•\ - 1,S< >• ». f .-c J* •» .^ ^ ,*l, u*. , "T .\ . , ^ W!tc* *V , Novamber 11031 " Stlpf" -I • i. • • V 'V*. W-t* ' *• ><X* &> "->*#' ' _ '** " •• *< "'u ~ r / v * o p " ' < ' ? PLAUVDSALSR ~" ' ' • . 1 ' i * •. ,' f, w t, 4 ' ^ T-J -**f- . '•*•»< 1 • • i - v , . ^ # . ^ ..^V- "j y > y^* •*.<-**" «! . , „/f ,•" /"' » 11 ' , *• ^ H . *» '• Wfc,"1 li k'1, • - I * -i •THC BHJEL5B ^n»" Week Diyi 7:29 S3* FRIDAY -- SATURDAY NOVEMBER 5 -6 Bette Dark -- Henry F«|l| "THAT CERTAIN woauar .. with Ian Hunter -- AnitaLoafee SUNDAY -- MONDAY NOVEMBERS -- 8 Dick Powell -- Priacilla Lane "VARSITY SHOW" with Fred Waring and His Pennsylvania^ Sunday Matinee, S:15 Continuous Prices change at 5:80-- --No change in Admission Priees-- TUESDAY (BARGAIN NITE) 10c T- Doable Feature -- 20c . Martin Johnson's Last Picture (1) "Borneo" (2) "My Dear Miss Aldxich" WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY NOVEMBER 10 -- II Kay Francis -- Ian Hunter "CONFESSION" ..', with Basil Rathbone MILLE LAST TIMES TONITE Gene Raymond -- Parkyafrrkus and an All-Star Cast! 'LIFE OF THE PARTY" Also--March of Time FRIDAY, BARGAIN NITE Zazu Pitts -- James Gleason "40 NAUGHTY GIRLS' SATURDAY ONLY --f-» Matinee at 2:30 --- Jimmy Ellison in "Annapolis Salut*" -- AND .----- Richard Diz in 'It Happened in Hollywood' SUNDAY AND MONDAY -- Continuous from 2:30 Sunday-- -- The Picture the World will be Talking About -- The Picture You Must Not Miss! !! "THE ROAD BACK" Positively Not a War Picture ALSO -- "Romance In Celluloid" Popeye Cartoon -- News TUESDAY, BARGAIN NITE Claire Trevor -- Bill Robiiwon "One Mile From Heaven" -- Big Special Attractions ---- WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Edward Arnold -- Frances Farmer "TOAST OF NEW YORK" with Cary Grant -- Jack Oalde STARTS NEXT FRIDAY Sensational Dinnerwaf® Gifts to the Ladkt" During tM at A&P vou t kifuis to chooMII pr»«"«sl ln*v* "PABST-Errr CHEESE Per pkg. _...„. 19c. MCL^O-SITc^&M.. 7«r &7c AGED AMERICAN . *--««*• MILD LONGHORN WISCONSIN BRICK . . NOTICE! ! We will have a very low price on winter keeping potatoes next week. 2<&lSc 2 CANS 29c -pkm. ILSS 2SC IWUCMM. BIROAN I BROADCAST BEEF 'BROADCAST OR ITO Beef SLICED Hwy Beat . AUNT JEMIMA %b?'29« PANCAKE now RAJAH Table Syrup . aSt 25C RED CIRCLE Coffee . BIROANNAD A4P BRAN 10c Natky OtEO Cera FANCY AAP 1 -LB, ' CRACKED LOAF 2 LBS. 23c FRY WITH SPRY SHORTKNINO flak4** . ft*29c Cnw*ernes EATMOR . LB 15c Hese ^ . . BOX 19c 3 CAKES 17c 'BAG® $2.15 Liftbeey Soap IKIL CSAILY NEW ERA HOME STYLE PEACHES N0.2Vi f% CANS X3 WIN A PRIZE WEEK I There are $55,000 (RETAIL VALUE) worth of prise* given iwav in 12 weekly conleMt, Thi# is Contest No. 8. Ask your A&P Manager for full details of the Ann Page Contest--theft enter it today! ANN PAGE SPARKLE ^ PUDDING . . 2PKGS 9C ANN PAGE ^ - SAND. SPREAD PINT 23c A&P FOOD STORES I H I „ R I A I A T 1 A N T ! C A N T P A C I F I C T E A C O M P A N Y BRIEF AND BREEZY Learn to be lonely and you can stand life. Men love their work or they would not long stick at it A fool should hold his that's just it; he can't. ; but Try always using politeness, is entertaining to perfect! it. It Only the brighter minds know when they art sdbfects of sattee. . A high state of personal dissatisfaction is what makes America progress. They'll never abolish the rocking chajr. The sense of rhythm in,one'8 being demands it. When "Oft in the Stilly Night" was written, there were. stilly nights; but "never no more." After the company has gone your* wife finds there is enough food left over to last three days without cooking anything. There are families that seem to have been always comfortably wellto- do. The thrift of the ancestor persisted in his descendants. "SOUl fiEAR| • ** "Els EARL WALSH OHAltPIOW OF WOMEN BOWLERS ROLLS FIRST QAXE 4KKEW ALLEYS A eoiqtle of noted Englishmen were picked off a few days ago by the Japs and prompted John Pfcalin to remark in his amusing manner, "Now, I suppose we can expect to vm another apology." -11- -- Seems darn decent of those polite little Japa the way they apologise. We've always tried to follow the rule that if another fellow is decent1 enough to apoogize, we'd be, decent enough to acsept the apology. --B-- , That still looks O. K. if it comes B*y, ncouu' The Scouts worked very hard at their meeting, Monday. Yes sir, they're working in earnest to get some badges at the Court of Honor IN A LINE OR TWO Genuine insight is to know When to call a man by his first name. Young foljcs like you if you laugh at what they think is funny instead of freezing up. Ordinary folks don't progress so far in underworld slang as to call $1,000 a "grand." V * Many a man thinks he has no use for more than two pair of trousers-- one off and one on. Men enjoy making money for the pleasure of making it. Didn't you ever play a game? The life he leads tends to make a celebrity foolish; yet most of the celebrities show a marked resistance to folly. i Don't bear false witness about yourself to your doctor. He fathoms the truth from symptoms he is entirely familiar with. HIT OR MISS - In the good old days, meals were opened with a blessing. Now, they're opened with a can opener. The newly married wife is bound to make mistakes and the wise husband is bound to eat them. Motor cars may be as deadly as' war, but they don't make you salute officers all day and scratch coolies all night. A woman would be unhappy if she could not stir things up a couple of times a year udder the guise of housecleaning. There are two reasons why some people don't mind their own business. One is that they haven't any mind, and the other that they haven't any business.--Los Angeles Times. Schaefer Brothers celebrated the grand opening of their new bowling alleys last Saturday night. The owner of the National Billiard Company cut the ribbon to open the aUeys for com- . . . .. iV „ petition. Mike Conway rolled the first . hel<* the m,ddle of *ext month, ball (he got three pins). | y011 know, the last Rally was Dorothy Burmeister of the Logan P°stPoned #nd troop 162 will have its Square Buicks, who is holder of the own awarding events. Three Chicago Evening American singles, 5r°ups.I*bored,at me*t"lr« Mr. doubles and all events recoitls, was *®®k°®n*J®"a took all boys on the flag the guest of the evening. Dorothy ,te8t- D°Tald Howard demonstrated showed h«r daaa by beating one of Mc- ots to his group and Yours Truly Henry's best bowlers, Herb Simon i care 01 banda^in^- ^ ^ys As evidence «f this Burmeister girP extend invitations to those people inability it might be pointed out that *frest€d scouting, to come see the her average is the best in a field of urJ of **onof- An official date has 14,000 women bowlers who have com- ,not **** *et *S ***' but U wil1 ^ peted in the Evening American tpur-i kn®wn sofn. J . . - naments. Her high game for all time1 1 T*8 jus^ wondenng )* there are when a person's feelings are hurt, but is 288. Over a period of seven years ®ny * i ° ^ ®°y it seems like carrying a hurt a little] her average is -187 pins. Tie that. , A.11 you have to do is just too far when they bump you off and Dorothy will be back some of these c?n)e doyn meeting Monday then spring that "I'm So Sorry" stuff, days with a ladies' team to challenge Scouting in progress --I-- the five best men bowlers we can " 1 Sorry our third ward alderman, Fred gather. Ferwerda is on the ailing list. Of On ^rnday afternoon there was a .. .. . . course, there is some compensation match between the Dutch and the ' J°,n now and miss in the fact that everybody is so ' a t - . Irish. The Ehitch wort with 2124 pins nQ more fun. tentive. Even the young ladies swarm against 2079 for the Irish. / to give hirft outside. »p now. - r - i -- " • , . • i ; league will hold ,t)heir watches on Wed- 'In At Nick's Tavern . p r West McHenry, Dl. - ^^~Plate Lunch on Fridays -- Beginning at Noon Sandwiches at all times Duck -^^3atriiiday Evening Specialty 4^. S*• tTirtWal The gang will treat you right be clause they are Scouts. You will be able to get in on all the Scout activi- Mr. Schoenholtz, ojir Scoutmaster, home when he stirs Spring Grove will have two teams ^ the meeting , an old bugle weSwm't' bring 'that,bowling on these^-alleys every Tuesday !on8:^ to the Scouts of M^- Armistice Eve Dance WEDNESDAY, NOV. 10,-1931 - ' ^ . NELL'S PAVIUON -- JOHNSBURa v - Benefit Girls ' Basketball Team Admission 25c - V - - - • night. The Kftights of Columbus *»<*_ trill mofAWfto am XiT^A to blow. It still 1 It sure is is useful, how- 'nes^y nights.. It is also expected that *ver'-to reca11 *** Scouting |itfs incidence in last week's" iPlaindealer. Harvard teams will use. the alleys on *°'n? on, ®. a'so some We wrote some nonsense about buy- °ne night of each week. On Friday u°0fik .J11 stor^ •sv'-r.'.' ^ ; "\r'z ing gloves from Ed Lusk in the store night of this week, a Woodstock team now occupied by Bill Althoff's hard-, will be on hand to match a Johnsburg Wh a t s h o u l d s h ow u p o n a n ' t'e am. STAFFORD COURIER PUTS "OK" STAMP ON OUR TEAM AND COACH The Stafford Courier of Stafford, Kansas, had the following to say about ware other page but an Althoff ad pushing those same brown glove*. Evelyn«Anderson tells us that 'we are going to have a girls' basketball team this year. --I--; . The girls plan to start practice next, . , Tuesday night in the grade school";our high school team in their opening gym. Any of you girls who are not remarks of a fine account of the rein high school are invited to dig up ®*nt football game. Good sports, those an outfit and be on "Eand for some fun. Kansas fellows. Here is what they y |»ayj * The girls have a dance planned for' "Stafford high school football team next Wednesday, November 10, at won >ts intersectional game with the Frank Nell's hall in Johnsburg. it team from McHenry, Illinois, Saturwouldn't be a bad idea to buy a ticket' d®y night on the Stafford field, 36 to 0, even jf you can't do the "Big Apple." before a crowd of some 3,000 Two baseball teams started their spring training early this year as they dueled in a hard-fought game in Ye Olde Meeting Hall. The fielding of all the boys was excellent, and I'm sure there are some fine ball players among the Scouts. The game came to a close as the boys were told to "fall in." The fellows all made the Indian -(Scout Benediction and then "hit" for home. Don't forget the Scout Oath and Law and use your Scout books cause those badges do look very"'fine. See you next Monday! --*-- There seems to be some mystery about Felix Unti dashing over to De persons. "Although defeated by a lopsided score, the entire McHenry team and troit. Some say he is interested in: t^,e cpach sold themselves thoroughly mechanical refrigeration and is going ^ this community, and this intersecto school. Others say there is another,tioinal contest gave the McHenry attraction over there in Detroit. Bet-'sch001 the finest publicity that could ter give us some dope on that, Felix. Spend Lives on Little Junks The sea-gypsies of South China pass virtually their entire lives on little junks, floating up and down rivers. When a marriage takes place the junks are festooned with red and gold paper, firecrackers exploded-- and then the bride falls on her knees and presents a cup of wine to her parents-in-law. ON THE OFF SIDE Ceylon elephants are said to take three baths--voluntarily--each day. A mole can turn 130 degrees in solid earth with four strokes of its paws. Twelve coats of paint were removed from Walton - on - Thames (England) church's 1630 organ. Standing on a stone traffic shaft, near Entebbe, South Africa, a king stork makes friends with motorists. An ivory rod found in ruins of Lachish, Palestine, is believed to be • hair curler of the sort used 3,200 years ago. Radio police a{ South Bend, Ind., answered * "a child screaming" broadcast and found two cats fighting in a garage. Four hundred mouse skins were used to inajk&jL coat of moiise fur for Mrs. M. Blowers, who has more than 30,000 mice at her farm, Hemel Hempstead* England. The senior Unti has had lots of advice since he lost that hat on one of Chicago's windy streets. A hat pin won't work. A string on the bonnet might work. We have a sure one though. While strolling down Chicago's Michigan Boulevard last Sunday night, we saw a fellow breezing along, carrying an extra lid in his hand. That's the answer, Charlie. If you go to that windy burg again, carry a spare. --A-- Take a peek at those bowling scorear this week. Elmwood Park, led by Melsheimer's 624 series, showed some red cla-ss in trimming Volo at the Palace last Sunday. IfUST BE A LAUGH Tram tickets in Australia have schoolboy howlers printed on them. Some of the specimens seem new, as: v- Gooseberries are grapes that need a shave. A ball falls to the ground because it is pulled by gratitude. Guerilla warfare means when the sides get up to monkey tricks. The Mediterranean and the Red sea are connected by the Sewage canal. * 'Every morning my sister waves her arms to stretch her abdominable muscles.' ' The father of the famous Black Prince in English history , was 03d King Cole. INSTALLING NEW MACHINES The Elmwood park team wants a match with a picked team and may put twenty-five bucks or so up for a side bet. Any takers? v --H-- A1 Jus ten was no slouch with hi# 613 series in the Forester league. --j-- We now have two high class bowling alleys in town and this column is hoping that both will have so much busi ness that they -will have to build on new additions.. --i-- Schaefer Brothers opened their; beautiful new alleys last Saturday night and are off to a great start. i-l-- Dorothy Burmeister, famous bowlerr who holds records a mile long, was the feature attraction for the grand open* in*. "Red"' Winkel was urged to match his skill against Dorothy's strikes, but "Red" got timid and Herb Simon stepped into the match. --I-- The Palace alleys had a new sanding and new finish this week so things are looking bright for McHenry bowlera. --I-"" Having two good alleys, McHenry is now drawing bowlers from a large area. Watch the scores and you will' notice that many surrounding cities are sending teams tp McHenry. TOrt $uits McHenry. ---1«-- We hear that Mike Budler has been on the disabled list. The gang at the Palace hopes to see him on deck again ; 'soon. :;v tions, and seemed to tire quickly. "Coach Reed and his boys from Mcbe imagined. The visiting team show- Henry made friends at once here; they ed distinctly the effects of the long bus will be remembered as an outfit whose trip, of the change of climatic condi-! acquaintance is a pleasure." MARKE Wm P) -. e-j; ? rrt. HARVEST SALE FREStftSItOUND BEEF, LB. BONELESS BEEF STEW, TENDER SIRLOIN STEi BEEF POT RQAST, LB. TENDER SMALL STEAKS. LB. TENDERIZED MINUTE STEAKS, Lb. SUGAR CURED BACON, Whole or half, LB. BACON SQUARES, IVi-ZVi lbs., PER LB. „ LAMB STEW, Spring Lamb, LB. LAMB SHOULDER STEAK, LB. PORK SHOULDER CHOPS, LB WNO^I^gA^VER SAUSAGE, 11- |Q LARM^dl^G^A, MINCED HAM, 1H. I 7C HOMEMADE PORK SAUSAGE M*AT, LB. 19^ TENDERIZEDPICNIC HAMS, LB. 25^ 17M%* 25c 29* 25* 27c 23* 14* 23* 25* VkHENRY'S "5me ft Market BRIM rnanm UPIO-MFH TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS iiii "Torchy'* Krause has been helping Herman Steffes since Mike kicked up his heels and had to go to bed. --I-- Roy Smith, who was the chief slicker- upper at the Palace for several years, bobbed up at the Schaefer Alleys this week in his working clothes. --8-- Old Timer Bennett is back in town feeling spry enough to rub the kinks out t>f a corkscrew. --a-- Woodstock High trimmed Marengo last Saturday with plenty to spare; Coach Dale's boys are champs once more. Vincent Wirfs, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Wirfs, of McHenry, is in Syracuse, N. Y., on a special trip, being sent there by his employer, the John Barnes Company of Rockford, to install drilling machines. Vincent, had made rapid progress in his work; form. The boys would feel dandy if in the Barnes plant and it is very j they could strut their stuff before St. Mary's eleven again showed they have what it takes when they "took Elkhorn into camp by a 12-7 score. --11 Our own high school football team will tackle Walworth here Friday aft» ernoon at 2:30 o'clock in the last home; game of the season. It looks like the team will be in top gratifying to learn that he has been selected from hundreds of employes to make these installations in New | York state. large crowd. BetVr be there. ) Mr. and Mrs. Carl i. FVeund and children were Elgin visitors Monday. ei ii§ V Choice of Sizes and Makes... at Greatly Reduced Prices! Completely insulated.. Oven heat regulator. Automatic top lighter. Non-dog top burner*. Bfuupaelled throughout. 2-piece grid-pan broiler. 2 roomy service drawers. • A woman's wprk shop is her kitchen! How important it is then to have it modern and upto- date in every respect! And yet, today, many homes- are still using ancient, inefficient stoves and ranges... equi discarded long ago. To make it possible for every home to enjoy modern cooking equipment, the Western United Gas and Electric Company now offers a big Fall Sale of modern Gas Ranges. Come in and inspect the many sizes and makes on display. See the drastically reduced prices that mean big savings to you. liberal terms to make it easy to buy now... so don't delay. Visit your Western United Store today. " SMALL DOWN PAYMENT ' LIBERAL TERMS ,;-t raoa