Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Aug 1943, p. 2

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Two JHX KcHENBT PLAINDEALEB Thursday, Augiwt 26, 1943 » , F ~)tr •-•*** • •• ~- '?•' A. ' • •--ft SLOCUM LAKE (By Mrs. Harry Matthews) Miss Frances Converse and Martin Bauer enjoyed a chicken dinner at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Bar! Converse last Tuesday, . . Chesney Brooks? in company with a sailor from a social center in Chicago, attended the Musical Festival in Chicago last Saturday evening at i Soldier field. i Frank Matthews of Crystal Lake was a supper guest last Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthew?- .. Mrs. James Thomson of Williams Park visited at the home of Mrs. Lottie Tennant in Chicago Tuesday. Mrs. C. H. Hansen and Mrs. Robert Liu'iiing of Roseville were calkrs iit ..McHunry last Wednesday. A. :B: Abney of Libertyville was a A^ller at tW home of Mr. and Mrs. r}4nrr vM <i 11 h c\v s last Fritiny evening wird Ne»«hnpm REDDY FOX PLAYS SPY fit Kills Banker, Is v Given Life Term r All on Same Day REDDY FOX didn't have to get up early to be hiding "behind J the fence back of Farmer Brown's < corncrib when jolly, round, red Mr. I Sun chased the little stars from the A rtian w'ho lost his job soon after ' sky- He didn't have to get up ON THE HOME FRONT vJ/-\ war began went to see a friend who early 'or the very good reason that had obtained a post in a much- i he hadn't been to bed. You see, criticized department. His friend Reddy Fox does a great many things was sympathetic and said: "I think that he wouldn't like to have seen, I can fix you up with a job here." so he does them in the night when The job seeker was taken along j most of the other little people of the corridor and installed in a com- j the Green Meadows and the Green fortable office. His friend left him i Forest are asleep. And it happens with these words: "Now, don't be I that often he does not go to bed at surprised at our way of doing things, j all at night, but sleeps in the day You'll soon get used to it." • - , j when most honest people are abroad. . , The man settled down in his of-j He had been roaming about all this Nlr. and Mrs. Rolland Shetjer and. fjce> read his newspaper from cov- night, and now he had come to ' joii. Rolland. Jr,,.of Chicago and Mrs. er to cover, and solved the cross- watch and see what was going on .1'rank l-a Belle of Wauconda were ^orcj. Then it was time to knock I at Farmer Brown's corncrib, to see 'ifuhcheon and evening guests , last ., off. The same thing happened eV- j whether or not Farmer Brown's Boy "Wiqr^lay^'at the Home of M,r, att&'Mrs. eiy succeeding day. had been setting a trap' there for. % tf :Ha)i<en. > , > •- During the second week he met : Sammy, Jay, as Sammy was so sure ' VMi. and Mrs Arnold Burkhartf Mr. hi$- friend, who asked him how be j he had. •and Mts/ H. Ludermann and Mr._and lik^ the, job. ^^ . Just ajs the little stars disappeared and the first faint light from Mr. Sun cozy and warm. 1 m quite comforta-' r" ble, but I don't think they trust me be^n to chase away *** black *hadr here. Every time I set foot outside the office I'm followed by two young men. They even shadow me when I go to lunch. Am I under suspicion?" "Not at all," replied his friend. "Those fellows are your secretaries!" - KNOWS OWN MIND F^ Holska of Chicago Surti df,y . guests the home of Mr. and Mr^; WmV Burkhart at Williams Park. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Hayford of Crvstal Lake visited" at the home of Mr. and' Mrs. Harry Matthews last Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wallace of Lake Villa visited at the home of Mr. tiid Mrs. Elmer Esping Sunday. Win, Burkhart of Williams Park v^s a caller at Barrington last Monday. John Blomgren and Mrs. and Mrs. Geo. Lunderen of Wauconda called on Mrs. John Blomgren at St. Therese: liosmtak Waukegan last Saturday, j Mr. and Mis. Wm. Burkhart of Wil- j. liams Park entertained Mrs. A. Voss, Mrs. S. Tallisch and Mrs. A. Knockanius of the Park at their home last Wednesday evening. Pinochle was played and delicious refreshments served, Mr. and Mrs. Campbell and two children of Chicago and summer residents of Island. Lake* visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Mat-; feather--Betty, what -'-ttaft.-"••ItS*.' thews Monday evening. tentions of that young man you are John Blomgren was a visitor at the permitting to call on you so often? " -heme of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ander- Betty--Never mind that, Dad. I s-cn at Cary last Sunday. j know what my intentions are. Mrs. Geo. Lundgren of Wfcoconda --; spent Tuesday at the home of Mr.t _T. Chip Off Hard Block and Mrs. John Blomgen. 1 . ?ith a big struggle the farmer , • . „ had sent his son to college. At the end of the first year the lad brought back his report. He stood second in his class. "Second?" said the father coldly. "Why weren't you first? What do you think I'm sending you to college for?" , So at the end of his second year he proudly displayed his report. "First this time, dad!" he exclaimed. s The farmer looked at the report in silence for a few moments; then he shrugged his shoulders. "Huh!" he. said curtly. "At the head of the class, eh? Can't be much of a college!" j ows, Reddy's sharp eyes saw some- ; thing move over at the corner of j the old stone wall on the edge of the i Old Orchard. Then a little dark form scampered across the road and ; there was the scratch of sharp little j clews on the tree growing near the corncrib. Reddy grinned and watched the top of the tree. In a' minute the same little form ran out along a; limb that overhung the corncrib and nimbly jumped to the roof. It ran along one edge and then disappeared. Reddy guessed Modern Chaplain Rides the Circuit in an Airplane The war has brought back the circuit rider, that famed clerical figure of another era, but this time he uses an airplane instead of a horse. Chaplain (Capt.) William E. j Taggart, who was chaplain of the j 19th bombardment group, United States army 6ir forces, has told about it. Chaplain Taggart wears the Silver Star, awarded him for gallantry in the Southwest Pacific. : "An army chaplain assigned to an air corps unit in a combat theater learns that he cannot expect his ; men to attend his services regular- ! ly," Chaplain Taggart said. "So he has to go to the men. Many times I have boarded a plane and gon? to the men, hidden maybe in the jungle and awaiting a chance to attack 6t to fly og n defepsiv? rni§- ,5ion-i ^sven't time to listen To found Pet ' sermons, and the chaplain has to go by each plane, give a short religious message to the pilot and the members of his crew and then hurry on to the next. It is circuit riding all over again but a little more modern than that which we had in the old days. . « ; "A chaplain doesn't have to 'sell' ! the Word of God to his men. His main job is seeing that religion is always made available to them. Of course, he has the never-ending job of visiting the sick and the wounded, the reviving of the spirits of the downhearted and the burying of the glorious ffead. He never feels his work, is through, but he also never feels that the seeds he sows do not bear fruit. All around him he can see the fruits of his work. There is a need for more and more chaplains.' and, even with the full quota as- : signed to us> there won't be enough; to do the job as well as we of the ; church would like to see it done." Knows the Answers Peter was visiting his aunt in the cqyntry, and this relative was strict with him. One thing upon which she insisted was the observance of Sunday as not a day for play. So when she er sailing his toy boat in the bath on Sunday afternoon she was grieved. r't)on't you know, Peter," she said, reproachfully, "that it's very wicked to sail your boat on Sunday?" "Oh, but aunty," explained Peter, anxiously, "it's not a pleasure trip. It's a missionary boat going to Africa." • Justice Moves Swiftly for Man Who Slew Cashier •'•'•...••'•'in Attempted Holdup* - SHAWANO, WIS.--Wisconsin justice moved with such rapidity the flJcCULLOM LAKE friends liere wish him a speedy recovery. '• • John Padgett of "Richmond and Anna Mae Smith were united in mar- . riage. Saturday, August 21. The wed- ( y Marie McKim) • J dinner was served in the home Correction--On Au^ftist 1& I re-j of his mother, also of Richmond, Mrs. ceived a letter from yeoman Third- Kennenberg, after which the wedding Class Berwyn Bourelle in California, j party and other guests spent the evecalling my attention to our column ning at McDonalds, where refreshon August 5, in which I had him listed among the army men, instead of the navy men. The article should have read: "Among our permanent men serving their country are Berwyn ments were served, is his aunt. _ McDonald Special tice moved with sucn rap1Qliy u- Bourelle, u. S. navy and his brother,! the Property Owners other day that Remhold Flessert, 25- Jack Bourelie> v g army » That was I associatlon held lts meetinfc year-old farm hand, who shot and j killed a bank cashier in an attemptmy error, can t army. blame that one ed holdup at noon, was in the county j 'he ,ce know ""iceman! jail by evening under wnUnra. of I" WW*.* ! life imprisonment for first degree at the Beatty residence. At this meeting five directors were elected. They are the following: Ray C. Willits, W. Tumey and S. F. Beatty, each to serve three years. Those who were elected to serve two years are Miss Rose Hagedorn and Ed Doran. The . officers elected on August 15 are S. On Wednesday, August 18, Mrs. ,F. Beatty> president; Ed Doran, vice- . . .. . • , ° the following president; Art Stuhlfeier, secretary foot after the shooting. , , ladies, Myrtle Coveney, Helen Shier, and Rar> willits treasurer At this T^nfodttedW' 1 CK'oe Campb.n, Market Manure.; £ ^ i-itattn so we accommodated mm, saia , antj LoUlse Kruger of the Austin District Atty. -KS J. Brunner. The * official added tnat Flessert was tckmurder This speedy disposition of the case followed Flessert's capture in midafternoon by a posse which pursued him into the woods where he fled on i Turney the service. Much obliged for calling' my attention to it. ' No, you. have not i lost disfavor. Would like- to hear | from you again. j make the decision. Directors from the Community club who were present at the meeting on August 22 were the ^following: F. W. Bailey, president; Mr. Bisoni, Mr. Burzinski, Mr. Paits, Mr. Hubsch, Mr. Carlson, Mr. Durr, MT. Devik and Mr. Delahunty. Those from the Property Owners association at the meeting on August 22, held at the Beatty residence were S. F. Beatty, Ed Doran, R. Willits, W. Turney, Cl Feiereisel, G. Schubart and Miss Rose Hagedorn. rr tr n n i, Austin was extended to the Community club Town_Hall Red Cross Unit of Surgical requesting the presence of Hs officers ^singS in/hicr- Th€y arri^d!>nd board of directors to attend pun in the morning and was actually ; an da;";,y"tSPAll -hls^ladiT^i^ mceting on Au^st 22 at the Beatty serving 'his life te£i behind the pris- 'i w k . ' ^ residence, to discuss a vital question on bars before his crime was 24 c d' f " Turiiey' ^fve been ^ "i Concerning each property owner. The hours old. u same, table since Pearl jnv;tatjon was accepted. The results Waives Hearing. °'w,as bombed. Thelatter has: 0f ty,i8 meeting will be explained in Brunner said that he issued M j "Ver 800 hours to her credit. Myrtle a^ Sfatement to be, sent to each propdegree tnurder warrant, for Flessert Coveney is a cousin of Mollie McGee, • erty owner by mail in the near fu- •"r.-*,- Bee Active Six Weeks IK^ien flowers are plentiful, a worker bee will wear itself out in about six weeks in producing its • quota of a teaspoonful of honey. While the average annual yield fqt the whole country is less than 90 pounds, a good hive may products' several hundred pounds of honefcr in a year, depending on the flora, " location and strength of the colony* and to a great degree on the weather, particularly during the flowering Of a single high-yield crop. Some of the honey is needed to maintain the colony over the winter, but most of it may be sold, at prices ranging from 10 to 35 cents a pound at retail, according to type and quality.. as soon as the snan was brought to his office after the capture. Flessert waived preliminary hearing and was taken at once before Circuit Judge Arold Murphy, who accepted the bandit's plea of guilty and imposed sentence. The victim of the attempted holdup was John Perrar,'45, cashier of the bank in the nearby village of Birnamwood. Perrar was serving a customer in the bank when Flessert. wearing dark glasses, entered and flourished a gun. Sheriff Stanley Brown said Flessert handed the cashier a sack which he ordered him to fill with money. Instead of complying, Perrar dodged out a rear door. Flessert became frightened and ran out of the the well-known radkr star of Fibber ture. It win be up to each of us to McGee and Mollie. Park Supervisor! Mr. Bosserman graciously offered the • use of the park facilities for this | activity. | Joe Crick of the army has been • home on a furlough. Saw Rollie Justen up here while i he was on furlough. He certainly looks fine. Tells me he gained about: 10lbs. The navy agrees with him. j Bud Palm, son of Mrs. Palm, who i has a home near Huskas, left Monday ] for Great L4kes. His wife is a cousin 1 of Mrs. A1 Thompson and Mrs. Mc- • Kim. | Gregory Burg, son of Mr. and Mrs. | Art Burg, and nephew of Mrs. Huska, j leaves Sept. 1 to work for Uncle i • '•"••'••"•" tJS'e Crates for Shipping More than six billion feet of luav' ber will be used this year for boxtt and crates to ship munitions, food and other war needs. ;il -bank but encountered Perrar in ^am He had no choice of service front of the building. The sheriff i Qn Wednesday evening, August 18,1 said Flessert fired-one shot at the I several of the ladies and escorts of} cashier hitting him in theforehead thg ^ attended the card t fater giV€n ^ the M^enry chapter of the! ' Taken Without Struggle. ^afe7LS^,r at the McHenry.Country | A posse of 60 men was gathered i ^ r" ^urney won a special prize, by Brown to search nearby wooded i They were spending the week at their, you Leaf Falls Abbott--Costello, where did get that bump on your head? Costello--My wife hit me on, the head with a maple leaf. Abbott--ThatSk. ridiculous. Where did she get a maple leaf in the winter time? Costello--From the middle of the dining room table. GOOD LOOKS Capacity of Hospitals The capacity of registered hospitals is 1,383,827 beds and 71,448 bassinets. There are 59,446 more beds and 5,285 more bassinets than one year ago. This growth in hospital facilities for the, past year was the equivalent of a 163 "bed hospital for every day in the year. "My, but Chatterer is getting fat! I think he will make a very good breakfast." right away that there was a hole there. He arose and stretched. !'I thought as much," said Reddy to himself. "I though* as much." Then he lay down to watch again. After a while out popped the same lively little form. It was quite light now, light enough for him to see the red coat of Chatterer, the Red Squirrel. Chatterer's cheeks were stuffed so full of corn that his head looked twice as large as it really is. He ran along the roof to where the tips of the limb of the tree brushed the roof, climbed into the tree, looked sharply to make sure that no one ! was about, particularly Black Pussy, and then ran down^ the tree and i scurried across the dooryard to the safety of the old'stone wall. "Ha!" said Reddy Fox, "I thought so! Unless I am much, very, very ! much mistaken, Chatterer can tell I Sammy Jay what caught him Jay the bill yesterday morning and • frightened him nearly to death, f ve ! wondered why he no longer came to ! that new storehouse of his that he i worked so hard to fill down on the edge of the cornfield, and now I i know. My, but Chatterer is getting fat! I think he will make me a very , good breakfast. I do, indeed!" Reddy licked his lips as if he already could taste, fat Red Squirrel, and then slipped away in the other direction, for it was getting so light that he dared stay no longer so near to , Farmer Brown's house and Bowser, the Hound. i All the way to the Green Forest HReddy grinned, partly at thought of the sharp trick he was sure Chatterer had played on Sammy Jay, and partly at the thought of the good breakfast he was sure he would have one of these fine mornings, for already he had thought of a plan to ; catch Chatterer, the Red Squirrel. ' But first he would find Sammy Jay. 1 He wanted to see how foolish £>ammy would look when he found out that it wasn't a trap of Farmer Brown's Boy at all that had frightenedl him so. areas, and Flessert was taken into custody without a struggle about 3 p. m. in a farmhouse 'where he had asked for and been given a meal. Brown said Flessert admitted the shooting and said he had planned cottage. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Thompson, daughter, Kay, and Mary Jane Ahern of Chicago, also Mr. and Mrs. McKim attended the * party given by the Wonder Center club of Wonder Lake, west Flessert is a native of Shawano and one of a family of 14 children, the sheriff said. He is unmarried and at one time was on probation for stealing a gun. the holdup to get funds for a trip saturday evening, August 21, at the American Legion hall in Woodstock. • Thos. Mathew is president of that { club. As an auctioneer, I understand I he is tops. Nice going, Tom. Lee Larson left Sunday for. Alaska, I where he will be employed for at least British AA Efficiency | nine months .. t i t * I ™rs- Sales and son, Chick, visited Multiplied Eight Tlrifes Mr. Sales at East St. Louis over the LONDON.--Capt. Duncan Sandys, weekend. parliamentary secretary of the min- Mc. and Mrs. Hugh Murphy accomistry of supply, said that Britain's , panied us to Great Lakes Sunday to anti-aircraft gunners "were now visit our son, Allan. .""" shooting down eight enemy planes j fiob S&les Stftve Huska> JrBob Wetle, Nancy Ruden, Marie Burzinski and Toots Schmitt were also on hand TO ANYONE WHO CAN IDENTIFY THE PERSON OR PERSONS MOLESTING OR SMASHING ROAD SIGNS BELONGING TO HENNING'S WIND-UP RESORT A T PISTAKEE BAY. phone mrnimm-m with the same number of shots required to down ope German aircraft in the autumn of 1940. He said that the difference had been achieved through a new mechanical fuse in anti-aircraft shells that is twice as accurate as the oldtype powder fuse. "As a result," he be made to to visit Vern Sund and Allan Sunday. Vern graduated from Great Lakes naval training station Monday. He will be home Saturday, August 28, on furlough. ! said, "shells can now oe maae to; Mr.' and Mrs. Whiteman of South bum accurately at heights half, Bend, Ind., parents of Dick Nimtz. again as great as could be done at. Visited Mrs. Nimtz over the weekend the beginning of the war." j at the Woodstock hospital. During their stay they were guests of her 'Walkic-Talkic* Is No I parents, Mr. and Mrs. Syd Smith, | . m. . » # i | Mr. apd Mrs. Frank Madsen were also 1 Marvel, in Nortn Arnca visitors at the Smith home Saturday. BROOKLINE, MASS.--The Amer- Last Thursday a wiener roast was ican soldier in north Africa with his given in honor of Fred Ball at the up-to-the-minute "walkie-talkie" ra-, gyd Smith home. They were roasted dio set is not astonishing the na- jn their open-air fireplace. Twenty- ] | tives, Roland Hayes said, for these ^ve were present, some from : same natives perfected a system of Chicag others from villa Park, 111., two-way communication over the air &nd geveral from here Fred left for ianes many hundreds of years ago , Au 23 The noted Negro tenor said a t ^ Coolson and children * are home here that he owned a drum . , spending a short vacation at the Schlitt home. She is Tess' sister.. Mrs. Schlitt, Sr., returned recently from an extended visit at the home of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Pathuman voice. Just how^ Aiin ~terson, of Glenview. canei did it I don't know." i R. Willits and daughter also at- | tended the party of Wonder Center-1 Love-Sick Swain, 84, < club at Woodstock August 21. ^ | " ... . , D . D ji Mrs. Campbel of Oak Park, 111., has, Jilted by Kation Board | y)een visiting at the ,home of herj SEYMOUR, CONN.--An 84-year ; dauffnUir, Mrs., D.° Reid, for Some;| old farmer admitted to the ration • time. ' j board that he.had used the gasoline Mrs. Adams received word from her! 10 1st WALWORTH COUNTY FAIR ELKHORN, WIS. 9,1: . . ;•'; ' • FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY, MONDAY SEPTEMBER 3, 4, 5, 6 4Ms Days--4 Nights which the Africans used to produce words and sentences. "I don't mean code signals beaten with drumsticks. I mean signals which mimicked the speaking of the son, Corp. Harry Ingersol, who has CHILD STUDY NOTE ? 9•'"i * t *, Spray Against Scabs Growers using liquid lime-sulphur tor scab sprays usually use the following amounts to each 100 gallons of water, for, delayed dormant two gallons and for pre-pink and pink 1% gallons. Users of flotation type sulphur put 12 pounds in each 100 gallons of water for both the pre-pink. and the pink sprays. Dry lime sulphur can be used in place of the liquid lime sulphur, the amounts used to 100 gallons of water being eight pounds in the delayed dormant and six pounds for both pre-pink and pink sprays. Wettable sulphurs used according to their manufacturer's directions can be substituted for flotation type sulphur. In orchards where varieties susceptible to scab can be sprayed separately from resistant varieties, the application on the resistant varieties should be a milder spray than the one used on susceptible varieties. To control scab, it is important to have the foliage covered with the fungicide before rains. Three pounds of lead arsenate and five pounds of lime should be added to the pink •pray to be applied in orchards which were defoliated by the canker 9frm in 1942. Subscribe for the Plaindealer ' L.' "IF, "How do you like my new fur coat, Hubby?" t "Well, if it's as expensive as it looks, I'll be sorry you looke4 a| it*" On Her Mark , A woman was about to be married to her fourth husband. Her friends were astonished and asked her why she would marry four men in her notrtoo-long career. She said: "My first husband was a banker, my second was an actor, my third was a preacher? and my fourth is an undertaker." When she was asked why she was marrying an undertaker, she said: "One for the money, two for the «how, three to get ready, and four to go." Psychologist--To sum up, when children are naughty, switch their attention. Mother--Switch their what? ' ' . • " * - : -- -- -- " ' "'iiAsY.ANswCiiv ,'••• allowed for his tractor in his car ^ instead. Asked why, he explained: { been in the army stationed in the "To go to see my girl friend. east for about two years, that he is j Cautioned by the surprised board.; aj,0ut to leave for overseas duty. I the octogenarian quickly suggested! Dayid Boyle js stationed at; a way to eliminate those pleasure:j ^mp Sutton) No^th Carolina. , ' . . | Walter Scharf, son of Mr. and Mrs. "How about extra gas for a honey i j gcharfi of the army, who 8aw moon,, he asked. . _ ' action overseas and was wounded in j the leg, is now convalescing-in a base i hospital in New Orleans. All his ] Aunty--Does your mother 'evet spank you, Elmer? , Elmer--Yes. Aunty--Does your father ever spank you?'/ Elmer--Xes. Aunty--Which hurts the worst? Elmer--Me! Jtm Italy? Tim--Garlic. Seldom Heard What's the National Air 99.5% Survive Early Appendectomy In an operation within 12 hours of the first attack of appendicitis, chances of recovery are 99.5 oer cent. Lots of Sugar In a year of sugar rationing almost nine billion pounds of refined • sugar have passed to American consumers. Reluctantly, the board said no. Man Steals Passenger Bus to Catch His Train j WHITE PLAINS, N. Y.--Did * man steal a 20-passenger bus tr make his train? Maybe, say polict . The bus was' taken from the Ar-, monk garage by a man who said he. was picking it up for the bus co...-l pany. j Three hours later employees at the New York Centra! Railroad station complained to police it was cluttering up the bus terminal. Attendants; there said a man drove up in the; bus and dashed for a train. Distillers Sell Grain f£esld«$ After distilling their alcohol, distillers ordinarily have the Tesidual slop evaporated and dried. The resulting solids are sold to livestock feeders as "distillers' dried grains" for about two cents a pound. Disease Rate Drops The army's venereal disease rate in 1942 was 37.8 cases per 1,000 men, compared with a 1941 rate of 40.5 per 1,000, and in January of this year the rate was 25.2 per 1,000 men8 ficiency. on an annual\basis, compared with a January, 1942, rate of 45, the war department announced. Alfalfa Requires Phosphorus The alfalfa plant develops abnormally in phosphorus-deficient soils. Short fine stems with small pointed grayish-green leaves are typical symptoms. The color of deficient alfalfa is only slightly different from good healthy alfalfa but a little experience will enable the grower to recognize the -phosphorus de- A plant or an animal will struggle against its surroundings in the attempt to survive. It does not show its needs until they are severe. m • Help chicks and young birds grow and devel-( op. Give them TONAX in their mash. Especially after an attack of any disease. And ,as a tonic and conditioner. Contains mild astringents to help relieve Enteritis; also blood building elements. Tonax helps control intestinal parasites. It provides trace minerals and reliable stimulants. For layers too. Inexpensive and convenient. 2-lb. can enough for 400 chicks for a month, 75c. Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry Hundreds of Attractions • "FOLLIES INTERNATIONAL" MUSICAL REVUE - Dancers, Beautiful Girls, Comedians in big open air show! • SIX BIG FREE ATTRACTIONS • BASEBALL EVERY DAY - CHAMPIONSHIP • GOLD MEDAL CARNIVAL ON MIDWAY - • FOUR SPLENDID BANDS National Defense Day Saturday •? - - Special Program $8000 Race Program • vlfffclDAY--2:24 Class Pace, Purse $600 . 2:14 Class Trot, Purse $600 2-Year-Old Pace, Purse $600 SATURDAY--2-Year-Old Trot, Purse $600 3-Year-Old Pace, Purse $600 [ear-Old Trot, Purse $600 --2:24 Class Trot, Purse $600 For-All Pace, Purse $600 Class Trot, $1,000 Stake M()NDAY--2:14 Class Pace, Purse $600 Uibor Day--Free-For-All Trot, Purse $600 _ 2:18 Class Pace, $1,000 Stake COME WITH A CAR FULL TO THE FAIR THAT ALWAYS MAKES GOOD

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