- . i ' • 1 0 - ' i.-r _^•-"(*%;V;«>*-ts & !-*• " •' ."r - *.• j ^ . i . £ v'.-V; • ft ,-:v;-n PLAINDKALER, THURSDAY, APRIL 14.1932 % Biblical Play. ' HaUfeck, In his "English Literature," mjn that "a miracle play Is the dr*- •katlc representation of the life of • iRlut and of the miracles connected fr{th him. A mystery play deals with Gospel events frhich are concerned With any phase of the life of Christ, «T with any Biblical event rthat remotely foreshadows Christ or Indicates (Jp iUicessitjf of a redeemer." Utile Gained by Chang* i'i ' ' v . In eases of tuberculosis, not more lhan 1 per cent need a great change' fit climate, nor wlll^hey benefit espe- |#ally by going far away from home or <•• friends to make the change, says a flew Tor* state health officer. Richmond 19\<. V §Dr. JOHN DUCEY VETERiNAKIAN _ ,TB and Blood Testiflf 1 ic^OND. > ILLINOIS HiNT & COMPANY ^ ,AH Kinds of , I N S U R A N C i Placed with the aost reliable \ . > • Companies in and talk it orer t: /Phone McHmr; 8 '• - . n m f i n n f -- * -- - * i » a * i HENRY V. SOMPEL f . J G e n e r a l Teaming Sand, Gravel and Goal for Sale grading, Graveling and Road Sfe! Work Done Bv Contract of Every Description By Day 649-R-l McHenry, 111, P. 0. Address, Route 3 The Mild Madness ^ A Story of Ambition • i:*/* Realized • • " ' V : * : ; By FANNIE HURST „ %v**sf OONNEL M. McDERMOTT , , - ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Heura--Every evening, 7 to 8:1® ' All day Saturdays Yriee Bldg. Cor. Green and Elm Sts. V feL McHenry 258 McHenry, HI. McHENRY GRAVEL A : %y EXCAVATING CO. A. P. Freund, Prop. Road Building and Excavating I Eetimates Furnished OH I Request - Iligh-grade Gravel Delivered any time--large or small orders given prompt attention fhone 204-M McHenry , felephone No. 108-R |i Stoffel & Reihansperger Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. I97EST McHENRY - ILLINOIS insure-In Sore --Insurance WITH -- Wm.G. Schreiner « Auctioneering OFFICE AT RESIDENCE rfcoM McHenry, Ifflneta WM. M. CARROLL Lawyer Oflke with West McHenry State Bank Every Friday Afternoon Phone 4 McHenry, Illinois Florence Ray, D. C. Chiropractor and Masseurirt Sunday by Appointment X-Ray ServicO '• ... Located over Batbiaa Bros. Grocery & Market RIVERSIDE DRIVE Ed Vogel GENERAL AUCTIONEER FARM SALES A SPECIAlS*^ P. O. Solon Mills, 111. Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED (6 by iicOure Newspaper Syndicate.) (WNC Service) LEOPOLD knew that his family was right, and . yet, throughout the yenrs of the early childhood of his childfenj he held out stubbornly against the often angry Importuning of his wife Anna, her relatives, and his. ' ., For a rnnn who had been trained to the lucrative trade of master-plumber, soddenly to turn waiter was not only a matter of supreme humiliation to the Dagmar family, one and all, but, as Anna and his own sisters expressed it, sometimes they actually feared for the sanity of Leopold. It was net as if he had been liusy. Even his sisters said of him that as a boy he had never given symptoms of a lazy bone in his body. And dear knows the servile work of waiting table in the small Russian restaurant where Leopold took up his new labors was no easier than that of a plumber who hired men to work under him. On the contrary, the hours were practically as long, and certainly more arduous. On his feet, carrying hoisted trays, polishing crockery, even sweeping out, and doing servile chores for patrons, from five in the evening until two and three in the morning, w$s work of an exacting, if less skilful nature than the plumbing. Wringing her hands, deploring the lack of dignity his work as waiter implied for his young children, over and over again Anna sought to wrest from Leopold the secret of his sudden decision to abandon his skilled work for the less remunerative, less ambitious vocation of waiter. . Not for worlds, after lffs five year? of life with her, could Leopold have been brought to reveal to her the se* eret reason for this amazing abandonment of his well-paying trade, for the lesser vocation of waiting table in a small Russian restaurant. Like his sisters, she would have cried and screamed her derision of his selfish, wastrel ways. The secret motive was neither so profound nor so complicated as that Imputed-to him by those, who felt themselves to be the victims of his vagaries. "He is after women," shouted Anna, knowing in her heart that women were not the cause of Leopold's defection. • ' "He is crazy after the low-life of the cabarets," accused his sisters, knowing that nothing of the kind was characteristic of Leopold. The reason, meanwhile, lay snugly Imbedded in the silence of Leopold. A simple reason; so simple that it shamed him. The great advantage of waiting table in a restaurant, over the more dignified, mere remunerative work as master plumber, wan the music! As a waiter, you worked to music! Your work was servile, yes, often in a way that was hateful and revolting, but as a waiter you worked to music 1 A five-piece orchestra played at Kosta's from 7 p. m. until 2 a. m. Russian music for the most part, with a balalaika or Russian banjo accompaniment that was as melancholy as wind in autumn trees, and yet at the same time sweet and plaintive and filled with a certain wild lust for life. Music that was as real as the beautiful black hair on the head of Leopold's two-months-f*d baby daughter. Yon worked tfi music at Kosta's. At 7, the patrons began to come. At 7:15, in trooped the five-piece orches-. tra. The dintier went something like this. Zakuska, a hors d'oeuvre, which consisted of chopped liver served usually to the accompaniment of a song that wrung the very heart out of Leopold; a .piece called "Ochee," which clumsily translated into "Languorous Eyes." Then the borsch course; thick soup clotted with sour cream, to strains that to Leopold were almost the most beautiful in the world: "The Volga Boat Song," filled with the dirge and the urge of those who sweat and toil. Pojarsky, cutlets of chopped chicken, served to the aria from "Eugene Onegin." And so on through an evening repetitiotisly crammed with melodies that never seemed to pall. You could not very well go home and say to the most practical wife In the world, and to sisters to whom life was a serious day-by-day business: "I cannot play a note, I do not know one note from another, but one Qday, white fixing radiators lift the home of a famous violinist, and hearing liim practice as I worked, I realized that music can lift life from the hum-drum affair it has' always been, into something that makes it worth living. I will work twice as hard as a waiter. I will dump every cent of my earnings Into your lap. Let me llve In my trance!" Of course the wife and sisters of Leopold did not "let him live in his trance. There were children to rear, clothe, educate and feed, and shortly after the startling defalcation of Leopold Anna developed a nervous illness, induced by worry. Life stepped in and took a hand in the mild madness which seemed to have got hold of Leopold. Within a month after he had gone to the role of waiter In the Russian restaurant he was back again at his work of sol dering lead, laying pipe and fixing die drains 'and faucets of people's bathrooms. U must be said for him that he took it philosophically. After all, it was uncontrdverslal that there were children to be reured, and Leopold had seen too miich of the struggle of poverty in his own boyhood not to feel imbued with th««desire to spare his-offspring as much as possible„ of pain and deprivation. The children of Leopold, the four of tliem, justified his sacrifice. There were three bojrs and a girl, all of them with their mothers' and sisters' square, practical heads, on their young shoulders. And all of them held the same attitude of tolerance toward the parent who spent his evenings and holidays picking out futile and unfinished melodies on the flute that time after time, In despair or In the spirit of practical joke, had been hidden from him by his tormented family, v When Betty, the black-haired baby, reached her maturity, there were four young people In the Dagmaf family earning each a good living wage, and contributing to the by no means Inconsiderable dally wage of the plumber, Leopold! , v -Five years later the four children of Anna and Leopold between them .were in the proud position to give the sum of one thousand dollars to their father on his sixtieth birthday. That accomplished two really triumphant purposes. It sealed by deed, theii' loving regard for his generosity to them. It Increased the nest egg of Leopold' and Anna from four to five thousand dollars. Four of this Leopold presented to the astounded Aqna bn the occasion of their next Redding anniversary. With the remaining one thousand, he made the first down payment on a little run-down restaurant In a Russian neighborhood, where for sixty-five cents one could eat a table d'hote dinner, to the strains of a three-piece "orchestra that boasted a balalaika. ' c '< J . . fmowooD - y .t'v -iwiv- Miss Nellie McDonald entertained the Evening Bridge club at her home Tuesday evening. Prizes were awarded to Marjorie Whiting and Mrs. Roy Neal- Luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth of Chicago spent Tuesday night and Wednesday in the Wm. Beth home.- - Mrs. Roy, l^eal entertained the Scotcfe Bridge club at her home Wednesday afternoon. Prizes were award- f Mrs. Leon Dodge, and family, ed to Mrs. l!L E. Whiting and Mrs- Miss Faith Rawaon of Greenwood called on Mxs. Ray Shafer Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter, Jane, attended a 6 o'clock dinner at' the home of Mrs. Jennie Bacon Saturday evening. • Mrs. Lewis Schroeder and daughter, Jessie, spent Saturday and Sunday in Chicago. Mrs. Howard of Woodstock is visiting in the home of her daughter, ALWAYS THERE IS ROOM AT THE TOP Even Where Professions Are .-.i Overcrowded. Mexico fls one country where the people get action from their government. ' In the state of San Luis Potosi, for example, the local legislature passed a law the other day suspending higher courses in law and medicine for five years. The reason was simple. The lawmakers decided that there are enough practicing lawyers and doctors in the state. So why spend money preparing others for these overcrowded professions? they asked. Which, considered from the standpoint of economy alone,: is an unassailable position. But suppose for a moment that such a philosophy of government prevailed in the United States. Both the medical and legal professions are overcrowded in this country, too. Many physicians and lawyers are eking out a bare existence and every year tho •-colleges, universities and night schools turn out more doctors and lawyers to increase the competition. Should we pass laws to prevent the teaching of law and medicine just because we have too many lawyers and too many doctors? • /- Of course not'. And the reason is just as simple as the reasoning of the legislators in San Luis Potosi. We have too many lawyers and too many doctors, it is true, but no one will deny that we have too few good lawyers and too few good doctors. The legal and medical professions are crowded at the bottom, hut there Is plenty of room at the top. It is an inexorable law of human nature that mediocrity prevails, even in the skilled professions. Thousands of young men are studying law and medicine. Most of them will land in the crowded bottom ranks of their profession. A few will go to the top and do great things for humanity. In American medical colleges young men are studying who will make discoveries which will prolong the span of life. In law schools of today future justices of the Supreme court--are learning the rudiments of law. It Is quite obvious that we would lose something of inestimable value if we closed down the law schools even for five years to gain a few dollars in lowered expense.--Houston 4*ost-Dispatch. . •Mi S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building Your Wants Jewish "Baptism** Baptism as it is understood by Christians is not practiced by the Jews. There was, however, an ancient Jewish rite, known as Jewish baptism or proselyte baptism which bears a striking similarity to Christian baptism. When a pagan became a convert to Judaism he was compelled, after submitting to circumcision, to go through a purificatory washing. This washing symbolized the removal of «11 pagan impurity and the stranger who sojourned among the Israelites did not become one of them until he had complied with this rite. Orthodox Jews still require gentiles !to comply with this rite when they become converts to Judaism.--Pathfinder Magazine. School Robbed of Oraagea The Granada (Calif.) grammar school is probably the only one that has Its private orange orchard, but even that has its drawbacks. Late at night while teachers and pupils were away from the school grounds, and the school closed, thieves entered the orchard, where more than 400 boxes of Valancia oranges bad been gath ered and stored. Piey took away the entire harvest, : ; Ambition Ambition breaks the ties of blood, and forgets the obligations of gratitude.-- Scott . / Lilmuii of Htm#' ~ The statue of John Harvard, on the Harvard campus, Is not a likeness of the original John Harvard, the founder of Harvard college. It was posed for by a Harvard undergraduate. Owe* Life to Confli At Dar-Es-S ilaam, Tanganyika, an African native is pointed out as the man who coughec' in his grave. Proiiounced dead, his relative's had assem bled and the. drana had reached the moment of burial vben the chief actor coughed loudly. He recovered, ex -pressed a belief thfct he had been un der a spell and started for the village witch doctor, who coughed once and Bed. . . jJBf -- . Lewis Schroeder. At the /Close of the games luncheon was served. aMts. E. C. Hawley entertained her bridge club Wednesday afternoon. Luncheon was served. Mrs. Ray Merchant entertained the Bunco club at her home Thursday afternoon, Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Edgar Thomas, Mrs. Ed Thompson, Mrs. Thomas Doherty and Mrs. G- E. Shepard. Luncheon was served. Mrs. Ray Shafer of Cincinnati came Wednesday evening for a tenday visit with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. W. A. t>odge. * Mesdames Ray Peters, Viola Low, S. H. Beatty and Jennie Bacon spent Thursday morning in Woodstock. Charles Can* and Mrs. Franfcie Stephenson were callers at Harvard Wednesday afternoon. Fred Schaw of Chicago spent. Thursday and Friday with his daughter, Mrs. L. E. Hawley, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson were visitors at McHenry Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young were callers in th^ Matt Nimsgern home at Spring Grove Wednesday. Mrs. Ray Page and daughters of McHenry spent Friday afternoon with Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nimsgern and family of Sprang Grove were callers in the Nick Young home Saturday af-. ternoon. Mrs. F- A. Hitchens entertained the Ladies' Aid society at her home Friday. A pot-luck dinner was served.. There were fourteen ladies present. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard were callers in Woodstock Friday morning. Amy and Esther Laurence spent Saturday afternoon with their aunt, Mrs. Joe Wagner, at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr, Mrs.: Frankie Stephenson and Mrs/ Rillah Foss were callers at Woodstock Saturday afternoon. At the Ringwood school election Saturday evening, S. H. Beatty was: re-elected. There was no opposition. The Ladies' Aid society will holdtheir next all day meeting at the home of Mrs- G. E. Shepard Friday April 29. Everybody welcome. August Pearson and son, Clarence, visited Mrs. Pearson in Chicago Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. Romie and daughter, Lutie, and son, Morton, of Paddock'H Lake spent Sunday in the Frank Dirt' home. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and faultily of McHenry spent Sunday with Mr- and Mrs. N. Young. "Mrs. Ray Shafer spent Friday night and Saturday in the George Bacon home at Antioch. Mr. and Mrs. Axel Carlson and} family of Woodstock spent Sunday afj ternoon in the Clayton Bruce home Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas and Mrs. Lucy Thomas of Woodstock were callers in the Edgar Thomas homo Sunday; Mildred Jepson and Maud George of Evanston and Eunice George of Polo, 111., spent the: week-end in the; C. J. Jepson home. Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Marble of Green-, wood and Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCannoif and family of Keystone spent .Suni 4ay in the Roland McCannon home- Dr. and Mrs. Harry Hartley of Chicago, Mrs. Paul Meyers and John Pint of McHenry were caller^ in th^ Ed. Thompson home Spndayj after« noon. ( v, Mr. and Mrs. George Young an<§ family spent Sunday morning at Mc* Henry. Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Fredericks->it and son spent Sunday -with relative^ at Woodstock. Harold Jepson of Rockford spent Sunday afternoon with his parent^ Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Edinger and family of Woodstock were callers iffthe Roland McCannon home Sunday afternoon- Mrs. Mary Kagel and daughter, Lit lian, of Chicago spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olson Mrs. Ed. Thompson and daughter! spent Saturday afternoon at McHen ry. Roger Quimby of Western Spring# spent the week-end in the Clay Rager home. Mr. and Mrs- Warren Thomas and family spent Sunday evening in the Chauncey Harrison home. The Home Bureau will hold a waffle supper at the M. W. A. hall Frid«f night, April 22. Waffles, syrup, sau-. sages and coffee will T>e served foe 25 cents. Supper will be served from 5:30 to 9 o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison spent Sunday with the tatter's parents, Mf. and Mrs. F. H. Wattles, at McHenry. Mrs. S. W. Smith and daughter, Bernice, „spenti Saturday afternoon at Woodstock Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Fisher "visited their son at Rockton Sunday. Dorothy Carr and Dewey Beck of Chicago spent the week-end with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas Carr. Fred Wiedrich and son, Roy, weW callers at Richmond Friday afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Saturday afternoon at Woodstock. Emil Oetzel and son, Leslie, of Highland Park were callers in the Frank Wiedrich homes Sunday. Roy Wiedrich and Walter Harrison were callers at Barreville Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs, A. K. Burns of Oak Park were callers in the W. A. Dodge home Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge.and family were callers at Woodstock Sunday afternoon. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter of Antioch spent Monday in the W. A. Dodge home. " ^ - " Mrs. A. K. Burns of Oak Park and Marguerite Johnson of McHenry were callers in the W., A. Dodge home Saturday afternoon. Mrs. S. W. Brown visited with friends at Evanston from Tuesday un. til Friday. Mrs. Thomas Kane spent the weekend in Chicago and attended the funeral of her uncle, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. James Conway of Libertyville, Mrs. Tom Tomason of Chicago and Mrs. Leo Karls and son of Richmond spent Sunday with Mrs. Jennie Bacon. j Mr. and Mrs. Floyd ..Foss of Mc-' Henry spent Sunday with Mrs. Rillah Foss. .. ' \ Mrs. Glenn Robison and Miss Jean ' Mathewson of Woodstock called on Wayne Foss Saturday afternoon. lamnie Desert Area The area of the United' States er la about 3<026,000 square miles, while the area of the Sahara is 8,500,- 000 Square miles; therefore the Sahara desert is larger than the United States exclusive of , Alaska and Its island territories. " ' • . ' . mi : • DHIffeace Wlas - Diligence 1* a virtue possessed |j|L. every successful maiv He knows hla job, he works at his job, he loves hia job. Diligence Is that which blends mind and body, transforms" wishes la* to work, dreams Into realities. It U the one thing that gets results. Vv and Hinting (o. Peter A. Freund All kinds of Plumbing and Heating Contracting x Estimates cheerfully given without obligation. ^Satisfaction Assured ^ ' TEL. 77-W McHENRY, ILL. ' \ Semi-Precious Stones Chemically the beryl, and Its varieties, is described as a silicate1 of beVylllum and aluminum. It is found in a good many gardens of the globe. Royalston, Mass., and certain parts of North Carolina, supply the best aquamarines found In the United States. Some are found also In New Hampshire, California and other states. Older sources are the gem gravels of Ceylon, certain Russian and Siberian localities and Rr^H. la a Nutshellr There is no Intrinsic merit In merely reading books. What matters Is what you get out of them. j Central Garage -; , ^ fired J. Smitii, Prop.. •„ Jfohnsburg . Gfcerolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work Give us a call when in trouble Expert Welding and Cylinder Reboring 3Diy Phone 200-J Night Phone 640- r V-; U C. KELLER Optometrist and Optician H yotn* old father or mother or an invalid, who needs a good pair of glasses and is unable to come to my office, I will examine them in your own home. Ify office hours in McHenry are Sunday and Monday of each week, at my summer home. Entrance is across from Joe Frett's home on Riverside Drive. Make date by Phone--McHenry 211-R. J MILLIONS • J!'? FlRESTONE tires appeal to the thrifty. They give Extra Values a$ the lowest prices ever known. Firestone do not manufacture tines under special brand names for mail order houses and others to distribute. Special brand tires are made without the manufacturer's name* They awe sold without his guarantee or responsibility for service. , You take no chances on Firestone tires. They are silent, safe, long* wearing -- and each tire bears the Firestone name, which is a guarantee of satisfactory service. Firestone's greater economies in buying*, manufacturing, anddistributing make| possible these greater t values and lower prices. Stop at our store today. See sections cut from Firestone tires--special brand mail order tires .and others. Take these sections in your own hands -- compare Quality and Construction. Then you, too, will know why--• "Firestone is the tir& that taught thrift to millions!9* "Extra Values GUM-DIPPED CORPS The Firestone patented Gum-Dipping proo ess transforms the cotton cords into a strong, tough, sinewy unit. Liquid rubber penetrates, every cord and coats every fiber, guarding against internal friction and heat, greatly inf|, creasing the strength ^ giving longer tiro life*-' TWO EXTRA UNDER THE TREAD This is a patented construction, and the two extra cord plies aro so placed that you get 56% stronger bond between treaf and cord body, and tests show 26% great# protection against punctures and blowouts# It sets a new standard for tiro perforation*# on high speed can. NON-SKID TREAD Tough, live rubber specially compounded for long, slow wear. Scientifically designers : non-skid gives greater traction and saf^j quiet performance. COMPARE « QUALITY » CONSTRUCTION » PRICE Tirestone COURIER TYPE 4.40-21 wn • OH CtMFtic. EMD Special Brand Mail Order Tire Price Each Oar Cnn Prlca Ft Pair 4.40-21 •3.6J $3.63 e7.e4 4.50-21 3.9S 3.98 7.74 30x3Mi Clin. S.*7 3.57 e.es EACH Tire$ton* SENTINEL TYPE WHEN BOUGHT IN PAIRS Special Oat Brand Oar sue CnkPrk. Mail Order Cask Ptk'i tack Tira POT Pair Price Each 4.40-21 I3.9S $3i95 e7.ee 4.50-21 4.57 4.37 e.46 4.75-20 S.SO 5.20 le.os 5.00-19 5.39 5.39 10.46 5.23-21 6.63 6.63 is.ee Other aim*!* proportionately I "to Ford- Chevrolet Chevrolet. Ford Ford Chevrolet Whippet.. Plym th.. Erskine Plym'th.. Chandler DeSoto.... Dodge Durant Gr. Paige Pontiae... Rooeevelt WUly.-K. EMCX Na«h Eitrx Naah Old.'bile Buick M. Chevrolet OldVbile Tm Ska Ftreatoee OMfteid Typa Caak Prica Each Firestone OWfioid Typa Cash Price Pet Pair 4.40-21 •4-79 09.30 4.50-20 4.50-21 5.35 S.4S 10.30 10.54 4.75-19 6.33 1S.3S 4.75-20 6.43 IS. 40 5.00-W e.e* 1S.90 5.00-20 6.75 13.16 5.00-21 6.90 13.54 £.25-18 7.§S 14.ee Buick. Stu'b'kV Auburn... Jordan .... Reo. Stu'bVr Gardner.. Marraoa. Oakland.. Peerleaa .. Chrysler.. StuVk'r Vikln#..... Stu'lTk'r Franklin Hudson-- H up'bile.. La Salle.. Packard.. Pleree'A*. n» m Firestone Oldftold Typo Cash Price Each F)restPft0 OidfieM Type Cash Price Per Pair 5.25-21 00.15 •is.es 5.50-lfl e.35 ie.se 3.50-19 0.40 ie.ee 6.00-18 H.D. ae.es se.ee 6.00-19 HJ>. xe.es si.04 6.00-20 H.D. ie.es S1.S4 6.00-21 H.D. 11.10 SI.54 6.00-22 H.D. is.ee as.se Cadillac _ Lincoln... Packard.. Flrntma Firestone Tin Ctdfiaid OtdfteM Typa T/pe sm Cash Prica Cask Pries E«cft Per Pair 6.50-19 • 1S.30 ts3.ee H.D. 6.50-20 IS.65 S4.S4 H.D. 7.00-20 14.eS S0.4S H.D. TEUCK and BUS TIRES 30*5 II.D. 32x6 H.D. 34*7 H.D. 36x8 H.D 6.00-20 H.D. 6.50-20 H.D. 7.50-20 1I.D. 9.00-20 H.D. 9.75-20 H.D. Ftrestotw CHdfeid Type C**fc Prkt Uck • 15.45 26.SO 3fc-40 51.*5 14.50 !*.»• 2*.45 4*.50 *1,65 OttftoM Type Ca«h Price P«r Pair fi.ee 7«.M ioe.se as.14 3i.es si.ee ee.4o ise.ee BUSS-PAGE MOTOR SALES .Serve After We Sell" DRIVE IN AND EQUIP TOUR CAR TODAY ILitten to thef€Voii?£Of "*every Monday night over N ft, C< nationwide network . W&J. JL#**..