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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Jan 1927, p. 6

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r r rr* rtT.*• ::;x>'7.^^.5? a*^ f, " -*,v , \i f > \ ^ J , r «t;,v«. -A ^.yp^...,v. rtA f , , _ -. */ " ' _ •.. THE ALEE, THURSDAY, JAN. 20,1927 gCBEVitounr builds ITS 3.000,©OOTH CAR king «the latest spectacular emenf la its history as the largest builder of three-seed ission cars, the Chevrolet Mo- Company today, announces the ijprodttetion of the 3,000,000th car. The -marking model, which happened * i» he a coach, was driven off the production line at the Flint plant by W. ' "S'r- S. Knudsen. president of the Chevrolet Motor company. The first passen- ?*$ 1 jper was C. F. Barth, vice president T-•&" in charge of production. Finished in St. James (fray Duco UJ$ »nd fashionably striped in pistache grreen, the milestone car flashed off the production line with scarcely more formality than attended thfc debut of number 3,000,001, which followed nine seconds later. Immediately after the final production, Mr. Knudsen stepped on the starter and the princely 3,000,000th car purred away to give room to the long Tine of sedans, coaches, roadsters, etc., that were moving up with clock/ like precision to the final inspection post. Equipped with balloon tires, steel disc wheels, one-piece crown fenders, bullets type head lamps, streamline Fischer body and other improvements incorporated this year, the coach dis- Adding machine rolls for sale at this office-- v 2 for 25c <0" while they last played a distinct advance over Its most illustrious predecessor, the 2,- 000,000th Chevrolet. The 2,000,000th model was built after 14 years of production and the 3,000,000 only 14 months later, in indication of the rapid growth of the company, which now has production facilities prepared to build 1,000,000 units a year. Commenting on ,'the achievement, Mr. Knudsen declared that the Chevrolet Motor Comapny was grateful for the ever increasing public confidence in the company and its product, which made the feat possible. "We are entering on what promises to be again our greatest year," he said, "and with a greatly improved product, I am sure that the motoring public will demand the 4,000,000th Chevrolet before 1928 is many weeks old." McHenry Plaindealer ?Vv, Electrical Wiring and Repair Work ftp© <}© ftH lrtfWlii clcetrical house wiring or make any changes in your present equipment. Experienced workmen "are employed to give prompt service and high class work. 'When" in need, of in the eTectnclf line, call on us. We also do plumbing and heating- H. E. BUCH & CO, Batteries, Tubes and Radio Aocesories Phone 48 Green ©U30T/ y^EIMO SCOTT WATSON pcd Beard, First Great Pirate "pIRACY is as old as history. The first savage man wbe hollowAi ent a log with fire and paddled around la this precarious craft probably fell a victim to the first act of piracy when he met another savage traveling en a log on which he had spent no lnbw. From time imuieniorial the Mediterranean sea w£b ravaged by pirate fleets which made Asia Minor and the islands near It their headquarters, from which they dashed out for raids en the ships ©f Rome. There Is the story of the pirates who captured the yoang Julius Caesar and held him for ransom for six weeks, during whlrti time the future consul lived on excellent terms with his captors. He told them that he would one day crucify them all, whereat they roared with laughter at this pleasantry. But It was also a matter of record that he kept his word. Piracy In the Mediterranean continued long after Rome had fallen, and early in the Sixteenth century it gave to history the first outstanding pirate leader, the famous Barbarossa or "Red Beard." Red Beard's real name was Uruj, and he was the son of ^ Turkish renegade and a Christian mother. He was born on the island of Lesbos In the Aegean sea, a'stronghold of the Mediterranean pirates, among whom he rose to accepted leadewrtiip. But feeling the need for a more convenient base from which to conduct his operations, in 1504 Red Beard established his headquarters at Tunis and became the first of the Barbary corsairs whose raids went unchecked until some youthful commanders of the United States navy taught them proper respect for the freedom of the seas. Red Beard had a convenient arrange ment with the sultan of Tunis whereby that eminent ruler was to be given one fifth of ail the booty he took in return for royal approval and protection when it was needed. One of his first exploits was the capture of two galleys belonging to Pope Julius II, which had sailed from Genoa, and the richness of the loot from this expedition showed the sultan that he had made no mistake in agreeing to the partnership. The next year the pirate chieftain showed his daring by capturing a Spanish ship with 500 soldiers on board, and in 1512 the Moors Invited him to join them la their never-ending war on Spain. They attempted to take the town and port of Bujeya, but after eight days' fighting, during which Red lost an arm, the attack failed. Although Barbarossa became rich and powerful after he had captured the town of Algiers, where he wet himself up as sultan, his embroilment witb Spain preved his undoing. Charles V. sent an army of 10,000 men to Algiers, defeated and killed the corsair. (((, ltlf, Wasters NiwivtHr fntea.) a:' ill . H j t ' ' 1 m;'" • fsg \ 1 < gwiNWMHnntiniinniiwiimminnimg I N«xdb Brevities § I of Illinois | EtfRimmiiiiiAnnnmiiiiiimiiiiitttHim? A scarcity of Ice and matches in Montgomery county courthouse at Litchfield looms. The board o£ supervisors has voted to discontinue purchase of those two commodities for the building. Illinois firemen held their annual three-day convention In Qulncy, nearly every fire department in the state being represented. Many manufacturers had extensive displays of Are fighting apparatus. H. E. Howland of Chicago was held to the Kane county grand jury after he had been identified as a robber who held up fhe cashier of the Orocker theater In Elgin on. January 1 and escaped with $1,500. Fire destroyed the junior clubhouse of Illinois Military school at Aledo, and Kenneth Lum, son of James K. Lum, Chicago, was killed. Col. d R. Terry, head of the school, jittempted to rescue Cadet Lum, but was overcome by smoke and suffered severe burns. L. R. Blackman was elected president of the Moline Association of Commerce at the organization meeting of the board. Other officers elected were as follows: First vice president, Dr. Perry Weasel; second vice president, Harold E. Godehn;' treasurer, Henry J. Grlpp. According to statistics compiled by B. E. Glos, assistant to the dean of men, 41.7 per cent of men students attending the University of Illinois this semester are members of fraternities. The largest number of fraternity men are sophomores and the smallest number are seniors. Serving a six-months' sentence in the Vermilion county jail on a charge of violating the Harrison narcotic act, Fred1 McGulre of Greenville, whose term was up but who was reluctant to leave the jail, was arrested at the jail door on a charge of bootlegging booze to the prisoners. A justice of the peace may tie marital knots In any county of the state of Illinois, as he is not limited in performing marriage ceremonies to the confines of his own county, Attorney General Oscar Carlstrom ruled in reply to a query from H. E. Fullenwlder, state's \attorney of Sangamon county. The body of .Tames Smith, fortythree years old, Marengo farmer, was discovered in Kishwaukee creek a short distance from his home. Mrs. Smith said her husband Jumped into the creek after he had tried to kill her and himself by driving his automobile through an embankment along the highway. Philip Mitchell, eighty-four, oldest active banker in Illinois, has relinquished his duties as head of the State bank of Rock Island after 65 years of continuous service with that institution. I. S. White, secretary and treasurer of the Hartz & Dahnsen Wholesale Drug company, and vice president of the State bank, succeeds Mr. Mitchell as president. The Rock Island County Bar association at a special meeting adopted a resolution referring to the grievance committee new charges against State Representative Harry M. McGaskrln, against whom disbarment proceedings are pending. This action grew out of the action of McCaskrln in filing suit against Senator J. J. Barbour and Attorney W. R. Moore, president of the Bar association. Determined to protect the "right of muninHpallties to control public affairs within their individual boundaries," the Illinois Municipal league will meat la Chicago February 8, 0, and 10 to outline a legislative program for presentation to the Fifty-fifth general assembly. Of particular moment Is the league's anticipated battle against a proposed indeterminate fraaehtae system fqr public utilities. One hundred citizens of Wilmette, Wlnnetka, Glencoe and Kenilworth started legal action in an endeavor to acquire an 18-aere plot known as "No Man's Land," lying between Wilmette and Kenilworth, for the purpose of making It a public park. County Judge Edmund K. Jareckl ordered a special election In New Trier township April 5 for a vote on a $500,000 bond issue, which Is to be used t<» buy the property. Once more the old has given way to the new, but this time it Is pork production on Illinois farms that is affected. , Swine sanitation, the new idea in hog raising, last year again proved so much more profitable than the old way, that almost without exception the farmers whe have tried the system will continue to use It In the future, according to reports coming to E. T. Bobbins, live-stock extension specialist of th# college of agriculture, University of Illinois. A total of 1,213 farmers In 75 counties of the state co-operated with Professor Robbins and their county farm advisers during the last year in demonstrating' the merits of the sanitation system^ which the college advocates. Mexican divorces are not recognised in McHenry county. This was Indi- Mtwl when Judge E. D. ShurtlefT set aside a decree granted to Mrs. Ida May West, wife of a prominent physician, in the Southern republic. Ray F. Beaudry, superintendent of transportation for the Elgin, .Toilet ifc Eastern railroad, was overcome by carbon monoxide gas while running the engine of his automobile in n closed garage in the rear of his home in .Toliet. He died a short time after members of the family discovered him Unconscious on the floor. ALONG LIFJ&'jS •• • TRAIL By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dcu of Mea. Ualvcralty of Illinois. ANDY AND HIS JOB AS SOON as Andy's examinations were over last June he came in to see rae with a wrinkled countenance. He was worried about something, It was plain to see. "What's on your mind?" I Inquired. - •Could I be excused from attending commencement?" he asked. "Why so?" "Well, I haven't any job, and want to go to Chicago and look for something. Fm afraid all the jobs will be taken." I recalled that I had felt the same way when I was graduating, and that for three months before that eventful day I had no peace of mind for thinking over the awful consequences which would ensue if, after going four years to college, there should be no place for me In the world. I recalled also that every year since my own exit from undergraduate circles I had heard the same fears expressed by scores of undergraduates. I listened not long age to one of the leaders In commercial enterprlaqp In this country. He was talking to young men upon this subject of getting a job. "The man himself," he asserted, "determines whether or not he will hold an important position. If he has training, If he has character and personality, If he can take responsibility with judgment, if he Is willing to work, he can have almost any job he desires." "There may be a shortage in little jobs In the world--Jobs which pay a thousand or two thousand or three thousand dollars a year, but there are not men enough available to fill the positions which carry with them salaries of ten thousand or twenty-five or fifty thousand dollars a year. There will always be a job for the man who has learned how intelligently to direct other men. Jobs are seeking men every day, all over the world." I didn't excuse Andy. I assured him that during all the years that I had had to do with young men, I had never known one who was in any way qualified who failed to get a Job. I suggested that he had been working pretty hard recently and that It wouldn't ruin him to take a little vacation and look around until August. He went away reluctantly and disappointed. Commencement morning he came In to see me with a letter in his hand. "I have a job," he announced, "a good Job, too. It's just what I wanted." For those who are really prepared to do something, there"Is seldom any dearth of JqUsl (the links REFEREES -- : 11nterpretatiems of the Rtdee J 0I of Coif • J * By INN1S BROWN , * ;t * (Managing gditor, The Amertoanl t Oolf«r) j What is the difference, if any, between a foursome and a four-ball matcht Also a threesome and a three-ball match f A foursome Is a match la hich two players to a 'side play alternate strokes with the same ball. A fourball match is one in which each player plays his own ball. A threesome Is a match in which two partners, playing alternate stroke with one ball, oppose the third player. In a threeball match each of the three plays his own baM. If one of the three plays agatnst the best ball of the other two, the match is called a best-ball match. Is a player allowed to lift his ball without penalty out of a track or a rut made by a wagon or other vehicle that has crossed a fairway t This Is not permissible unless the club has a local rule authorizing it. Where conditions of this kind exist, also where horses used to draw a mower or other equipment leave tracks in the fairways that are likely to prove troublesome, the club officials should properly handle the situation through a local rule. (Q by the B«U SynAoat*. I DO.) * Ancient Coal Mine • coal mine believed to have I operated by monks nearly 300 y ago was discovered recently by exploring in caves ne»r Cockburaa* path, Scotland. Some men succeed bea are destined to, but most ceed because they are d After a few hours with the rod lin^, Trouter was enjoying a smoke and a drink at the Arms when Bateman, an did tance, entered. "Had any lack?" he inquired iously. "Just one," answered "Of good weight?" Bateman. "Well," replied Trouter, "to tell you the truth, I haven't weighed it yet, but when 1 pulled it out the river went down three i: Parson Brown was partaking a chicken dinner with Broths Johnson. It was such a good chicken that the Parson could no longer speaking about it. "Dat's de finest chicken Whar did you git hit?" he Brother Johnson. ^Parson Brown, " slowly replied Johnson, "when you preaches a fine sermon Ah nebber axes yo' whar you got hit! Ah beliebe Ah should de same considerashun!" Don't wait for extraordinary opportunities; sieze those at hand and make them great. Foiling Forgm* A quartz lamp is used by experts in Hanau, Germany, by which counterfeit bank notes, fake pearls and the faintest shades of ink may be detected. The apparatus, by means of ultra-violet rays, discloses the most subtle falsifications whose detection hitherto depended on microscopic investigation aad complicated ofaamicnl analysis. Big Speedway Planned What is projected as the largest motor speedway in the world is being planned for Sydney, Australia. The track will be on the outskirts of the town, two miles ia length and 100 feet wide. It will be a part ef Blacktowa, a suburb of Sydney. The Plaindealer job department is ready to give you assistance in working out your ledger and loose leaf problems. . Have You Noticed? which car gets going quickest when green light flashes on! It's the Ford, of course. No shifting of levers--simply step on the pedal an# you're off. Following^prices include starter' dud balloon tires: ' RUNABOUT $360 ooupi $485 TOURING $380 v9tJD0R *49» FORDOR $545 JtO. R. FACTORY ^ Tudoy and Fordor Sedans equipped with wire wheels. New Fprd Vaporizer standard equipment on all models. CONVENIENT TERMS MOTOR Phones 30 and 31 M'HENRY No Alternative s^lWtttie Girl (at seashore)--Why-4t» the waves dance, mamma? Fashionable, Mother--I suppose, my child, because they cannot play bridge. ^•Boston Transcript. Sar-.JT; Produce* Much Enmrg&7<" Department of the Interior figures show that In 1925 public utility power plants in the United States produced nearly 06,000,000,000 kflawatfrfeoax* etf electric energy. T kamm There's only one Fontiac Six fond only General Motors could build it The Pontiac Six swept into the lime* light because it came to the public representing all the skill, resources and experience of General Motors. And it has remained in the limelight from the very day of its introduction, because no other c t has since appeared which offers so n oh for so low a price. Only the economies of General Motors' v; purchasing power could make po;- le at $825--Fisher closed bodies of ch commanding beauty, Pontiac Sb at factory. finished in distinctive Duco colors, such unusual fine car features as 46 lb. crankshaft, honed cylinders, full pre** sure oiling, automatic spark control, bronze-backed interchangeable be«f* ings of the costliest type. A #ull year has passed since the Pontiac Six was introduced--and the supreme satisfaction of 60,000 owners lends emphasis to the fact: There*is only one Pontiac Six--and only Qen» ertd Mulors could build it! '25 to $975. Oakland Six, companion to Pot.ttac Six, $1025 to $1295. All M4pS' diet by Fishsr. Easy to pay on the liberal (j**eral Motors Time Payment rldfc ONWAY MOTOR SALES McHenry, Illinois ' M l - *.^1 V SIX

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