McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Mar 1932, p. 5

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BACON'S-,' ' - S-'r* "ZEKE" BACON The OM Timers are now the only bowling leaguo in action- The memben seemed unwilling to quit while still in the throes of winter and this desire to remain in action seems to vouch Well for the system they use to keep their interest brewing. DUXDEfc FLOGS ELGIN FOR DISTRICT TITLE Dundee was crowned District Champions Saturday night by trouncing Elgin in the finals at Woodstock by a 24 - 11 count in a game that was devoid of sensational basketball. Had it been any other game than a final contest of a tournament the game would have been terrible to all save those partisan fans of Dundee who are always glad to see Elgin age old rival, go down in defeat. Mitchell, stellar Dundee center, was . . . . . the only bright spot in the game and Dundee is again crowned district, he, too, seemed to be affected by the L champion for the fourth time in four, inefectual work of both his mates and •: years, which is quite a record for any: their opponents. Elgin's loss of three schooL They trimmed Elgin in a j regulars at the mid year semester, one-sided tilt 24-11 and held the am} the later loss of their captain Adams men to one lone field goal, through lack of eligibility, seems to %xdue chiefly to Elgin's inability to hit; have played havoc with their chances vthe basket. From the way Dundee, to go places and do things as people > looked in the tournament at Wood- have grown to expect Elgin teams to School Notes. ! rv.v stock they'll not go far toward an Tiexing the state championship. do in this district. Truly it is a deplor able state of affairs when Elgin can produce no better team than that which bowed to Dundee. Huntley captured third place from Hampshire in a contest that provided The regular monthly business meet- " ing of the Married Men's Athletic club ;was held last Monday and all current business disposed of without an ex- thrill after thrill in the final minutes . ception. Attendance at this meeting | after witnessing an Unexpected come- • was exceptional, over thirty members j back by Huntley after % broken fx.- • • ; •: '%»•> being present. Next Monday another] spirited Hampshire five .had built up y( ^ "volley ball session will be held at the j an early lead in the first half. They - ^hoo} jn a continuation of the! led by only three points at the half but Huntley had stayed in the game by dint of their free throwing ability. .. r season's competition for high scoreii bptrfflz-i-.esessionsj htime-cW When the second half started so did Huntley's rather hit and miss offense Baskets clicked as they do at times Mitchell, Dundee's elongated center, was tlfe whole show for the champs. Every play is built around this lad jsoon Hampshire was trailing only and he comes through in fine shape. | 8^age a comeback and gain a one His ability to sink one-handed push J advantage. This existed until shots piles up a lot of points for him,' w'y seconds remained when even though he does carry the one- j Pav^t Huntley center, sank a one -hand shots to extremes. Annibali and handed specialty shot from the midst Puffpaff are able assistants in the °/. a scrambling group which wan game, the former being a younger brother of that Dundee star of several years ago. third place and basketball for his school. i Good crowds witnessed the semifinals and the final* and enabled Away from basketball to dwell up- Woods^k Commnmty High, sponon the fast waning bowling season. sors ^ touniament to put over a The Old Timers did themselves successful affair. The officials, Smidl brown in their suce&sful entertaining an. Kuehn, handled the games in - of the Knights of Columbus league ?.?!?. fashion. One of them had a as a reward fer the trimming handed ! tough luck when he lost a tooth them by the latter in their interleague ™ °"t of «>»ision w!th an /match. The affair took place at ®lgm- player m the first <luarter of Weber's hall Monday night and was a rare success. 'Nuf said! Yes, the Knights will wish for another match C i in the future and won't turn away an •V •opportunity to reciprocate if a trimming they must take. TVi Elgin's pitiful. plight this ydar is due to the graduation at the semester of three of its veterans and the later ineligibility of the captain of the squad. This left but one veteran and Coach Adams- has been floundering around ever since in an effort to find the lone survivor some suitable companions, but from the looks of the team he has so far met with little success. Several of the men hadn't been on the squad more than two weeks, so little should be expected of them as a team. Huntley came through in flne shape t , to give McHenry county show money in the tourney by nosing out Hamp- , shire in the consolation, 20-19, on Davis' one-hand shot with five seconds •' to go. The game was far more interesting than the big game of the night. - more so because fans were anxious to see just how the Hampshire boys would take that heartbreaking defeat :by Elgin the night before. They ~*":r*TTstood it admirably, which seems to mean that Coach Herman is a real coach, and possesses more than an ' ability to pound basketball into Ins . „ boys. He must have that something that goes to make the difference between a coach and good coach. - ^ It was interesting to contrast the defense Of Huntley with that of Elgin. Hampshire met both and went down to defeat, both time9 by the narrowest of margins. They ran. rings around the Elgin guards, who seemed unable to cope with the fast block of the opposing forwards. Huntley, on the other hand, shifted guards in most every instance without a tremor. It imay have been the inexperience of the Elgin crew, but they certainly Hooked helpless in the second quarter of their game when Hampshire scored fourteen points to their one in tha first seven minutes of that period. It's hard to believe that anything but luck and the pschycological effect of playing a larger school like Elgin that beat that scrappy little outfit- Dundee, besides possessing a eolorful center in Mitchell," also led in one other department, that of cheerleadirig. A dapper little man attired iri sv red striped blazer, flannels, spats and tan oxfords--lacking merely a Chaplin mustache to complete his makeup --performed in inimitable fashion, much to the delight of the whole audience. At first glance he seemed to be one of the students, but under closer scrutiny he was revealed to be old-. >r and later it was found that he was 'the English instructor of the high School. Upon second thought he did !>ossess too much of that all-necessary goofy grace to be a mere student. 'Ed- Note--That goofy grape is necheerleading, a* teach- . tag.) McHenry had more than the ex- J>ected success in the district tournament when they defeated Marengo ;n ' Charmed Circlet *Tre often wondered what led to the custom of women wearing wed (.Ing rings," writes a correspondent Some deem them survivals of slavery, a syman overtime game in the first round woman's bondage to her captor. the final game. He finished the game. UNKNOWN RELIGION PUZZLE TO SAGES '"'V-' 11 . ,i i Excavation* in Syria Yield Evidences of Strange Cult « of Early Ages* Paris.--Vestiges of an unknown religion which evidently combined the cult of the death with the idea of fecundity are being accumulated by the researches of the French mission in northern Syria, it was declared by Prof. F. A. Claude Schaeffer of the University of Strasbourg lecturing before the Societe Ernest ltenan in Paris. Professor Schaeffer described the excavations he has superintended for three seasons at Kas Shamra and Minet el Beida, where he has discovered royal tombs and the remains of a great religious center, dkting perhaps from the nineteenth century before the Christian era. Find Strange Languages. Further discoveries that are sure to be made in the course of the coming season Professor Schaeffer hopes will do much to clarify the significance of the finds made so far, among which are tablets containing Inscriptions In several unidentified languages and comprising perhaps the earliest known efforts at poetry and literature. "Our conclusions," said Professor Schaeffer, "must await further verifications, but we already know enough of the settlement ^hat ©nee existed there to be certain that It not only represented a great commercial center but also a religious organization and pilgrimage place of the very first Importance. Religion Mystifies. "The precise nature of the religfon that was practiced and certainly ex-, pounded there we have yet to determine from the very rich remains that we are uncovering each year. At the present moment It seems certain that It had for a basis the association of the cult of the dead and their burial In fertile earth as the source of eternal fecundity." Professor Schaeffer described the large vaulted tombs at Minet el- Beidu, and the peculiar deposits of vases exhumed in extraordinary quantities In the area between the tombs. He told of the curious cisterns and tiled conduits installed in this area, which some Of his Auditors suggested might have been a;ranged for libations to the dead, to which the Greek custom of pouring libations niiu'lit perhaps he traced. He then described the finding of frequent representations of the nude goddess Astarte. or the Venus of Syrian antiquity, which he believes have some direct bearing on the nature of' the cult which will be revealed by the translations of the works transcribed on the tablets of the Has Shamra library." PUBLIC SPEAKING \T SCHOOL Members of the public speaking class at the local high school under the direction of Clarence Angelese, appeared before the entire high school assembly Monday and delivered speeches of three-minute duration or various topics of interest. Their program was as follows: Smile--Dorothy Fisher. John Philip Sousa--Marie Freund. Having a Hobby--Evelyn Anderson. A Beautiful Scene--Mary Althoff. Good Manners--Rita Freund. Fear--Louise Kilday. - - n Sapphire Mines--Rita Martin* Saturnine--Gene Nye. ; Ambition--Edward Hettermaim. He Lives off the Fat of the Land- Lillian Segel. Importance of Having a Hobby- Harriet Boger. k World's Conquest--LeRoy Welter, Helen Whiting. Importance of Having a Hftbby-- Marie Miller. Oa Tuesday the remaining mem* ers of the class- gave the following program before the high school assembly: ' . tSpeechei^--Eunice Marshall. Glacier National Park--Qlga Brefeld. V-v\:. Friends San Rosino--'George Larkin Why Worry--Julia McLaughlin. What's Wrong with Our Student Body--Anita Bacon. Master Carver--Lyman Howe. Importance of Manners--Charlotte Erickson. Readings--Gordon Engeln. A Barrangle Ride--Margaret l*r» kin. Inside Dope--Harold Heimer. A Strange World--E. Matthew*. Your Imagination-->C. Peterson. The Attitude a Student Body Should Take Toward Education--Albert Buch. Exams will take place this Thursday and Friday. There will be no exemptions until next quarter. This week concluded the third quarter leaving only one more quarter to complete the school year. -a. The G. P. C. sponsored another dance on Friday. The high school jaiz band furnished the music and Bob Peterson sang a few selections. Everyone had a good time; Miss Mac Donald's food class gave a tea in honor of Dr. Cook and Miss Ware. Delicious .refreshments were served by the food class. Those present were the high school faculty and the Sisters of St. Mary's. Dr. Cook and Miss Ware were here for one week. They gave the Schick test to the students and gave physical examination to the children of the grade school. Both Dr. Cook and Miss Ware gave interesting talks to the student body. Miss Ware's talk was for the girls, complimenting them on many things. The Freshmen played the Grade school Monday evening. The plucky grade school defeated the Freshmen by three points. The score being 17 to 14. Mack is organizing a track squad and the boys will go out as soon as the weather permits. The (district tournament is over. McHenry defeated Marengo by one point in an overtime game Thursday night Dundee was too flashy for the Orange and Black and defeated us 35 to 18. Woodstock came in as district champs. Last year Harvard came in first. Report of the Schick Test On March 7 in the nurse's office at the high school 136 persona, including pre-school children, grade school and high school students and adults, received the Schick test. Of this number 127 presented themselves for the final reading, which was gfiven on Friday, March 11. Of this number 14 had not received antitoxin previously. Following is an itemized report: Total present for final reading 127. Total absolutely negative (or absolutely free from danger of diphtheria) 80. Total very doubtful (probably immune) 10. Total having 1 plus (probably immune) 10. Total having 2 plus (moderately susceptible) 2L ^ Total having 3 plus (highly susceptible and should receive further immunizing doses) 6. When one considers that 14 of the 136 had never received toxin anti toxin, and that 27 equals the total not protected against diphtheria, our percentage of immunity is very satisfactory, giving an immunity reading of 92 per cent minus of the total im munized. . ; Recommendations -- When severe Schlick reaction (2 plus, 3 or 3 plus) give u.cc at first dose, then Ice or three full immunizing doses of lcc each. ROBERT C. COOK, M. D. Pediatrician, Div. of Child Hygiene, Illinois State Dept. of Public Health. t , School Nurse GIANT HOWITZERS NOW TRAVEL FAST Army Develops New Transpot* tation for Gun*. Washington.--A picture of torized howitzers--some of 8-lnch caliber-- dashing over highways at 45 miles per hour, was painted In the annua^ report of MaJ. Gen. Samuel Hoff, chief of army ordnance. v Guns of such weight have In past wars had to be moved slowly by mules or crawling tractors. Now, apparently, it will be possible to transfer them between fronts 200 miles apart In five hours. The first of these large mobile guns, Hoff reported, was completed last year at Rock Island arsenal. It is now at Aberdeen (Md.) proving ground, undergoing testa. "Preliminary firing tests," Hoff said, "indicate that it is satisfactory as a firing unit. In road tests it has been transported at 45 miles an hour, this being made possible by the use of pneumatic tirt-s and spring supports provided In the1 carriage and limber." Developmeot of a, semiautomatic shoulder r(fie to Increase the firing power of infantry is being carried out by the ordnance department, Hoff said. Three types, of .276~calliter rifles --the Garand, Pederson and White guns--are no#^ being tested. During the last year the army Increased its artillery by 35'75-mm. p'acll howitzers, 15 3-inch antiaircraft guns, 11 87-mm> guns, 12 75-mm, niortars nnd 4 106-mm. bowltzers.- CavaJry Radio Found Practicable in Testi Washington.--Use of radio within mounted orgaii'nations has been found practicable, MaJ. Gen. Guy V. Henry, chief of cavalry, stated In his annual report. He added that during recent cavalry division maneuvers receiving sets were installed in airplanes. In armored cars and carried on horseback, accompanying widely separated columns of mounted troops. "In these maneuvers," Major General Henry said, "the importance of quick and reliable radio communication between cavalry columns, while they were actually marching and In combat, was clearly demonstrated. Th« radius of action of a cavalry command Is being greatly Increased and Its ability to disperse safety into several columns on a wide front is being insured by Improved radio communication. • "Intensive study Is being given to proi»er radio communication within mounted organizations, within mechanized units and to the problem of intercommunication between both of them." » L Animal Rescue Leagu Upset on Cat Question Grand Rapids, Mich.;--From Cap* Cod to the Catskillft, a cat catastrophe is sweeping the East, according to Robert E. Sellar, managing director of tho Animal Rescue league, Boston. Mass. Before a session of the American Humane association, here for Its flftyflfth annual meeting, Sellar declared the fat menace In the FJjist '•amounts to a catastrophe." lie said city dwellers are leaving their pets when they return from vacations in their summer cottagea. "Cats," Sellar saldi "turn wild and , kill our songster and game birds when they are allowed to run free. TTiey become as fierce as catamounts." The quarterly CoOrteof Honor at the McHenry County Codncil, Bgy Scouts of America, was held at the Crystal Lake Community high school Thursday evening, March 10th. The county Court of Honor chairman, Sam Marsh, was in charge and was assisted by Scoutmaster E. B. Dahl, Scout Executive E. L. Rice and Scouts from the Legion troop "and the Congregational troop of Crystal Lake. Two tenderfoot pins were awarded, five Second Class pins, 17 Second Class merit badges, 7 First Class pins, 115 First Class merit badges, 10 Star Scout pins, 1 Life Scout pin, 2 Eagle Scout badges and 2 Bronze palms. The following boys from McHenry were awarded badges: • Orval Granger---autoniobiling, bird study, cooking, flremanship, first aid, first aid .to annimais, pathfinding and atar.';- Braos ^Grani^t^Higagling, first aid, first aid to animals, handicraft^ reptiles, animal industry and star; r Donald Granger---first aid. ; > Ray Hughes--angling, reptiles and scholarship. . George Johnson--first -aid and scholarship. M, L. SchoeoholtJE, scoutmaster-- horsemanship and animal industry. Sttkiai tW Uiwtlii«»lil» There Is an old Portuguese proverb: *We are happy with whit we have •ntll we kuow there is more to have." Alas, for the sophistication of modem manners culture which leaves u» eoatlnunlly striving--for no matter what we attain, there is always more b<* yond--the unattainable! We are satisfied wtth the music of a strolling player*vuntil we learn there Is such a thing as grand opera.--Detroit News. H»i Scientists PcaM The "driftlcss area" (several hundred square miles In extent In Wisconsin and adjacent, portions of Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois) has never Itself undergone glacial action of any kind. Just why this area should have escaped the glacial action that went on all a found it ia by no means clear and has never been, absolutely explained. Hawaii One* a Kingdom Hawaii was a kingdom until a provisional government was set up In 1893. A .republican government was established with Sanford B. Dohv a ttilssionary's son, as President r; OM EnglUk Mm. 8t. James' palace, In London,. Unfit on the site of a hospital for rous women, a religious foundati dedicated to St James the Less, op of Jerusalem. The site quired by Henry VHI. the bull torn down and the palace erected 1532. St James* palace was the ficlal residence of the kings of E land after the fire at Whitehall 1908 and so, remained until the of William IV. Where Lather Preached SiMl church of St Nicholas ben, Germany, In which Martin delivered sermons In the Sixteentit century, has been renovated and monumental stained glass wtnd< each more than twenty-two feet have been placed in the choir. of the windows . depicts Bi scenes and important events o &ef©r*#atlon. . , .;r Ultfai Effort# '- Efforts to be permanently useful must be Uniformly Joyous, a spirit all sunshine, graceful from very glsdnaos, beautiful because blight--Carlyle. Monday evening, March 14, the Boy Scouts had a real sliding meeting. Afthe assembling in the hall the meeting was called to order. Scoutmaster Schoenholtz surprised us by .having a skating party on the channel. All Scouts thought the plan tcLeal. It was a wonderful evening for skating and alt enjoyed themselves. There was a large number of Scouts from nearby towns who received merit badges and badges of rank. There were two Scouts who received Eagle badges,, the highest rank of Scouting. On April 2 and 3 there is a banquet given for scoutmasters and teachers. This affair is held at the Abraham Lincoln Junior high school, under the auspices of the Blackhawk Area Cooncil. BRUCE GRANGER. ENTERTAIN FRIENDS A party of friends were entertained at the home of Dr. and Mrs- C. W. Klontx Saturday night A social evening was enjoyed and two tables of cards were in play.- • s ^ PUBLIC NOTICE Notfoa is hereby given thai r the Township Board of Auditors will meet at the Town Clerk's Office on Tuesday, the 29th day of March, 1932, at 2 p. m., for the purpose to audit all Township bills of said Town. All Mils against Town may be left to the Supervisor or the undersigned. PETER M. JUSTEN, 42-2 Town Clerk. Woman Works Alongside ; Husband as Plasterer SiMf Angeles.--Here's a mother of two husky boys, who cleans them upt sends them to school and then accomv panies her contractor-husband to on* of his Jobs and for eight hours a day labors as a plasterer. r* She is Mrs. Lida Jancar, who In times of adversity for her family, de*: cided to labor by the side of her hus* band to recoup their fortunes. So, dally she works along with thf men on a job. She mixes mortar, trips along the scaffolding and then# brandishes her trowel with a dexterity that shows years of practice. 95-Year-Old Man Sleeps Days, Reads at Night Evansville, Ind;--The time-honor^ <t advising "early to lied,"' etc., dwsu't. apply in the .case of Dr. C. P. Bacon* ninety-five, a resident here. Doctor Bacon stays up most of the night He often reads until 3 or 4 a. m., then sleeps until late in the afternoon. He said he formed a habit of remaining awake late while a jned ical student. Doctor Bueon has used tobac o moat of hia life. * African Postage Postage came to the Cape of Good Hope In 1853 In a series of triangular stamps designed by Charles Bell, surveyor general, showing an emblematic sealed figure of "Hope." Primitive postage stamps appeared in Natal In 1857. In 1859 New Caledonia had stamps bearing a crude efligy of poiecn ill, done by Sergeant Xriquerat FRIDAY AND SATORDAY AT National CO. Food Stores Green Tag Sale Lucky Ifeluei for Yoa{ Watch for the Green Tag v Corn » * • ^5* Beans Navy / "--"Eggs t American Home Pure Fruit BaMAMnrAe RwpberrT. Paach, Plain, Pineapple, n lt-aLnA^ • RSCrVCS LofinlwrTi BlackhertT, Nrctar ]{••• Strawberry or Chipped Cherry 'j? 17« •alada 19c *7« ^ 2I4« (balk) Pillsbary's iwufi.*, Fuji Bean Sprouts iu^t far Pabst-ett Plain or Pimento • • • • Good Luck Oleo Blue Ribbon • * P&G Soap The White Naphtha • '• American Family Lux Soap Uaed by fatnoua Movie Qoeen* Lux Flakes &*Oc S. S* Soap and pad alt in mm* • **S5?Z7* log; Ma mod. lb * pkp. -Jr-- % oka 19C V^*SC Oranges California Navels rise, doe. n« Grapefruit T~X80»9e Lettuce £3^3 fa K V Florida! L|«. California Iceberg Idaho Potatoes ^ asc Carrots fc • l'. S. No. 1 Rutti California--Praah, Potatoes White Wisconsin pack* 15c , A. W. K1U G. Manager McHENRY, ILLINOIS National ca Food Stores THi QUALITY OaOC«K» Of TW MIPDH WEST SINC« |«9f rlaindealers at attles. SPRING OF GAS RANGES That they evolved from the husband lending his wife his signet ring as a •Ign of her authority in his absence is a more likely view.--London Tit-Bits. "19-18, on Hayes' free throw in the •vertime period. Dundee then put them out of the running in the next . /found by a 32-15 count, MeCracken's #ien playinpr the best brand of ball of . 1ny °f the Dundee opponents throuph- • ~ When one considers Ei 215 B. C. and In 214 B. W the fhat this includes Crystal Lake, Hunt- treasury of Rome was almost empty an<^ El&in* McHenry fans should Private Individuals came to the resfeel'proud of the late season showing cue. This was, so far as Is km own. i ^ 4,16 MCHS lads. It is true that the first time that " McHenry trimmed Marengo 21-10 two ! crisis, money was, In - greeks before, but somehow the local' the treasury. / followers were of a mind to discount Jttiis victory and call it a fluke. The Repetition of the win showed that Mc- up their suits until next STenrv a financial » way, lent lenry wasnt the worst team in the though many of them ,<?ounty by a long ways. The season year and will not see ; ' Worrying ' A bunch of- seveu-.vear-olds boarded ft street car for school. Soon there" was animated chatter about "the play" to be given and confidences were exchanged concerning the costumes and characters. Finally one little mlaa piped up: "I don't need to worry; my part's not valuable.** Dress Failed to Fit, So Wife Misses Boat San Francisco.--Failure of a dresaj to fit delayed the liner Santa AnarHis traded a husband and three children and caused a search of the ship. After her son, Luis, had swung ashore and frantically telephoned police, Mrs. Pedro Bscalon arrived at the pier half an hour after the vessel departed. She had trouble getting the proper fitting for a new dress, she calmly told offl-, cials. v::: • !• <'-v Billy was entertaining one of his little girl friends with a colorful account of his grandmother's, farm, and "his" horse that lived on if. Pinned down bf her questioning, be hedged: "Well, be isn't exactly but I bet he yishes he was. War Dog Killad fcMBdon.--Tim, a dog war veteraa, has been killed by a motorcycle, after ^escaping death while aboard H. M. 8. Morris at the taking of Ostand and Zeebrugge, abd ta aa Nieuport. (fitfor* tU Bathing Era Bathing and the bathtub of today Is a comparatively recent Innovation ,n civilization, as witness the remark , cultured lady of some years back, * fmcUMm who, on tiearing that a friend was building a bathroom, remarked : "Well, I thank God, I'm none so dirty."--Ex- The ginkgo tree, or ds a unique place in plant evolution, in that It has not changed in appearance ia BKKre thj years. The first act of parliament authorizing the establishment of public }1- Oar season • opening exhlbir of newest range creations is now ready. We invite you and your friends to call and see the latest advancements and refinements. We Will, on request, gladly demonstrate si range. Should you desire to purchiuv, you'll find some very attractive models at astonishingly low prices. Terms are easy, the down payment is small, and you will receive a liberal allowance on your old cooking equipment. Moore's Reversible Bullet Gas Range OUR Spring Sale leader is this new Moore Reversible, at tne remarkably low price of $49-30. Seldom it there offered • value such as this. Never before was ft Moore range offered at to) where near this price. ,, You'll like this range for in beauty, as well as foe its cooking and baking qualities. Foil porcelain enameled, kuide and out. New supple finish sea given sad black, or old ivory and black. See the reversible oven, la two minutes it can be changed from right to left or left to right, without adding a tingle new part. Whether you move to another kitchen, or change things about in your own kitchen, tbe rang* caa qoidefy be made to conform. Four doubie-dutv gas-saving burners each s speed boraet aad simmering burner in ooe. No need to shut paa from large to simmering burner, as (he right asMniat of heat caa always be applied. Ams huge twMn top. Grate surface, 21 yi in. z 21# ia. f ...i v . ' - ' ' , • - Ter gr*tes eaiily Itfif d off, burners qukLly removed, (B Mti!> cleaned. Cooking top, »heo not iu u«, u hWdea , a hinged cover. When open, co*er acn as hirii tpl iiti Wfc MDtecting wall. Oven has an easy lighting feature and a balanced door. Roomy ucepsil drawer has partition) iitd Slide-easy rollers. A down payment of $4.9i will put this range is yew home. Balance in small sums, with sauil cartyiaf CMfgK : CocDe in aad look it ores. •m VANIT1 BAlfOE, |§9.V« : Wltli Ymit Old Range Vetoty and utility hsppitv combined! Range, cab'art tsfefr-- a91| one. Utility cabinet each tide ol oven. Large Morage space Alt utensils. Cover conceals cooking :op--acts as bavk-tplashcr whoa Open. Large even heat oven, fuliv insulated, porvrixjo lioev^. hsa oven-heat control. Easy-slidins bro/ler drawer, with patennsi fimo* lowering device, spatterless broiler-pan. The Vanity is finished & rich ivory porcelain enamel, trimmed in (learning black. cOaaB payment. Easy terms. Small cao^iof GAS a«d ELECTRIC COKIPANY 0. E« COLLINS, District Manafer S:.

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