Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Sep 1935, p. 4

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

* '+ ik'p-v' » . . ' - THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER published every Thursday at McHcnry, EL, by Charles If. Rmich. Entered as Mcond*{lus matter at the poitoita at VcHaiitfi. DL, ht the act of May 8, 1879. On* Year Six Month* ...$2.oe ..41.00 EXECUTIONER OF r. / FELONS WILL NOT SPEAK OF TASKS R. G^lliott Shuns Publicity, Looks on Work as Just"* Another Job. FOR SALE A. H. H06HBR, Editor aad Maaager Lillian Sayler, Local Editor -- --- Telephone 197 'j! * *« *'*?" One Senorita--and Five Men BiteDust Zarnora, Micboacan, Mexico.-- The flashing eves of a pretty Mexican senorita sent five men to their death a'nd six tohospitals near > sr£ recently. \ •. ;Two' -her. attention a train bound fo^ this «|ty.- from t rfetui ro s titrtig}, to1. ba t ti e it ou t iin<3 -most of the other male "pas* senders* joined in. Some one drew a gun, the remMp4er followed suit. Five were, killed atid. six w"6uiided before the ' fljrHt emled, •* >r . Uncommon SCnSC "I John Blake <?. Be!! Syndicate.--WNU Service. r - 'Vj • - OLD CRIME SOLVED BY SCRAP OF PAPER Confession Forced by Prison Warden's' Find. l^ris.--"Don't forget that yoo were not "In Paris on September 16, 1932." These words, scribbled on a scrap of paper which was detected by a warden as it was being passed by one prisoner to another in the prison at St. Julien en-Genevoise< France, led to the definite solution of a murder mystery which for three yetors had nonplused the keenest detectives of the Surete and caused a great sensation when the crime was committed. Another consequence was the sending of three men to Devil's Island, In French Guiana, for 20 years. They were Rene Anchisi, an Italian; Pierre Guiiieminot and Serge Sauvageot, both Swiss. ° The victim was Donald Ross, the fifty-six-yeaf-old representative on the continent of a Glasgow firm who lived at Maisons-Laffitte, near Paris'. Mr. Ross was also a member of the British Intelligence service, and fhis fact it was that surrounded the investigation into-his death with an atmosphere of peculiar mystery ^nd drama. The men now eo&victed had been ar? rested on charges of burglary and efforts had been made to connect them with the, Ross murder. There was nothing to go upon, and their efforts, the detectives admitted, probably would have proved abortive but for the telltale scrap of paper. This forced the men to confess. They said Jhey met Mr. Ross at: the Gare St. Lazare in Paris. He was intoxicated, and railway employees asked ^jthem to see that he alighted at Malsone Laffltte station. They had taken the last train with the object of carrying out a burglary at Mantes, but, considering Mr. Ross an easy victim, changed their plans and accompanied him home. There Mr. Ross Imprudently Invited ! them to take refreshments. When he was still more inebriated, they demanded money, and when he refused fell upon him. After a desperate struggle they bound him with wire from the wireless, stuffed a gag in bis mouth and left. When his son came home next day Mr. Ross had died of asphyxia. Was First a Boy, Then Girl, Now a Boy Again . Sin Francisco.--Science made a mistake in determining the sex of an orphanage child and then corrected ltwlf through an operation to make the j&Hd a boy, it was revealed at the convention of the American Urologies) astion here, The aficCcCouonutn t of the efror and Its correction formed part of the exhibit of Dr. Hugh Hampton Young, of Baltimore. Until, the age of seven the child was reared as a boy in a boys' orphanage. Then it was decided the child was a girl and she was placed in an institution for girls. Later an operation supposedly eliminated male characteristics. ji A6 the child grew older she Increasingly expressed male tendencies. Her main delight was baseball. She also liked to climb trees. Orphanage attendants marked her as a tomboy. When she reached the height of six feet and developed a beard and had muscles' it was decided to perform another ->| ><'rution. , Now the subject at eighteen is definitely- masculine. Be wears male at -•tire. . -:-'- ger Talces Bride in Middle of Wedding Calcutta.--A last minute change of bridegrooms--in the middle of the wedllng ceremony--resulted in a girl marrying a comparative stranger. After weeks of elaborate prepare tions, the wedding was about to take place when the bridegroom confessed he was unable to provide the dowry agreed on with the bride's father. Consternation followed this breach of etiquette. But, after bitter recrlml nations, the girl's parents decided to auow the wedding to go on «o that the C06tly feast should not be wasted . Then, half way through the ceremony, a young man strode Into the room and offered to put up the agreed dowry. The newcomer took his place--and i His wedding ceremony proceeded. Because only thinking and educated people know anything about their r „, bodiesi and how to ; V Cost 'of : keep them in health, , T •' hundreds of doctors '; ISnorafke jnust do work that. • they ought not to have to do. Because great numbers of peoples fn great cities do not understand that huddling together In closed and U1 vetitifated rooms results tow often. In . tuberculosis . and other deadly ills, cities must pay many physicians and their assistants, whose services might be used la other fields. . Ignorance Is one «f the most expensive evils that eities have to combat It is true that a family of five or more people, all dwelling In two or three tenement rooms, can hardly he expected to keep the premises sanitary and well ventilated. But if they were made to understand how their lives and those of their children are menaced, they would pay more attention to the advice of the visiting nurse as to what should be done to guard against epidemic diseases. • » • « « » • Ignorance has always been a stumbling block in the way of progress. Happily, 1 enlightened city governments are constantly finding new ways to combat it This is being dope in almost every important city in the United States by education. Time was when tenement dwellers taken from infected flats and sent to a hospital were terrified because they believed that sooner br later they would be forced to drink from the "black bottle" and would never return to their homes alive. The desire to care for (he ill and the unfortunate is a. fine (salt th human nature. ' . :V I am beginning to think better than I used to of listless and often incon^ Siderate human nature. The world may not be getting better very rapidly--it has still to make a war on war--but it is improving in thoughtfulness for its fellow creatures, and willing to spend money to rid the world of plagues and pestilences. , What the world may be like a hundred years from now I naturally have no guess. * ,v But I am sure it will- be free from most of the pestilences that now decimate the population. And in another hundred -- pr perhaps two hundred years it may get rid of the worst pestilence jof all, which is war. Ton will get fortunate "breaks" as yon go along, and, unfortunate ones. But your success Luck and depends on you, and not on outside circumstances. If luck come* your way, take it But, after yoo take it, use it as a starting point. Don't figtire that'll is going to keep right on helping., yon out If yon do, you are going to get a very unpleasant disillusionment before long. If you have good intelligence, enough to teach you to keep at what you have Started, and a real desire to be something more than "just average" yon are, in baseball parlance, as far as first base. It depends on whether you get t6 second base or third base or home or "not . •. - ~ \ " "" There are capable basemen on each one of these. - * Their business Is to keep you from where you are trying to go. It is your business to outwit them. If you don't, the manager is pretty sure to drop yon out of the team before so very. leng. j Make yourself worthy Of trost That isn't going to be easy. Life is a competition, and there are plenty of entrants. . * If you are going pretty well, you willattract attention, and some other fellow will be after your position. Don't let him take It away from you. Don't waste your evenings wandering aimlessly around hunting for something to do. If you like what you are doing, and want to keep at it you will find plenty to do, and you "won't have any time to "hear the chimes at midnight" Or trotting around town with the gang. Superstition Charleston, Mass.--A knotted, powerful hand, encased In a rubber glove, reached up to drive home the blades of a giant switch in the prison here. Three times the hand reached and each" time a man died. The hand was that [ of Robert G. Elliott, official executioner for the states of Massachusetts, Delaware, New York, Pennsylvania, «nd New Jersey. The hand took the lives of Mnrton and Irving Mrllen and Abraham Faber. All three men had been convicted of murdering a policeman while engaged in a bank holdup, Elliott's hand threw the switch which caused their electrocution. Once before Elliott carried out a triple execution in Boston. -Those electrocuted then were the two car barn bandits, Nicolo Sacco, and Bartolomeo Vanzettl, anarchists convicted of murdering a paymaster and his guard, and Celestino Medeiros, who died for the murder of a bank -cashier. Ten years ago Elliott branched out from his electrical supply business into th6 position of official executioner when his predecessor, John Hllbert, committed suicide. | a Just Another Jo|. His Job does not bother the sixtyone- year-old Elliott. The only time his nerve has been shaken was the time he threw the current thrdugh the body of Mrs. Ruth Snyder for her complicity In the window weight murder of her hushand who was killed by Judd Gray, her corset salesman lover. He looks upon it as just another job. By his philosophy some one Is guilty of murder and when the law discovers that some one he deserves to die. "It's the law and some one must do it," is his way of looking at things. Elliott shahs publicity. He lives quietly and modestly in a cottage house at Richmond Hills, N. Y., with his wife, a son, and a daughter. His only absences from home are occasioned by his frequent trips to the prisons of his own or nearby states to carry on his grim task. There Is good reason for his reluctance to appear in the public eye. Every effort was made to keep his identity $nd his address a secret but gangsters found where he lived a few years ago and bombed his home. The bombing occurred shortly after the electrocution of Sacco and Vanzettl and it was thought that their friends were attempting to seek revenge on the executioner. The case has never been solved. Elliott's home was wrecked but he and his family escaped without Injury. / 1160 Per Death. There Is nothing about the grim vlsaged, Jdanken cheeked and spare" framed eWmitioner's demeanor or appearance urmark him as the man whp • has sent the current of death through an uncounted number pf convicted criminals. He refusea to reveal bow many he has executed, though there is little doubt that the figure is well over one hundred; For each person that dies by his hand lie receives $150, plus his traveling expenses. His routine - varies little from prison to prison. In some states he throws a switch. In others he spins a wheel. Arrived In the town tn which the execution is to be held, he registers at a hotel, unpacks his bag, lays out his "working clothes," to be ready for the night's grim task. When the execution Is over he dons his coat, goes back to his hotel, and after a steaming hot bath goes to bed and sleeps soundly until it comes morning and he goest back to bis home or to some other prison where his services are required, . i.., FOR SALE--Jacob Schmitt estate" house at Johnsburg. Inquire of Matt N. Schmitt. Tel. G23-R-1. 13tf FOR SALE OR RENT--Perry house on Richmond road, neaft. St. Mary's church. Modern, ne^jvoecorated inside and o&t. Steamiveat, double garage. Call Mrs. John R. Knox, Phone 17. 43tf FOR SALE--30 Head of Good, Big fresh cows and heifers, some springers. Holsitein, Guernsey, Sw)iss, Jersey and Red cows. A few regular cattle. Also a span of mules weight about 2,900--gentle and good workers. Come and see them and we will do some business. Three miles north on Route 14. Kilpatrick Bros., Reliable Cattle Dealers. Harvard, 111. , ' »16 FOR SALE--Empty kegs and barrels, water tight. Phone McHenry 153. 16 FOR SALE--Bartlett Pears. Gall 142-M. and Duchess 16 SMUGGLING GUNS TO ETHIOPIA NEW GAME Rumrunning Adventurers Now Turn to Arms. FOR SALE--New Crop Timothy Seed. 5 cent, per lb; Wm. Staines. McHenry, 111. 016 FOR SALE--Three oil burners. Phone McHenry 168. 16 FOR RENT FOR RENT-- Furnished room, mod' ern home. Also garage. John S. Freund. Court St., McHenry. Phone 90-R. 15-tf FOR RENT--Room, centrally located. Inquire at Plaindealer office. 15-tf FOR RENT--Brick building in Johnsburg. Inquire of John Pitzen. *16- 3 FOR RENT--670-Acre Farm. Also 6-room house in McHenry. Call McHenry 93-M^< 16-tf LOST LOST--Brown leather coat in Mo- Henry. Finder please return to John Stock. Reward. *16 MISCELLANEOUS WE PAY FOR DEAD : ANIMALS MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. PHONE DUNDEE l(jf " Reverse (jharges t PAY CASH AND QUICK REMOVAL OF DEAD AND CRIPPLED COWS AND HORSES. Call Axel Bolvig, Woodstock 1645-W-2 and reverse charges. *46-26 I WILL PAY $4.0O to $14.00 for old and disabled horses. They must be able to walk: Call or write FRANK. M. JAYNE. -Phone Woodstock 209. *47-13 ARE YOU HAVING TROUBLE with your sewing machine ? If so, call McHenry 162. We repair them, no matter, what the trouble may be. Popp, West McHenry. 37-tf RELIABLE DEALER--wanted to handle Heberling Products in McHen- ' ry County. Excellent opportunity for the right man, stlling direct to farmers. Earnings $35 weekly not unusual. Write for free catalogue. G. C. Heberling Company, Dept. 409, Bloomington, 111. 16-2 Owl Destroys Bojr'i Ey« Swan River, Man.--Richard Clemetsen, fifteen, will never rob another bird's nest An owl pecked out one of his eyes when, he climbed a tree to •tea! a nefet and doctors fear be will los£ bis sight ° Wag Uses Legs of Dummy to Scare Street Crowd Warren, Ohio.--Men stood ' aghast, women and children screamed and fled In terror. In the middle of tbe street were two mutilated legs with no body attached. A motorist espied the grisly scene and stopped to offer assistance If it were not too late. Flipping a blanket from the stump end of the legs, he found--not flesh and blood shafts-- but artificial legs hacked from a clothing store dummy. A village wag near by chuckled. Among the Sick Mrs. Ben N. Schmitt is recovering from an appendicitis operation in St. Therese's hospital, Waukegan. Miss Gwendolyn Overton is seriously ill at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. I. Overton, on Waukegan street. She is suffering from a heart attack which followed pneumonia and is under the care of a trained nurse. Miss Liliam Nordin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Nordin, was operated on for appendicitis at St. Therese's hospital, Monday. J^he ia Recovering nicely. Georeg W. Colby is ill with heart trouble at his farm home near this city.. PaJkxIt Op«n.d by Word ^ Chicago.--To open an ancient English padlock owned by Mrs. D. R. Peache here, one must arrange its com- Bear in mind that today there are more trained and educated people In the game of life than there ever have been before. But remember all A« time that belief m luck is belief in superstition and thai superstition is disappearing as men grow more intelligent and more ambitious. If you haven't an education--get 6ne. There ate many ways to get one. The country is filled with schools and colleges, there are chances to take special course!' after you have knocked off your regular Job for the day. What's the use of being in a live modern intelligent world If you are not going to fake advantage of your opportunities'? Keep thinking about the future Keep learning. Get Ideals and keep them. r, Maybe it won't be always pleasant at the time. Bat what counts js the future; So forget Old Man Luck and go to work and keep at work. And you will be surprised, after a year or twe» how ttincb fun you are 'getting outeaifeaxigteocg. -• • • m-.»• . \ Girl Hitchhiker Gives Advice and Four "Don'ts" Tucson, Ariz.--These are the rules of Miss Shirley Williams for hitchhiking: Don't thumb rides. Don't travel at night. Never ride in trucks or on freight trains. Never accept rides of less than 100 miles. 'I make an average of better than 400 miles a day," she said. She says that she has crossed the country four times, and stopped here on her fifth trip. She has a contract with Paramount when she gets to Hollywood. sl»r reported. Armless Girl Teaches Herself to Play Piano BIDS WANTED ^ The Board of Supervisors of Mc Henry County, Illinois, through its Purchasing Committee advertise for bids fort approximately five carloads of % to 1% inch de-duster screenings stoker .coal, Franklin County or equal, F. O. B. tracks, Woodstock, Illinois. Bids (to be in the Office of the County Clerk at Woodstock not later than September 18, at 10 o'clock A. M. Also bids on hauling of coal from tracks to bin at Court House. The Board of Supervisors reserves the right to accept or reject any or all bids. ' SIGNED: CHAS. ACKMAN, Chairman Purchasing Committee. 16 Paris, France.--Europe's gangsters and International adventurers, who have found time on their hands since bootlegging booze into S/ftnerica be came a dead industry, have discovered a new racket in gunrunnlng into Ethiopia. ^ While the . chancelleries are busy trying to find a solution to the quarrel between Benito Mussolini and the emperor of Ethiopia, Halle Selassl I, gunrunnlng racketeers are busy rushing into East Africa the munitions which will blaze when talking ceases. With some 500,000 men to resist the might of Italy, and the need for airplanes, tanks, and motorized artillery, the ruler of Ethiopia has sent emissaries to munition plants of Europe to try to obtain the equipment necessary to, carry on war against the white invader of the kingdom founded, according to legend, by Solomon and the queen of- -Sheba. ; • Secret Orders Placed. • • Owing to the ban on export bt. arms, the Ethiopians have not been able to buy enough war stocks, although the emissaries have offered gold from their fabled mines. Some secret orders have been passed and ships, under sealed instructions, have sailed mysteriously from several ports In Europe down through the Suez canal and the Red sea. Normally, they carry trinkets and western goods for the emperor'a people, but In rejallty they have vbeen loaded to the Plimsoll line with powder and arms. The gunrunnlng racketeers are supplementing this traffic. Mostly Greeks, Germans, Armenians and other individuals of no defined nationality, they have spread their activity from the capitals of Europe to the shores of the Red sea and the inland frontiers of the emperor's kingdom. Their agents throughout the western capitals are charged with the mission of buying all available rifles, shotguns and revolvers and, if possible, machine guns. These are then shipped to the nearest port, where bartering goesr on with the captains of vessels bound east of Suez. Racketeers Charter dhlps. The smugglers' agents offer big rewards to sea captains who are willing to use up available space in- loading guns for tbe East African war. As, however, the number of vessels available on the regular routes Is limited, the racketeers have been chartering vessels of their own, idle tramp steamers, yachts and sailing craft Crammed full Mothe decks with grenades and rifles and machine guns, they steer for the Red sea, unload their cargoes and rush them over the caravan routes by camel and mule pack to the frontiers of Ethiopia. Here the Ethiopians, hungry for the guns which they need to defend their soil, are ready with precious golddust tied In cloth, whlcb they pay to the gun traders. Throughout the vast desert wastes of Arabia and the Yemen, where Lawrence roused the tribes against the Turks in the World war, the gun traders today are searching the land for guns which they can ship across the stretch of water which separates the Arabian state from Africa. Arabian tribes, eager to help their Ethiopian neighbors against the Invading Europeans, gladly contribute their sharp-shooting rifles to the cause, especially when they < get well paid for their benevolence. YOUTH ADMINISTRATION 1 Application blanks for the Nation>- al Youth Administration have been received at the local high school and may be obtained by anyone who arib for them. They are for students who desire funds to continue their high school or college education, allowing $6. per month. Miss Marion Wegener, <who has been enjoying a vacation from her duties at the West McHenry State bank, with Louis Nimsgern, John* Schaefer and Laur<* Schaefer, spent Sunday at the Dells in Wisconsin. RELATIVE DIES Relatives here received word Sunday of the death of Mrs. Alice Magnusen, 20 years old, of Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Magnusen, who had only been married a few weeks, died of pneumonia. She was the daughter of Mm. Alice Woods of Elburn and granddaughter of the late Thomas Conway, brother of M A. Conway st>3 M. E. Conway of this city. / * • - 4 MOTHERS CLUB The Mothers club will meet Iftikday afternoon with Mrs. Clarence Carp. t, 111.--Using her nose and chin to touch the keys, nineteen-year-old Helen Wllhelml^tias learned tb play the piano with more than average skill. When her arsus failed to develop after birth, Helen set about learning to utilize other members of the body for duties usually done by the hands. Miss Wtlhelml Is able to operate a typewriter with a pencil held in her moutt). Mafder *nd Mahitoatbtc*1 In most states a death resulting from a felonious act is considered murder, even when it Is not the natural or probable consequence of the crime. But not in Ohio. A man set fire to his shop to collect Insurance and several occbpants of the apartments over the store were burned to death. The conviction was first-degree murder, but on appeal It was modified to manslaughter because there was no "specific Intent to Collar's Weekly. ' Mias Leone Freund completed her nurse's training, course at St. Therese's hospital, Waukgan, on Sept. 4, and is now spending a few weeks at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Freund. Miss Ruth Nye of St, Vherese's hospital, Waukegan, spent the weekend at her home. > V' < Piiat Was Colonial Lux«ry Paint In Colonial times was mainly a luxury, antiquarians have recently discovered. At first crudely mixed paint, Inspired by the Indian red paint derived from clay, enhanced the appearance of room paneling Or floor. When mahogany for cabinet work came ifitc use, homemade furniture was often painted deep red in imitation of the expensive tropical wood. "Blue Eagle's" Rise and Fall Is Found in BiMe Boston.--Mrs. Evelyn Connell, Biblical student, compared events of the past few years with those of the Bible and found them similar, even to the rise and fall of the Blue Eagle. Mrs. Connell said the Great Stone Face in New Hampshire was similar to the part of Joshua where pilgrims entered the promised land and were commanded to take stones and leave them in the lodging place where they lodged for the night "And these stones shall be for a memorial unto the children of Israel forever. And the children of Israel did as they were commanded, and they are there unto this day." "Joshua took a great stone and set it up 'as a witness unto all the people,' for it bath heard all the works of the Lord which he spake unto us." Thus the stone face. *1' She finds the eagle in the seventeeth chapter of Ezekiel, where it said that an eagle rose, and settled among "the merchants of the city," planted and sowed in the fields, but ultimately was vanquished. 115-Year-Old Indian Is Still Working His Farm Wabeno, Wis.--Joe Ice, one hundredand- fifteen-year-old Indian living near here, has earnel the reputation of an excellent farmer among the younger tribesmen. His corn crop was so superior last season that members of his tribe pnrchased their seed for this year's planting from him. Friends say he is in excellent health for his age anil "is good for another ten years." Ice, who isn't Just ex actiy sure of his age, but remembers when his people lived In Chicago and were moved across the Mississippi river, can speak only the language of the Pottawattomle Indians. " Say you read DEALER. it in THE PLAINMr. and Mrs. C. E. Crandall of Belleview, Fla., who are visiting rel atlves in Illinois enroute to Michigan, spent the first of the week with Mrs. Abbie Martin. The Plaindealer is in receipt of card from P. S. Orr, former coach at MCHS. He states he is located at 221 Linn street, Iowa City, Iowa, that school is going fine and he likes his new job. Miss Anna Blake fropn Wilmette fpent the weekend with her parents, Jilr. mad Mrs, Peter Blake, SAVE MONEY ; ? TRADE IN YOUR OLD TIRES ON Q-3 and Goodyear Pathfinderi allow you 20% discount regardless; of si*e, brand or condition of your tires. Price Your Price 30x4.50--211 28x4.75--10. 27x5.50--17 28x5.25--18 30x5--8-ply Track . 32x6--10-ply Track. A* \ $7.35 7.75 10.15 9,25 20.70 35,20 $5.88 • 6.20 8.12 7,40 16.56 28.16 Save $1.47 1.55 2.03 1.85 4,14 7.04 W alter J. Freund Battery Charging, Fan Belts, Radiator Hose and TIRE REPAIRING AND VULCANIZING Spark Plugs, Etc., to Fit Every Car or Truck PHONE 294> West McHenry, Illinois . FREE DANCING Open All Winter . WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS GOOD ORCHESTRA SATURDAY NIOHT SEPT 14 FRANK NELL'S PAVILION Johnsburg Bridge Bill Benson and His 7-Piece Orchestra, Starting Saturday Night, Sept. 21, r BEER 5c MIXED DRINKS EAT DRINK AND BE MERRY Around the Marine Bar AT THE PIT t Quarter Mile East of McHenry on Route 20 FISH FRY EVERT FRIDAY NIGHT SATURDAY NIGHT Chicken Dinner, 35c (Vi Chicken) ; ORCHESTRA , HAROLD (Schmalta) MILLER, Prop. JOHNSBURG TAVERN ~ Joe B. Hetternuii, Prop. 7^ SATURDAY NIGHT--ORCHESTRA And Special Chicken Plate Dinner -- 35c FISH FRY FRIDAY NIGHT The Place to Eat and Drink Special dinners arranged for any size parties--anything you could wish to eat and drink. -- CHICKEN PLATE LUNCH AT 35c .... --"v FISH DINNERS ALL DAY FRIDAY My Place Tavern Green Street f£MOUS FOR A WONDERFUL TIME Every Saturday Night NIK lUKISOrS at PISTAKE BAY < Dine and Danot Vi Fried Chicken Plate Lunch. m MUSI^ by BARBARA HORICK'S ORCHESTRA LONE MAPLE TAVERN River Road, south of McHenry A. H. Watson, Prop. SATURDAY NIGH*T--Fried Chicken Dinner-- Music by Ben Thonnesen Orchestra 1 Kitchen under new management -- Mrs. Fred Wagner. ' " Fish Fry Every Friday 3lpen All Winter 7 2^ M&L '

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy