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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Jan 1932, p. 2

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ffj,' Worn Mrs. Sherman Davis of Round Lake, Mr#- Eva Ames of Waukej?an, Mrs. Richard Powell, Mrs. Clinton Ravin and daughter, Mrs. Davis and daughter, Helen, of Slocunv Lake, Archie Wallis, and daughter of Fremont and Mrs. Elmer Gottschalk of Lak^ Zurich spent Monday With Mrs. ~ I<?r. Fisher., Mrs. Frank-Wilson entertained the V';- Voio' Cemetery society Thursday.af- : tcrnoon. ".Eight' tables ?of airplane ' bunco were played. Prizes were won. - by Mrs. E. Baf^n, Mrs- Frank Davis, MrS. M. E. Smith. John Fairweather, and daughters, Ruby and Fern, of Downer'!!?' Gir-ove were guests of the {society Thursday*. ; ' i i -'j-'Mjt^'iA-flbert Hofer of Fremont spent •: Monday-with her daughter^ Mrs. Lloyd Fisher; '£":•/ Miss Edna Fisher returned to her >. home in Waukegan M,ondtky evening, after spending the past two weeks < here at the" home of her' parents, Mr»; and Mrs. Esse .Fisher.. , Mrs- G. A. Vasey will entertain the ^ Volo remote ry society the first Thursdayirt February^; * • *.• , ; , Earl Donley of' VqIo and Joe Molit \- dor of Round Lake left last Sunday • v/* via auto for Los Angeles Word has 'been received that.,they w:efje, at Elr, v • , pasn, Texas ' v ; t• .v Mr. and Mrs, Clark Nicholas and <r .non, Gerie, of Wiauc6jidal; Milton ?i)c>w-' "•'7'ell, Mr. and J^frs. Arthur Kaiser, Mr. .»•,« and Mrs. Hoj'd Fisher spent Friday ' , . evening in, the home of Mr; and Mrs: ^ Albert Hofer §t Fremont. Mrs. Frank Hironimus and family visited Mrs. Earl Hironimus and in* fant babe at the Wood-lawn hospital, " Friday- She found them both doing niecly and the new arrival answers to the name of William Earl. Miss Letah Bacon returned to her home in McHenry Friday, after spend. ' " ing the past week at Ihe Baedn home. V - Milton Dowell motored to Elgin on business Friday. •*** v Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter, Vinnie, . visited Mrs. Mary Ames at Waukegan. ' Sunday. ' ' " ~~ Mrs. Beatrice Dowe'l spent Friday s. v • afternoon at the home of Mr. and ; Mrs- Clark Nicholas at Wauconda. ; " Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and son and Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell were Elgin shoppers Friday. • • Mrs. Roy Passfield has been on the sick list the past week. Mrs. William Hironimus and son. 'Chester, of Round Lake called*on her mother, Mrs. Rose Dunnell, Sunday. Misses Vinnie and Letah Bacon motored to Wauconda Monday. Miss Marie Gaennes^, Miss Edith Purvey of Crystal Lake' spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker. Mr- and Mlrs. Frank St. George motored to Evanston Tuesday. ' • , . FrtniTliironiraus was a Chicjj^o c a l l e r F r i d a y . . - • ' , ' • 7 Mr. ««ind Mrs. Frank TJowell and daughter of £lgin, Mr. an'd Mrs. Joe Passfield- and son, Mr. and Mrs. Roy I Pa ssfield and family and Mr. and Mrs. | Charles Dalvin arid family of Wauconda spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs* George Dowell.. Clarence Hironimus and Miss Ethel Knigge spent Sunday in Chicago *t the home of Dr. .and. Mrs!. Kothens. Mr. and Mrs. Fraijk St. George£ entertained company from' Evanston on Wednesday. , Twice T o l d Tales THE M HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, JANTJAEY ELECTION CALENDAR ****.., \ Item* of Interest Taken Prow • the' FHes of the Plaindeal^ •',! of Years Ago Beer As Made By Brewers 50 Years'Ago After several years of prohibition in this country, the following story, which appeared in the McHenry Plaindealer in the year 1881, will prove interesting reading: "What is the difference in the consumption of beer in winter and summer ?" asked George Alfred Townsend of a New York brewer. "There is not much more than onethird of the beer drunk in winter that is consumed in summer. I?ut the brew ers prefer that kind of trade which FIFTY YEARS AGO they can employ all (the year round The first snow of the .season, in this That js wh.y Coney Island is of very section, fell -here Non Tuesday and to- little advantage to a brewer. The day, the sleighs and cutters are flying large establishments have to be run around lively. A little more sriow to all winter ;iid the men to be'paid, their cover up the rough places, would make wages. Bee!' brewing in. the Southern Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser fnotor-1 ^lei^hin& K°od- * , j States ^ has .not been J a success, on ed tosCrj^tal Lake on Sunday. " V V F- G- Mayes has sold his store account of .the cost of ice, which does Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and fa'mt ib,iiJ<ling in this village to M. fingeln."71104 form in that climate. You mast ily and Ell Wood Dowell spent. Sunday. I Ml*- -Mayes has not yet decided what. you* beer at low temperatures afternoon at the lioitie of .Mr. and Mrs. George Scheid, [Jr., at Wauconda. Arthur Wackei^w; spent Sunday afternoon, at the;>.J'oe .DoWell ,home;"at' Slocum 'Liafee... ,. s '?• • Albert Etten !• ^f- Scfuth Dakota is Visitipg ,his - br oti^,;."%iilik'ift -EttefSi •" • vMiv and J®r«.;.'iir6y^.. -Fjslier ;aif»d "sfcon' spent Wedrte'sd&y at the home of J^r. an$ li^s. Wili»ro Lohttaji; at jjbertyvilhe. * , » t - - it I* sad to think when night comes on that there are so many homeless men; and, sadder still, to know that many men are home less than they ought to be---Kansas City Star. Cynical Reflection* Politicians who spend Monday to maklrtg promises, Tuesday la brewing them and Wednesday In being found out, are elected by enthusiastic majorities on Saturday.--George Bernard Shaw. \ Noted American Writer Oliver Optic was the pseudonym of William Taylor Adams (1822-1897), author and editor. Uhder this name he became a voluminous and popular writer of fiction for the younger generation. His writings embraced travel and adventure, notably Young-America Abroad, and Starry Flag Series. Two Performances of Carmen Feature 12th Week at Civic Operja he will do, but thinks some of build-order to destroy certain diseased ing a store jfcore suitable fer his busi- 'fewftwts which -would spoil it, and nesi. . - |which only develop above ascertain . 'As it is probable tliat our bridge temperature. That .would make' the question yill be brought before , the fkeer sour." 'J;; v-.'.4- court at the presciit t^rm, it may" not! 's Jreas^'i' J be uniitteVesting to our- Teaders - to 1 ,, ^Wel'- Here'» Mr "-will know that the following' similar cases tliat yeast is prdbably the have been tried, and in every instance, lowest form of organized life. It is a decided-in favor of thie towns; Town plan^ or spore, invisible but floating ^.f Shelbyville . vs. Shelby County - ^ atmosphere. Here is a photo- Town of Carmi^vs. White County and «raph of some yeast magnified thou- Town of Lexin^on vs. McLean Coun-' san<^s °f tiwies. \ ou see that it is apty. The last named is an exact par- parently little-. clusters of eggs, like allel of our case- . roe a shad. Now look at it • \ through the microscope, and each one FORTY YEARS AGO ' : ^ "°f these little eggs becomes half as Ice on the pond is rtow reported as a Pea* There is a cavity at the ibout ten inches thick and it is ex- n^ldd,e T> 68 if there was a stomach pected they will commence cutting ^"ere* Brewers use yeast in preference fiext week. jto several ferments they might use. Ice boating on the pond has been' J11* refuse yeast is ^iven away- Other brisk the past week, and greatly eii- | .e^.ers °^n come to borrow yeast, joyed by many. Isaac Wentworth is ^" .5 .to ,c^angre t^Lelr yeast, as they said to have the "boss" boat in this i , 13 I!ke breedln«: with certain locality. animals which lose their mettle, and - We are now enjoying in this sec- '"troduce new blood from your tion the first sleighing, and in fact s s^00^' c^° ,'t is with yeast tlie first for the"past two years. The . J if organized life, you want to change makes our streets look lively quic ^ ^ another brewery. We and everybody feels better, j "se a*>oiit one gallon of yeast to a The officers of McHenry Lodge, No. Jf"? ° + ^ ^ S f t ermented 158, A. F. & A. M., were publicly in- jth® thf best of lts abllity the stalled on Monday evening last, by y]e&St d^n "po" shavings of Deputy Grand Master Hewins, of El- clean beech put in the bottom of the u- , rru -i , i-, , . , gin. About fifty of the Masonic *ch,ckens brethren and their friends were pres- v. ' v, 1S & tna?1" ent. " • . hole in each one of those tuns or casks TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Concliita )ervia r S ' . . [V. •' GUEST ARTIST in Tide Role of Carmen . .s° ; Civic Opera January 18 md Matinee January 23 • i... Butterfly, Lohengrin, on a» Season Nears End. The twelfth week of opera at the Civic Opera House, Chicago, will bring Carmen into the repertoire for the first time Jin two years. - Two performances of the Bizet work, one on Monday evening, January 18, and one "on Saturday afternoon, January 23, will be sung. In both Concliita Supervia,. favorite Carmen of F'uropean opefa houses; will appear in the title role as guest arti'st. ReneMaison as Bon Jose, ' Leola Turner as Micaela and John Charles Thomas as Ks<?amillaj. complete a spleiidid'»<]uartette of .^principals and Kmil Ctfoper conducts. The balance of the week is given over to repetitions of operas wfiieh have proved ..popular earlier in the season. ' Ambroise Thomas' Mlgnon will be suhg for a third time on Tuesday Evening, January 19. Tliere is an important change in cast, for Charles Haokett will have the role of Wilhefm ^isiter. The opera, while it has been well known In'France and the United States for nearly three-quarters of a century, received -its first production at La Scala only a few years .ago, and Hackett was the choice of the direction for the role there. He made a sensational success, singing the.role there nineteen times t^iat season,, besides appearing as guest, artist in the part at many other Italian theatres. It will be.Hackett's first performance df the role on the Chicago stage. The cast otherwise Is unchanged, - with Margherita Salyi as Phiiina, Coe Glade as Mlgnon and Vanrii-Marcoux ftg Lothario," with Cooper conducting. lladarne Butterfly, in which Itosetta Pftmpanini made-her sensational debut, Is scheduled for Wednesday, with Victor Damiani returning to an otherwise unchanged cast as Sharpless. Lohengrin, first presented this year daring the eleventh week, is billed for" second hearing on the evening of Thursda^. The cast is unchanged. of Santyzza in the opening half of the bill and Rosetta Pampanini will sing Nedda. The tenors are Antonio CortiS for Cavalleria Rusticana and Charles Marshall for I Pagliacci. Conductors are Isaac Van Grove" and Frank St: Leger. The complete schedule for thie twelfth week is: .MONDAY, Jan. 18^-at S--CARMEN' (In French)--Opera in four acts by Georges Bizet. With Concliita Supervia . (guest), Leola TuPper, Rene Maison, John Charles Thomas and others. Bullet. Conductor, Emil Cooper. big enough to let a man put his head and shoulders inside. He removes the A change in the management of the Least -f1tbe .t,shavjn®s , electric light plant takes place'next f TJ' ^ Monday, when Chris Hapke assumes 11 the management of the plant, S. Rey-1 o nolds having resigned some time ago. 'w L. th f>,' 1S- that ?n/he \r • rr i « ,, . . . -. wot weather, when there is a bier de- M 1 ' ",S'°S mand for it, it is furnished too new, »" »">» a.«- and we try to'keep it that long. Bui Chns Hapke and f#a mi*li y hta ve movedj, W^th four or five hundred trade cus- tomers a thirsty city> the. dr^ Walsh house mn^lnf^reeL 6 I Atigust * tjhe annual dinner of th^G. A- B» fh^hl^out St. Northwestern ,is rirunk. There is only about 4 per hotd last Saturday noon.• 'cent of alcohol in beer and about 40 l ^](lnZmX\0\Ba™n> wh0 pet eent of alcohol in whisky. That resides east of town took a lively run accounts for the popularity of lager ? °n lSt SldC !aSt beer: Ifc is a ^ir compromise betwfen Saturday afternoon. . The horses yen total abstinence and alcohol. It espfici- ^opped before much -damage ^Ts a„y seems t0 suit the ^0^- • e - - ' j p e r a t u r e c o r r e s p o n d i n g t o o u r W e s t - ' | em and Middle States. . _TWEOTY YEARS AGO rv"Why do you use ^is^barle^ instead W. A. Fisher, who for the past few of wheat?" - years has conducted a milk route Jn J "Aiiy grain will make J>eer," said JtcHenry, has disposed of his Inter^V th6 brewer. "Wheat will ntake weiss ,to Stephen H. Freutiu, tne latter tak-, beer. We use barley becauseWK find i»g possession of the route on Monday it not only the cheapest grain, but it ittorriing of this week. J develop® jntcn diastalste and St^ch McHenry has just experienced one most thoroughly. This grain of bifrW of the coldest spells in; years, - the you see now is nothing but starfch thermometers registering all the wax and a very little diastaste. The from zero to twenty below during the diastate attacks the starch and turns past week. One man was heard td re- into sugar. Then the yeast has such mark that his thermometer went down a gluttony for sugar that it makes as-far as twenty-four below, but it carbonic acid gas and alcohol of it. takes nerve to tell that. , The hopes fere merely put into the ± The pupils of the McHenry high beer to give it the "tonic qualities. School, together with a number of in- Hops now cost about 20 cents a pound *ited friends, will enjoy a masquerade and we use exclusively American hops, dance at Staff el's hall on Friday eve- j which are profitable to the producer ning of this week. | if he gets 12 cents a whim for them. W, A. Fisher, ex-milkman, has pur- ( We are now the gi^fist hops prochased the Henry ErBuch meat mar- ducing country in thewtpld, and send ket on Water street and has already enormous quantities of \ops to Engtaken possession of new^r,aca , land. Quite an item in the brewers quired business. j list is horses and wagons. A good pair of brewer's horses come from . TEN, YEARS AGO j Ohio 6nd have, some Norman or Ben Brefeld, who recently came in- Flemish stockin them, and cost about to possession of the Wirfs property $600. Our drivers and breWers are The'Plaindealer is indebted to Pe ter M. Justen, township clerk, fdr the following, information pertaining, to elections to be held during the year 1932: Township Election, April 5, 1932 Feb. 5--First day for filing certificates of nomination or nomination papers. March 1--Last day of filing certif icates of' nomination or nomination, p a p e r s ^ . ' " . _ ' Mardh 7--iaat day for filing withdrawal. March 26--Last day for posting aWl publishing notices of election. March 31--Last day for " posting cards of instruction and specimen ballots. April 4--Deliver ballots to judges^ April 5--fclection. April 7--Last day for judges to de liver returns to clerk. April 15^--Last day for to^ clfirls to notify persons elected; ' April 25-TirLast day for town cleric to file in,the"office of the county clerk a lift pf town officers elected. Primary, April 12, 1932 | F?eb. 6--First day for filing tions with the Secretary of State, and" for county officers with the county }clerk.' " . •" ... Feb. 12--First day for filing peti tions for precinct committeeman with county clerk. Feb. 22--Last day for filing peti-; tions with the Secretary of State and ... for county .officers with the «ountyL tr*- cleric. Feb. 27--Last day to file withdrawal with the Secretary of State. March 3--Last day to file for pre-; cinct committeeman.- March 8--Last day for meeting of Senatorial Committees for each political party to fix and determine the number of candidates to be nominated for Representative in the General Assembly. March 8--Last day to fife withdrawal with county clerk; • March 8--Last day for State Certifying Board to certify names of candidates to county clerk. March 14-^I^ast. day for county clerk to certify nam&Kof candidates to (Election Gommissioaiers (if any in county). < March 23--Last day to prepare notices of primary. March 28--Last day jfor posting no. tices of primary. March "28--Last day to post and publish announcement of color of ballots; April 7---Last day tcf ipost specimen ballots. - April 11--list day for delivering primary ballots. April 12--Primary election •day. April 14--Last day for judges to deliver returns to clerk. April 18--Meeting of County" Central Committee. .-yy- April 22--State convention helci* American CliMtrfvIaCM Foreigners profess to be amused at the American Idea of "'keep smiling." Why not be honest and admit that a stronger love of life, a stronger will to enjoy, Is at the bottom of Itt-- Anjerlcan Magazine) Ancimt Clumclk Edlfic* The present cathedral of Notre0 Dame in Paris was begun In 1163 "and ttg towers were finished in 1225. The first church upon this site was built upon the ruins of a temple of Joveabout 375. JlSWFsili V ; - # * / Patent Land Fee Paid After Two Centuries Lancaster, Pa.--Payment of patent fees of $15 each on two tracts of land secured from the commonwealth of Pennsylvania In the Eighteenth century was made at the county tax office here. The tracts were the Mathews'property in P.arth township, deeded by the "state in 1737, and the Steel land, grant-. , ed the private owners In 1790. The fees were due when the land was "beded to the private owners, but were unpaid. Tlie State department of revenue l? now Investigating all such lands and Is seeking payment of the fees wherever possible. It was estimated that there are 742 such tracts In Lancaster county alone. Z1-' facing Main street, has been tearing generally Bavarians, though Ameridown all of the old buildings, includ- cans are coming into the business ing an old barn and iee house, and since it has become such, a prominent in their steady will erect a private feature of trade. Myself and my part" garage. The improvement is a veny neiv were orginally produce merchants, noticeable^ one, indeed. > The leading brewers of New York By prying tho-Tear door, some one arrived in this country poor men." gained entrance to Smithy's barber' "Now," said I /'let me run over nT UESDAY, Jan. 19-at 8-MIGNON ! iIaTstw Weedlneessddayl vni^ghrt^ aHnd fre lri"ev ed the Beer ?iso ibfaSr ley ssu€gea lrf f?e rkmnoewnt.e ^dh ebmy. place of about $25 worth of stock, yeast and made bitter and tonicy by consisting of cigarettes, tobacco and hops- The yeast settles and is throWn candy. McHenry officials believe it away; the mash, after infusing the was the. work of local talent. ' 1 boiling water, is drawn off and sold The jewelry store, which has been for manure. The carbonjc acid released conducted in the Mrs. Elizabeth Roth- by the action of the yeast 0%the sugar ermel building on Riverside Drive is what makes the beer lively. The during the past two months by E. C,! ®old required in the ripening of Jacobs, closed its doors last week, the beer is to keep down poisonous -The closing came very unexpectedly ferments which have a tendency t,o as few of our people were aware of develop. Hops do not make yeast, but the proprietor^ intention until aft >r yeast has to come from a seed and to the building had been vacated by Mr. propagate by the malt it feeds on." Jacobs. \ I The Romans used yeast and we A public service to honor the mem-.think it is a form of organized life, ory of the late Judge Charles H. Don. ar,d that we dont know much about it nelly will take place at the city hall, except that like some furious maggoT Woodstock, on Thursday afternoon, wgar and converts it into With pahi'ni, »-The week wilt dose with a pfrftiriu |- Antonio ance of the famous double /bill of Cavalleria Rusticana and I Pagliacci. (In French)--Opera in three acts by Ambroise Thomas. With Margherita Salvi, Coe Glade, Charles Hackett, Vnnni-Marcoux and others. Ballet. Conductor, Emil Cooper WEDNESDAY, Jan. 20--at 8-- MADAME BUTTERFLY (In Italian) --A Japanese tragedy, founded on the book by John Luther Long and the dranm by David Belasco. Music* by Puccini. With Rosetta Pampanini, Helen Ornstein, . Charles Hackett, Victor Damiani and otherd. Conductor, Roberto Moranzoni. THURSDAY, Jan. 21--at 8--LOHENGRIN (In- Oerman):--Opera In three acts by Richard Wagner. With Lotte I^ehmann, Maria--Olszewska, Rene Maison, Hans Hermann Nissen, Eduard Habich and Alexander Kipnis. Conductor, Egon Pollak. SATURDAY; Jan. 23--at 2--CARMEN (In French)--Opera in four acts by Georges Bizet. With Conchita Su pervia (guest), Leola Turner, Rene. Maisrtn, John Charles Thomas and others. Ballet. Conduct, Emil Cooper. SATURDAY, Jan. 23--at &--CAV AI.LERIA RUSTICANA and I PAG I.IAI"Cl (In Italian)--Opera in one act by Pietro Mascagnl and dramp. In two acts by RuggiefO Leoncavallo. Claudia Muzirt, Rosetta I'am Coe Glade, Maria Claessens. Cartis, Charles Marshall. Desire Defrere , and others. Conduc- J&n. 29. 1 akoboL Muzlo will have the role [ Leger tors, Isaac Van Grove and Frank St. One Uiiful Mod'**' '• The grasshopper mouse, which la found in western states, makes Itself useful by eating grasshopperis, beetles, >rlckets,and sooni'ons. . , .Think It Or«r " * V, Tbe Wat' portion of a good tpan's Hfe^-his little, nameless, unremembere- l acts ot kindness and of love v ' SugAr iB Amtor A German scientist 1ms found, sugar 'inppieces of amber, imbedded there when insects gathering sap or honey were trapped in the sticky resin which hardened. " •r ;; ' ' •' t , ' Beneficent Duclcs DUcks, ordinarily thought irf gatnrblrds, are gre^t weed ctinsirnierW;' The stomach of a duck killed In Louisiana not long ago contained more tba.n weed aee^a. Paper Currency Old > When Marco Polo visited the East i^fhe Thirteehth century he found po "per money Jn ^ 'JSTChinas Uncle Eb*rn "De hopeless thjng about a meani man," said Uncle "Eben, "is dat he mistakes a whole lot of meanness fob smartness."--Washington Star. McHenry Floral Company - _ v Main Street, McHemy Where quality is best and priced are lowest •' • - - ---- ~ --- - 1; ^0" / •. • ;s, " Funeral Work a Specialty ! Flowers for Weddings and all occasions SYNCRO-MESH, QU I ET SECOND AND FREE WHEELING--ALL THREE IN THE NEW PONTIAC Look for thoroughness in Pontiac engineering. In all new Pontiacs, Syncro-Mesh makes gear-shifting effortless--second gear is really quiet--and free wheeling permits you Co coast along at will. Then shift gears without touching the clutch. You get not just one, " but all three of these big improvements in all Pontiacs at no extra cost. a chief of ^7 values Pontiac offers these important developments at no extra cost SYNCRO-MESH " QUIET SECOND FREE WHEELING RIDE CONTROL LONGER WhEELBASE INCREASED POWER AND HIGH SPEED m GREATER ECONOMY • /NEW/ROOMIER FISHER BODIES •. RUBBER CUSHIONING AT 47 CHASSIS POlNTf ' •" "* • j'/':"'-, . ENCLOSED SPRINGS NEW PONTIAC SIX Brings the Important Developments of the Year to the Low-tPricm Fiel4 NEW PONTIAC V-8 Offers thdt^ Distinction of V-8 Per* formance at a List Price under *8SO Overton & Go wen M'HENRY, ILL. PROVED 0creases egg production TJOUITRY m«l have known for years that early-morning . " and evening lighting makes hens lay more eggs. No^;;|v': 'v . comes a new development: All-night lighting in th#/' poultry house brings even better results--^further increases egg produaion, especially during winter months when : eggs sell at peak prices. " The explanation is simpler-Hens Me more active when the house is lighted. Tliey eat more feed--and are able' to lay more eggs. - The Ohio Agricultural Experiment Station finds that mature pullets increased from 40% to 75% production in 4 weeks. Birds averaged 57 eggs each from December 1st to March 1st when the poultry house was lighted all night. Also important is the fact that the hens gained weight even though they were laying more eggs.* The relatively small cost of all-night lighting is several! times offset by the profits from increased egg produaion. Careful use of light can also bring pullets and hens out of molt into production. " for complete information on the benefits of all-night poultry house lighting you are invited to write or phone the Public Service Company. We will be glad to send *one of our representatives familiar with this subject to call - on you. He will help you plan the wiring of your poul> try house and also" recommend the proper lights to use Remember, there is no obligation. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS • E. J. LARK1N. Dist. Mgr. ' * lOl Williams St., prystal Lake Crystal Lake Phone 180 * For a copy of the Experiment Station's report, write "t&h Agricultural Experiment Station, Wooster, Ohio, and ask for Bulletin 476. No charge. J NEW PONTIAC SIXES AND V-EIGHTS

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