^ r - a * * * * - . ) & « « • "STHENRY '%£* t^Vii VV^1H. -FR-'-^-"^-^ • - * * ** >&~"'V"'-i+<- ;*4 - ' A'* T.ra.TM.tttr '«i®s-#. if u||fe >? * : 'W" :M miblishsd mqr Iteiday at Mc&esxy, 1&, hy Charles r. 1 Entered as second-class mattsr at tfcs | dar the act of May 8, 1879. wstoAca at KcHeaty. HL, ^ v-- . •*» S1.AB » • ' ' A. H. M06HBR, B«t< : ^ • ' ! : mt and Haaageg PERSONALS IS ; - • V Nfc . *<- V, *£*-*" j t\ {"p? •'/Ik ^,V. :'vt.^r ?s:; 'f 1 «*' ^ . /, V - - find Moore of Chicago spent Tues- .«day here. \ • Miss1 Ruth Phahn is visiting relatives at Cleveland. Phyllis Moulton of Elmkunt Is visiting relatives here. Mrs. Edmund Walsh and children of Chicago visited here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Hoye of Waukegan wire McHenry visitors Tuesday. .Oeorge Barrowman of Genoa City •was a Tuesday caller In McHenry, Mrs. George Fhalin of Woodstock visited relatives here Tuesday even- 5n^. Mr, and Mrs. William Aylward of Solon were Monday guests of Mrs. If. McCarthy. Arnold Chestnut of West Chicago spent Thursday with his grandfather, <3ftorge Meyers. 'Keith and Victor "Hovort of Chicago ar© visiting their aunt, Mrs. Richard Fleming. Maurice and Ruth Lavelle of Streator are spending a Tew weeks with th£ir grandmother, Mrs. J. Buss. Marion and Ida Allen, Evelyn Bohl and Minnie Eibisch of Crystal Lake are spending this week in a cottage on Fox river. George Meyers, Mrs. Charles Egan an& eon, Mrs. William Marshall and eop, Billy, visited relatives at Waukegan, Thursday. Mrs. Harry Goldwaite, son, John, and grandson, and A. J. Molodock of Chicago were Sunday guests of Mrs. Margaret McCarthy. Miss Christine Wegener of Chicago is spending a three weeks' vacation with her parents, My. and Mrs. Geo- J. Wegener, at Lily Lake. Mr and Mrs. Charles Egan and son, Charles, have returned to Chicago after a few days' visit in the home of her father, George Meyers. Mr. and Mrs. Mort Ritt and daughter left Tuesday by motor for Brethren, Mich., where they will visit Mrs. Ritt's sister, Mrs. William Jayne. Misses Rovena and Dorothy Marshall, in company with several girls from the Woodstock telephone office, enjoyed a picnic at Crystal Lake, on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and children of Elgin visited relatives h«re Sunday. Arleen Warner returned home with them after a two weeks' visit here. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hughes, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs- Robert Thompson and Miss Maud Granger left Saturday afternoon on a one week camping trip in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mirs. Wm. Bonslett had as their guests Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bonslett of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. O'Connell of Evanston, Mrs. Beraice Muckler of Oak Park and Ed Bonslett of Auburn, Ind., also Paul and Francis Bonslett of Chicago. Prof, and Mrs. Howard Smith of Arizona, Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Smith WantA<te FOR SALE FOR SALE--Ice box in good condition- Reasonable price. Phone McHenry 167; „ " FOR SALE--One pump gun and case, 12-gage; one hunting coat and cap; one pair high-top shoes; two boxes shells. Gun and clothes only used two days. $40 takes all. Write J. R. Justea, 611 Fourth St., Wauttegan. - . , 6-tf • I.- - W;;v 'Ir'lifrir ;-i. . FOE RENT FOR RENT--Furnished cottage, will he vacant July 18 . Throe rooms, large sun parlor. Near bathing beach and park. Inquire Mrs. Andrew Miller, Broad St. *7 FOR RENT--Four room furnished house with all modern conveniences and garage. Reasonable. Phone 50-W. *7 FOR RENT--Heated apartment With garage. Rent very reasonable. Inquire at Peoples State Bank of McHenry. 8-tf WANTED WANTED--A 30 or 40-acre farm, with some woods on. Not over $100 per acre. H. G. Voelker, 849 Fletcher St, Chicago. WANTEB--Watches and clocks for repair. Expert repair man with 30 years' experience in the testing room of Elgin Watch factory, at Nye Jewelry and Music Shop. e '50-tf LOST LOST--Baby's green, coat. Finder please leave at Plaindealer office. 7 MISCELLANEOUS GUITAR LESSONS--For lessons on the Spanish guitar, inquire at Nye's Jewelry, Music and Radio Shop, WeBt McHenry. Phone 123-J. 7 CANADA THISTLES--Haying two weeks ahead this year; harvesting 10 to 15 days early. Corn laid by. Get after the thistles along the fence rows and in the pastures. Do not thresh grain infested with thistles. W. J. Kittle, Commissioner of Noxious Weeds, Nunda Township. 7-2 GET PAID WEEKLY--Liberal terms to right man in choice territory as sales representative for Wisconsin's Greatest Nursery. No delivering or collecting. Healthy work with good pay in a business of your own. Stock Northern grown, with liberal guarantee. Company established over 30 years. Write McKay Nursery Comand son, Earl, of Urbana and Mrs., pany, Madison, Wisconsin. I~. Emily Turner and daughters, Jane |p and Ruth, of Lincoln and Mr. and Mrs. I Thomas Fusion of New York were "f£ 1 waek-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hughes. BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. John Justen are parents of a son, born Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Justen are the parents of a 9-pound boy, born Saturday, July 9. Mr. and Mrs- Frank T. Duffy of Niesen's subdivision, are the parents of an 8-pound boy, named Robert Emmet, and born on the 4th of July at St. Mary of Nazareth hospital, Chicago. The newcomer is a brother to Frank Thomas, Jr., and a grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Victor R. Hopp, Ri?- erside Drive, Niesen's subdivision, and Mr. and Mrs. John J. Duffy of Pistakee Bay. 4-4 Have you a house to rent--try the classified ads. ILLE1 THEATRE . "VOOOJTOCK, Woodstock's Beautiful Play House SATURDAY America" ft'sr. with SPENCER TRACY DORIS KENYON SUNDAY --< MONDAY Continuous Sunday, 2M to 11 "Merrily We Go to Hell" with SYLVIA SIDNEY • FREDRIC MARCH TUESDAY WEDNESDAY "Forgotten ~ iommindments" It shows yon what happens when the world we live in sets up new morals. Pute love en a different plane! with . SARI MARITZA GENE RAYMOND MARGUERITE CHURCHILL UPHOLSTERING--All kinds of furniture reupholstered and repaired. Work called for and delivered. Chae. Rasmussen, S. Center St., West Mc Henry, 111. Tel. 107-M. 52-tf RADIO REPAIRING--Let us look over your radio and put it in first class working order. Prices reasonable Vincent Wirfs. Phone 68-J. 48-tf BEFORE YOU BUY--see our Bargain Shoe Counter. Expert shoe and sewing machine repairing. Popp's Shoe Store. West McHenry. Phone 162. ' * 46tf LOCAL GOLFtta VMIT WOODSTOCK MeHenry Country dub golfers went to Woodstock Thursday, where they met defeat at the hands of the Glen Crest golfers in a friendly match at the Glen Crest golf links. Twenty-four of the McHenry club members invaded the Glen Crest course and had a most enjoyable afternoon. Hie match in,,the afternoon was followed by a dinner in the clubhouse- Father F. C. Voet of Woodstock turned in th® best round of the afternoon. His card showed an 81>|or the eighteen holes, but his 36 on thfe second round'was the low round ofr the afternoon. George Grant also had a gross of 81 with 39 and 42 and Floyd Kuhn's 40 was the next best. Leo Stilling of McHenry had the low gross with a 38 and 40 for 79. This was a good exhibition on the wind swopt course. A strong wind proved rather a handiqpp for all the golfors. Among the visiting golfers were included Galitx, Morris, Muyerhofer, Roroke, Stilling. Granger, Fekht, K?«h»n, Johnsc rv Bidder, -Sayler, Duker, Buck, 3cehke, Bassett, Page, Purvey, Walsh, Nye, Weber, Lash, Justen, Schaffer and Bonslett. Those playing for Woodstock included Grant, West, Copeland, Wynt koop. Voet, Griffing, F. Kuhn, Hoesley, R. O. Andrew, Baccus, Ferris, Abraham, L. Andrew, Sandeen, Giesselbrecht, H. M. Sears, Ryan, Stone, G. Kuhn, Meyer, Colahan, H. 0. Sears, Eden A Field. August 4 the Woodstock club members will return the visit and be the guests of the MlcHenry Country club. tmm PARKSIDES BLANK BUCHS LYONS ALSO VICTORIOUS The Farksides, those off and on boys in the MMAC, finally hit an "on" night and took out a lot of ' past scores on the Buchs when they blanked them, scoring the first whitewash of the season. A general shake, up in the ranks and several nights' practice is accountable for this showing and from now on the Parksiders are out for blood. George WebCT looked like his old self at third base and, with a few more weeks of practice, is expected to equal Petie Schaefer's impressive record. In the other contest of the week, if such it may be termed, the Lyons league leaders took the Buch ten into camp, 15 to 2. Stoffel started on the mound and allowed thirteen runs in the first two inning^ before being relieved by Joe Regner- Joe gave up but two tallies the remainder of the route. With the games occupying two evenings each week and the players making use of the diamond on every available occasion the diamond is constantly in use. Tonight the Lyons men tackle the second place Laundry Boys and *iAyt Tuesday the Lyons mingle with the Parksiders. League Standing Lyons 5 Laundrymen 4 Buchs ^ 3 Parksiders ............ 2 4N>7 .571 .375 .250 TO BE HAPPY DON"5 " BELIEVE WHAT YOU READ A clever chap by the name of Paul Smith put this readable bit in circulation. "We hope you'll like it."- If you really want to learn about the human race, read magazines- Not the stories or the articles about RUHsia. Skip them--Start at the back of the book--Read the advertisements. And learn what a lousy job was done when people were made. Their hair falls out. So do their teeth. They have athlete's foot and B. O. The nation's corn crop iq growing foot by foot. Even your best fi^iend won't tell you. You may be a rosebud when you step out of the bath tub--but it's only a question of minutes before you 11 revert to type. You can't even get a life insurance policy if you don't eat certain things. If, in spite of all these frailties, you succeed in growing old, you won't have any friends unless you carry life insurance. If you don't use certain soaps youH be a hag at twentyfive. Carry a tooth brush next to your fountain pen--and use it constantly or you'll start coriing apart. Wear nice undies, or your wife will elope with the milkman. Coffee is good for you. Coffee is bad for you. Nobody loves a fat woman. Nobody loves a thin woman. We're all held together with adhesive tape; we're all a cross between a gorilla and pole cat. We've all got to be soaked dc odorized, scraped, dry-cleaned, wetcleaned, pasteurised, vulcanized, aet-> naized, simonized, or we're not fit to be seen. Mankind is a mountain of mistakes. It makes you feel like tearing yourself up and starting over. JOLIET DEFEATS WAUKEGAN IN„ JUNIOR LEGION CONTEST Joliet's Legion baseball entry in the race for National honors trimmed Waukegan at the local diamond yesterday afternoon 9-4 t and thereby earned the right to proceed another step in the race that ra growing more strenuous daily. The game was well punctuated by squabbling and ended with a threat by the Waukegan management to protest the game, due to the fact that Joliet is alleged to have combined the stars of several teams to form the nine that was placed on the diamond in yesterday's battle. Espluiiai CMBIC Raf The cosmic rays, according to Doctor Mllllkan, are rays of extremely high frequency and penetrating power, produced probably beyond the earth's atmosphere or nearly beyond It by transmutations of atoms continually taking place through interstellar space. These rays bombard the earth from all directions. LILY LAKE PIRATES Last ,Thursday evening the Lily Lake Pirates held a beach party instead of their regular meeting. Several of the members went in swim ming and a weenie and marshmallow roast followed- We sang songs and generally enjoyed ourselves. We will meet next Thursday as usual. Bt.gANORE WEGENER, Clpb Reporter. font tame Geographies >uth Florida has a lake by the of Histocopatcheelacoochee, which should make the fish about as dizzy as you who are reading this. And for those who have the fishing itch, we refer you to Itchtucknee river In the same state.--Pathfinder Magazine. JULY SALE rnmm Urn '"<y ;! x ' the tatterly pipit bees-- its yellew and *od tils--cms pelted ftr «n slender stalks rweable tatterties hovering on the wing. Te ladwee Sleep sheep as a relief'from Insomnia doesn't always work. We re* call one occasion that we counted until we smelled the wool on a thousand backs and even then had to get up and read a farm bulletin.--Toledo Blade. w-ti Q--Hi--tleei . Ti be Mus--fal the architect most , ' have aa lnthsate kaowtedge ef a score ^ er aore of the building trades; of p< values, «uahties and nsea of build- ity . lag materials; of plumbing, veotllat- .iff", tag, heating and wiring; of decoration, furnishing and finishing; of landscape r|~ tng, community design and etty plan- t. j aing, and of construction engineering and business management. 10^ Conceit a*y puff a man op, bat sever prop him up.--Ruskln. Where Central f Irk Hilh tiie Northward March ef AfoMtestura! Oiaftta. WM D 81 hL Bleached MnsJfavyd: 23c 81 in. Brown Muslin, yd., 17c 45 in Pillow Tubing, yd., 22c 36 in. Rayon Alpaca, yd 17c 81x90 Peppereli Sheets, ,72c Part linen Toweling 10 yds 69c Men's Shirts, shorts, 3 for $1.00 Boys' Play Suits, 3-12, .. .49c Rayon Bloomers, Panties, 39c : Extra sizes 49c Fijg^&fiPiques, yd./- ..... i5c Seaside Prints, tub fast* jd 10c Broadclot}r Slips Rayon Slips, ton Stoffel Mi (fr*j>ar«4 fcj WHtlnftM, ft Q.V- WKX3 Itrrltt. BSPITE -Jak youth and experience owpnA with London, and the-^^MOd flow of gold toward the BrMtsh capital, New York retains its position as the world's leading banker. • ' ,». New York is a city of superlatives. It is man's incemlMtsble feat I As incredible almost arf that ante should have built the Andes) Go up on any high hotel roof aft#r fcunset and watch the city come to Hfe. By electric moons, rainbows, and fixed comets you see Manhattan Mm* from dusk Into gorgeous theatricu Illumination. It's twinkling skyline ebbs and flows in tides of tempo and color. As each edifice melts into new lights and shadows, all the architectural phantasmagoria of the ages, linked even with earth's ancient scars, seems to unfold., In fancy you see a phantom city, a kaleidoscopic riot of Alps and Acropolis; Ming tombs, Taj Mahal, and Pyramids; Gibraltar, Panama\canal, Tower of Babel, with Grand canyon and Yangtze gorges formed by street caverns far below; Cologne cathedral, Pikes Peak, and St Peter's, a Chinese Wall against a Sahara desert of lamp-lit iky; towers and turrets, mosques, minarets, domes, steeples, roof tanks and penthouses all heaped and crowding and seeming to burn as smoke moves in electric light Next day, from the same high place, see u again--realistic, noisy, its streets crowded with traffic. New York never rests. Higher and ever higher rise the skyscrapers. Their mastodontic bulk; their grace of geometric design; their dizzy height and fearsome beauty --at first they almost hint that man's monsters have run away with him.; Stare up at such a building and It fairly dominates one's mind and body. From their upper stories you see bits of fog floating' by. Miles to the east stretches Long Island; to the south Is the Statue ef Liberty, and Staten Island; toAt)i«* west spreads New Jersey, and to the north that part of the city beyond Central park. Below lie mere pigmy structures of six and eight stories. , Here and there, up from among thenar* bther skyscrapers rise in this swifly changing region of Mid-Manhattan. : In their myriad windows one sees girls pounding typewriters or powdering their noses; but, save for a faint metallic city hum from far below, there is nb ^ound. Vertical Travel Is Immense. These high buildings, that visitors from all over the world stare at with such astonishment, make New York what it is--the supreme wonder of the modern world, When the first "skyscraper," of only 18 stories, went up on lower Broadway, people feared it Those in adjacent houses moved out In alarm. Now, higher and higher they go--60, 00, 70, #6 stories. So many there are, and so high, that today the vertical travel in New York actually exceeds tl^ horizontal. In other words, elevators-1 cirry more passengers than do all the surface cars, elevated trains, taxis, fusses, and sub. ways combined. In one skyscraper 21 levators cover a mileage equal to the run of tha Twentieth Century Limited from New York to Chicago, daily. One of the big problems In New York is getting the' occupants of skyscrapers In and out on time. The "larger buildings hold anywhere from 5,000 to 15,000, and even 20,000 workers. In some are found people from practically every state In the Union. Even with express elevators, It takes nearly an hour to empty some of the larger buildings and tget the people away from the ground floor and entrances, because of congested subways. If they all came down at once, it would pile people up ten or twelve deep In the streets around a bullding. The New. fork skyscraper is a city In Itself, w|$t| all a city's problems of traffic, watilrty heat, lights, sewage, fire and police protection, and cleaning. Its total floor area equals that of many a farm. To run the elevators of one of them requires a starter, six assistant starters, 85 operator i, and a crew of ten maintenance met.. Since water from fire hydrants can be squirted upward only about 1B0 feet, and since firemen cannot drag a hose up 50 or 75 stories, a skyscraper has its own upright water mains, tanks and high pres«\ilt« pumps, with an elaborate system of^larms and extinguishing apparatus. Beneath one building, are turntables for busses from terminals • - . • . . #* Tunnels lead from it in many directions. Through them thousands of its tenants arrive each morning after many miles of underground travel, and through them one may wander, as In the streets of a Subterranean city. In this human prairie-dog town are more than 50 places to eat, and stores selling everything from offlce supplies and lingerie to thermos bottles, sunray lamps, cigars, books and haberdashery. From these commercial catacombs one may ride all the way otit to Long Island without ever coming l&to the open air. Speed In Mew Construction. But New York's greatness Is hot in structure alone. It lies also in the speed at which life moves and new buildings displace the old. This swift iltlon stuns even the blase New was wrecked and rebuilt nine times. {Here history repeats. Compare the skyline now with pictures of the same region made only ten years ago. You will see that palatial homes have been demolished and whole residence districts swept away to clear sites for higher buildings. You see buildings like the famous Waldorf-Astoria turn to Junk, and hard on the heels of its wreck come giants like the amazing Empire State building. To widen streets, houses are sliced off in front as with giant shears. Four hundred buildings wrecked to extend a subway spur; trainloads of dirt hauled to the river front and dumped to make a park below Riverside drive In cyclonic devastation, whole neighborhoods are razed for new bridge approaches. Swiftly the old landmarks fade. Only Grant's tomb and similar objects eit Sentiment seem safe. If even the Sphinx stood on Fifth avenue, somebody would probably want to wreck II t) build a skyscraper! Here is no space for static tilings. By many cuts and running It fast, imagine this picture shown in, say, two or three hours. You would see old buildings crumbling down and new skyscrapers hastening heavenward, pushing up like giant mushrooms. It would be unendurable. Compared with medieval cities, think how fast New York grows. Today, In New York, bricklayers may run walls up two stories in a day. A building of 50 floors is begun and finished in about the same time it used to take a Sioux to kill a buffalo and tan its hide for his wigwam. Between crowds and skyscrapers is reciprocal affinity. Each is the cause of the other. Into that part of Manhattan below F^fty-ninth street there comes to work every morning an army of people equal to the population of Paris or Chicago. No other spot on earth is so crowded with men and houses. It reminds you of one certain rock near • coast where cormorants, gulls, and pelicans all come to roost. Other islets are near, but the fussing birds crowd and deflJe only their favorite rock. They pack it so tight that if one bird raises a wing to stretch, another Is pushed into the sea. On, Under and Over Manhattan. Thus men crowd Manhattan rock. Not only that They bore holes In it, dig tunnels under rivers, and push bridges over to it, so that still more men may readmit hastily. The passengers on its transport lines each year outnumber all the people In the world. Those passing through Times Square subway station alone last year equaled In number half the lnhabi tants of the western hemisphere So jammed Is Fifth avenue now that In busy hours a man walking goes faster than a bus. In many streets motors average less than four miles an hour. New York's fight to keep men and things in motion knows no lulL It has built a great elevated express high way, a novel thoroughfare many feet above the street It runs along the Hudson river water front from Canal street north to Seventy-second, with ramps for access and egress at a few important criws-tuwa street*.- At Seventy- second its outlet te Riverside drive. Think what this means to crowded New York! A broad, free path of two 90-foot roadways, with no grade crossings, able to carry from 5,000 to 8,000 motor cars an hotp, at a speed of S5 miles--right over all congestion. Then there's the new tunnel, to run under tidewater from Brooklyn out to Staten island. It will take two to four years to bore this bold submarine high way. Mere Mm Xeler-BHaS Men are said to be more often color blind than women. The ratio, according to I. H. Godlove, of the Museum of Science and Industir> New York, Is about four to one. Factors of Success ««•&*»," said HI Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "depends pt rtly In having your own way and partly in pretending that you ape ftngton Star. / ®. - _ |Mlb« OM Bfll Gravity Since we're going it on two Instead Of four legs, we need to build against gravity or lose. Certain exercises for health win ke^ the diaphragm and all below in place. Excepti** Stated •fethlng Is more delightful thtt to lie under a tree In the summer with a fceok, cxcept to lie under a tree in the summer without a book,--Ex- 0«=H=1 f/sr j* vy The finest New York ICE CREAM you ever tasted. McHenry Ice Cream made with Wisconsin cream, and it's A MA » J?q uart ^2v0p int Other Delicious Flavors are Vanilla, Choco- - late and Strawberry. PERMANENT WAVBS Mondays, Tuesdays and Wsdaeedays--Short Time Only SPECIALS ITALIAN OLIVE OIL, tioning Process, $6.50 value, 2 Persons for $5.td STOMP AN ATO'S Reconditioning Oil Process, $10.00 value, 2 Persons for ...$10.00 Complete with Shampoo and Finger Wave {Haircut Extra, No Service) Stompanaito's Special Method Haircut. Thinning Spilt Ends Treatment, $1.00 value for. .......50c ZOTOS Machine-Less Permanent $25.00 Value for $10.00 :: Free! Two Mar- O-Oil Treatment ( S h a m p o o s a n d Finger W a v e s. (Standard Price Value $4.) With Every $8 and $10 Permanent Wave, Except Zotos. BEAUTY AIDS--Three for $1.00 or50c each - Boys and Girls Under IS Yean Complete Permanent Wave....$2.0O Haircut, Shampoo and Wave, Each 25c Boy's Haircut and Tonie.....«.....3Sc Saturdays 50c We use genuine supplies and wind the entire head regardless of the price. AT YOUR SERVICE 3 BARBERS, 5 BEAUTY ARTISTO" ?'f 3 STOMPANATO'S O 3 , Ultra Modern Exclusive Barber and Beauty Salon* Telephone 641 226 Main Street Woodstock, Illinois Open until 9 P. M. Prices subject to change. Clean soft water used Every Day Extra Values at Low Prices "v Full Line Nationally Advertised! Permanent Waves $3, $5, $6.50, $8, Gorgeous Natural Waves ' With Fascinating Ringlet Ends. All Waves From $5.00 and Up Include One Special Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave. Service until Grown Out. Shampoo and Set 50c FOOD VALUES CAMPBRl'S TOMATO SOUP 4 QUAKER MAID KETCHHP.2 10H-OZ. CAN6 S-OZ BOTTLES QUAKER MAID 2 N. B. C. ASSORTED MARSHMALLOW MOUNTS 25c 20c 23c 10c 14^ 1S-OZ. JAR 1J-OZ. •OTS. • LB t-LB. • PKG. J4-LB. >KG. 15^ 29c CMDftSauce Cookies Iona Brand Cocoa Quaker Maid Cocoa e Vanilla Extract DR-PRICT# Preserves EDELWEISS GREEN RIVER OH ^ Root Beer • • • • ® »"• (PLUS BOTTLE DEPOSIT) 3 Karo Bine Label Syrup lOc ; HOP FLAVORED. S^LB. J 5c: 4 ROLLS 19c : IOIAW 26c CAKES 16C 15 * 19c Budwelser Halt LIGHT OR DARK • CAN Gauze Bathroom Tissue - -°- Waldorf Tissue NAPHTHA Soai* 3 MED. SIZE Ivory Soap CAKES 15c jcuiayfMlet Soap Oxydol 2 LARGE s CAKES LOE. FKO. FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY I BGHT O'CLOCK Mild and Me/fow COFFEE . . 3 - 53e RED CIRCLE COFFff 3 lbs. 65c • BOKAR COFF& 3 lbs 79c ORANGES, 252-216 sue! d<*. ii|"i.C ^iinimi i dw. 39^ v f/IGARETTES, tucly Strike,"Chesiei&eld, * - Old Gold, tin of 50 29* THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACIFIC TEA COt * *»*»• dm*.- t r " I , h. * .! V *---• v: ^ .. .... ' *• •y •' ">-1.