W ' V- -J-" - r , jt^ '»- ,ir \ I *•' .t.i«.«;( 1.1 THE M 'HENRY PLAIN DEALER, THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1931 W r , •', • •Jj"-„* #0ENSBU1 >•'.;* ... ' " Miss Dorothy •• r#|f ncock / of Wood-; stock visited Helen Smith Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben /Schaefer and "ffls-'iy' ^family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Schroeiy • • der and family, Mr. and Mrs. James fmTChamber!in andi.daughter, Mr. and Mrs.' F'rank Pitzen, Mrs. Mafh May and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. F|enry % >*y-. Stoffel and daughter visited-Mr. and ' • ; ",:Mr5. Georg^ Miller and family at V Vylo Sunday. ; Misses Mildred "and Susan Frett and John Freund of Chicago spent Suiiday with relatives here. " » • Mrs. George Michels and children' an1 visiting in Chicago. , V-v* Mrs- Wm. Tonyan,; Sr.,'spent, Sun- . day with Mr. and Mrs.. Michael v / Bauer at Pistakee Bay." "; 1: Teddy Guyser of Chicago Is spend- . ing the week with his grandparent^ t . Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Oqffling. . /. MisS Florence. Smith'was. ill a few * days last week. Mr?. James Chamberlin and dailfch- • ter and '.Marie Miller* and Bernice y Schroeder >re spending a week in - Chicaeo. ' . , • -• ;• Helen Blank of Crystal^Lake spent i*' ,;r*Frida^u^awgvhere^ ;' v '>( Tj^trri S'mfVs and Helen Schaefer were McHc-riiJ- ca^#s Fiiday night. !. * ,V M r- Bt v./Schuefer , and daughter, , . ' soh/ CHarleA.' and Mrs. +' v Elmer S^kt^der-^visi.t.ed- Mrs/ Cteorge' ?» •» v "* Obenauf of9 Gfav^laJte "Monday ©Vend i n g . ' • ; ' • v - " 7""' Mt. l^nd '^frs; Jos.' Adatfisr" Sunday'a'ftemooin -with friends™at An- ItoMB of Interest Taken Fro* ^JkT Files erf the ri&irideater , . „ . of Years Ago** ' DRABNEi. THAT LlS WITHIN / FIFTY YEARS AGO We -learn that Aaron Boomer hair sold /his residence in this tillage to Samuel Poole, N^nd will give posses-^ sioji about October"!"? •' The business, at R. Bishop's wagon factory in this village, having increased so rapidly, he informs us, that he will build an addition of sixty feet to his shops and put In new machinery. He also plans to hire more help, : About twenty-five hundred bushels jsf: j-ucumbers were received/at the pickle factory oil /Saturday last J. Oatmih & ^Sons' - butter . and* cheese "factory declared dividends 'for .May » Sund'^^une. •' T^ey, hav,e a fine arranged f&cto,ry v$nd jure doimj a good business.. " " . ' A splendid new' show /ftrtie adorns the millinery store of Mrs. H- Nichols. "tioch. . .'••' - Mr. and -Mrs. John Mertes -and daughter, Marie, and Mrs...Swan Johti- ^$on motored to Michigan Tuesday^ •' ^IVLr. and Mrs. Jos. H. Adams motor-, ed to Chicago Wednesday evening. , DR. C. KELLER ^ r Optometrisii and Optician WALSH'S DRUG STORH " Riverside Drive / : V fcrifry Saturday afternoon, 2 to 7 -p/iw. ' Eyes examined and glasSeb made tc( •.order only i •• Also all repairs • Tele^tone No. 108-R v v " , > Stoffel & Reihansperger FORTY YEARS AGO John P. Smith, the jeweler, has treated his. house and store to a coat of-paint on the outside, which make» it the most .attractive of any on that street. L""®"' ; Miss Jess}e Wightma* is acting as i deputy at the West McHenry, pos.t- •; office for a few weeks during the ab- 1 sehcfe of Mrs. Stevens. | ' Ed W.cOwery is the happiest man in • Jtown, due to the arrival of a girl at | his home on Thursday. morning. 7 ! Quite a number from this place at- 1 tended the races at Richmond on Wednesday. The races were closely contested and interesting^ ; W. J- McLeod has left- cm\our table a branch of an apple tre\^ (|bout one | foot long, which contains "perfect and full grown a tree from, which it was c; his garden and is • load' the same proportion. tC. By FANNIE HtjRST (® by JlcCIure Newspaper Symilcate.V (WNU Service.v HERE Is an all too large proportion et Jui man beings who find life.a! dull business. Certain definite conditions of our civilization contribute to that pathetic end and iielp briijg about tlie sin and the shame of itu Life, so short at its best, should be, if the. little god-of-things-as-they-oiught-to-be is at all merciful, an interval cro\V.(led with light. But we* go alieird and era In man. Into the soinetinies . too tightly fitting shoe of • civilization, cramp liim mentally and physically into routine ip>rfc sttjititj* his imagination by crucifying ,hin» on the cross of •day-jtiy-day stark reality and»Vin- ^ess th« individual develops .the pt>w* er ,and glory <>f resistance to mere, e?:- ternals, the result is dan^^u^ly ^pt^: to: be drab. ' / : Nor Is this- quality of dnibhesa^tte^ ; ^Ksarily (jphh^ned #o; special social plftnes. It .can hang in a pail over" the rich and poor {dike. Conspire'as all these eternal conditions of society tuny, against the individual, It Is undoubtedly a matter whitfh lies within his potver whether he will succumb pr resist the deadliness of finding life drab. » Insurance agents for all classes property in the beit companies. WEST McHENRY V CONNEL M. McDERMOTT • ATTOtaEY-AT-LAW Hours--Every evening, 7 to 8:30 All day Saturdays Pries BMg. Cor. Greenland Elm Sts. TVVENTY-fr^E YEARS AGO Miss Barb^ifdihelen and Julius A. of Butzen were married at the St. ! Joseph's catholic church at Elgin on i Monday morning/ Miss Tnelen is a ILLINOIS McHenry girl. The new. addition to the Borden factory isj fast nearing completion and will soon be ready.for occupancy- Much danaage was <J|pe by the | heavy rain and hail of^Tast Friclay. 1 The corn fields suffered the most, l The ^f-IIenry Canning company Tel: McHeW^S -M^enryriH; Phone Richmond 16 Dr. JOHN DUCEY VETERIN TB and Bl( RICHMOND, , McHENRY ^GRAVEL & EXCAVATING CO. A. P. Freund\grop. Road Building and ExcSroting Estimates Furnished on * Request ^ High-grade Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small orders given prompt attention Phone 204-M McHenry has. recently received a carload of cans and the canning seaso^ will soon be opened at the new plant;. Work on the new addition t6 the Schneider grocery store on Water street has been commenced. _Prof. Wm. F. Rice has been e;ngaged teach in our hrgh school the comar" \\ Largk posters a^eVout announcing ILLINOIS ^ t^e big llabor day pienre to be helJ"at / ; the Ljly Rake park, eastN^f McHenry on Sunday,] September 2, and from all indications/the event this ytear will 't As a matter of fact, even though so. ninny of our lives seem tinned and classified, the way out "via"'the in-' tellect, more than througlr release from routine. But the difficulty lies •In its obviousness. ? ^ There is a certain experiment which is -cbminonry "practiced on college classes in psycliology. The professor holds up a chart, containing various pictures, sentences, figures, objects, characters and colors. The class Is enty-six; Permitted to gaze^upon the chart for 'les. The the Perl°<l of a moment or two and at' the end of that time each menib^f .recites what he has seen* The almost invariable result, Is d fine commentary upon the varying der gree of thoroughness \ylth whidi ihdividuais observe. The majority of the'class usually observes minimum. Sonie few have been alert to most of the objects, colors and characters/but' only a select minority really sees In detail and- with power of observation the contents of the chart. . . Life can be°drab because most of us apa__SQ^ busy missing the most of it, the aspect of it that Is free for nil. Tha e.dvonture of the adventure that lies in our reach; the excitment'of curiosity, stands in in almost far surpass all previous effc TWENTY YEARS AGO . The water tower is in the hands of the painters. Frank Bohr has. the job in hand. • " The electrical storms of late have , played havoc with the lighting system v*ri'\ the mystery of a pulsating, ill McHenry. The storms have, became esirin'" scheming human The desire to know. IntelLectuaL- jCuriosity...axieaning.--the_.d.esire and the vitality and the interest to delre into every minute aspect of life that presents itself, is the gateway to experience. Practically all the great figures of history, have been blessed with it. To Caesars, Napoleons, Roosevelts, life canno^ be commonplace, because 'so little appears to them as commonplace. Vigorous, seeking minds are not easily bored. It is fair to assume that just as much of life is lying about us in our daily routine, as there is compressed between the leaves of books. Anyway It Is worth seeking, and the way to ; seek is to take nothing for granted. A subway jam contains enough of the possibility of adventure to blow up New York harbor. .Scratch the cuticle of your desk neighbor and you so frequent that the public is almost disgusted with the service. While working with his well drilling machine on Monday afternoon, )Wm. Bacon met with a painful acci- " • . • i dent when his left hand became en- HENRY V. SOMPEL * j tangled in the rope and pulley of the General Teaming i™Shurte died »t w, h<m* «t Band/G>avel and Goal for Sale Chanute. ^nv on Aug. 9. He is a n > n r. . _ . brother of Mrs. E^^ Hanley of West Grading. Graveling and Road; McHenry. - -| "Work Done By Contract The rural mail carriers of the Mc-1 of Every Descriptioa , ' or By Day, "• Phone McHenry 649-R-J McHenry, HI. P. 0. Address, Route 3 being. Intellectual curiosity about people, places, street scenes, books, and above all, ,£he desire to study and know the, people who happen to be Inhabiting this planet called earth,. during your same interval here, simple will ,not permit life to become drab. - That must be why the sort of human- beings in whom you are impelled to confide your difficulties, problems^ amours, seem always so filled with a certain power and strength. They are excltetttent of life can come. On the contrary, if the drabness lies Within you, for those, who see not, it Is as equally boring te roam the world as It is to ride dall^ in the subway toward your Job. 4 , If not, then= you are one of those tobe- envied persons who sees with joyous, alert eyes the Color, the shape, the significance of ev. ry object on the professor's chart and It requires no genius nor special equipment to do %o. Just a deliberate love of life and a will to live it for all ft is worth (and to such a person, it is worth a great deal) and since we are ail of us occupied with the business of living it, how Joyful to be living It joy* fhUy! \ There Is great deal of bubbling optimism which manifests Itself in -the so-called drab places of life; one. is Inclined to Jthink just as much, if not more, than there is In the makeup of the synthetic kind of>Joys manufactured by the rich. Men digging ditches look no more oppressed wiih the heaviness of life than men sitting in opera boxes. No one can fairly blame his internal drabness upon externals, at least if we -are to judge by the interchangeableness of human reactions. The rich can foe drab; ^be poor can be drab ;»nd both can be drab; ':•/ •: • ' J>utl days -c^rne oiiore;^rettdify * #Q some tKah to' othei^ You liear^pft)- ple say they' are neV^r bored. Xhey cannot be drab inside. • What they •find • In life may make them suffer as easily as It may bring thepi "joy>, but the unhappy medium is boredom# To be neither pained nor surprised; delighted nor depressed with life because the interior Is a vast moor--, gray--^unlighted with Interest or intellectual curiosity, Is to be dead on your feet. * " Boredom is the emotion of a vege table. / Civility as Practiced by Ordinary Citizen He meets you on the street and ask? how youv have been, and you tell him, with due emphasis on the pain in the small of the back, the headache of Wednesday and the eyestrain of the day before. , Nothing daunted, he Inquires about yoqr wife and you describe fully her state of health, her present interests and occupations. Then- he expresses a desire to know about your children, which Jeads you to launch forth upon a discourse relative* to their tonlsilB and adenoids and general physical Condition, "their lack of appetite, methods of discipline and punishment and prol^ lems that arise from school and play. Thanks to his continued attention, you are reminded of some qf their bright sayings which you thitik bear repeating. . .. Next he asks after your business, and you enter at considerable length upon a summary of your achievements, of your future prospects and the discouragement resulting from association with men of decidedly limited He expresses an interest In the performance of your motor car and you recite to him numerous statistics relative to the cost of operation, the number of miles attained on a gallon of ga?,. the mileage got out of your tires, the periodic replenishment of oil, and 'other less Important details. •Before he' leaves you he Inquires also after your parents, your brothers and sisters and other intimate matters. But when he has departed it Suddenly" occurs to you that in ynut'^nthusiasm in talking about yourself ana^our owa affairs you have"neglected to recipro* fcate by asking after himself, or hiis health, or his family, or his-business or his possessions, which gives the impresslon of your having been most ungracious... ....I:.. - However, there Is at least one consolation-- in all probability he has not listened to half you said to him anyway.-- Baltimore Sun. DAVID R. JOSLYN, JR* Solicitor Stiate of Illinois, McHenry County, in. - In the Circut Cour^- of McHenry County, State of Illinois, September Term, A. D. 1931. Anton M. SchmitjL Complainant,. vs. Richard A, Koch, Ethel Koch, Straus National Bank and Trust Company, a corporation, Ai Howard Langert, Trustee, Carl W/ Kuehne, Successor in Trust and the McHenry Lumber Company, Defendants, In Chancery--Bill to Foreclose. Notice is hereby given that the above is the title of the Court and the iiames of the parties to a suit which is now pending in said Court and that process for said defendants has been issued to the Sheriff of said County returnable to the said Court at its Court Room in the City of Woodstock, County of McHenry and State of Illinois, on Monday^ the 28th day of September, A. D. 1931. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court, at my office in Woodstock this 16th day of August A. D1. I93L. • - ; WILL: T. CpNNj Clerk. (Circuit Court Seal.) ' "s y >; . • 1 ' - T • 1 ; .... " Chapter of Ljrim^ ^ " I &i the locker room the other day, a golfer told of killing a rabbit with one of his drives. That put Wm In a difficult situation. You have to play the next shot from where yon lie, and he lied in the locker room.--Detroit News. • 1 • . . ' h , r - ^ * ' tlpwllek titHtg"hi' • lipstick has been used as a cosmetic for thousands of years. Women have from time immeiaoi-iai sought to enhance their charms by the use Of cosmetics, among which the lipstick was one of the first - . » The first attempt to grant and out relldons freedom may be credited to Constantine In the edict of Milaa, 313 A. D. This edict granted "both to the Christians and to all others fine power of following whatever religion jgUdLJtajr havg preferred." „ ^ > 3., j • • » ' • ; : • . Wmley*s Mn John Wesley quaintly observed thit the road to heaven is a narrow path, not intended for wheels, and that CO ride in a coach here and go to heaven hereafter, was a happiness too muc|) for 'man.--Beecher. . . •: - ^^"'Iienryx. :C0WL^v,'-i^>- ' ' ; Attorney, Crystal Lake EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Alice I. Knox, Deceased. TJje undersigned, having been * apnted Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Alice I. Knox, deceased, late of the County of McHenry and State o^ Illinois, hereby gives! notice that she will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, at the November Term, on the first Monday in November next, at which time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. • v_ r Dated this 19th d*y. of ^August, A, D. 1 9 3 1 . - i- - , _ MARY F. KNOXf 13-3 Executrix. HENRY L. COWLIN, ^ * Attorney, Crystal Lake, 111.,. V State of Illinois, # " McHenry County, ss. Estate of Mary Slauf, Deceased. ; TO ALL WHOM IT MAY CONCERN: TO THE UNKNOWN HEIRS OF MARY SLAUF, DECEASED. You are hereby notified that on Monday, the 31st day of August, 1931, I, as the Executrix of the last Will and TesttftS^nt of said deceased, wi}l present to\he County Court of !V(c-, -Henry Countly, at the Court House in Woddstock, Illinois, my final report of my acts and doings as such Executrix, and ask the Court to be' discharged from any and all further duties and responsibilities connecte-.l with said Estate and my administration thereof, at which time and place you may be present and resist such application, if you choose so to do. EMILIE KUCHINKA UXA, Executrix of the Last Will and Testapent of Mary Slauf, Deceased. 11-3 is'tKe meanest job ia eona^aioo with the ope?-" . ation o£ your automobile? Many men, even stalwart: mechanics,, will say: "changing a ^ 1 One hundred thousand motorists in Illinois and lndiana know that they will not be called upon to peir-. form this disagreeable task--these men and women 4 are members of the Chicago Motor Club.... They say, "No tire changing for met" Tire changing for members is part of the duties ctf dsir y emergency road service department of the club. You s call the nearest official service station at any hour of the day or night. You are as close to help as the nearest telephone. • ^ But emergency road service is only one of the num^r- | ous money saving services of the club. You have the • protection of the insurance service, the bail bonct f ^ service, and the travel service. Then there is the home district and accident prevention work. .<-/ Sixty-two branches are at yotir disposal. Twenty•ijuiie in Cook county; thirty-three dbwnstate. Investigate the money saving services of the club today. Write or call. ' . - • - . -+ ' • ' • Hear the Chicago Motor Club dramas-^-'KOADS OF ROMANCE--every Wednesday evening over WENR (NBC) 9."00 P.M. Daylight Saving Time; 8:00 P.M. Central. Standard Time. "A Henry -postoffice presented ex-post-! \n They command . confidence »>y wanting it. Nobody is WM. M. CARROLL™ Lawyer Oflke with West McHenry State Bank Every Friday Afternoon 4 McHenry, Illinois '4\ $:- Pknte 126-W. Reasonable Kates A. % SCHAEFBB Draymg MsHENRY - ILLINOIS Insure-In Sure-Insurance -- WITH W m.G. Schreiner > Auctioneering ; OFFICE AT RESIDENCE PlMtie 93-R McHenry, Illinois just a person. Men and women are master Rollin Waite with a beautiful j oak rocker when he stepped -from • . t. •office the first of the month.: . . ^oblematIci 8u^Ie- • I ;aangerous, appealing, provocative, v TEN YEARS AGO ' ' -* fnagnetlc, repellent, alluring and hu- The ground has been staked for a beautiful new bungalow which is to be erected for Wm. Pries on his lo.t at the corner of Green and Pearl streets. The railroad bridge over the mill race creek and underneath, the new side track is under construction this week. The McHenry community high ^chool as well as the grade school will open on Monday, September 5. Os- Well G. Treadway has been re-engaged as superintendent of schools. One of the most damaging raiii, wind arid electrical storms of the season passed over, this section last Friday night and as a result of its visitation both telephone and electric light systems were put out of commission for a while. Regis C. Goodwin, aged, 12, passed away quite -suddenly, at McCollum's lake on Monday morning.v McHenry employees at the Oliver Typewriter factory at Woodstock are spending the week at"' their homes here, the factory being, shut down for 'one week. . k ; . !> S, H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS /AND BUILDERS j* Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building ~ Your Wants v « Ancient Seaside' Reaed • ® The world's, oldest seaside resort,' Nice, wift a history of more than twpntyrljve centuries, wis founded by : Phoenicians in 350~k C. on the site i °' a '"ulch earlier colony.. Its climate has attracted iu turn Phoenicians, Greeks,. Romans, . the--tuitions of medieval and m.idern ; Rnrope. ' " Million* of Mail Bags _'f Hanufacture of mail bags at the rate of more than 1,000,000 each year and repair of more than 4,000,000 bags annually Is necessary to provide facilities for transportation and distribu tion of United States.mail man. And In the midst of this melee of the excitement of being human among humans, each of us Is privileged to live his life. Just around the corner is no more to me, than It Is to you. The unknown lurks there for one and for all. Intellectual curiosity Is a magic carpet which can whisk you out of yourself, and yet how appa1 ling, when one stops to consider, the'reC|liargy toward life that falls to the lot of so many. The books that are never opened. The confidences that are never given or received. The friendships that are never made because two -^particular human beings had not the curiosity to want to know! When it Is said of a mAn that he is a good mixer it usually means that his life is crammed with interests of various sorts. Who wants to know people, because he knows that within them lies the secret of keeping life quick with Interest. He does not find life drabf \hiefly because lie1! is not drab. The same applies to 'the light thatjles in. the eyes of the bookworm. Strange-"fhrills are his, strange reactions to beauty, because he has hafl the curiosity to go seeking them. It Is not only to those destined to walk high places, or^to roam the world that Episcopal Altar Vestments In altar vestments in the Episcopal church white is used on all feasts and at all seasons relating> to our Lord, such as Christmas, Epiphany, Easter, etc.; to the Blessed Virgin, and to those saints who were not also , martyrs; at dedication and harvest festivals; at ^wedding and confirmations, and RenW-ally at the burial of infants. Red is used on the feasts of martyrs and at Whitsuntide. Grefen is used after the Epiphany and for the long summer season of Trinity and on all days Which are not feiasts or fasts. Violet Is used throughout Advent, Septuageslnia and Lent and on Vigils, Ember days and Rogation days. Black is used only on Good Friday, on All Souls' Day and at .Offices for the dead. Dancing Pavilion at Sea ^ .. 'A dancing pavilion at Rlslftore, Calif., is constructed on the lines of a boat and when the party is assembled the boat moves out to sea on a track which has been laid under the water, but the "boat" never leaves the rails. The dancers get the romance of the sea and the moon and all that as well as the refreshing breeze from the water. The experience answers all the purposes of. a moonlight excursion. Goose Got Homesick 'Mris. Charles Coe, resident of Mtnteca, Calif., has discovered that the domestic goose has a strong homing instinct. She bought a bird froih Joe Vinet at Atlanta, five miles distant,' and took It home and penned It In the morning she found the goose gone. After a search she went to Vinet's farm. She had been there only a few minutes when the goose fleir~fn and Joined the other fowls. Of the Quarts Variety > Jasper Is an impure colored varietyof cryptocrystalllne quartz, admitting ; of a high polish. In color it is usually brown, red or yellow, due to the admixture otJron oxide. ... - • - if V'f ; -ife. . ;-:3r. 'r- -< - Always Handieapfted - A sluggish, dawdling and dilatory man. may have spasms of activity, bat he never acts continuously, and con* secutlvely with energetic quickness.-- George S. Hillard. g Not Always Friendliness •Be who speaks words of kindness,* •Hid HI Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "may not, necessarily be a friend. He may be only a diplomat."--Washing ton Stair. Hate Easily Borne The hate which we bear with the most Christian patience is the hate of those who envy us.-- Colton. Cyclonic Belt* The most advanced or progressive parts of the world are the regions of cyclonic storms. Two chief features of cyclonic regions are rainfall in moderate abundance at all seasons and weather subject to marked changes every few days. Most of the United State!|, together with southern Canada and most of Europe, lies In the great northern cyclonic belt. Th* Chicago Motor Ct«b tuildlng a* 66 East Sotfffc Watsr 5tr»»t Affiliattd wlttr tfit American Automo* bit* Association This affiliation Slivrci miiritri of Itatlon-widt "strrict 1,653 A. A. A. Clubs In. Unlfd Statu CNARif^M. HAYES, hm. McHenry Co. Branch Hartley E. Rardin, Mgr. ' 119 Dean St., Woodstock Phone Woodstock ^58 Attorney for the Club Joslyn '& Joslyn, Woodstock Mechanical Service Station . Phalin's Garage . v ' ;®earl Street Episcopal Church in America The general convention, assembled in Philadelphia in 1785, gave the first expression of its existence In - this country of the Protestant Episcopal church as a single and united body. At that time there were eight dioceses, while at present there are 73 and 32 nglssionary districts. ? CHICAGO MOTOJl CLUB .< t) { I 199 Dean St^ Woodstwlc Nmh* *"• j I Gentlemen: Without any obliga- S tion on my part, please let me |. h ave further information on the I many money saving servicas 1*1 |th e club. AdJrest. * « • a-* f e>V* • city. k . . . . . . i . i.»...:. .. ". .. ...... •» MMMHMMttlMUtMMlHtinilltlllMloV If we can't sell you a TIRE ; y ---come in arid get a We will be glad if you just drop in and look around. Ask prices on our Goodyear tires. Compare them with ethers.* t<m don't need to feel that yon have to buyf You may not believe ft lrofr to make yoo our food friend interests us more than an immediate sale. The reason % that if we do iriftke you our friend, sooner or later we will make a lot of sales to you. 0^ tires are good. Our prices are right. Come and see. When you do buy, we will cement the friendship by giving you the gwelleat service you ever saw. . ,:r;- ^alter.J. Freund, - Battery pharging and Repairing Tire^and Tube Vulcanizing Phone 294 Work Guaranteed West McHenry 4.40 - 20 4.50 - 20 4.50 - 21 4.75 -19 4.75-20 5.00.19 5.00-20 5.00 • 21 5.25 -18 5.25-19 5.25 - 20 5.25 - 21 5.50 -18 5.50-19 5.50 - 20 6.00 -18 6.00-19 6.00-20 6f00 - 4.00 - 22 30x3 Vz CI Reg, m 30x3 Vi CL O. S. 31x4 32x4 H. D. Std. $ 5.25 ri|ri . si- .5.95 8.75 ; ., 6.05 _ 9.70 7.05 j-;:.- 7.15 ^10.90 7.40 _ 11.25 7.50 7.70 •'•M- • ' 8.30 j*.' 8.55 _ 12.20 8.75 ^ 12.95 9.00 ^.13.05 • 9.15 13.40 9^0 32x4^4 ' 33x4Vi 34x4% • 30x5 Heavy Duty 33x5 Heavy Duty 32x6 Heavy Duty 12.05 12.20 12.60 $4.65 4.75 8.10 8.45 12.15 12.60 13.70 19.95 21.90 33.00 I---. -'• « • rrrr.. t." • 3BSK--