which i% "white man" for Oj'bway-- outside they speaik English. If they commit a crime they are tried in a w^hite man's courts' • Eighty ^Indians -- from newborn /habes to 80 year old sqpaws and wrinkled braves, make up the band today. Originally it numbered 200. Big. chief is youthful John Ackley, and medicine man. is venerable John Pete, 77 years C>lcL, who speaks little English. Interpreter and unofficial agent is Cadotte, educated Indian who speaks* fluent English and. received commercial training in Superior, Wis., before he drifted itt to stay early in the depression. Flight of Widow From Maiaya Is ^ Long Nightmare Arrives in New York After Trying Experiences; Husband Killed. NEW YORK.--Next time anybody asks just what it will take to wki this war think of Mrs. Olive Anderson- _ Her husband was killed in action in Kuala Lumpur. Her brother is lost sorh£wher£ in Malaya. She raced Japs 250 miles through jungle and air raids to Singapore, driving her sister-in-law and three infants to safety, writes Frank Farrell in the New York World-Telegram. She got clear of Singapore, before the surrender, via plane to Sydney. The boat she caught there was ,rammed by another in blackout off the Florida Keys. Then, plodding with its bow stove in, it provided an excellent target for threp Nazi torpedoes off Cape HaUeras, where' the sea is roughest on the Atlantic coast. . She arrived in New York recently, a "survivor." As such the British admiralty has charge. As such She wears a few things the Red Cross provided, has a few dollars the consulate provided, shares a small rcfom at the firyant hotel and patiently, graciously, courageously awaits the small ship that will run the gantlet of horror between here and home--dear England. Bombed Every Day. As Olive Moir just before the outbreak of the war, her wedding to John Anderson, son of Lady Anderson, was one of the most fashionable performed in Christ church, Lancaster Gate, London.^ He was a director in Guthrie, one of the richest companies in Malaya, and about to retire, but they decided on one last visit to friends out East as Mr. and Mrs. He could have hefen an officer, but he enlisted as a Buck private in. the volunteers. The Japs dumped their infernal cargo on Kuala Lumpur every day. Her brother pleaded with her to evacuate with his wife and three children--ages seven, five, and an infant of three months. Otherwise she would have stayed. Their Sikh 1 chauffeur refused to' leave hi? family, so they had to go> it alone. Twice on the 250-mile race they pulled over into fields, locked .the car and hid under trees and in a friendly Chinese hut as Jap planes strafed and tried to' bomb the car. That was the day after Christmas. In Singapore she had! a letter from her husband every day umtil January 10. On the 15th a messenger from the war office notified her that a Jap tree sniper was responsible. Plane Ordered Baefc- Twenty-one Dutch' transports sailed from Singapore with evacuees the day she flew t©> Darwin. A l0-year-old boy is*the sole survivor. That plane was ordered batHk to Singapore and shot down e» ro«te. Another plane flew her to> Syxiraey. From February 2$ until1 April 17 she and 239 others were aboard a heavily laden ship that wrestled with the Pacific and Atlantic on> its way to England. Its troubled1,, cramped passengers slept in the blackness of April 7 at 1:30 nrjhe morning. They were off the Florida Keys. Stodidenly there was a thunderous crash. Another blacked-out ship had rammed head-on into them and stove the bow of their ship until it! looked like a fishhook. It is amazing that it stayed •ou uab auuJ Ui-a 4t *W-Ui U ,m»m«wNm«T<r »K1a td navigate it at all. April 11 off Cape Hatteras the first torpedo struck., Fortunately rt hit a steel-beamed surface of the hull. The radioman sent out his SOS. Ten lifeboats went'overside. But for that the American destroyer that lifted them out of tumbling, treacherous sea» two hours later might not have hadi so many to land when it got to Charleston. All aboard the stricken ship- were saved. Ethyl Alcohol for Defense Ethyl alcohol is used in the manufacture of smokeless powder as a material > for the manufacture of ether, which ift turn is used as a component of a mixed solvent. While this is true, ethyl alcohol has two other uses in the production of powier. It is used as a solvent for water, or as a dehydrating agent. After nitration, the cellulose is centrifuged to remove water as completely as possible. The remainder of the water is removed with alcohol. After dehydration, the nitrocellulose is dispersed in a mixed solvent. This solvent is one part alcohol and two parts ether. Thus, there! jg qnnthor direct use of alcohol. Ilade in CJ. Manufacture of shoes in this cottn* try was begun in 1829. 1 * CHURCH SERVICER. St. MSry's Catholic Church Masses: • Sundays: 7:00; 8:30; 10:00; 11:80. Holy Days: 6:00; 8:00; 10:0®^'X: Week Days: 6:45 and 8:00. , First Friday: 6:30 and 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Thursday before First Fridays' ; After 8':t)0 Mass on Thursday! 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. ' Msgr. C. S. Nix; Pastor. McHENRY GARAGE Electric and Acetyle d ing. General Repairing, wSgbns and Trailers to Order! Rte. 31 -- John & Front Sts. Phone 97-J or 151 Ji Nick P. Miller "V A. WORWICK -PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture - Commercial Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying - Framing Phone 275 -- Riverside Drive McHENRY. ILL. ~ ' ' • ~*3U '• FIRE AUTO itt; Patrick's Catholic Church M&SS6S * 4 Sundays: 8:00; 9*00; 10:00; 11:00. Weekdays': 7"-80. First Fridays: 7:30. On First Friday, Communion distributed at 6:30, 7:00 and before and during the 7:30 Mask Confessions: - Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00 p.til. and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday. 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:0*1 te 8:00 Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, pastor. INSURANCE P L A,S EARL R. WALSR ; ^ Presenting *, , - ^ . \ Reliable Companies • _ V When you need insurance of any kdai *rt Phone 43 or 118-M LGreen & Elizt McHenry St. John's Catholic Church, Johnsbarg Masses: Sundays: 7, 8:30, 10 and 11:15. Holy Days: 7:00 and ' Weekdays: 8:00. 7 First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: * Saturdays: 2:3ft and 7:90. Thursday before First Friday: 2:30 and 7:30. Rev. A, J. Neidert, pastor. Community Church Sunday School: 10:00 a. m. Worship Service: 11:00 a. m. Junior League: 6:30 p. m. Epworth League: 8:00 p.m. Rev. J. Heber Miller, pastor.' Phone McHenry 677-R-t -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND & GRAVEL Special Rates fin Road Gravel and Lot Filling . . . Black Dirt & Stone Power Shovel Service . . Power Leveling and Grading- ; . . Cement Mixers for Rent.* i J. E. NETT ' Johnsburg , P. O.--McHenry Telephone Nou .<fh Stoffel & Reihansperger Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McHEfNRY - - ILLINOIS S. H. Freund & SOD CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Your Siervice in Building Your Wants. Phone 56-W. McHenry Zion Evangelical LnAcran Qhntfc Divine Service -- Nine o'clock. Sunday School --Ten o'elock." , Rev. R. T. Eisfeldt,, Pastor. It Peter'a Cathotte CWtfc, Spring: Geov* Masses: Sundays: 8:00 and 10 .ML Holy Days: 6:30 and 9*9* Weekdays: 8:00i First Friday. ri:00v Confessions: Saturdays: &30 audi Trtft. Thursday before First Friday: and ".13. Kev. John L. Daleiden, Pastor. Ill McHENRT LODGrE" A.F. * A. M. McHenry Lodge No. 158 meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month at the hall on Court street. Read the Want ^ds! (WNU Service) Afost Willing tq» Figfc»l r For Mother^ Troops Vote SAN PEDRQy CALIF.--Mother woe by a landslide when soldiers at Fort MacArthua took a vote to find out for whom they were most willing to fight. After her it was. a close race between father audi Col. W. W. Hicks, commanding officer at the Fort, The colonel had an edge. Ranked in the first 10 women were the boys' sisters, wives, sweethearts and Mrs. Roosevelt. In the first 10 men were President Roosevelt, Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur and Winston Churchill. Tenth in the women's list was Ann Sheridan, the movie actress. Tenth in the men's poll was "Sergeant Mulligan," a fiat-faced. English bulldog, the camp masoot. Youth Risks His Life To Get Into Air Corps NEW ORLEANS, LA.--Marechal O'Quinn, Tft-year-old New Orleans youth, risked has life once to get into the United! States naval air corps*, and he's ready to risk it again now that he's in service. O'Quinn is a former Louisiana State university student who tried to enlist in the air corps last May, but was turned down because at a physical defect that needed a delicate operation to correct. Although the operation involved a gamble with his life, young: O'Quinn accepted the risk. The operation a success* he is'now at the naval air corps, stationed at Norfolk. Va., and ready to risk his life again, if necessary* fur him country. ~'n';' Sisters Find Each Other After 60-Year Separation ' MERIDIAN. MISS.--Mrs. Georgia Grajiam of Meridian has ended her 60-ytar quest--that of locating her sister. Traced through a letter written to a friend in Atlanta, Mrs. Graham's long search, which took her from New York to California, terminated when she found that Mrs. S. C. Styron of Atlanta is the former Lena Garvin, her sister. The two hid become separated since the death of their mother 60 years ago. Charlk's Repair Stop Sign Painting Cj Truck Lettering Furniture Upholstering . and Repairing CHARLES RIETESEL A. P. Freund Co. Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Servke. --Road Btrilding--- ; Tel. 204-M McHenry, Phone 43 Vernon J. Knox ATTORNEY AT LAW -- OFFICE HOURS -- Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment McHenry ,- .nfimw PHONfc 15 X-Rky Service DR. J. E SAYLEB DENTIST Office Hours 9-12 and T-5 Ehrenrngs by Appointment Thurdkycr - 9 tit t? IVfain Street :---: W. McfTeorf TEL. WOSXHER LAKJ3 158 DR. & L. WATKEKS Dentist » - Office Flours - Tuesday & Saturdays: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evening* and Sunday Mornings Awaatawnt! Lookout Point Wonder lake, IU. WA&TEI) TO BUi We pay $3 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt's Mink Ranch Johnsbarg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 669-J-2 CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES & CATTLE We pay phone charges. mAHR • flyT •••!• •> II MH 19 w Bli JTJCiXW i3£iAVXU£ SINCLAIR iGta, Oils and Gi iMM Cor Routes 31 and 120 -- McHenry Horses Wanted I B U T OM and Disabled Horaea. Pay front $5 to $14 ARTHUR W. WBRRBACK Phone 844 439 E. Calhoun St. WoiMfstodc, HL McHENRY FLORAL CO. -- Phone 606-R-l One Mile South of McHenry on Route 31. Ylowers for all occasions! / Gold Workers Only 600 persons usually work .in the manufacture of gold and silvr leaf and«foil in the U. S. normally, but they rtianufacture about $1,500,- 000 worth of gold leaf annually. Prisoner Robbed in Jail; His Cellmate Is Accuset r MEADVILLE, PA --An hour after a prisoner in the jail shouted "I've been robbed," Police Chief E. C Gibson booked tlie prisoner's ex cellmate on a larceny charge. Two workers had occupied the f same cell after being arrested on a charge of drunkenness. After one of the men was given his freedom •his companion reported $24 had disappeared. The chief gave the acthiel a separate cclL McHENRY TOWN CLUB * Riverside Drive and Pearl Street Mixed Drinks of All Kinds OUR SPECIAL BARBECUED RIB8 Phone 12 McHenry Smart Spider The trap door spider oovers the hole it lives in with a hinged lid. _OUo Commuter Oalen E&ward Elser, a graduate music student in Kent State university, flies his own monoplane every day from Youngstown to Kent to attend classes--a total of 2,900 commuting miles every year. Elephants Damage School. Broken windows in a school In Clacton-on-Sea, England, were ""believed the work of thieves until pupils returned from their vacations and explained. They had fed buns to twp elephants quartered nearby. During the vacatiqn time the beasts grew bun tuingr^ and triad to enter the school. Good Brakes Save Your Tires " K E E P EM R O L L I N G " * If you are having brake trouble, bring your car or tmeff to our trained mechanics for expert Brake Service. Remember, good brakes give your tires the chance to give you the maximum service at minimum cost. Cqtme in today for a checkup on our State Approved Safety Lane. These services will lengthen the life of your car. Motor Tuning Lubrication Tire Repairing Will&rd Fast Battery Charging CENTRAL GARAGE FRED J. SMITH, Prop. Phone 200-J Towing Johnsburg r

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