Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Jul 1943, p. 5

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

. 1" -r ™ ~ 1 ' > \ ' • •'" '*!*>,.\, t. WjWWfft wp1 T " " "' - .vr-. * .#» v;vk * V.\ thinner, My 1, IMS >« •>".-. '.;< > ';.? S® THE McHENSY PLAINDEALEK SHAMBOOKS STAGE NINTH INNING RALLY TO BEAT RICHMOND rip Tiv0 I by EARL R. WALSH B: '- Los Angeles, CaHfornifr June 19, I9fl Itefcr G*rl* •. • A ~ . In your column of Jane lw yw %'-rote you were betting on the Loys in |he "Services vs. Zoots." Well, you - ijjron. .. ., Since I am "only (censored) miles ^irom Lo« Angeles, I had a chance to tee the fun. It is truly a strange sight .;-|o see a lad running down the streets Vith gayly colowl shorts that had «nce been shielded from public eye by more ostentacious suits. The towns 'Fox Hunters/ I. Schmitt Vnd Co., would really have had work here paying good returns. Rumor has |t the Zooters are all having their locks sheared at *1.25 per copy. But then if one'si too busy one cant go .r*ox lrantinr ***> Eari? - See you soon, ^ •$!i ' BOB WINOSU-;;- g|Dear Friend Bob: _• ^ Or should we say Sgt. Bob 7 . 1 Glad to hear that you -*%»e Zoots. It struck us light Along W too much material >YUS wasted M gang M th< Whose soot suits. Couldn't some of whokrstafF •-:^tht»t material be used to make uniforms for those zooters who have so much time on their hands? Or wouldn't the army want em. We have to be ki^d of careful m remarks about those barbers. know! Frank about takes all the energy out of you the first, few days. I have run across fellows here that have been to all paHs of the world, including Russia, North Africa, Solomons, New Guirvea, etc. They know more about what goes on than POTTO of us will ever realize. The one thing that marks them mostly is their quietness when it comes to talking and an outsider will very rarely ever get a word out of them on what they have dene. Well, Earl, thanks again f'.r the paper and hope to be able to attend the Legion Carnival over the 4th. J. H. DOWNS,eA.M. M. 2/c. Dear Jack: Very interesting letter. It seems good to hear from jeflews who are fi iding their training interesting, j Confidentially, yours truly deserves .little credit for sending your home town paper. We collect all the addresses possible and try to Things looked none too, rosy for the Shamrock nine at Richmond last Sunday, but the boys put on a drive in the final inm ig that netted three runs and a 6 to 4 victory. Taking advantage of Shamrock miscues, Richmond built up a three run lead before the Shamrocks could score a run. The "Micks" scored all their run* in the last three innings, as the> mixed hits witfc a shaky Richmond defense. CRITICAL NEED FOR ©OdTORS, DENTISTS ? * FOR SERVICE EXISTS Major General Lewis B. Hershey, national director of selective service, because of the existing critical need for doctors to fill medical and dental personnel requirements of the army, has called on all state directors to instruct local boards to reconsider the status of all medical doctors and dentists of military age who are now deferred from military service solely because of occupation, it has Veen announced by Colonel Paul G. Armstrong, Illinois director of selective Fighter Pilot of Cary Is Listed as Missing Sad news is once more re-echoing throughout the county as word reaches us that McHenry county has another war casualty. Mr. artd Mrs. Arthur Frankes of Cary receiv## word that their son, Lieut. Arthur IVanke, Jr.. was missing in action FARMERS URGED TO USE POISONED BAIf TO KILL ARMY WORMS senic, water and molasses togethi*. and add it to the bran. If Paris greaa is used mix it dry with the bran a>|# then add the arsenic, water and m#» lasses mixture. # The oil mixture bait costs a littl# more but the bait stays moist,'onger. By substituting ground com tohs f part of the bran, the cost of applying Harry Dowel 1, star Shamrock hur- . service. ler, pulled a muscle in his side and "The Procurement and Assignment had to turn his pitching chores over Service," stated Colonel Armstrong, to"Dick Conway after two were out in i "is composed of committees of mectithe fifth inning. Dick pitched mag- j cal doctors and dentists. When one of nifieient ball for the remainder of the j these committees declares a registrant game. The only time Dick was in j available for military service, the serious trouble, was in the last of the > name of such registrant is reported to | ninth, but Arnold Anderson's sensa-j Lieut. Colonel E. Mann Hartlett, state i tkmal stab of a hard liner, which he j medical officer and occupational de- ; turned into a double play, ended the | ferment advisor on medical doctors ; game. W 'and dentists, who then recommends • Next Sunday the Shamrocks j to the local board that the registrant! Woodstock at McHenry. be immediately processed for indue-; Shamrocks--6': < ' tion unless he is entitled to deferment j As army worms have been reported in more than half of the townships in McHenry county, Farm Adviser John _ H. Brock urges all farmers to be on j "m7teriaHy7ed^cedT' the alert and scatter poisoned bait as . By kiUin(r the WOT7ns at thi8 tint# Young Franke is a fighter pilot and soon as the worms are seen. it is possibie that a second and thifii has been serving for some time in the j Tha poison bran bait material j brood of worms can be prevented «r African theatre of war. Only recent- • should be spread out late in the after- greatly redwed. ly he was cited for bravery in action j noon at the rate of eight pounds per and recommended for a decoration, j acre. It takes only a little of properly His family and friends hope that he j prepared material to do the job. One formula for a bait mixture is: -Twenty-five pounds of bran, 1 pound still may be safe although possibly a prisoner of the enemy. Strip Crops Check Erosion, Retain Moisture in Ground Strip cropping is an important practice on sloping fields. The reason commonly considered first is that strip cropping slows down or pre- ENTERTAIN (ydfcT "ROYALTY McHenry was liflelK# golf royalty last Sunday, June £fT when Jim Ferrier, pro at tTie Elmhurst Country Paris Green or white arsenic (not lead 'club and former Australian champ, arsenate) mixed together dry and to j visited McHenry and played the local which two quarts of SAE No. *20 new I eighteen -hole course. Mr. Ferrier did oil is added. his playing with Jimmy Smith, Me- Another formula is twenty-five IIenry pro, and Earl Seepe who is also pounds ofbran, three gallons of water, two quarts of cheap molasses and one our Sensitive boys, you Kempfer goes around with a sharp hatchet these days trying to lead us into saying something out of the way. That's "scalper" Kempfer. . Another thing, those barbers have eager to give us a "free . . , Anderson, 8b. of all the fellows m service, but the B Eolff<?r> cf offi<* does the work The . ^ lfe gets pleasure out of hear- j „ ..... „ ingfro.n the servicemtn and knowing :Ci;oueh rf* ^ j. % that therPIaim*ealer is enjoyed. .jw Bol' ^ 0* « ; .,1>Hnks for .^u^;^,,an4,^ ;iA st-jWing, 2te.. ^ up the good" work. "Sv L H* You wouldn't want to miss that ba'l game coming up next Sunday between the Shamrocks and Woodstock Alemite on our home diamond. AJB. •' B. ,.v.S • ; V'0/: ...« t'.T. H. s 9 !for some reason other than occupation. ! In such cases, draft boards are not authorized to give consideration to any pending application for a medical or |, Conservationists point out th*t, no dentax commssion m the firmed forces.,j matter how fertile any soil is, crops •".Resident • tyedioal doctors or ••; cannot 'be grown on it successfully dent dentists serving in hospitals or Without & good supply of soil moisvents erosion. ProducUvity c^t: Pound of ^hit<. arsenic or be maintained U the top soB is car- If white *rsemc ls u5"1' th« ried away by running water. , There are two great benefits from slowing down the rate of speed of surface water. First, the rate of erosion becomes much greater as the speed increases, and, second, the amount of water lost from the field also is much greater quite a golfer. Mr. Ferrier shot thK course in a brilliant 69 . ^ Subscribe for The PlaindeaJer! H. Dowell, p-S8^.. Totals.. 39 10 been too shave." We did •, hear |bat Irv pulled aiv awful trick on his wife late^V- but don't go telling anybody we told you kte w Ken Zimmerman, former University of Illinois athlete and former coach at Woodstock, is back in the Alemite lineup, adding considerable punch. Irv took "The Mrs." out fishing. She rowed the boat. He hollered his head off about not getting over the water. She kept rowing--all the time thinking that their string of fish must be awful doggone heavy. Then Irv got big hearted and pulled up the anchor! . So long, Bob--and good luck. t . » a » I* D«ar Earl : • . - - Just a line to say taanks for your services in seeing that we fellows get our home town paper. It sure is good to know what is happossibly heading the pitching assignment. The teams will meet at a time when both are riding high on a victories. Richmond--4 . •-- A.B. R. » H. V. Miller, If. ........ 6 2 Keuckcr, 3b. 4 • .. 1 R. Miller, lb. I.;.-.--.- 6 •: - 0 1 H. Brtiz, cf. 4. e o ;- 1 L. Loetscher, rf..... 4 Britz, ss 4 • 1 M. Stilling, 2b. .... $ c 0 0 Christen, 2b. 2 e H. Loetscher, e. 4 Robinson, p. 8 ' e Totals.... ..37 . 4 „• ,"5;: (institutions cannot be deferred unless 'they, under ordinary hospital staff; ! supervision, make their own diagnoses and prescribe their own treatments of | patients.. No consideration for defer- ! nient will be given to resident doctors ; ,or dentists who pre engaged primarily ' ; in furthering their own me<ncal educations ot- who are dependent on other .doctors in the work performed. ' "Doctors on medical school faculties or those engaged in industrial medicine who have been declared available ' and are acceptable to the armed forces will not be deferred on occupational grounds alone. '^Medical doctors or dentists who make application for commissions but who are not acceptable to the armed forces because of physical defects or lack of American citizenship will not 10 | be inducted by local boards. ture.. It is estimated that 400 pounds of water are required to produce each pound of dry matter in a corn crop, so a 100-bushel yield per acre -will take 5,000,000 pounds of water. There are frequent periods during the summer when the rainfall is too short to keep the corn jumping; and, unless there is abundant soil moisture, growth slows down or stops during dry periods. Strip cropping slows down the runoff of rainfall, so considerably more water soaks into the ground. This supply is available in subsequent dry wealher. 81 "As state director, I recommend j Seore by innings: « Shamrocks 000 000 213--6 Richmond 100 020 001--4 , ; Stolen bases: Larkin, H. Stilling, that all medical doctors and dentists Our Shamrocks have shown a 1°^ 'Crouch, L. Stilling, V. Miller, Keuck- who are currently liable for military of spirit and will give that Woodstock lpr H Britz Two-base hits: L. Loet- service determine their acceptability team a whale of a battle all the way. jj.cher. Double plays: Anderson, unas- to thc armCf} forces by apylvinp for sisted. Struck out by: Robinson, ^. commissions. They must remember, IftiMlstMi Center Most of the world's supply of tungsten comes from southeastern Asia in normal times. win this one if they stay on their toeV DADS TWO WEEKS The time is coming very soon perting back there, even though some When Dad's two weeks begin of us are only a stone's throw away , When we always got up early at times. I have been here in school for over two weeks now and each day gets more interesting. Right now they are trying to teach me to be an aircraft engine specialist. We have some night work to do each week (incidentally, the night work pertains to our school work), which makes us work a little harder. By the time we finish this training we should be able ^ to make all repairs and adjustmertts in a minimum of time under most exacting conditions. I feel very fortunate in being able to attend this school as I was the first to be sent here from our base, since it was established. That alone is enough to make one want to get everything possible that is offered here. We have our hour of commai^o training here every day which just No reason why the "Micks"_^an^t jpoweu( 2; Conway, 1. Bases on balls however, that a doctor rejected by the navy may be accepted by the army and local boards cannot give occupational classification to a doctor available for military service until he has eso'toni. been rejected by the army. . "Doctors- and dentsts undef 38 years of age, who do not have chi ^ ren bom before September 15, 1942, with v.hom they maintain a bo.ia fide The Johnsburg ball team toured • family relationship in their homes are over to Woodstock last Sunday to do 'now being considered for reclassificabattle with the strong Alemite nine, .tion and induction by their local but came home on the short end of a boards." And packed the children in And started on that joyful trip To the same old favorite spot But war rules and priorities* This slimmer say we're not. off: Robinson, 1; Dowell, 0; Conway, 4. Winning pitcher: Conway. Umpires: Evans and Peterson. WOODSTOCK WINS f LOSE GAME FROM JOHNSBURG NINE Scrap Bridges Four steel Central Vermont Railway bridges, torn from their foundations and hurtled into the water during the great Vermont flood of 1927 and the New England hurricane of 1938, and which were replaced by new structures, have been contributed to the national scrap salvage pile. Thek estimated So, we've dug up a Victory Gardwl ' And found that "lucious loam,'* To our surprise is underfoot In our side lot at home. » f And our back porch windtf* * When those evening shadows fall, It's as pretty a scene as we ever found That we hadn't noticed all . So as the time approaches For Dad's tfwo weeks to begin We're knowing the joys of both staying home And helping our country to win. .--C. aad G. Former Resident Recalls w Memorial Day Here in '83 German People Increasing Use of Nerve Sedatives Reports said to emanate from Italy are to the effect that the use of sedatives by city populations of Germany has reached a degree requiring drastic rationing. The de- 6 to 6 score. Pud Miller was pressed back into service as a pitcher and got along very nicely after a three-run start by the Alemite. With three runs in the eighth, the Johnsburg aggregation threw quite a scare into the county leaders. A little hitting at the top of the batting order could easily have turned the tide. Johnson clouted a home run for the winner*.. , ' ®ie Plaindealer is in receipt of a letter from a reader of many years, Mrs. J. T. Sorenson of Racine, Wis. In the letter she expresses pleasure in reading of the fine Memorial Day j rivatives of barbituric acid, known program celebrated here this year. under various trade names, are be- In retrospect, Mrs. Sorenson return- ing consumed "in uncontrolled i ed to Memorial Day sixty years ago j quantities bordering an ma*ia,M P when her father, Capt. L. E. Bennett, j quotes a prominent member of the H. Freuhd, <Sf. . A. Jackson, 2b. Miller, p J. Wagner, If. . S. Freund, lb. . R. Schaefer, rf. Jim Freund, 3b. ... 4 Lay, ss S G. Jackson, p. 2 J. Freund, c. ........ 0 A.B. .. 6 ...I-' .. 5 .. 4 . . 4 .. 4 Totals. ..M R. :• IM- 1 f : 0 0 % J ^ 0 1 0 1 e 1 . t e * < 0 2 was commander of the G. A. R. post in McHenry. She recalls the large parade of that year, when local girls, dressed in white, marched to the cem eteries and decorated the soldiers' graves. Personal Meeting When his plane was shot down m the Southwest Pacific, Lieut. Jack Conger, U. S. marine corps pilot, parachuted into the ocean. A few aeconds later, another pilot---a Jap dropped into the water beside him. Both survived, but the Jap was a prisoner when he reached shore. Chicago's Drinking Water The city of Chicago receives its water supply from Lake Michigan. Water is pumped through several tunnels connected with cribs located from two to five miles from shore. The cribs are heavy structures of timber and iron loaded with stone and inclosing the intake cylinders, which join the tunnels well below the bottom of the lake. The first tunnel was completed in 1887. The tunnels now form a labyrinth 72 miles in extent under the lake and the city. The average amount of water pumped per day is 877,811,- 400 gallons. American Chemical society. "It has undoubtedly been found necessary to conserve the barbiturates for hospital and medical usage in Germany," states Dr. William G. Young, chafrman of the i chemistry department at the Los Angeles campus of the University j of California. "It is quite conceiv- , | able that the repeated bombings of j Murphy, ^b. | cities and lack of sleep have driven Miles, lb. ... 1 many people to the use of sedatives. "In this country a prescription is | required for such drugs, since the. i average person if permitted to buy I at will at the drug stores might take {too large doses with possibly fatal results. "An unprecedented use of sedatives has been occasioned by the war. The problem of the hospitals is to get a sufficient quantity id quick-acting drugs." Woodstock-- A.B. Garrett, rf. ......... 6 I Woods,-tfa. ! Zimmerman,' cf. .... 6 Johnson, c. 4 I Judson, lf-p. 4 \ | Funk, 3b S ! Phillips, 3b. 1 ... 4 ' Boxleitner, p. .... ~ 4v : Schmidt, If............. 1 ....40 '«*••• 0 i i l o 9 t "I- 4 ** % H * i 2 2 : t v* 0 2 1 A :ii Fools Sergeant Private to his top sergeant: "Sergeant, was I gigged today?" Sergeant: "Gigged? What for?" Private: "A guy in the barracks said you stopped and looked hard at my bunk while I was on duty." Sergeant: "On duty? I thought you were sleeping in that bunk." • Totals... Score by innings: Johnsburjr 001 010 030--5 , 6 Woodstock 310 100 lOx--6 12 Two - base hits: Miles, Johnson. Home runs: Johnson. Double plays: Lav to Jackson, to Freund; J. Freund to *G Jackson, to S. Freund. Struck out by: Miller, 3; Boxleitner, 3; Judson, 3. Bases on balls off: Boxleitner, 2; Judson, 8. Umpires Butler and Wendt. .. ^»r Next Tear's Use No woman this year should look with disdain on the cottons, bembergs, and summer garments that are left at the end of the season. A summer's wear has naturally left its mark, but unless a garment is hopelessly worn it should be carefully saved. Next year it may be as welcome as buriedjreasure. To get the most good out of summer leftovers for another year, those that can be washed should be given a final anfl thorough laundering before being put away. Buttons and fasteners should be sewed firmly, and holes and tears should be mended. Clothes that are just too badly worn to be useful another year should be Tipped apart and the good sections should be salvaged either with an eye to combining them with other materials or giving them to the cloth salvage collectors for war uses. What Workers Eat The average soldier eats about 8% pounds of food daily. This means an army of 5,000,000 men will eat 27,500,000 pounds every 24 hours. And civilian workers eat, plenty, too. It takes the food from 155 acres to feed the workers who build one bomber; food from 43 acres to feed the men. who buiH one medium tank. And workers who construct a 35,000-ton battleship need the food products of 42.000 acres. Milkmaid Gives Clue for Vaccine Against Smallpox During a smallpox epidemic of the fete 1780s, when most people stayed indoors, Gloucestershire Physician, Ornithologist and Poet Edward Jenner one day met a little milkmaid walking about the nearly deserted streets and cautioned her to go home quickly for fear of infection. She paused only long enough to say: "Oh, I can't get it. I've had cowpox." The words aroused Dr. Jenner's interest and launched him on an inquiry which lasted several i . , ~ years All over the countryside he j tm> le,flets tum visited farms and spoke to dairy i hands. Invariably they repeated the | girl's assertion: Those who had j had cowpox went free of "fever." In 1796 Jenner was prepared to j put this rural belief and his theory j to a test. From the hands of a : dairymaid he obtained cowpox virus, ; scratched It into the akin of eight- 1 year-old James Phip$*. watched him 1 sicken slightly and then, recover, i Nineteen days later young Phipps ! was inoculated with smallpox virus, ; barely reacted. •Almost seven years elapsed before Dr. Jenner's discovery was accept- ; ed. During that time he campaigned alone, inoculated gratis as many as 300 poor Londoners a day. Finally the medical world conceded that ; vaccination meant immunity, and for the next 140 years it worked on the extermination of smallpox, now ! a textbook disease to most medical ; students. Devilfish's Mouth Unlike that of the other rays, the mouth of the devil fish is broad, extending across the front of the head. The teeth, minute tubercles, number in the thousands and are arranged in rows over the lower Jaw only. When the nature of the lood is considered, this reduction in size of teeth is easily understood. Devil fishes feed on the small crustaceans, fishes, and other plankton found drifting at the surface of the sea. To obtain this food the devil fish simply opens its mouth and swims along, removing the nutritious organisms as the sea water is : sucked into the mouth and strained out through the gills. There is a special sieving apparatus located ; just in front of the gills which is 1 found in no other fish. This con- ! gists of rows of elongated plates the i appearance of which has been ! likened to the stems of ferns with ea backwards. Subscribe to The Plaindealerl Aussies Supply Feat Australia, through reciprocal'aid, has furnished American forces with more than 26 million pounds of fresh meats, 20 million pounds of potatoes, 25 million pounds of fruit, and almost 5^ million quarts of milk. (oiflv'old* Inc. •FT BOS* QFLIEKLY IN TNI DRINK For noldi tnd kreathii* trooU««. Heip« pr»- spread; rt!irrc« r mjrtoai*. Warn Iro» the InM) taendisordef*. ] Ut^d aloue, or ia www with YAMO-SritA^. SPKAY WITH VAPO-SPRAY Orwb«*l«ofth*hird« Rapid in . ftvl v I^anhiuo NOW, *nd be p* p*red. Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry Get Patrol Boat The government of Ecuador recently acquired a 400-ton coastal patrol boat under United States lendlease arrangements. The ship will be used for training midshipmen of the Ecuadorean naval school. Safeasrifce for The Plaindealer! Cliff Dwellers ' Ninety per cent of the citizens of Copenhagen, Denmark, lived in apartments. To this fact is credited Copenhagen's reputation for spending more per capita for amusements than any city in Europe. It is a city of diners-out, gayer than Paris. People find pleasure in sitting at tables. Even the theaters have semicircular shelves on the backs of the seats, with "table aervtce" uninterrupted by the show. Doable 1%:.' Hotbeds in these times are not always places to start plants. Housing conditions in some towns are so bad that beds are rented on an eighthour plan. The occupant of the bed gives way to aaother. rgptgr at-the end of his shift. , Shock Treatment outlines for first aid workers should be modernized at once by modifying those portions dealing with external heat for the alleged prevention or treatment of shocks, authorities say. Instead of warming the shocked patient, as has been the general custom in the i past, he should be allowed to maintain the lowest safe level of temperature. WANTED--Maintenanoe man. Hunter Boat Company. SG-tf Trade In Your Old Battery on a new We have a complete stock of TIRES, passenger sjid track. Bicycle tires and tubes. You can now have your tires retreadedwithootsn OP A order. Bring them in. > ft • TIRE AND TUBE VULCANIZING Sinclair Stock Spray, 75c per gallop. Walter J. OFFICIAL TIRE INSPECTION STATION MAIN ST., WEST M'HENRY PHONE 294 LH rU" PMdtie 2 West McHcinryr YOU'LL FIND 0 CALIFORNIA WHITE HOSE Potatoes . 10 LBS. 49* CALIFORNIA VALENCIA JUICE SIZE OrasgM • a • B07 33* PURE NATURAL FLAVOR Pineapple N*b°t JUICE CAN NEW 6 KEEN Cabbagt . LAR6E SIZE CncamlMrs ..CAN NATIONAL FRCSH CREAMERY GRADE A .CTN. REFRESHING Pineapple UNSWEETENED Grapefruit Jvlc* AMERICAN HOME Temate Juioe ..,*CAN t2e VEGETAILE JUICE V-8 Cocktail «-oz. CAN XAM 15C VITAMIN RICH TOMATO I Mw CAN"2I* AMERICAN HOME CUT Green Bsans HO. I CAN 20C LORD won FRENCH STYLE Green BeansNo. ICANISc LARSEN'S MIXEO VEGFIAILES v*c-an aSsUe1* UNSWEETENEO Grapefruit JBIW^CAN 13c TOMATO SOUP Campbell's'^ •J NATIONAL WHOLE Kernel Cern NO. 2 CAN 14C VEGETAIIE SOUr CAMPBELL? CAN 14C ..CTH. 17C 25c MARIGOLD Margarine MARGARINE Geod Lick c™. FOR SALADS OR COOKING Mazela Oil GLASS 32c ' FOR SALADS OR COOKING MmliOil FULLY HTDROGENATW SHORTENIWG Trend &V57C *• FURE VEGETAHS SHORTENING Spry SJTfC htrm V«9*t«tela Sfcort»»i Crises 2^,'s 19c MACARONI ANDCHEESI Kraft Dinner 2nc«i M ft C SPAGHETTI Dinner ...PM. 2§c r SPAGHETTI DINNER • LM* Clvk ' NATIONAL UNSWEETENED Enp. Milk 2"£g,M7c * PET OR CARNATION Eup- Milk 2'SCm 19c * NON-RATIONED AND LOW PRICED | CORN FLAKES. . ... Kellogg's ll-o*. pk£. 9c 1 Pep lUflow'* WltMt FUkat t-OZ. PKG. 3 •REAKFAST OF CHAMPIONS Wheaties W DELICIOUS-NUTRITIOUS Cheerioats CRISP--CRUNCH* Grape-Nuts GRAPE NUTS Flakes VARIETY PACKAM Kellogg's KEL LOSS'S All-Bran SSMJe 1*e u-or P«G 14c kg 23C 1*. 02. PKG. 19c KELLOGG'S Krumbles ... FORT DEARIORN Cern Flakes POST Bran Flakes FORT DEARIORN Wheat Rakes ,. NEW PUFFED FLAK0 KIX RICE KRISPIES KELLOGG'S ........iSS 11* »e 14c i.«9c 12c 57iP£ 12c COFFEE STAMP No. 21 N O N - R A T I O N E D FOOD V A t J E S COFFEE Maxwell 1-lb Hou>« J«r 34' DILL PICKLES Bailey's 91 9k JAR FCL ] COFFEE Hills Bres. .......... COFFEE Chase & Sanbtrn. COFFEE Manor House COFFEE National Deluxe . I-LR ...JAR 34c £l39c 'ja.SSc &27C GIFFORO'S JUMTO Rip* Olivts *£V30c AMERICAN HOME SW1ST Gherkins JAR National FrMch. H«<U»d * H©r»«r*dl»* Mustard "j?, 10c CREAM SALAD MUSTARO 25c VACUUM PACKED COFFEE NathmalD.iu..'jt30* I-LI. ....•AG IRHMIW COFFEE American Homo *7% CAFFEIN FREE Sanka . .JA« *77. CAFFEIN FREE Kaffee Hag .....JAR JUMBO WHIT* BREAD Smooth ¥••*••» ouQhly b«k*4. " toait. ENRICHED White Bread GOLDEN GRAIN Donuts SALERNO Butter Cookies SALERNO ^Grahams ....... 1 French's COME AGAIN Sala4 Dressing 4-02. S....JA* 19c nJmAR 19c H O U S E H O L D N E E D S 24c 37c "•36c iy,.Li Qo LOAF « .. J. Mor» *or- IM «oM«a cfkp i56e „..90L 13c *P°KGM. 7c 14.0. .PKG. 19c ROIL 5C <?T. 23c ITU .a i9c HAZEL Tiau#....... AMMONIA Little Be-Peep HAZEL AmmeaU ....... CLEANED Zsre ....... WAXED PAPER Rap-in-Wax 3 MINERAL POWDER _ Rai CLEANS A MILLION OHINGS ^ o»kit« ....... HAZEL Teweft OT. ITV. 19c •n. If* ROUS I »• ROUS 17c NATIONAL rm STORES m. '*•.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy