LOSE MONBT ON NEW GAS STATIONS ifr xi- '4i § 2*^ % - ^ ^'V ^ Kol-ffc-S' \:A^' i "•tr'1, * >J I ^S'V3'- To open * filling station is an easy way to go into business but also an easy and almost sure way to lose money. This is the conclusion drawn by Glen B. Winship, New York analyst, from two years of studying gasoline marketing conditions, !n the United S t a t e s . . . . The last census showed that there •re 318,248 places in the United States where the motorist can buy gasoline and oil- Mr. Winshlp's study reveals tJ»t many of these are superfluous. "In more than 10,000 communities, the number of motor vehicles is not sufficient to warrant a service station," his report states. "There are 4S.476 stations in such villages and fn rural sections which could be abandoned without inconvenience to car owners. "Of 6,351 towns and cities large enough to warrant service station operation at least 5,519 ere overbuilt. I Aave discovered only 365 towns in the entire country where additional stations could be built without gross >• Our Washington --By-- Natfaaal Editorial A--ociatioa Washington, July 20--With the final swing of the gavel to sound the signal for adjournment in the Senate and House of Representatives, weary legislators who have been packed for weeks have started their trek to face the folks back home. Not since the World War has a Congressional session been faced with such stubborn problems,, important political develop, ments and persistent polemics. There are various reasons by Senators and Representatives are not in high spirits in departing from Washington. One is the universal realization that Congress is in bad with the country at large. Another is that every member knows he must give an accounting to his constituents and have his life r°™d bUSinelSlt'nfS!:' Pestered out for jobs and Federal aid. and of these 2-58 are m eight states. More than $1,000,000,000 has been invested needlessly in gasoline marketing facilities." Mr. Winship's advice to those con fr" "\ templating entering this overcrowded business is to stay out unless they can find a spot where there are more than 400 vehicles for each station and even then to be very sure of a continuing patronage for the station before build, ing it. * DR. C. KELLER Optometrist and Optician My 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. CONN EL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Hoars: 8:30 to 11 a. m.; 1:39 to 5 p. m. Evenings, 7 to 8 r' (BUlling Bldg. Riverside Drive .TeL McHenry 258 McHenry, III. riOH Kicnmond 16 ( Dr. JOHN DUCEY | VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing RICHMOND, ILLINOIS Few statesmen and states-women expect to fiid the bands out and Main street decorated in their honor. The end of the first Session of the Seventy-second Congress marks the beginning of the inquisitorial season; which will last during the summer and fall months. These investigations will range all the way from an inquiry into the loans of the Reconstruction Finance Corporation to a study of American trade in China. Some of them may produce spectacular headlines for newspapers. There .ire others, however, which seem likely to produce nothing more than nice cool junkets this summer, assuming that the appropriations are adequate and politicians still have the nerve to go on junkets. As in previous years, both the Senate and House have appointed committees to keep an eye on campaign expenditures. In the past such committees have uncovered some devastating material, but in this lean year the outlook is not po exciting. * In Washington and every important European capital statements are forthcoming which leave the average citizen in this country completely befuddled as to just exactly what has happened in the reparations-war debts business. "Gentlemen's agreements", "new ententes cordiale," accords and compacts", indirectly entangling the United States with the plan to relieve Germany of her obliare affirmed »nH j KENT & COMPANY All Kinds of |I N S U R A N C E •f% Placed with the most reliable s£jt; fF OwnpantH f - CMne in and talk it olIV ff ' Phone McHenry 8 r' Telephone No. 108-R Stoffel & Reihanaperger P': " ' jhlnrance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WIST McHENRt •ILLINOIS bsnre-b Sure-Insurance A TIMELY SERMONETTE ^ FOR ALL OF US We have passed through a panic, suffered from a crash on the stock market and are now more than half way through tip depression, and am still -rich .... It may be true that I have much less to live on than I had a yea-r ago, bat it is certainly true that I have just as much as evor to live for . , .... The real values of life are unshaken and solid .... The depression has not lowered the value of a single friendship. Neighbors still greet us in th® same old cordial way, business associates believe in us and our sons hold us in high respect, the wife'is welcome at the close of day has not depreciated in the least, and our daughters continue to lavish their affection upon us with the same old extravagance .... My faith in the goodness of the universe is unimpaired; by that faith I am emboldened as I face defeat and despair. The prayers my mother taught ma and the faith in God instilled in me by a devout father remain as priceless treasures no depression can touch .... No nation becomes great by becoming rich. Neither does a man find enduring satifsfaction in life &y owning something-- only by *»acoming something. The moat degrading poverty is that which results from killing the spirit that the body may be served .... This depression is a challenge, not a catastrophe- A generation that has conquered the air and sent giant planes circling the globe, that has plunged into the deeps and disported on the ocean's floor, that has climbed above the clouds and lived in stratosphere, is now faced with the challenge to rise above its dependence on mere things and seek an emancipation of the spirit of man .... The last six months have been for many men a thrilling spiritual adventure through which' they have discovered their real-wealth. Bereft of dividends and profits, they are discovering the sustaining powers of a strong religious faith, the' abiding values of courage, heroism, honor, charity and trustworthiness .... A financial crisis can wipe out profits and bring business to a standstill, but character is beyond its reach. It can rob us of all we have, but it cannot affect what we are .... The deepest satisfactions of life--those which come from sharing and serving--remain secure • . . . I am still rich because I am independently rich--none of my wealth depends upon business conditions or market reports.--Anon. , ' CAROL'S ESCAPADES * RESENTED BY ARMY fe-r--".' •WITH' W m.G. Schreiner 1 Auctioneering OFFICE AT RESIDENCE f1 S3-R McHenry, DUatb A. P. Freund Tp.vppfTQ^injr Contractor felting. Hydraulic and Crane Service Road Building 204H McHenry, III Participation in the Lausanne negotiations by representatives of America is alleged in Europe and disavowed over here. Regardless of the meaning of these many phases political leaders have no desire to explain the foreign jdebt situation to the voters a.nd are | hoping to have the entire matter ironed out so that this issue will be kept out of the forthcoming paigns. The political prophets are how explaining that events -will change with ttie departure of Congress. It is rumored around Washington that President Hoover has been waiting for Congress to adjourn to issue a series of blasts on the economic situation. Contrary to the opinions of many that Mr. Hoover would allow his campaign to be dominated ty Members of his Cabinet and others gifted with oratorical powers, Hoover's political advisors now say that the Republican nominee for the presidency will fire his own opening guns in the campaign for his re-election. Those whose business it is to atudy political trends concede that today the tide is flowing toward Governor Roosevelt. However, the Republicans take comfort from the ancient quip that the Democrats generally win in July, only to lose in November. On the other hand, the Democrats view this year as a victorious one, an<* are confident that nothing can dim their prospect except a wholly unexpected improvement in business conditions between now and election time. The Gifford Committee on Unemployment Relief, which started out with a tremendous bang, is now singing its swan song. Since the eld appropriation expired with the end of the fiscal year on June 30, there has been no authority to engage in even the simple operation of sending _ telegram. A handful of loyal workers serving without pay or the promise of Pay. are malting an effort to carry on. The typewriters are silent for all the classified Civil Service stenographers have been reassigned to the departments from which they were borrowed last year. However, among those who are sticking to their labors there is a #ort of an unspoken conviction that "something will turn up." Marshal Rebuked as He Pens Hints of Dethronement.. Ed Vogel GENERAL J> AUCTIONEER FARM SALES A SPECIALTY P. O. Solon Mills, HI. Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS idiie 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Your L; Service in building Your Wants Smoke Writing The chemicals generally ttseff In t/kywriting are tar, with a certain amount of rosin and solidified alcohol. The machines used are equipped with smoke generator and ejector In the. fuselage. The smoke is produced at the rate of 250,000 cubic feet per second; according to one calculation it takes about 8,000,000 cubic feet of smoke fo* each letter, a mile leag,^' Potent Church Boll* As the "curfew tolled the kneU of parting days," so for ages have village bells knelled for the welfare of a departing soul. Once they were held potent against all evils. No longer ago than 1852 the bishop of Malta ordered the church bells to be rung for an hour "to lay a gale of wind." In France up to a decade or two ago it was not unusual to ring charch bells to ward off Jlghtnlng. . *1 ' • Geneva. -- Kins Card's uneasy throne shows new symptoms of shaklness, not the least of which Is a growing discontent In the Rumanian army. Reports percolating from Bukharest weeks ago hinted trouble ahead, but a "history parable" published in Bukharest by the fearless, blunt Marshal Averescu said In so many words that Rumania's army no longer gets its pay regularly and is "discontented." Averescu even hinted at the dethronement of Carol, with the result that members of parliament felt It necessary to rebuke him and give three rousing cheers for the king. Among diplomats here, however, the marshal's "history parable" was of particular Interest because It seemed to confirm, reports via Paris that palace intrigue in Bukharest had developed to the point where Prince Nicholas felt duty bound to warn party leaders to "act quickly" if they wanted to save the dynasty. Nicholas was quoted as saying that Mme. Magda Lupescu and other intimates of the king "control all his actions, and unless halted will surely drive both him and the dynasty to ruin." He Is expected to return to Bukharest within a few days. Besides the flaming-haired Lupescu the chief intriguers Included, according to this report, Dumltrescu, the king's private secretary, and a Mme. Wleder, intimate friend of Lupescu. Queen Helene, Carol's divorced wife, visited him and her son, Prince Michael, and a reconciliation was hinted. Now Marshal Averescu's parable says not a word directly about King Carol, It is merely a series of extracts from historical volumes, all bearing on the sad fate of Prince Alexander Cuza, first ruler of Rumania, who lost his throne In a popular revolution in February,'1866. "It was just 66 years ago today," writes the marshal, "that Alexandra loan Cuza lost the throne of the Rumanian princes." The veteran then goes on to cite excerpts from this and that historian --excerpts with pat overtones of modern applicability. For Instance: "He failed to restore the country's economic equilibrium. Such measures as he attempted turned out to be directed against certain classes and groups. In addition there were various scandalous affairs, all-too-numer* ous in his disordered Way of life." Tropical Tree A sand-box tree is "a tropical Amer lean euphorblaceous tree, Hura crept* tans, having a depressed many-celled woody capsule which when completely dry bursts with s loud report and scat t«* the see6i. ffl FANNIE HUfttt Norwegians Score at Most Generous Tippers London. -- Scandinavians are tho world's most generous tippers, hotel servants say. A poll among waiters, bellhops, chambermaids aud other employees of London's leading liostelrles Showed Norwegians to be the most welcome guests. Other northern European visitors tipped almost as well. Spaniards were a good sepond and Germans not far behind. * The French and ItallAli, however, are considered "tight." Americans, it was found, could not be classified. They tip extravagantly or hardly ever. (9 by |tcCI«r» N«w»p»|H)r 8yadlo^U.) PEOPLE expected great things of Aline Davis. And well they might? She had grown steadily from a precocious, unusually gifted child Into the most brilliant girl In her high school and college classes, delivering the valedictory each time she graduated and generally rated by faculties as a girl with a marked future. Then what did she turn around and do, with al! her accomplishments of language, laboratory science and dramatics to choose from,, but develop a voice I Verily, the gods hft& smiled npon Aline. As her friends put it (a little wistfully perhaps), AUne had everything. Youth. Culture. Beauty,. Iq/ tellect Varied talents and now "a voice f To say nothing of the fact that tli® sAn of oae of the foremost bankers of Buffalo, N. Yn wanted to marry her. She made her selection brilliantly, as she did everything, throwing everything over, including the son of the Buffalo banker, to follow the career of a singer. It meant struggle. Aline was not blessed in worldly goods, but scholarships were forever showering her path and It was made possible, what with the patronage of a philanthropic woman In Aline's home town, and a scholarship offered by her university, for her to take up the study of voice and harmony with two of the most influential teachers in New Ydrk. With her usual ability for doing whatever she did outstandingly well, In her third year of tutelage she attracted the attention of a famous Impresario who arranged her an audition with the opera. She came through it with flying colors and the offer of a contract to sing minor roles with the greatest opera organization in the world. **Of course, I told you sol" said all of Aline's friends. But still It was a little breath-taking to have her walk Into one honor after another, as casually as if a contract to sing In opera were not the mecca of girls from almost every corner of the globe. Aline continued her studies and made superbly good in her opera work that first year. So good that at the derstudylng the famous Donna Bella. Critics and teachers predicted a magnificent future for her. The star of her destiny seemed never to flicker In Its steady light. And tt must be said of Aline that she did not depend upon destiny to keep that star lighted. - She was an indefatigable worked A painstaking student. A musician at heart and at soul. It was when her star seemed so sure and so true and so almost Inevitable, that Aline met Kronald Blau. Blau was a young Swiss fellow, only ten years In America, and engaged In laboratory work at the Rockefeller foundation. A student A scientist devoted to research. His work was the study of the loathsome disease leprosy. Blau was said already to have made some distinguished contributions to the alleviation of that foul disease and was hopefully working toward the solution of making It 100 per cent curable. Not a romantic background. Scarce-1 ly a fellow with the type of mind calculated to capture the Interest of a beautiful and promising young opera singer, on the verge of her big success. Blau himself was unpreposses* Sing enough. A tow-haired young fellow with a thoughtful face and kind eyes magnified by high-power spectacles. A student In aspect and manner. A student by temperament.jind equipment. AUne met him hy chance it the home of a doctor friend, It was a matter of love at flrst sight ' w It was remarked by those present that, from the moment she entered the rootn, Blau never took eyes off of her, and after they met It was all Aline could do to keep her own gaze from boring back against his. Aline always said of herself that she did the wooing. In any .event it Is doubtful If young Blau would ever have had the courage to follow up this first meeting with the brilliant young singer. Aline saw to that Aline saw to it that the physician friend arranged another meeting. To the stupefaction of all concerned, they were married two weeks later. For six months after that Aline went on with her singing, and practically a miracle happened. From a lovely-voiced soprano of quite unusual range and clarity that young voice took on even another dimension. It became a warm and glowing, a vibrant fountain of rilling, trilling loveliness. Apparently Aline was one of those women whom love literally enriches, body and soul. Her voice, where It had been full and fine before, now became a soaring thing of astonishing vitality. The maestros and the wiseacres connected with the opera company began to wag knowing heads about her. "Watch Aline Angelo!" was the word that went arouirf. Magnificent! The sensation of tonrorrow. Watch! Well, this is what happened, and curiously enough on the very day that Aline was cast to go into rehearsal to sinf Batterlly ta a gain performance^ On that very day, Blau received his commission to go to a Pacific island directly south of Manila for a firsthand study of leprosy in a colony of those afflicted with it. And if you think them was aver even any conflict in Aline about It, you are wrong. Whatever of hesitancy, trepidation, compunction Blau himself may have had about It, was swept away by the \ quality of her exuberance. In vain he expostulated that, In any event, her career must not be Interfered with. Then, since the idea of his Ignoring this great opportunity to perfect his work was repugnant to her fend started her off Into an actual hysteria of tears, his suggestion was that he go alone. That too, reduced her to even stormier hysteria. In vain her friends, advisors, admirers, teachers, patrons joined with Blau in remonstrance. On the eve of her Butterfly. On the ev« of her Success! Madness! * But never for a moment did AUne falter. Her decision was fixed and clear in he* mind. It never faltered. It never wavered. A Two weeks before she was to hare sung the coveted role of Butterfly In the largest opera bouse In the world, Mr. and Mrs. Blau put foot on a small, one-class steamer bound for Manila. Five weeks latgr, two rather bewildered young people took up abode in a bamboo bungalow half a mile removed from a government leper reservation. Hot rains came down their first five weeks there, and made a rancid, steaming hades of the place. Insects swarmed through the Hghts and the long motionless days sapped vitality. All day, changing his clothes and scouring with disinfectants before he came home evenings, Blau worked at the colony. Aline's sole companions were her two Hawaiian servants and the pretty and homesick young wife of one of the English physicians also engaged in laboratory work. The first year, It sometimes seemed to AUne that she would go starlc, raving mad. Often, Just to walk to the colony and stand outside the railing watching the wretched people inside go about, their duties, was a pastime. ! Blau, worshiping her for the quality of her character and the quality of her sacrifice, did all ln^hls power to make less tedloys and less harrowing the slow pasjtfng ofN^he days, but once there, his heart flamed with his passion for his work. Life was a vibrant significant search after truth. After six years at the colony, one Bteaming foetid night Blau canje home staggering, trembling, almost crying from the over-wrought nerves result- Millionaire Racer ®mt straightaway mile «j*e4 record was created by the millionaire amateur, Vanderbllt, who drove his Mercedes at tnqE« an hour in 1901 w spent In his laboratory. Blau had won! The final test had befen given efficacy of his leprosy treatment ; ; " Blau had won. " Aline, by this time a little fat, haired and with her singing voice a dead thing In her throat met him at the door so that virtually fce feU into her arms, half fainting. Blau had won. There are those who still' regard Aline pityingly, as a woman who threw away her life. Aline, who lives very happily with Blau and their five children In a small, pretty house near John Hopkins university where Blau Is the head of one of the great research departments, feels that the secret of life is within her hands. She feels that part of Blau's great discovery for the alleviation of the suffering of mankind is hers. Blau, who kisses her hands sometimes with a reverence that Is dampened with his tears, feels that practically all of his great discovery Is hers. ^ ^ Man Slow to Realize ' Great Value of Coal In the early annals of mankind there was some knowledge of soft coal. The Chinese used soft -coal for baking porcelains. It Is not unlikely that some of the beautiful porcelains In the Boston Museum of Fine Arts were baked with heat derived from this early coal. The use of coal for heating purposes was known in England prior to the Saxon invasion; but the fact of its extensive existence, or valuable uses, did not gain much notice until the Ninth century. It was not until 1239 that the first charter, giving permission to dig coal in Great Britain, was Issued and Newcastle thus became the first town to become famous as the home of the coal miner. Even as late as 1600 only two ships were needed to bring all the coal required to London. In this country bituminous coal was mined in Virginia about 1750 and was soon in general use In the regions around the mines for both heating and manufacturing purposes. Now the United States is by far the largest producer of coal In the world. There are three great coal-producing areas, the Appalachian, which Includes the Pennsylvania coal fields; the Illinois and the Missouri field, which overlaps into all the adjacent states, and the Michigan field. There are small fields in other parts of the United States. All told there are 29 coal-producing states. NEM SOLUTION M«i f» Arrested for Kitting Bachelor in North Carolina 38 Years Ago. BBgh Point, N. C.--Information furnished by J. Allan Austin, attorney, who as a young law Student vowed to bring to Justice the murderers of his oncle, led to the arrest in Florida recently of John Morgan, thus lifting the veil in a thlrty-elght-year-old murder mystery In Stanly county. One other man is expected to be arrested upon information given the Florida authorities by the High Point man. The identity of the murderers of Francis Talley, bachelor, has been an unsolved mystery. It wss rumored that he was killed for his money, being reputed to possess a board cf gold coins. Sererai men were tried and acquitted immediately after the murder, and then the case was shelved, remaining ever since in the category of unsolved eases. Aided Slay®?* to Escape. A few days ago Mr. Austin, visiting his old home place, came into cor tact with an old friend who related to him a story that sounded more like fiction than truth. He said that a man told him how he had guided the two alleged killers of Talley out of the state, and that he had not revealed the secret during trials that followed the murder because he had been warned that to do so would he to Imperil his own life. According to the story the two killers became drunk after they had killed Talley and chopped his furniture into bits. Then they encountered the man, then a youth, and forced him to ride bareback with them to the South Carolina line and bring back their horses. There were then no automobiles in this section of the country. " With, this information in his possession, Mr. Austin inaugurated an investigation, with the result that he learned that one of the men, alleged to be Morgan, was living In Florida under an assumed name. The story of the murder, as told by Mr. Austin, is as amazing and absorbing as a detective yarn. Talley, an aged bachelor, lived alone In his tittle country home. He was a gold miner and one of the richest men in the county. North CaroUna was a high producer of gold in those days, and mining was an industry. A living might be obtained by panning along many North Carolina streams. Stanly county was on# of the producing communities. Horribly Mutilated. On the night of November 21, 1899; two men came down the side of the mountain and slew him. His head was nearly severed from his body, and his face was split down the middle, apparently with a sharp ax. The cabin had been ransacked. The murderers, evidently chagrined at their inability to locate the hidden treasure, chopped the furniture in the building into small bits perhaps with the same ax with which they had slain their victim. Bloody footprints were visible throughout the house. Young Austin, his imagination impressed with the horrible crime, determined three decades ago to find the men who killed his uncle. When the two Florida suspects are tried In Stanly county-Superior court the lawyer, nephew of the dead man, will appear at the bar to avenge the memory of his relative. Stanly county officers are working with vigor and determination to bring about further arrests. .. Have you a house to rent--try the classified ads. • .... -v: Twice T o l d Tales Itema af Interest Takea Frem tfce Files of the PlaindeaJec of Tears Age FIFTY YEARS ACfO lave hogs sold in this village on Monday for $7 and $7.50 per hundred. Jacob Story is making some good improvement* in and around his premises by giving his buildings a new coat of paint The wool season has arrived, but as yet but little has been marketed in this section. The price offered by our buyers range from thirty to thirtyfive eents, according to quality. E. M. Owen deserves the thanks of thO community for cutting out the old hedge in front of his land just west of L. Bonslett's residence- It much improves the a^p^ra^ street in tkat locality ; - FORTY YEARS AG6 .Quite a number from this place took in the celebration and races at Richmond on the 4th. One hundred and ten couples attended the party at the McHenry House July 4th., and all report a quiet and pleasant time. Married at the Johnsburg church, on Wednesday, July 6th, by Rev. Father Mehring, John Stoffel, of Waukegan, and Miss Mary Buss, daughter of B. Buss, of this village. H. E. Wrightman carried with his busses ninety-seven passengers from the depot to Pistaqua Bay, on Friday and Saturday last. This was in addition to his regular business between the depot and the hotel and steamboats. E - i jft-, ^. a* • -i' > i, r rif" ^ . - ,• . V , 1 • c <- *;*C \ 'a t'f J ' *' . TWENTY-FIVE YEARS IAW^ Butter advanced % cent on the Elgin board of trade Monday, the price quoted at 24 cents. N. J. Justen is having a one story addition built to the north end of his West Side furniture fcouse. The Borden factory is being treated to a new coat of paint, which adds greatly to its appearance. Peter Schoewer has recently added a new porch to the front oi his residency on Green street, a neat improvement. '* TWENTY YEARS AGO Batter was declared firm at cents on the Elgin board of trade, Monday. Good home-grown potatoes, only 75 cents per bushel while supply lasts. , Promoters of the Woodstock, Marengo, and Sycamore railroad were in town this week. Looks like this company still has its eye on McHenry. McHenry will fall in line with other up-to-date towns in this vicinity and have her streets sprinkled with oil. I |g|piTEN- YEARS AGO Mayor Simon Stoffel has, for soiho time past, been using his office in an endeavor to induce the C. & N. W. Railroad company to install gates over the railroad crossings in this village. While ye soribe has not interviewed all, but those with whom we have talked tell us that their holiday business this year exceeded that of last year by far. Every line of business in town benefitted either directly or indirectly by the influx of visitors. Central Garage Fred J. Smith. Prop. Johnsburg . . . . . Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work Give us a call when in trouble Expert Welding and Cylinder Beboring Day Phone 200-J Night Phone ifcf-2 ' Biddy Strictly oa Job A Waterbury (Conn.) motorllt ft" ports the following Incident: Driving along a highway he observed a hen sitting in the ralddlfe of the road. He slowed down and tooted his horn. The hen conUnued to sit. Slowly he drove across the hen and looked back. The hen stood up, cackled loudly and walked away,. leaving ah egg in the road. r Fl»r*r^rl»U .. . Neither Britain nor the United States can claim the discovery of finger- prints as an infallible means of identification. Finger-prints were employed In deeds for the sale of slaves laJKeraa twelve hundred years ago v Panama Waterway Passage was blasted through the last sUde at Cucaracha and a line of water was established across the Isthmus of Panama, October 12, 1013. KMMlfalkFMi Many Of the huge slabs of stone, each weighing several tons, erected at Stonehenge by the Britons of nearly 4,000 years ago, were brought 160 miles across wild country from Wales. |F . " ~;' Faminla* Grief i- Haftng a face that it's fi waste time to doll up Is one kind of feminine grief, and another kind Is having a husband so meek there is no kick in bossing him.--Cincinnati Enquirer. FREE INNER TUBE With each Goodyear All-Weather Tread Tire sold at following prices: 29x4.40--2Li... i ^.$6.35 30x5.00--20. 8.45 30x4.50--21.....: ..... 7.05 31x5.25--21.-... 10.25 2 9 x 5 . 1 9 ±1.. 8.25 33x6.00- 21.-... |*50 Other sizes at corresponding low prices ; rires are all Fresh Stocfe Fiwls and Fully Guaranteed i i * " WALTER J. FREUND Tire and Tube Vulcanmng-Battery Charging, Repairing Car Washing, Simonizing Greasing, Draining, Etc. First Class Job Guaranteed Phone 294 WEST M'HENRY rr vt -• J > 'In. V ti,'