. -.a.,V' y- " v 4 :: * l4'**.. ^ "" ** ' *• c^ V..V. ^ *, *• '".[W- / • W .1* "•"" '•"•'""'• r• i -c ", ^ \| v - Theodore Johnson, Attrrrney ^ First National- Bank Bid* *j /"'V ADMINISTRATRIX'S SALE i» y^.' t~£» ^tate of Illinois, County of Cook; ss. • '^3 ^wProbate Coart of Cook County. In ^ matter of the estate of Charles C. • * O'Malley, deceased. Eileen O'Malley, t\ * Administratrix of the estate of Charles ; ,,v * C. O'Malley, deceased, vs. Charles F. 'f'rf-- O'Malley, West McHenry State Bank, !* J. B. Kelter, E. H. Merrick, Azilda t , ' O'Malley and Carl W. Stenger, as '. , ' ttustee. : / Petition to Jiell real estate to pay '.-""V.' . Ptiblic notice is% hereby given that, b» virtue of a decretal order made and entered of record by said Court, , . in the above entitled cause, on the fcleventh day of October, A. D. 1928, the said Eileen O'MaHey, Administra- . ' trix of the estate of Charles C. O'Malley. deceased, will, at the hour of Eleven o'clock in the forenoon on Friday, the Twenty-third day of November, A. D. 1928, at the judicial sales- • ' roomB of the Chicago Real Estate Board, in the building known as No. * • y 87 West Monroe Street, on the second floor of said building in the City w of Chicago, County of Cook and State of Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest and best bidder for cash, to pay the debts of said estate, all the right, title, interest and estate which the said Charles C. O'Malley, deceased, had at the time at his death, in and to the following described real estate, cr so much thereof as may be necessary, to pay PEOPLE AND LITTLE WILLIE MUCH ALIKE Senator Ladd tiSId u£^k luoeheon In Fargo: "The world really does need a pact outlawing war, for when war comes every people is as blindly obedient to its government, no matter bow blameworthy its government may be; as was tittle Willie to bis father. " •Willie,' said his teacher, 'suppose, Willie, that a tiger was to come rushlng~ kt you to eat jou up--what would you do?' " 'Nothing, teacher,' said Willie. *"\Yhat? Nothing? You wouldn't even shout for help?1" • * 'Oh, no, teacher.* - ' •"Goodness, me! Whjrootl* "Because my pop says I mustn't talk at meals."* >: Remarkable Goldfi$h 'trained goldfish that responds to his owner's call und that eats out of hejr hsnd Is owned by Mrs. Morelle D. Brnyton. Lansing. Mich. The fish --named Bill--conies swimming its fastest when Mrs. Brajton calls him. Bill will eat out of lietf hand and will Jump of the water at her command. He permits anyone to pick him up. Bill makes his home In a large pool with 150 other goldfish. He Is eight years old and welchs a pound and a half. His unusual sire is attributedby Mrs. Ri&yton to his living in an ^ut-of-dWors pool apd to a selected aanndd// hbia lanced diet. HaZ to Come "Again Pedro Martinez, twenty-four, "Do splk much EngY's," but he knows how to make love. I'edro went to see Police Judge Wade Moore at Pittsburg, the debts now due from said estate, | Calif., with Francisca Garcia. Franand the cost of administration now due and to accrue, to-wit: Block Three (3) in Hanley's Third Addition to West McHenry, said Addition being a part of the North East Quarter of Section Thirty-four (34), cisca had Just arrived from Mexico and Pedro made the judge understand they wished to be married. Pedro proudly displayed his license, obtained earlier In the day from .the county clerk, and prepared to say "I do." permitted PedH* to fish In Township Forty-five (45) North,! Before the Judge tied the knot he Range Eight (8), East of the Third) 8crminired the "cense and d'scov- Principal Meridian, and a part of the South East quarter of Section Twen-1 California. ty-seven (27). Township Forty-five (45) North, Range Eight (8), East of the Third Principal Meridian, situated the County of McHenry and State if Illinois, The above described real estate will be sold subject to the estate of dower of Azilda O'Malley, and also subject to the lien of said trust deeds to Carl W. Stenger, as Trustee, given to secure Three Thousand ($3,000) Dollars and Otoe Thousand ($1,000) Dollars, lispecftvely. . . No dded or deeds will be delivered t» purchaser or purchasers until said sale has been reported to and approved by said Probate Court. Dated, Chicago, Illinois, October 20th, A. D. 1928. EILEEN O'MALLEY, Administratrix of the estate of Charles C. O'Malley, deceased. Theodore Johnson, Attorney. 21-4 Bachelor Primaie The fact that the new archbishop of Canterbury is still unmarried recalls a story of him and Queen Victoria which, If not true', is at any rate good enough to be true. The qtirefrn, the story runs, said to him: /'Doctor Lang,Why don't you dismiss a couple of curates and marry a wife?" "Madam," replied the future archbishop, "I can dismiss on rates. I could not dismiss a wife"--Manchester Guardian. J* Benzine for BeeHet To clear beetles out «t ruphoards and larders, sprinkle a little benzine over the boards, it will kill the eggs. m well as the Insects Hat Ha* Lotted Long Forty-eight years ago Thomas H. Hussey, seventy-seven, Of Batavia, N. Y„ went shopping for a hat After much Inspection of stock, Mr. Hussey bought the only one he thought looked well on him. And for 48 year? he has worn it whenever the use of £ head covering has been required. H<> says U Trains its shape and original color. Oyetort Top Limt Oysters ure more valuable than anj •»ther single product of the fluhmiM purchaser of a new Ford is entitled to Free Inspection Service for the first 1500 miles THE modern automobile it a finely built piece of machinery and it Mill stand a lot of abuse. Considering the work it does, it gives suv prisinglv little trouble. But there isn't a car made that will not run better and longer if given proper care. The first few hundred miles are especially important because that is when the mechanism of jour car la being broken in* * Proper attention during this period will lengthen its life and prevent unnecessary trouble later on. We are particularly into* cated in this matter because «e believe it is our duty not only to make a good automobile, but to help the owner get the greatest possible use over the longest . period of time at a minimum of trouble «ai expense. With this in view, the entire Ford dealer organisation has been specially trained and equipped to service the new Model A ear. Furthermore, we jglructed every Ford daaler to give the following Free IIIHpMUOIl 3CTV1W In yW| 1000 and 1500 miles t Check battery Check generator charging rmto " Check distributor adjustmemt Check carburetor Check light* Check brake* Check shock absorber ment Check tin inflation Check steering gear Change engine oil Lubricate chassis * No charge is made fof - labor or materials incidental to this service, except, of course, where repairs are necessary through accident, misuse or neglect. The only charge is for new oil. See your Ford dealc therefore, and get this Fi Inspection of your new earat 500, 1000 and 150§ miles. Find out, too, ho# little it will cost to have vour ear given a thorough going* over at regular periods thereafter. A checlung-up by expert , eaeed mechanics, together^ with oiling and every 500 miles, will months and years to the lif|P of your ear and mean mor|§ economical and ple4> snrable motorin every mile you PLAIHDEALKll, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1,1928 •rv c** LIGHT BURNED LONG * IN FORGOTTEN ROOM TH E WORLD HAS NEW AND FINER •>< 100#' Speed in Michigan By "RING LARONEM rty <>»»»»»»»»»••»»• 0 > To tlie LUitor: About a couple ol three weeks ago t hud oceasious to go from Goshen, ludiuua, to the old home town, Miles, Mick, atnl -we decided to take the Uichigun division of the big 4 on acct. of it uui taking as long like the lnterurbun urn! when t enjoy a experience i;..t i.uii i ulways feel like 1 , ouglii i«i k A ih> readers so as they can ei.j .« it -U tiuiid you ml^lit say. \ktU. i.. i»«* 1st place,'we called up the (jw»l...^s;atiou about 3 o'clock In the p. i.t i.uii found out wbut time the tin.it i. .t but the employees was home t....v.iiii their t»lesta, but huely 1 weui <>•>» my.telf In persoL and fouiUf l. -.i i>t mikI | says what time does t« Nlles? 'So he su>».;. . "VufH. lv ii ilw tu leave here at 0:11 but if « v y%u | wouldn't «^t down here at titiw because it don't .hardly leave- tiere at that time. If 1 w..t> >. .< l %(Hild cull me up along about i . " I will try aud tell you how liu« , I*.1' So 1 1.1. i itiiif, now could a train get I.tie i-.-i «»u.> curne from Indian apolin mat il.e titiie table give it ail day to «»> n*Ut. mid lie said be didn't kuow r<« Wiiys wherefores but he hud IH.ii vthere u guod many yrs..iit.u ... * to tlie was not to Set-theie Ht trftiu rime. So 1 took his word tor it and suutered down to the' station , i.liuut Vk after 5 aud sure enouxu !•>- «.;s in and I asked him how wui- 1.1.- train und be said it was ou thiit* -i. t 1 said*. -Olt. i. .. poller' S» lie It's only 20 minutes late ami \. .. u it oolites that dbse to Ou tiuif « ...» is the use of finding fault Km . •• sUd vulliUK It late." Well it.. . j mIniui ft:H5 there was a big »• disturbance and sure enoii^ii <^ie come and we was standing .11 the station platform waiting iiiio after slit was drawed Op aloug »i«ie ot us 1 aud my collar looked liU- m Kepublican delegate from Ga., but mi;, way we dumb aboard and set down in a red plusb seat and there was 2 other passengers on the train including a uian from the Bouse Of David aud bis wife. I don't know If you know what the Bouse of David is or uot. Well, It's a sex that lives In, Benton Harbor, Mich., aud It's religion Is that as long as you don't sin you don't die. Very few of them lives to be 100 but 1 could easily live to be that age If 1 didn't have to fret my life away shaving every A. M. Well this guy parked hi® head and whiskers on his Mrs. shoulder to take a nap and I thought she'd be tickled to death. Well along about this time we come to Elkhart and It was still broad daylight yet and the sun was shining in the golden west, but In come a brakeman dressed In a fedora bat and a mufti and a pair of shoes that hdi& been working on the railroad all the livelong day and be pulled dowif all the shades on the sunny side of the car and lit a acetylene light and the lady with me says: "What in the rorld Is he doing that for." So I says: "He believes In savelng daylight." She laughed heartily. Wile we was In Bikhart the crew found out that we was only about 25 minutes late and It would not do to spoil a record so we set around there for about % a hr. trying to get back to normal and finely the conductor come In and I asked him what time we was due in Nlles and be looked In a book and be said we was due there at 6:35 so 1 asked bin why did he half to look ID a book to find out and he said: . "Well If you was conducting a train that hadn't never got DO place when It was due how could you remember when It was due anywheres? If you had asked me what time when It was going to get in Niles instead of what time we ^as due there 1 could of told you without looking in po book." Well, the next station is Granger where the Grand Trunk" crosses and they have built a new Union Station that will bold 5 or 6 people but never does, but tjhe train has to stop a long while there on the the^y tlist they might be somebody on the Trunk (.Ine that's so desperate that they want to transfer, but nobody did and I said. "Now we won't have no more stops tiy we get to Nl'les." but Just before we come to that metropolis a hird with a red flag come out on the track and stopped us and it seems like they was a freight coming In the opp. direction on the same and only track and 1 or the other of us bad to buck on to a sidelng because they didn't neither one of us have tlie courage to try conclusions.. . • Well, the freight was elected though It probly had a more valuable cargo myself included and we missed It and rolled Into old Niles and when we got ofT the train the apogtle from the House of David was still napping oa his old Iad.v8 shoulder but she didn!t $took tickled to death. (0 by the Bef1 8yn<VlMt«. la*.) I Misled *pardon me," said the little roaa, "but are you quite sure it wae a marriage license you gave me on March iori The .clerk prepared to turn up par» tlculara. "I believe so, sir," be said, "but why do you ask me?" -Well, I've led a dog's We ever since That's all !* u pie*> torinc Ford Motor Compan* Orange Once a Berry Scientists who have looked up the pedigree of the orange say that It was formerly a jerry and that It has been to the course of development far 7JSBU years. ' • Bow a light in an unknown room in a theater at Glasgow, Scotland, burned unseen for 2- >ears, hps just been reported. When electrical engineers were asked to give quotations on overhauling the lighting system a certain line of conduit disappeared in a wall, und the trail ended. Nearby was a locked door, the key to which had been lost. No oue from the manivt( r to the call boy could remember ti.ut the door had ever been opened. It was forced. The unknown room had been uml by billposters, and according to a poster lying there the place hud not been used since 190Ql A 10 candle-power carbon lamp was burning brightly just as it had evidently been left by the last occupant of the room. The report adds that when the manager estimated the cost of tlie wasted light of 60 watts for 22 rears, he fainted. The ice combine, as we gather from the news, still has a grip on the Arctic regions that the most determined .Eskimo housewife isn't going to be able to shake off. •The new-style street peddlers of Ice cream from shoulder-slung boxes are less of an Impediment to traffic than the old time hoky-polcy man. but have to work harder. "The only authentic story ot the last days of the Ozifl*" is appearing once more. This is usually followed by the report that lie is still alive,/and is in seclusion somewhere. J The Australian government has appropriated $100,000,000 to help citizens build homes. That ought to reduce the number of tourist campers to\a satisfactory degree. Although women are becoming numerous in political affairs and are welcomed at the party councils, It Is doubtful if any wishes to be enrolled among "the elder statesman.'* A Boy Scout enjoying a summer vacation and finding in the woods reminders of early pioneer heroism, Is for the present but slightly concerned with a few little uninteresting details that may be more or less adroitly slipped Into the school books. The man who fohnd his lost golf ball In a hawk's nest had to abandon his dream of membership in the holeln- one club when he learned there were six other balls In the same nest. Indicating not so much good shootlnf on the part of man as good collecting on the part of the hawk. "400" Special Six Malt *1343 •0. ' ; - #* V ^ • '• • • ; elcome!That's what America las said to tbe Twin-Ignition Motoi? PIOM the very day of the introduction of the hew Nash "400", keen ¥ablic interest has surrounded the new win-Ignition motor-- •sing ordinary gasoline, and less of If*' Before you buy your new car, cone in* ! We'll give you the key to a Twin- Ignition-Motored "400". Yon take 1;^ People everywhere are telling other Out, and take a ride. That's all w* asj£jt people that they've never driven a car with so much sparkle and enthusiasm in its action-- --Or one that is as smooth and quiet. at every speed, clear up to the top-- --Or one that ctteds so little gasoline. Twin ignition, with high compression in the valve-in-head motor means pore power, more snap, more speed, > Smlmmjrtm $885 ts $1990, 8 Cmpet, Cmbrtt>Tm P'ktorias/rmm $885 * $1775, /.«. k fattm/f */» the first three months jolhwhlM the "4O0" introduction **400" sale& V Were nearly 75,OOO cars, 14,000 morg than the total of the best previot/9 ^ July, the best previous August and the best previous September, in aU flash history. 400 leads Uke HVM its Motor Cm> flmlue IMPORTANT F E A T I T R E S-JTO OTHEft CAR HAS THE. 4X.M, n Twin-Ignition motor 12 Air craft-type (park plugs High compression Houdaille and Lovefoy •hock absorbers (SMCimth* Nadk i Salon Bodies flMBt IS Aluminum alloy piatoas (Intmr Strmtt) New double droptraae Torsional vibration damper World's eatiett steering 7-bearina crankshaft (Mh* crsmt phtt • Bijur centralised chassis lubrication Longer wheel bases One-piece Salon Electric clocks fenders Clear vision front. . -X*rerior metalware pillar posts chrome plated over N. . , Short turning radins bampsn Stilling Garage . MeHmry, (WHS) Descriptive of Slang Argot Is the French term for in English Is known as slang, rlally applied to tJte dialect of tl Wi iUtik t Your otif"' Any range purchased under our easy "pajfras you'iise it" plan. Ask about it. Next Saturday, November 3rd, ends our big special concession offer, whereby we allow $10 for your old gas range on the purchase of any new one you select 0L our store . v • Don't delay action if you wish to enjoy the greater beauty and convenience of a brand new range at a decided money saving . .<... Qu| ijpi apd select yours today! C'-f Phone 1.67 GAS ELECTRIC COMPANY. IL F. Conway | |tfcHenry, Illinois •:'k' :7r'ri '* '* #ju*' - V >tr 4? \ a -5 r-; V ' 7£ I'M USE THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR QUICK RESULTS l 'e v.-i% :* ' ? -IwP "it chance to benefit by our Special $10 Allowance offer in buying ff, ^ , Beautiful New Range! '.M i ,