k ^ ' X > ,r it' v; V; ^.x-%: ;**:•'*- M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, I1L, by Charles F. Kanich. Entered as second-class natter at the postofflce at McHenry, ^ /*V<*'** **» "* «* «. aw. ' i1 _ j»y m Iii|,r-l|-i ^ j.i nu Om Ymmr -tt-oe 41.00 j j j* mm Decorative Properties petmd in Wide Window Sills >• A. B. M06HBB, Editor and rf'* r-jfc #*<*, S^i- . Sp*alda| of Antiqmiti**---- - The ultimate destination of the old - intt yout wife sold to the touring second- hand dealer la probably Constan- • tlnople. Mok than 3,000,000 pieces of second-hand clothing are shipped there yearly from the United States. Thousands of Turks work the year round repairing and rehabilitating them for resale at 25 cents to $3 per garment-- Country Home. • - :-,r V ' Muf> Odd IfiM ' . .. Tin Can island is the nickname of Ulafou, one of the Tongo or Friendly Islands, situated in the Wy South Pacific halfway between Samoa •"^S and FIJI. It is a small volcanic Island ' which owes its name to the fact that fat** *Woodstock's Beautiful Play House Matinees 8um.-Wed.-Sat. 2:30 '3i-- Cvenings 7-9 SATURDAY GUEST NITE Two Will Be Admitted For 50c "Seis Beneatk" with George O'Brien Marion Leasing ftomething new in big thrills also Oomedy and Movietone News 8UHDAYMONIIAY " TUESDATf Continuous Show From 2:30 to 11:00 p. m. and every Sunday hereafter pi"*/. f M rclinti East Lvnne dh*~^Cmmt CroDk Nagel VRANKUOrD/xuicttn WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY Mat. Wednesday 2:30 Mark [wain s merriest jests in a comedy classic WILL ROGERS •M A Connection! Yankee o 4 «• ;; Lonely Ditch-Digger j | :: &ivexi Fortune :: <> - ;• ;: By JANNIS PARKER <. o • the Islanders* mall bag is a tin can bobbing in the water to be picked op by a passing steamer. (©. mi. McClnre Newupapw Syndicate* (WNU SerrVc«.> LISETTE looked at the chill gray current and hugged Henri's arm more tightly. A stiff gust of wind swirled around her and through her thin clothing. Her coat didn't feel as heavy as she thought it would when she first saw it in the store window. With her free hand she drew It more closely around ber. Some day Henri would buy her a coat, such a coat! The eyes of the other midinettes would drop out "Lisa, dear!" Henri would sometimes say, calling her attention to the costumes of the smart women that passed them. "That hatl You would look charming In it!" And Lisette would memorize every line, ribbon, or tiny quill and late that night the lamp's rays would fell on her tawny hair as she bent over a piece of buckram, twisting and stitching it; or as she ran her finger caressingly along the upturned brim of a bat she had PUNK goes thji pistol I PLUNK go the knights! U-'0; . just fashioned from an old piece of velvet. "Lisa, oh that gray dress! It was created for you, my dear. No! On the tall girl, Lisa! The one with the panels!" And when Lisette had saved enough she would go to the big department store and, with her heart pounding, in very dignified tones she would ask the sales girl if they had anything in a soft, gray crepe. She felt hungry, but Henri didn't seem to need food. His studies fed him. How often he had tried to explain to her about the Sorbonne. but to her It was a dreadful university that ate up everything he had. To him it meant something bigger, finer, a home for them both. Looking op at him now, as he clasped her arm more firmly, bis straight brown hair with Its sbeen mads ber forget the low, scurrying clouds overhead, and that they were watching every centime for Henri's courses and their marriage. Henri slackened his steps at the corner. "Lisette, dear, this Is where I leave yon. T am already twenty minutes late." Lisette looked carefully op aW down the almost deserted street. No one was in sight save an old laborer, dlggtng in the gutter. Then she stood very nearly on the tips of her toes and held her face up to Henri's. "You will be there, tonight, Henri?" **I will he there. Lisa, I must hurry!" Llsette's eyes darted away to a dreary-looking somber coach, drawn by two tired horses. "Henri, look! A hearse, unaccompanied ! Come, we will have to follow it That anyone should allow the poor soul to go to his last resting place alone! Never, in France, have I heard of such a thing! Come, Henri!" She grasped his hand but he stood riveted to the pavement "Come, Henri, don't stand there! Would you have it go to the cemetery alone? Look, if we don't go perhaps no one will. The street Is almost deserted !" She stamped her tiny foot. "Mon dieu, Henri, It Is almost out of sight 1" "Lisa, have I not told you that I am already late for my class?" "But Henri, the professor jnm say he Is such a nice man--" 'Nevertheless, be will give the examination and I must pass It*' "Henri, youll pass, yon always do." r "Yen, but I must first take It" "But Henri--" "Even now. Lisa, you should be back at the shop. Madame will be In a frenzy." "Madame is always In a frenzy." "That is unfortunately her privilege. And Lisa, she will not feel inclined towards paying you that you may accompany stray hearses around the country and you will have to buy your own dresses forever If you do not let me finish my stndies that I may earn." Llsette's eyes wistfully followed the slow carriage. "The poor man--" "Is dead. We are alive. It will be no great loss to him If he goes alone. Is It our fault that hj has no friends? Lisa, we have no time to devote to such customs. We cannot afford It Let some one else. There are. plenty of people In Paris." He held her chin up and gazed down into her big eyes. "Don't look so sad, little one. Look Lisa! Everything Is splendid! The ditch digger, see, he has dropped his shovel! He Is following. He fumbles his cap In his hands! There, are yon happy? Let me see you smile I" Lisette looked up the street. Henri was right. With slow steps the old man was limping along. She could the wind lift the thin gray strands of his hair. The next day at lunch time Lisette sat on a high stool, munchlbg a croissant and trying to read the paper amid the roar and clamor of the work* room. Her eyes oamed leisurely over the page. As they fell on heavy print she stopped chewing. "Ditch-Digged Wins Fortune." She reread It three times. So the man had been rich, a miser. "Monsieur Leval, haying no relatives and apparently no friends, stated In his will that all his posses sions be left to whomsoever would accompany his hearse to the cemetery. To Pierrs Duval, an elderly laborer, goes--" Lisette Slid from the stool, folded the paper and pot it anrter ber arof She thought a moment, enfolded It, and tore it up. Of what good to fell Henri? She Ita Miss Ethel Jones spent the week end in Chicago. Mrs. George Phalin was a Wood' stock visitor Thursday. Mrs. E. R. Suilon wcui * Cafcajfo visitor Thursday and Friday. Miss Theresa Brefeld of Chicago spent Sunday at her home here. Mrs. John Bolger of Woodstock visited relatives here Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dreyer of Forest Park visited relatives here Sunday. Miss Marjory Phalin of Chicago spent the week-end at her home here. Miss Floribel . Bassett visited friends at Richmond over the weekend. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontx and children were Chicago visitors Sonday. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Marshall and family were Waukegan visitors Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phalin visited in the Emil Feffer home at Barreville Sunday. Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Chamberlin were Crystal Lake visitors Sunday afternoon. C""v-,' Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Bender of Chicago spent the week-Qhd at their home here. Misses Dorothy and Genevieve Knox visited in Chicago over the week-end. Mrs. Ella Brown of Chicago.yap g week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Edidy. Mrs. J. A. Craver attended the funeral of a relative in Chicago the last of the week. Peter Reimann of Milwaukee, Wis., spent the week-end with his sister. Mrs. Henry Degen. Mr. and Mrs. William Lester of Elgin were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Burke. Dr. and Mrs. Charles Leppert of Fox Lake visited her mother, Mrs. Minnie Miller, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. N. H. Petesch and daughter, Angela, of Oak Park visited friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Frisby and Miss Nellie Malloy of Chicago visited relatives here Sunday. Mrs. Charles Hobler and daughters of Chicago visited Mrs. Georgie A. Meine a few days this week. Mr. and Mrs. George Johnson and" family were Sunday visitors in the A. K. Burns home at Oak Park. Mr. and Mrs. John Brefeld and family of Waukegan were Sunday visitors in the B. J. Brefeld home. Mr. and Mrs. C. Wiedling and family of Chicago are spending the week at their summer home on Fox river. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grays lake spent Sundby with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Eddy. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phalin, son, Harold, and Mrs. Anna Barron were Harvard visitors one day last week. Mrs. Wm. Spencer spent a few days this week in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Richard Stenger, at Waukegan. Mrs. Jim Burke and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Frisby of Chicago visited his mother, Mrs. Anna Frisby, and other relatives here Sunday. Leslie Bungard spent Sunday in Chicago where he visited his sister, who is recovering from an operation at the Presbyterian hospital. Misses Anna and Dorothy Knox and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. North of Chicago were Sunday evening guests in the E. Knox home on Waukegflh street Mrs. George W. Hess Is" entertaining her mother, Mrs. Allen, of Terre Haute, Jnd., this week. Her sister, Miss Helen Allen, of Terre Haute, Ind., was a week-end guest. Sunday guests in the Fred Karls hiDme were: William Karls, Mrs. Clemens, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Colman and Miss Laura Karls, all of Chicago. Among those from out-of-town who attended the funeral of Mrs. Ellen Bolger last Wednesday were: Mrs. William Bolger and daughter,r Marjory, of Chicago; Mrs. Alice Woods, Elburn; Mr. and Mrs, John Bolger and daughter, Helen, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Corr, Mrs. M. Evans and son, Harold of Woodstock; Mr. and Mrs. Geferge Bolger, Mrs. Frank Dunn, Laurence and Paul Bolger, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Malone, Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward, Miss May me Aylward, Mrs. B. Costello, Mrs. Thomas Darlington of Elgin; Mr. and Mrs. John Haiderman, Mrs. Margaret Strang, Gerald Strang of Waukegan; Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Morse, Mrs. Spellman of Liberty ville; William Hughes of. Harvard; Mrs. Daniel Fitzgerald, Lowell, Ind.; Sister Mary Henry and Sister Mary Evangelista of Kansas City, Mo. Now Oat most modem bouses have none to spftfc of, decorators haw thought up the mo«t fascinating things to do with window sills. If they are 'fairly wide, they put radiators or shelves of books under them, if they FOR SALJ^HBtmberslup in McHen- | are long, running across two windows. ry county at Flainctea&ifc . Reasonable. Fice. FOR SALB. i'flats and barley. William Justea. iHttgwood, 111. I%one Richmond 931. *48-2 FOR SALB--Used ice boxes. Electric Shop. Carey 48-tf FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE for eggs or chickens, electric washing machine, ice box, kitchen cabinet, beds, two wringers, etc. Call Sun days at Leonard's summer cottage, near Bald Knob Hotel, Pistakee Bay 48 FOR SALE--Select Gladiolas, 26c, 35c and 60c per do*.; Privet Hedging, $8 per hundred; Evergreens, Shade, Ornamental and Fruit Trees, Shrubs and Plants of every description. Woodstock Nursery, Heinig & Schenck, Woodstock, 111. Tel. 216-W. *47-2 FOR SALE--Gftod bicycle. Kamholz. West McHenry. H. C. 47-tf FOR SALE--Early Murdock Seed Corn, also some Yellow Early, germination 99 per cent. James Hunter, McHenry, Tel. McHenry 617-J-2. 47-tf POTATOES ftMt SALE--No. 1 Irish Cobblers; good eating and also good •for seed. We deliver. We have a few Early Ohios left for $1.26 per bu. These potatoes are not cold storage, but kept at my home, therefore will make excellent seed potatoes. Dave Segel, West Mtffenry. Tel. 92-J. 41-tf FOR SALE--A • quantity of Early Yellow Dent Seed Corn. Germination 98. John Blake. Tel. 686-J-2. 46-4 FOR SALE--7-room house and garage, located in 'Spring Grove. Very reasonable. Ihijijfjre of Frank ~L. Adams, Ringwood, 111. • 37tf BEFORE YOU* BUY SHOES see our bargain counter. B. Popp. Expert shoemaker and repair shop. Main street. Phone f62., 38-tf FOR SALE--Rm rugs. Frank Gustafson. W. McHenry, corner of Center and John stziilets. . 35-tf FOR SALE--Well secured 1% First Mortgages on ^fcHenry Residence Property. Inquit^s At FUindeater office. 19-tf Inquire they place baskets of fern or bowls 48 of Chinese lanterns on top, and If they are very wide, an arch may be built over the top of the window, valance fashion, and long narrow bookcases inserted in the walls at each side. The decorative possibilities of window sills, in fact appear to be wellnlgh limitless, but the difficulty lies in securing the window sills themselves. For, as Marcia Clark points out in an article in Home and Field, modern houses built for profit and not for love have the thinnest walls that can squeeze by the building codes. This means that you do not get deep reveals Into which to set your windows, and consequently wide window sills are now extremely rare. "In the majority of cases the absence of a sill can be successfully camouflaged and a whole decorative scheme built up around the remodeled windows," Miss Clark advises. "Some window sill treatments are complicated by the presence of radiators under the windows, and others simplified. The average builder thinks he has /done you a gracious favor when he Incloses the steam radiators in packing cases with wicker faces, and lets it go at that. You can buy really good looking radiator incloeures with decorative value, or you can rip off the inclosures and start afresh, with a construction In one piece that incloees the radiators, furnishes sills for what-, ever windows stand In a row on one wall, and adds character to the room. "In houses and particularly cottages of the colonial type, window sills are indispensable. Here you may build out under your window in cabinet fashion, either putting doors on the little cupboards whose tops are the window sills, or shelves for books or' ornaments. Often one end of the room, or two sides of It, are treated this way, and the low bookshelves are integral parts of the architectural background rather than afterthoughts tacked on. Sometimes the windows are made to appear recessed by building bookshelves nine Inches deep all the way around them and across the top, if the windows do Hot reach the ceiling, using the top of the lower bookcase as a window sill. This la attractive in many kinds of rooms, but perhaps most so in children's play- rooms where toys and picture books fill the shelves and are out of the way^aod ornamental at the sum time." ! -37 FOR RENT PASTURE FOR RENT--Have 125 acres good pasturage with plenty of water and shade. 4 Priced reasonable. Farmers Oil Assn. Phone McHenry 305. • *48 WOODSTOCK FAlhf FOR RENT-- We will lease to a good tenant on a cash basis our 440 acres, known is Peter Fahrney farm in Woodstock, 111., 1 mile from depot; 2 large barns with silo and 7-room house. Possession at once. Please make your proposition to Salinger & Jacobi, owners, Room 660, First National Bank Bldg., Chicago, 111. FOR RENT--Six-ro6m' house, modern, and garage. Located on Main street, McHenry. Inquire of Wm. J. Weloh. Phone 100-J. 46-tf FLAT FOR RENT--Reasonable. H. C. Kamhols, West McHenry. S6-tf LOST LOST--Row boat, green with red stripes. Name ^Pfeil" painted on boat. Finder rettfrtx to Mr. Joyce, Hiverdale subdivision. No questions asked. Phone 621-M-l. 48 5" i mi WANTED WANTED--Housework by the day or week or any kind of work. Phone McHenry 149-JL 7 48 WANTED--First mortgage loan on my McHenry residence. Address "G,r care McHenry Plaindaaler. 47-3 Mm Who Owm la Trust** A person who has liabilities is, to • sense, a trustee. He holds more than he owns. His responsibility for the liabilities requires ttqit he should keep hia own margin Of capital comparatively safe. The (risk of his becoming insolvent Is necessarily assumed by his creditor^, and its existence should be recognized In law as well as In business practice. * . th. w~u*. P"' The list of eight treat mfell described by George Beitiard Shaw as "builders ' of universes" comprises Aristotle, • Pythagoras; Copernicus, Ptolemy, aallleo. N«wt<Jp, Kepler and Einstein, f . Ti»y Bit. ^ Story Of that hit the Hilagst automobile and then had to stop to let the engineer have It taken, out of his eye.--New York FARM LOANS-^First mortgage loams on farms, low interest. Now taking applications for 1931 loans. R. M. Frit*, Sad FL, Harvard State Bank Bldg., Harvard, HI. Phene 147. „ 29-tf MISCELLANEOUS FREE 40c Dust Pan with each bottle of new Champion brand Vanilla. Also have a complete line of spices, extracts, medicines, stock and poultry remedies and household brushes. foies, McNess Man. West McHamfr, HI. Tel 283. •r *47-2 FREE! FRBR1 FREE! For men, women children, coupons worth 50 cent|( service. Ask or send for them, --•©••'t delay. Do it now. Stompan^tte' * Barber and Beauty Salon, 226 mtln St, Woodstock, 111. Tel. Wwlfoek 641. 46-8 JUEVING MA ^ lUg Rugs Mi All Werk ' B. PlMNM 1ft REPAIRED Order McHesnry ILL. Aa author states that he always does Ms hardest work before breaktest Getting set af bed, tsr tnstaaca. --Exchange. Large CaUhrah Couty Baa Bernardino cseonty. Calif- Is the largest county to the country, wltfc ia area aimoet as big as the sattie State of West Virginia. Job kvidhka, Livestock Dealer 1 IMri tSrtri a . IMf TUNE--and keep. Tuning makes yoO$ instrument. H. Delhi, Weodstoek, IB. People Again Demanding Fireplaces in Homes The family hearthstone is coming back. People are again beginning to demand fireplaces in their homes, whether they dwell In a country cottage where a biasing hearth often fills an actual need of temporary hent, or whether they live in a small city oilheated apartment where a fireplace ia chiefly ornamental. It's a matter of primitive psychology, the architects say, by which they mean, that the old primitive urge to gather around the fire for cheer and comfort is reasserting Itfelf. Anyhow, many of the recently-built better type of apartment houses now offer at least one fireplace to an apartment and even several new bl^ city hotels have fireplaces in the bedrooms. The Waldorf-Astoria hotel In New York, for instance, will have fireplaces In all Important rooms. Furthermore, where fireplaces are absent in houses and apartments people are now buying the necessary hearth equipment in the shops and tacking it onto their walla, according to an article by Margaret Collins In Home and Field. Basements Being Made Livable Part of Home Home owners are doing away with the dark, old-fas*uoned basement with Its coal dust, unhealthy dampness and dirt. With the advent of the new type of heating plant with Its colorful jackets, and dust-proof and gas-proof construction to keep the basement clean, and building insulation board to keep It warm and dry, home owners are converting this former waste space into livable rooms. .r,,' Water •• Panes ; More than 500 gallons of water are need daily on the average American term, according to federal and state eatlmntr* - Run-Down, Weak, Nervous? To have plenty of firm flesh and the ability to do a big day's work and feel "like a two-year-old at night, you must relish your food and properly digest it. If you can't eat, can't sleep, can't work. Just give Tanlac the dianea to do for you what it has done for millions » Mrs. Fred Wcstin. of 88? E. 67th St. North, Portland, Ore., uyi: 'Tanks cured my stomach trouble eemaleteiy after three years auffsriag. It Mtttme up to perieet health* wtth a pd* of 17 Ihe." r Taalae is wonderful for indtgarifim *~gaa pains, nausla, dlssiwsss and headaches, It bringi bade lost app* UPBOLaTBBDro-jife Bad, at furnlture reuphoktere^ • kbd repaired. Good work guaranteed. Work ttBed for and delivered. C&w- Raamuspen, S. Canter St* Weet Utter, HL TeL 1OT-M. , . . Tty ear daseifled ade fer «akk dragi* only roots, barka aad hsrt*, nature'e own aaedtdnos. Ims Wi n * esntsadoee. Get a bottie from your druggist. * Yesnr me*? back tf it doesn't hate. Dead Animals Dead and Crippled Cava, Horses, Hogs, and old Flogs Prompt Service * . $1.90 to $11 a hoi 'itfephooe Banington SM - .'V-Eeveree Charges LAFAYETTE FAMLY AGAIN IN SQUABBLE farritation to Yovktown Re- «P«" Cofttarorergy. Pais* Au wiiuuvwi; among the members of the family of Lafayette haa bean reopened by an invitatlon to descendants ot the famous so.W dier to attend the aeaqalcentennial of the Battle of Yorktown In the United States next October. The quarrel was unwittingly revived by the State department at Washington in sending an invitation, and some doubt has been raised as to whether any of the actual descendants of Lafayette will go to America fcr the celebration. The American embassy la Paris has discovered there are 100 tt more Frenchmen and Italians who dalm to be * descendants. But among them there are only twenty to thirty actual descendants and they are quarreling among themselves as to who is who. All agree that the real master of the family today is Count Louis De Lasteyrle, last of his line and a direct descendant of Lafayette's s«eond-born daughter, Virginia, who manned CoL Marquis de Lasteyrie. Family Estate Reduced. Count De Lasteyrie lives in the Lafayette castle. La Orange, southeast of Paris, where hard times have reduced the estate to the beautiful stonetowered tastle, its drawbridge and moat and fifty acres of ground. The name of Lefayette actually became extinct with the death of Oscar and Bdmond Lafayette, sons of Lafayette's only son, George Washington Lafayette. Lafayette himself renounced the title of marquis when France became a republic. Some years ago^a descendant of Oscar Lafayette, M. Pourcet de Sahume, went to the council of state and obtained legal permission to change his name to M. de Sahume-Lafayette. That started a family war, for after getting the court's permission to add the Lafayette with a hyphen the bearer changed his name voluntarily to Marfiuis de Lafayette, dropping his original name entirely. His son became Count Jacques de Lafayette, although there had never before been a count in the family. ^ Other Descendants Angered. Tills angered the other descendants, who look upon Count Louis de Lasteyrie as the head of the family and holder' of the family home. In issuing its invitation the State department had no knowledge of the family quarrel. Now Count de Lasteyrie and other descendants have Indicated they will refuse to go to America if the Marquis de Lafayette or his son, Count de Lafayette, should go under those names. The embassy is trying to straighten matters out by listing the descendant? of Lafayette's three children, Virginia, Anastasie, who married Count de la Tour Maubonrg, and Oeorge. It has torned to Countess Clara de Chambrun, now with her husband, military commander of Tunisia, and has asked her to draw a fine line between the real and the other descendants and will be guided In part by her work. AatiqM V • BHly was paying aft aftemon c«B on his next-door neighbor, and he was arrayed iq. all his glory in honor of the occasion, including his first suit with wool pants, and a small gold xing. "See my ring?" was his introductory query. "My daddy had thto ring whes bar waa a little boy. My daddy's had It a hundred ysafsl" Arbor Day a;. - Nebraska was the first staU.'to serve Arbor day. The first Arbor day was on April 10, 1872, on which ooctr sion more than 1.000,000 trees wdr* planted. " Protane Bottled " ' % Gas 7- • EawloUw, WM. H. ALTHOFF, HDWE. Comer U. S, 12 and Main St. Phone 294 McHenry, IU. ART r\t V SHOPPE Your Door We have a beautiful selection of Hand-Painted Dance Handkerchiefs and Party Bags. Suitable tar Gifts and Social Activities. Also gifts for Mother's Daj Leave your order The Claire Beauty . Shoppe oroall96-J ' # Ralpk D. Hoflf, Sftlttinfit REGNER'S ,CRa MARykbt Week-end Special*" . r $ Cash Price* MEATS *PT ROAST BEEF, lb, 8TANDINO RIB ROAST, Vb, PORK LOIN, lb PORK SHOULDER, rolled, no botiet, FRESH SPARE RIBS , g lbs. 25^ VEAL ROAST, rotted, no --24^ Jjjpl*"!I14U |gj y~l^i|sjjih| Bom«-made lb. 20c GROCERIES IJUSERVIS, Lake View Brani^ Mb. jam QOLD DUST, large pk*. • small pkgtr . flUL---Oranffe Pekoe, % lb, „ ^ Japan Green, Va lbw . JELLO, all flavors ^ .19* -8 to 10* 21* ^--18* -3 pkp- 21* 25* 19* MAZOLA OIL, pint cans ASPARGUS TIPS, picnic sise tins BEANS, cut wax or green, Ho. 2 cans _--3 for 29* AMERICAN FAMILY FLAKES^ pkf.^ 18* AMERICAN FAMILY SOAP 4 bars 23* WELOH GRAPE JUICE, pints „ 24* QUAKER OATS . .. " , 2 pkgs. 17* Seedless Calif. GRAPES, Prepared PRUNES and PRUNE PLUMS, 8-os. cant -3 cans 25* CAMAY TOILET SOAP 3 bars 19* NAVY SJSANS, hand picks*, lb. - 5* GRAPE-FRUIT, Lake View brand, No. 2 can __19* EXTRACT, vanilla or lemon, %-ox. bottles 2 to 19* MARASCHINO CHERRIES, 2ft ox. jars _ 9* We deliver at 9 and 11 a. m. and 2 and 4 p. m.. . 1 " "" * -- i" 1 1 . " - - Regner's Grocery & Market Green Street fUspbosas 3 and 39 McHenry - im- 'lk