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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Jul 1934, p. 5

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%• • ^ ' . , ,-..sv .. v e ^ ' ' *fl. j, - - v--£ ' Thursday, July 5,1934 I . i*r , 1 - - . *»' - i- . -t . ' TBS Meastttr PLAnnmattsR <* A/,•: .; * BACON'S STRIP • VBt t/ ZEKE" BACON oldtimers weren't quite so node bat they were giving a fine display of spme silk undifs. , ,-.. .. Renehan's wrestling match last Friday night attracted,a crowd of around 2500 who gathered to watch Jim McMillan prove to everyone, including ./Lou. Plummer, that he is *he best in JSxnibinon games seem to be duels J the game from Lake County. Lou is a>br«^her of B$b, basketball star who quiyfc well known in these parts and esembles Lou not a little bit. ^oup for the MicHenry Softball outfit. /The^1 recently trimmed Belviderj, boasting one of the st,rortgest teams in years, by a 9-4 count afterTih^ ning up eight runs in the first inning -Some -of the fans' may remember Freddie Johannes, former MAC-player, whp was &t first base for Belvidere. ' •->*J '!V" 5/ i"V .* V. c&<S The Softballers got the spirit of victory by trouncing Crystal Lake, league leaders a week ago, and thencame back to hand Woodstock the worst defeat in its history when they, too, were tied for the lead. MicHenry now holds undisputed possession of first place. The Woodstock score was 16-10 which doesn't &3urid so bad but the score at one tiirar was 16-1 which isn't -so- good. Conley wasn't hurlinp: for Woodstock and Jimmie Moricol! . had his ojrotrpubles before being relieved in the sixth- Pflug, who sjart- *d ifor McH«nry-, gave way to Dooms ih the seventh ;vrifch a 15 run lead, „• Bestoii set two records for the sea- . son and tied one ajl time record'^ their double header Sunday. In the < fiHt game which they won they scoi*- ed something like twelve runs and yet bad not a jauwn left on base to tie the all time record. In the next game Bob Brown', just"recalfed from Albany, hurled five hit ball and not an outfielder had a cha?ire for a put out or an assist which is really quiteremarka b l e . . ^ : ; . . . • . Charley Peterson,-^Jio makes his home at Pistakee Bay during the summer months, was in the prelims and took his man. The next card will be Friday night, July 13th and some of 4he boys are going to be more superstitious than ever when they get dons with their night's work. The events are held in Renehan's open air arena on the" shore of Round Lake. The semif-finals of the President's Cup will bib played:• next Sunday at the Country Club with Willard Galitz meeting Mayer and Duker teeing off against Ray Page so there's bound to he-a McHenry finalist vs. a Niles Center golfer. Page trimmed Jim Perkins <m the twentieth hole to go into the seitii-finals while Mayer beat'Bacon, Galitz took Steilow and Duker measured Sayier. * John.^urg pulled an unexpected " • V imAlr CnwJn.. 1..L«M 1^.1. _ T Mayer sewed up his marfch^on^ the sixteenth ^greeh with a peculiar shot. His^ second was short and he .pitched from about thirty yards out. The ball never reached the green but hit the stake just about one half, inch above the surface and plunked into the Cup for . a birdie three. Harry *Frye made the boys sit up •and take notice in the Fourth of July blind bogey. Seem® Harry has a lot trick Sunday when they took a Tfi ! °f o1^ tir^e plf left »|h him but he's game from Spring Grove. Leo Freund i een navmg trouble getting it out and the result was that his game has been sticking right around 100. Consequently he posted himself a 25 handicap and went out and shot a 43-41 for an 84 net 59 which was just a little bit below the posted blind bogey limits. started on the mound for Johnsburg and was wild, walking four men in the first two innings, so Joe Glosson took charge and held the Grovers to six hits, one of them a homer. But Leo King hit two home runs £or-Johnsburg and that , just about told the tale. ";-wr Next Sunday Johnsburg takes on the Colored All - Stars from Kenosha in a feature bill. With the Spring Grove victory still fresh in their min-ls this boys are liable to go out and trim the colored' lads just like Johnsburg used to in the days of the old timer?. Another exhibition contest will be played at the McHenry Softball park next Monday night, July 9 with Andrew Millers furnishing the. opposition and plenty of it. R. 0. Andrews mean there will be plenty of action. Some of the golfers seem to be starting , a semi-nudist camp bn the golf course this year by playing around with no wearing apparel from the waist up. Looking at the old time pictures of the golf stars and seeing them wearing coats in their matches the wonders of"the game is slipping from its high pedestal. Some of the STRANGE WEDDING FACT IS REVEALED . BY U. S. CONVICT donvicted Murderer Tells of Marriage Contract With Kansas City Widow, The. Cubs won't miss Bill J urges very much if Woody English keeps oh smacking them in his present fashion. Woody has boosted His average ^o a point well over three hundred and is fielding in his old style. He may not cover the ground that Jurges does but there's more than one club that could use a man of his calibre in their regular lineup. t •• , Mike Schoenholti drops a line from Boulder Colorado where he iv again spending the summer in charge of a boy's camp. (Mike s^ys things aire himself will be there and that shouldfgoing O. K. and advises anyone going out that way not to miss thie scenery in that vicinity. • . With the retirement offpension of Sam Landwer, United States rflaTlcairier of 30 years, Barrington rural patrons will be served after July 1 by ^two routes in place of three •which formfe* iv covered the territory. Subscribe for The Plaindealerl GREEN STREET I First Shaw 7:15 (D. S. T.) ThC BtiELSB McHENRY ILLINOIS Adm. 10-25c LAST FRIDAY--'SISTERS UNDER THE SKIN' Saturday Only, July 7 * SLIM SUMMERVILLE - ZAZU PITTS "LOVE BIRDS" 3RD. EPISODE, ' VANISHING SHADOW" Sunday and Monday, July 8 and 9 * IRENE DUNNE - RALPH BELLAMY . CONSTANCE CUMMINGS "THIS MAN IS MINE" MICKEY MOUSE CARTOON i v Tuesday Only, July 10 HOME TALENT NITE On The Screen "THE NINTH GUEST" A Thrilling' Mystery Storv • Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, July 11*12-1£. DICK POWELL PAT O BRIEN GINGER ROGERS ' "20 MILE SWEETHEARTS" ^ Sizzles with Action and Surprises 1 ansfls City.--The amazing career, of Robert F. Stroud, serving a life sentence for murder and held In soli' tary confinement in the federal prison' at Leavenworth, has turned to a romance as strange as the chapters of his own life story. The man for whom a gallows once was built and whose life was spared by President Wilson holds' forth now that he has taken a wife within the nieaning of the law. Stroud, the convict who has built" from Illiteracy and handicaps of solitary confinement a • reputation nationwide as an authority on canaries hnd ts a skilled mattienia: tielkn, is seeking to establish in common law a marriage with the woman who has been to him "everything that at true, loving and faithful possibly be." . , ^ Wife S««k« His FrMdom. - The woman whom Stroud thus d^ scribied la a "'contract of marriage" made public recently by her is Mrs, Delia May Jones, forty-elghi; years old,- 1345 East Tentlj street Mrs. 'Jones, a widow, has been working diligently twelve yearso to bring about Stroud's freedom from prison. , They became acquainted at a time when Stroud entered one of his prison canaries In a canary contest and won a prize. The prize was a canary which Mrs. Jones had given to the contest, and the forwarding of the bird to the man In "murder row"-at Leavenworth _ was the beginning of their romance. . ' Mrs. Jones revealed that the socalled "marriage contract" was drawn last August, a document which she displayed and bearing her signature and that of Robert F. Stroud. The contract reads: "Contract of marriage between Robert Stroud and Delia May Jones. "In the state of Kansas, conntj1 of Leavenworth, upon the territory of the Leavenworth Military reservation and under the governmeoL, of the United States, on the fifteenth day of August In the year of our L&cd-nineteen hundred and-thirty-three.- "It Is agreed: . "By Robert Stroud of post office box 1 Leavenworth. Kan., and Delia May Jones of 134.5 East Tenth street, Kansas City: Mo., that they are and hence-, forth shall be, .for so long as they two •shall live, man and wife. To Love-and Cherish. "An<J the said Robert Stroud states that he is a citizen of the United States, of legal age, of sound mind and unmarried, that the above mentioned Delia May Jones bas been to him everything that a true, loving and faithful wife could possibly be, and he hereby promises before the world to love and cherish her above all others so long as his life shall last. "And the said Delia May \ Jones 'states that she Is a citizen of the United States, of legal age, of sound mind and unmarried; that the above mentioned Robert Stroud has been to her everything that a true, loving and faithful husband could possibly be, and that she hereby promises before the world to love and honor him above all . others so long as her life shall last." Mrs. Jones said that Strrtnd drew up the "marriage contract" She will flic it with the clerk of the United States District court In Kansas, the court in which Stroud was convicted and sentenced to death for the murder of a guard In the federal prison at Leavenworth. ~ The first time Mrs. Jones saw Robert F. Stroud was April 13, 1932, after she had gone to the prison and detained permission to visit him. Before, that Mrs. Jones had corresponded regularly with Strouf, since the time she learned /nat the man who had won her canary In .a bird contest was a life term prisoner and the "Post Office Box 7" was the federal prison at Leavenworth, . - Business Men's. -_ Soft Ball League PATRK SIDES 21; STANDARDS 6 ^he Park Sides easily defeated the Standards last Thursday evening, taking the contest by the one-sided score of 21 to 6; - The losers were without the services of their regular pitcher which undoubtedly accounted for the decisive defeat. The scares -J;_-V- : , Standards-- ; ;v R . g G. Weber, 3b-p 0" d Adams, c 1 ; f Kothermel, Jf i Jt Purvey, lss . .......^;....^ t«>^2 McCarroll, cf ....... 1 Brooks, p-8b ^.....1,,... 1 v~ ^1- Stilling, 1^ v. 1 j]0t Al. Krause, rf 0 ^1 IPO ' 1 , 1 3 2 2 7: 0 -6. 9 21- -: -Park Sidw : R H -]PO E. Freund, ^ 2 >. 1/. 0 Justen, cf 4 .. 5 1 J. Schmitt,.;c ....^i^...M..v-:S- r 0 H. -Miller, m 2 1. I Williarrts, rf 3 - 4 0 Cohwfty, Isa,. 3 $ 8 Culver, 3b 0 t - 5 •Worts,- If /i: G. Freund," lb 1 1 1° 4 r?.:-; 1 ' . 21 24 21 Score By, Innings • ,v Standards .2 0 0 0 3 1* 0^ 6 Park Sides 5 1 0 6 1 0 8--21 Left on-bases: Standards, 6; Park Sides, 8. Bases On balls: Off Brooks, 4; .off ^eber> 1; 'Off Freund, 4. Struck out by Brooks, 1; by Weber 0; by Freund, 0. Double play: Conway to Culver. Two base hits: Purvey 2, McCarroll, E. Freund, Worts. Three base hit#: Culver, G. Freund. Home runs: J. Schmitt, Williams, Buss. Umpires : Smith beh ind plate; Winkle at first, Bickler at third. L - Page Fhn^fy BIG FIRST INNING v ROUTS BELVIDERE Belvidere suffered a. bad attack of fymbleitis in the first inning of their pame with McHenry last Friday night »nd McHenry pushed across eight i*un9 to just about cinch the contest. After that it was a good game butthose eight runs were. enough fqr Green to coast home to victory- $)itrteen merf'batted for McHenry in thst wild first inning when there were eight hits, four errors and eight nms. Harold Freund started things off with a hit and then Thennes, Bohr, Fay, Krause, Downs aqi again JHarohJ Freund ami Elmer Freundl came through. Gus Freund had a walk and Clarence Smith survived on an error. - Balvidere scored once in the1 fourth and twice in the fifth but were then quelled until the ninth whe# they COLORED NINE AT JOHNSBURG SUNDAY Jfofctisburg surprised its flowers by,' upsetting Spring Grove in a game punctuated with .long hits,-7-6. Leo Freund started for J ohnsburg and al • lowed but one hit in the first two innings but was removed because of wikJness. Joe Glo^sori then took the mound and did sonte fine work. Leo King handed him some valuable assistance with two home runs off Ikpy -Britz while Friti hit one of the losers. Next -Sunday Johnsburg entertains the featured Kenosha^All Stars^ a colored nine that has been going great things on the diamond this«^eason. The victory over the Spring Grovers bias Johnsburg all pepped up for this game ami £ lively contest should ensue.* . . .. : ' The Johiisburg batting averages folagain broke through foT^jL.tally,, that-.low;-;-.M. Schn«»f»r ,41.0, H ' aai,; ditln't mean anything except a few more cents tacked on the light bill. „ i Frtd Johnannes, fortn^r heavy ter of the McHenry A. -C. nin^-a few yea^' back, played 'first ba«e for tha BelvRlere team and itiquiml: about "soma of his old mates. T V " Another stellar exhibition game is schrdiiied for next Monday night, July 9, when Andrew's Mii!er% of Woodistockj one of the leading teams ih th'e city league of that city, will appear here. Admission will be the usual, "on^rdime" and the game will'start,at 9 o'clock daylight saving time. McHenry, H. Freund, ss E. Freund, rf .... H. Smith, rf Thennes, 2b ....^ C. Smith, 8b Bohr^ ib.......nTr Fay, « Krause, cf G. Freund, sf .. Downs, If Greeti* p 1 0 1 1 I-- ' Oi ' Belvidene, 4^-s Worf, If ' Rudinski, 3b E. Whitehead, is , STANDARDS 19; SCHAEFERS 14 $7 9. 13 Al. Purvey's running ohe-handed catch of J. Weber's fly ball in short left field in the ninth inning was'easily the feature play of Mondav night's *'M,ln ,wh'ch ">« SUnJ.«u'def«to.l &h«fers Specials by a .score of 13 Howdjn, 2b .. Aside from thj<Art Krause piloher ' rf for the wraneri, turnej » tM >es. nLblett,^i I [ 9 4 a 4' • :'A'r 4'v;' ' wbrk of the evening. ^He struck out! Fie)df, c'( fourteen batsmen, made two triples, Waslieu rf - two doubles and three singles in eight trips to the plate. The score: Standards-- R H |»n L. ' King .39is, Oeffling 375, Chas. Smith .359, Leo Freund .342* Walt Smith .323, Clarence Smith .295, Ray Hetterman .231, Joe Glosson .182, Bud Miiler .158, Q, Selling- .164, , Johnsburg-- ' - - '/•' Oeffling, rf i -A ' 6 ' a i;. 'King, 31> Clar' Smith,' Chas. Smith, 88 H. Smith, c ' j. • C.'-Stilling, If *4 '0 .0 W.. Smith, lb ..;..s.....,;4 0 1 lietUrman, rf ' o J. Glosson, p 8 0 0 Leo Freund, 3 --1 FARM BUREAU TEAMS y - IJi 6-GAME SG^EDULX -A great deal ctf interest is being manifested by local farmers who are interested in baseball in the County Farm Bureau League. There are more than thirty teams included io the I statg and the state is divided into districtg!. Boone, Lake, McHenry and De- Kalb are included in our district. To date each of the teams in each of the above four counties have 'played six ' games. The standing of the-Zteanbl is as follows: McHenry county won five and io«t one. ^ Lake county won four and lost twow DeKalb county won three «ad three. " .. . ' Boone tounty won npne and lost: Six.; .. .: ; Each of-thie teams in -this district T 4 ^ will play siW rrtore' ^aipes, two . "-V.1 ' - -f fV.'. 34 Sprihig GH'bw-i Pat, cf 4 Britz, 2b 5» Lutz, 3b 1 •If Britz, 3b ....j....„„;........ 2 Fritz, ss Sj Deering, lb --.... Aj G. Klaus, If 4 L. Lay, rf 4 Lewis, c S Ike Britz, p 3 "wlfhTea^v county. The winner of the district will: compete with the winner iA an adjoining district and the state champion team will be determined. E. A. Thomas of McHenry is manager of the local team. Aimer Aavang i»- * ' A ' a baseball director for this district. TBe - „i'. t- J" v't rentaining schedule af games to be; ' ' •? » -^ | played bv the local Finn Bateau.teia%, * J J is as follows. ••••*,-*•?< ' * : Z July 5F--McITenry at r>c-Kalb: July 1^-- Boone at McHenry*. . July 21---McHenry at J^->on^, • >. • July 23-^DeKalb at McHetiry.. ^ August 4--McHer.ry at Lake. v August 11--Lake at McHenry. Members of, the local team" are a* follows: Glenn Burmeister, Woodstock ; Fritz DeHaati, Akten; feichard Vran Every, Spring Grove; Walter Schneidewind, Woodstock; Donald Haldeman, Spring Grove; DonaTd Schmitt, Woodstock; Floyd ZarnStorff, Richmond; Everett Thorns, W. McHenry; Robert Book. Harvard; Wilbur Lehman, Genoa; Leo Freund, McHenry; Frank Drory, Woodstock; Glenn Siedschlag, Spring Grove; Lee 11 0 0 HU H 0 * z • I i - , ; <. », A • • ' V ' Adam?, c ........... 2 I'W if, Purvey, .lss 5 4 Art. Krausej p .. 5 2 7 .4 McGee, If 0 '•:-"2i McCarroll, 8b .-. 2 6 0 jBrooks, rf Stilling, lb .„ ;:'0: 3 0 3 ; 0 '•;- .5 VJ ' V'"'.. 19 23 • 2 7 Schaefers-- R H PO P. Schaefer, Jf .. '• A •"" ' "* 1 0 4 N. Freund, 2br^ 2 1 McCracken, r H.I lllltml i 4 • - ' 1 Meyer, p .P. Freund, c ..... .8 .2 * ^i - - 2 1 8 J. Weber, cf 0 0 "v 1 Townsend, lb ... 0' • 10 Bevis, rf a Q " 0 Wirtz, lss 0 • 6 - 0 J- Miilier, ................ i • :t-" 0 Belvidere ......OOtT McHenry ..^...".810 36 4 1^0 001--4 8 000 OOx--9 13 33 6 * PLAVcfkot'M) NOTES . (By N. Miller) ilcCracken won the men's singles championship by defeating Mawr;ce Bontele. * ' , ' r In the doubles toiirnamfnt. Fay and Patzke drew a bye in the first round. McCracken and Cletus Althoff defeated C. Vycital and Bob Miller in the fiV?t round, and" In the second round the two defeated Fnv and Patzke. Wednesday night, June 27, the people from Woodstock and those from McHenry. who attended, witnessed one of the most spirited anil interesting baseball games when our Junior team trimmed Baeir's Woodstock "Ting Tigers" to the tunee»of 18 to 15. It H - j^Benecke, Union; Everett Hutchinson, | Harvard; Aimer Aavang, Jr., Woodstock; Obed Wyse, Harvard, Howard Wyse, Harvard, and Ray Miller, Rich- ' M. T. Lenney, one of the founders bf the Marengo -News, is understood to be slated for postmaster of Williams Bay, Wis. His name appear*- first ^n the eligible list of three who have taken the civil service examina- wa* the first Aeieat the "Ting Tigers" tion. The other two are Lesliq, Sawyer ! ^atl suffered in fffre starts: All eleven and Miss Elsie Pihl. Lenney is an ' •official in Ce<lar Park addition to Williams Bay, going there some years ago from Chicago. < 14 27 r I k 4 lh<' ( \m > 11 * *•* I Spol In iiivxr," FRIDAY--Opportunity. Night „ Starts 7:00 p. m. , Adults 30c, Children 10c 8 - ALL NEW ACTS - 8 and on the screen "Eight Girls In a Boatj * SATURDAY " . Matir.ee 2:30 - • • .;j[en Maynard In " "Wheels of Destiny'* - ' ( SUN. - MON.. JULY 8 - 9 Clark Gable - William Powell " : Myrna Lov inb "MANHATTAN 1 MELODRAMA" Also C. Chase in PI'LL TAKE VANILLA" TlTESI)AY--Bargain Night _George Raft in "THE TRUMPET BLOWS r . • - f I WED. - TH I RS., JULY 11 . "12 Sylvia Sidney - Cary Grant in - "THIRTY DAY PRINCESS" an< < CRYSTAL LAKE. ILL. Shows Daily 7 and 9 .'15 D S.T. FRIDAY and SATURDAY "STAND UP AND CHEER" • . with Warner Baxter Madge Evans, John Iktles The Show of 1,001 Surpluses SUNDAY, JULY 8 / *; ^ Warrer Baxter in '-'StrCH WOMEN ARE DANGEROUS" with Rosemary Ames Sun. Mat. 2:45 to ^.^-rlOc^Sc '.fter 6 and Weekdays--10c-30c '- - - --i---- MONDAY 10c SPECIAL 15c Charier Farrell in "GIRL WITHOUT A ROOM" M. Churchill and His Stubbornness Nets Britisher 18 Jail Terms London.--The height of stubbornness-- or it may- be !nnocence-r-has been reached by an Englishman. John Smith'-has gone to Jail for the eighteenth time because he has refused consistently to pay a penny toward the support of a child which' he declares is not his. - The court, however, has adjudge*] hfto the father... ., In consequence Smith's cfinsistent refusal , to contribute to the child's Bpkeep has netted him 17 previous prison terms. His gray-haired mother, convinced <if her son's Innocence, has accompanied him to court each-time he has een sentenced." * ' • - .14 v Stored iMiings Standards 0 0 4 4 0 0 3 4 4--19 Schaefers' 4 0 0 0 2_ 0 4 0 4---14 Left on bases: Standards, 10; 'Stan( Schaefers, 5. Bases on balls: Off j Park Krause, 4; off Meyer, 4. Struck out Scha< by Krause, 14,; by Meyer, 7. Double play: Krause, unassisteJ. McCracken to Towfisehd. Two base hits: Krause 2, McCarroll 2, McGee, P. Freund. Three base hits: Krause 2, Purvey, N. Freund, Cracken. Home runs: McCracken, Meyer, P. Freund. Umpires: Smith behind plate; Bickler on bases. U" Standing' ofTeams Cadillacs Sid< w Li ' Pet. ...... 5 V 2 .714 ...... ..... 5 s * .625 4 ' 8 .571 1 .125 boys who played on our team played bang-up ball, and their will to wiv was not to, be denied. Acting Captain Don Meyers pttched nice ball until in the fifth When Woodstock got to him for four ruhs. Nickie Justen relieved him, and Dickie Freund finished the game. At. the end bf the regulation time' (seven innings) the score was • tied 11 ,to 11. Joey McAndreiiP, who had replaced Bob Stiling in right field, opened the eighth with a home run. Successive singles„by Justen. Freund, a pass to H. Anderson,hit by CI. Anderson, another pass to Meyers, another hit.by Jack Becker, and climaxed with a long home run by Andv Becker, which ended the rally ami 7 ftacidaat of "Civil War The Fifteenth Ohio battery, organ* lied In the four Western Reserve count ties of Trumbull, Ashtabula, Cuy*.? hoga and Lorain, cao In the historical. sidelights of thrf Civil war lay. Claldl to the most untlSfmi Incident of thft/ entire-campaign. - During one of thelf7~~ biittles- a little blrtl alighted upon th§ . shoulder of Private Seth Pow«ra „wh# 7 was helping operate a cannon. each discharge of the cannon the blrjl ' burle,d its head in the soldier's hair, and then resumed Its place on hi§ ; - shoulder; watching the men load th§ • gun. It stayed w ith the men througb* out the battle and : for several. day# afterward and then flew away. 'Carpetbagger" le term was used long befovs tlkt Civil war, and was applied In th« West to denote promoters of wildcats banks or stocks, whose earthly poiK sessions were contained in ths carpst* bag with which they usually arrlrafl. at the places they desired to exploit. £arly Okio S«ttl«niMU The second and third settlements OA Ohio .soil were where Cincinnati notf staqds, but neither was kuowa by that name. runs had crossed the plate. Woodstock came back in their half of the eighth and scored 4 runs fc» bring their total tip to 15. fylan Kills Two Rabbits With One Rifle Shot Tulare, .-Calif.--Joo Hill, Tulare rancher and marksman. Is claiming a i eW record for rabbit shooting. He Allied two Jackrabbits with one shot, i lie bullet struck one rabbit. Ipierced it, struck a-rock and ricocheted/ and killed a second ,rabbit gome ffistance away. ' :•• :• -1 • • -" "GsRuggles It's Gay! It's GGllaammoorroouuss TUBS.'- WED. - TKUKS. George Arliss in "THE HOUSE OF ROTHSCHILD" with Loretta Young Seven Houses in On* Bass River, Mass.--The house owned '>y fffenr^ Charles Davisv mine owner ind engineer, is one of the most int> Testing on Cape Cod. ft is made up '•f seven, separate old Cape houses 1 ulned together to make a large one. it is said the house has 17 front doors, -ll friedows, 7i2 closets and SO rooms. Our Friends Granting that we both had the will *nd sens* to choose our friends well, bow few of us have that power. Yfci there^s a soclety.-tontlnually open to as, waiting all day long, kings and statesmen on our bookcase shelrsa.-- Johu Kusklil. iSmmiSSm M0RF. N0N-SKIB MILEAGE u iii wmM" 0-ima i l l h'T J. m says a North Carolina car dealer whd has seen G-3's perform for months oil mountain roads. "In My Opinion You Have 75% More!" Reports pouring in from G-3 users everywhere read like these: "43% more n<yn-skid mileage is tdo conservative"-- "60% would bo closer" --"Feel I'll receive 100% more non-skid mileage.1' Maybe we have put the figure low, ^ut--Goodyear's 43% statement is based on the toughest tire tests ever devised-- speeding up to 50--jamming on brakes--every few miles'--day and night --tougher use than most people give tires. Come see this wonderful new G-3 that "The Public Test Fleet" says is better than we claim--the costlier- tire-to-build that costs YOU nothing extra to buy! Top Soich Value---- at Ei cry Price! Another famous example of Goodyear value possible because < .<x> I * car Dealers sell the most tins--by millions! GOODYEAR S P E EDBuWilt AwYith Super-twist Cord--Center t T a c t i o n ; touftb thick t r e a d ; f u l l oversize. 30 I J K 4.40-21 $»4-95 Other sizes in proportion apertly mounted on wheels Pricej fub/ect I* change with' out notice . - " extra non v wit A * CVOS!sVV* o0^iVo*^VCe some ASTONISHING NEW //J% a / I ALL GOODYEAR TIRES ARE GUAR ANTEED FOR ONE YEAR AGAINST ALL ROAD HAZARDS 13-Plate Battery $4.95 GOODYEAR PATHFINDERS $5-70 and up GOODYEAR ALL-WEATHER Look What You Got-- No Extra Cost: More >1 iles of real nonskid safety . . Flatter Wider Tr^&d ... More Center Traction (16#i more non-skid blocks) . . . Heavier Tougher Tread (average of 2 lbs. more rubber) . . •. Supertwist Cord Body (supports heavier tread safely). ^, Rubber ia Goldsarod Different varieties of goldenrod contain from 0.0 to 6,34 per cent «f robber. - •' ' " : _r• -"'r' . . :v SINfeEl!R"GASOLINE and OILS PRESTO-LITE BATTERIES Battery Charging, Repairing Tire and Tube Vulcaapng j Phone 294, West ftcHenry, Illinois m: •-j

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