McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Sep 1932, p. 6

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TOLO of Fark KMiy vrmtoc sapper gawfei at the home of Mr. and Mrs fl|W| Kinc. JWm Molidor transacted business IK Chicago Monday.' - Billy Elisabeth Waldmann accompinied by her grandmother Mrs William Waldmann left Wednesday for Detroit Michigan. Mrs. George Scheid Jr., and. daughter of Wauconda Saturday with iMr sister Mrs. Lloya Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann Hd daughter spent Wednesday in Chicago with relatives. Eileen Hifonimus had her tonsils Ntrioved at St. Therses Hospital Monday, and is getting along nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis of ®ocum Lak£ spent Tuesday evening at the E£se Fisher home. JMr- and Mrs. Frank Henkel and ifelughter Katherine of Waukegan and •on Frank Jr. of Wauconda were Wednesday dinner guests at the home of Mi-, and Mrs. Frank Hlronimus. Miss Marion Davis of Slocum Lake ^ent a few days the past week with fcier cousin Miss Ada DowelL Mr. and Mrs. Ear] Hironimus and t#n„ Mr. and Mrs- Roy Passfield, Mr. •»d* Mrs. Jpe PassfieW; Mr, and Mrs. Frank Wilson and family attended tbe camival at Wauconda Saturday Wening. ' ; * : jtfr. and Mrs. George Dryer and •on, Mr. And Mrs. Nimps of Mount Prospects spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Frank King. Mrs. Leona Beitzel and Frank Gould of Libertyville spent Tuesday ^rtth Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. James and Robert Paddock and Arthur Wackerow attended the fair Springfield this week. Miss Roberta Dowell spent a few days with her sister Mrs. Charles Dfclvin at Wauconda. Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser motored to Waukegan on business Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser attended the show at Crystal Lake Tues- :jdfey evening. Earl Jacobson and Frank Henkel of Wauconda (failed at the home of Mr and Mrs. Roy Passfield Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Frank King enter- -tained friends at their home Saturday evening. The evening was spent In dancing and at midnight they all enjoyed a weenie roast. Mr- and Mrs. Paul Kruppa of Lake Villa were Friday , evening supper guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George. Mrs. Charles Dalvin and daughters •I Wauconda spent Saturday with her parents Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell. Henry Grover and Mrs. Wilford Grover and daughter of Waukegan •pent Wednesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowell and daughter of Elgin spent the week-end fcere with the former's parents Mr. nd Mrs. George Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St. George accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hankie to Lake Como Saturday eve '••tfng. " I Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ames and Virginia Mae Ames spent Sunday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. 0. Howard at Round Lake. Mrs. R. D. Max son and son of Elminrst, Mrs- W. H. Huffman of Crystal t*ke spent Tuesday with Mrs! Her- «an Dunker. The "Fahopeha 4-H club" met at the home of Mrs. Frank Wilson Friday August 26,, which was acheivment day for the- club. All members were present. The following guests visited the club that day; Miss Florence Kimnelshue, our Home Advisor, Mrs. Bert Dowell, Mrs. Wayne Bacon, Mrs. E; Bacon, Mrs. Alvin Case, Mrs. Richard Dowell, Mrs. Willlam Nicholas, Mrs. Harry Passfield, Mrs. Lloyd Eddy, Shirley Ann Cuminings, Mrs. Levi Wait. A fine program was given by Miss Kimnelshue jUid her members. A dainty lunch was served by Mrs- Wilson.' Prep- • arations were made that the members Would all take their garments that fhey had made to the 4-H club picnic at the "Cedar Crest Farm" Tuesday. iX Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey and son - |R>ent Sunday afternoon at the home gif Mr. and Mrs. Charles Parker Jflrayslake- Mrs. Robert Ames, Virginia Mae ,Ames and Mrs. Ida Fisher spent • ^Thursday evening with Mrs. Hiller s at McHenry. • Arthur Wackerow spent the weekend in Chicago with relatives. Miss Vera Mae Vasey left Friday j|ip resume her duties at the Eldora "Illinois High School. ;Th© Home Bureau will jneet at the home of Mrs. William Dillion Sept. Told Iteaa af Iataraat Takaa Freak the Files af the Plaiadaaltf ' af Tear* Aga j . V FIFTY TEARS AGO Rev. L. J. Dinsmore and family have arrived and will live in the D. S. Smith house next to the church. Regular services will commence in the Universalist church in this village on Sunday next and will be held in the morning at 10% o'clock. The new well being dug at pickle factory of Criaty, Walker & Co., caved in on Friday night lask They had dug down about fifty-one feet when they struck water, which came in so rapidly that they were obliged to pump it out with a steam pump, after which they had commenced to brick it up, when the sides gave way and the labor of weeks was lost almost in a moment. The expense to the firm has been immence, but they are not the kind that get discouraged and will immediately try it again- v : FORTY YEARS AGO < McHenry County Faif fo fn progress tkis week. -> O- L. Lincoln, P. G. Bishop C. 1 Curtis have been camping and fishing up the river for a week. They caught 178 black bass and 8 pickerel. The Harvest Party, at the Riverside House, on Thursday evening last was attended by about 65 couples, and all report a good time. Ray Owen, came out from Chicago on Sunday on his bicycle, doing the distance in exactly six hours. This we call good time. The distance is in the neighborhood of 50 miles. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Butter advanced a* cent Monday on the Elgin board of trade, the price being 25% cents. There were „no offerings nor sales. New York was 26 for specials and 25% for extras. Monday was entry day at the Woodstock fair, and 'ti's said that it was the largest entry day ever. The ladies of St. Patrick's church will hold a coffee at the home of Mrs. Peter Doherty Saturday afternoon of this week at three. TWENTY YEARS AGO Butter was declared firm at 25 cents on the Elgin, board of trade Monday. "The highway between this village and Ringwood is being scraped and graded. The auto drivers don't like the job a little bit, altho the road should be a dandy within a few weeks. The Meyers Ice company of this place had decided to puild a new ice house here this fall and have same filled during the coming winter. The house will be 40 X 100 ft. and 30 ft. high. It will be located somewhere on the edge of the mill pond. Clearance Sale at John Stoffel's: Waists, $1-39; muslin gowns, 50 cents; petticoats, 50 cents; dressing sacks, 35 ceftts and kimonos 60 cents. sbootWi Mr. and lfr». Williaa Foe« were callers at McHenry last Friday. Mir. and Bin. Leo Simmer and daughter Joan of Palatine spent last Thursday evening at tfte home of the former's grandfather here. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son James Howard of Crystal Lake spent the week-end at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith and attended the Carnival at Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Maimen of Wauconda and Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Shaffer of McHenry were Sunday supper and evening guests at the home of Henry Geary here. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Lundern and Miss Erickson of Chicago spent last Tuesday afternoon and evening at the Blomgren home. Mr. and Mrs. John Deinlein and daughter Eyelyn and son Junior of Libertyville and Mrs. Louisa Grenbnan and sons Richard and Gordon of Fairfield spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr., and Mrs- Fred Nordmeyer. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughters spent Stturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Davis. Mr. and Mrs- Frank Hall and two sons of Chicago were-callers Sunday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. W, E. Brooks and s$<i Chesn%y were callers at Crystal Lake last Thursday morning. Mrs. George Lundgren of Wauconda spent last Thursday and Friday at the Bkrfngren home. Mr. W. E. Brooks and son Chesney were business callers at Evanston last Thursday evening. Mr and Mrs. W. O. Brooks of Waukegan and Mrs. Lucile Rohman and Alfred Rau of Chicago spent Friday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H- L. Brooks. A baby was born to Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Raven Sunday evening. Mrs. Elmer Esping called at thdf home of Mr. and Mrs. John Baraings Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Hunter at Crystal Lake last Friday. Miss Buelah Bacon has spent a few weeks of her vacation at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Davis. Mrs. Earl Converse accompanied Mr. and Mrs. William Davis and daughter Frances and Miss Buelah Bacon to Elgin last Monday. v Mr. and Mrs. Redere Deane and two children and Mr. and Mrs. J- D. Williams and son of Crystal Lake enjoyed a picnic dinner at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith Sunday. Many of the families fztam this community attended the Carnival at Wauconda last yeek. Vi* TEN YEARS AGO ; F. W. Voeltz is having quite extensive improvements made on his home on Waukegan street. Besides an addition to the rear, a pew porch and sun parlor are being added on the front. With an abundance of apples, cider mills throughout this section are doing a rushing business, these days. One mill near Wauconda is turning out as high as 40 gallons of the apple juice per day. Less than one vat of pickles have thus far been taken in at the John L. May Pickle company's plant in this village. Quite a contrast from last year, when a single vat holding 500 bushels were filled in a day. The week-end crowd was noticeably smaller than for .some weeks past. The storm of last week, which brought on a few cool days, unooubtedly caused the falling off in the number of visitors. Hotels in the village are beginning to notice that the summer season is almost at its end. KHCHEfl CABINET (©. 1921. We»tern Newspaper Union.) Life Is grand, and so arc Its environments of Past and Future. Would the face of nature be so se* rene and beautiful if man's destiny were not equally so?--Thoreau. 14th. sr,--tt British Post Office Has "Dictionary" of Its Own London.--An enterprising lnvestigator has just discovered that the post . office department here will let a customer send a telegram calling a man a "chump" or a "blockhead," but It Is ";i against the rules to call him a "fat- | Hiead." In telegrams they will count | Stratford-on-Avon as one word, but | Stratford-by-Bow as three. Also for v some reason, "upstairs" Is •%, but "downstairs" Is two. one word, l«mm| Corks If you have a bottle that must be opened and the bottle opener has disappeared, Insert a knife on either side of the cork, grasp the two knives jflrmly as though they were one, and ull forward, turning them as you do. ~ e pressure will remove the Silver ia Chunks The largest lump of silver mined In the United States was at the Smuggler mine, Aspen, Colo., in 1894. It weighed 1,840 pounds. A lump of silver found In Peru weighed 800 pounds. . Tpacee of Aadoat City A Survey for an airplane service from Berlin to China revealed the ancient city of Hachentse, or Black built 2,000 yean ago aaft • 7 i -i» •_ Famed Guerrilla Chief's' Rifle Owned by Ohioans Willow Grove, Ohio.--An ancient flintlock rifle whose unerring aim would have filled a good sized cemetery is owned by a group of Willow Grove citizens. Originally it was the property of Gorilla Bill Smith, Ohio guerrilla chieftain In Civil war days, who individually claimed killer's rights to 100 men. The gun, weighing 13% pounds, was displayed during the Chicago World's fiur In 1886. Rotting Stumps There Is no practical quick way Of rotting stumps with chemicals. In a dooryard corner such stumps may be made very ornamental by planting honeysuckles and rambler roses to cover them. If a quick growing vine is needed, nasturtiums or canary creeper will prove excellent. Fairy Storjr "I've got a lot of work to do at the office tonight and won't be home for dinner," said the broker to his wife over the telephone. "If you need me for anything, you can get me at the Chumu^ cabaret.'Kanf>f ^GUy Star. Inca Stairways The Inca Indians had steps or stain to many of their buildings. Hie great* er part of their dwelling houses were constructed with only one story, with steps leading to the roof. They also had "steps leading to tfee tope of towers. DISHES FOR ALL OCCASIONS For a Sunday night lunch a simple dish which is easy to prepare and serve is the following: 8unday Dish. -- Melt one-half of a tablespoonful of butter, add one cupful of grated crumbs, mix well, add two cupfuls of milk with one well-beaten egg. Mix and cook; when hot, add onehalf cupful of grated cheese, a bit of salt and a dash of paprika and cayenne. Serve on crisp rounds of buttered toast Mustard, too, may be added If desired. For Any Dinner.--Take a small chuck roast, brown it In a little fat and add a tablespoonful of water, cook slowly until well don£ An hour before serving add potatoes, arranging them around the meat Cook In a tightly-covered scotch kettle. Serve with the potatoes surrounding the meat •n onion may be added or a clove of garlic for flavor. Serve with Buttered Parsnips.--Cut the parsnips Into even-sized pieces and place in a heavy kettle with two or three tablespoonfuls of butter, depending upon the amount of parsnips. Stir and cook without adding any water, if possible. When tender the parsnips will be t light brown and most delightful flavor. Season with salt and pepper and serve. Date Puff.--Beat six eggs separately, add one cupful of powdered sugar t© the yolks of the eggs, one-half cupful of walnut meats and half a package of dates finely cut Add four heaping tablespoonfuls of bread crumbs to which one teaspoonful of baking powder is added. Mix well, then fold in the stiffly beaten whites of the eggs and bake half an hour in a slow oven. Serve with whipped cream. Fruit Salad.--Place a slice of pineapple on a jprisp lettuce leaf, on this a spoonful of cottage cheese. On top of the cheese arrange two slices of cannfed pear with a section of orange between. Dot the cheese with bits of maraschino cherry and serve with a spoonful of mayonnaise. Salmon Sandwiches.--Add a sour, chopped pickle to two or three tablespoonfuls of flaked salmon mixed with salad dressing. Spread on buttered bread and serve with a hot or cold drink. ^HcJUA [' Leads ia Rivtr Mileag* Nebraska has more river mileage than any other state but Kentucky has more miles of navigable rivers. Within the latter's borders are ten streams with 1,503 navigable miles. ACQUMI * FAMOUS MOUNTAIN PmU GItm Up A11 Omh to Littfe Ararat Washington.--Part of one of the world's most famous mountains has changed hands ae a result of Persia's ratification of a new boundary treaty with Turkey. By the agreement Persia has ceded to Turkey all claim to Little Ararat' Now both peaks, Great and Little Ararat, and their common base, lie wholly within Turkish territory. A bulletin from the National Geographic society tells of the doable mountain whose name Is familiar be* cause of its association with Noah and his ark. Ararat Hely to. Armenlana. / "Ararat Ilea In a region far froos mountains of comparable magnitude and height" *ays the bulletin, "and so from the earliest times has beea looked upon not only as a significant landmark, bat also as a holy spot On the north the snow-covered peaks of the Caucasus are 200 mliea away, while the snowy summits of the El* burs range In Persia lie 500 miles to tfae southeast Southward there are no mountains in Asia Minor or Arabia that approach Ararat lu importance. "Rising to a heJght of nearly IT,000 feet, Greater Ararat is topped by several thousand feet Of snow which glistens through the long summer while the plain* and plateaus below and even the slopes of the mountain are hot and dry. This unique character, the seeming impossibility of scaling the peak, and the traditions of Noah's landing on its heights, combined to build up In the minds of the Armenians who lived near-by an idea of holiness. They maintained that supernatural forces guarded the top as a sacred preserve and that no man would be able to reach it When Parrot climbed to the top in 1829, making the, first recorded ascent, the Armenians refused to believe that the feat bad been accomplished. A number of mountaineers have scaled the * peak since Parrot's day, including a Russian surveyor who spent five days on the summit, and James Bryce, later British ambassador to the United States. Where Empires Met. "Approximately seven miles southeast of the peak of Greater Ararat lies Little Ararat 12,840 feet high. The snow line on the Ararat massif is very high--14,000 feet--so that Little Ararat is without a white cap during the summer. The ridge which connects the two peaks has an altitude about 9,000 feet "Little Ararat was of unusual political significance before the World war, for there three empires met: the Russian, the Turkish, and the Persian. The boundary lines roughly trisected Little Ararat, as though a pie were cut into three equal pieces. The Turkish- Persian line ran southward; the Russian-Persian line, northeastward; and the Russian-Turkish line, northwestward. The latter line struck across the southern shoulder of Greater Ararat, leaving the entire upper portion of the mountain In Russian territory. "During the war, the Russian-Turkish boundary fluctuated north and south of Ararat. In 1921, by the Treaty of Kars, Russia and Turkey agreed that their new common boundary should run about 25 miles north of Ararat along the river Araxes. Since then Greater Ararat has been entirely in Turkish territory while the Turkish-Persian line has continued to run through Little Ararat. The recent agreement between Persia and Turkey pushes this latter line eastward down the slopes of Little Ararat so that the entire Ararat massif falls under Turkish sovereignty. To compensate Persia for this transfer, Turkey has relinquished a narrow strip of territory farther south. The adjustments have been made to aid both countries In the control of tribesmen living along the border," Dinn# iy JAN* OSftOfcM O bjr MeOtur* N< nmtiMtfc Husband Defeats Wife in School Board Election Wright City, Mo.--John F. Case, president of the Missouri state board of agriculture, defeated his wife for school director here in a campaign in which "taxes" was the issue. Case advocated high taxes for education while his wife, Maggie, held "this is no time for a farmer to advocate higher taxes." Find Mastodon Bonos Bend, Ore.--Bones of a mastodon, believed to be more than 20,000 years old, were found by Everett Miller of Terrebonne and excavated from a ravine In the Gray Butte region recently. Undo Eboa ! "You kin learn to read, an* write," said Uncle Eben, "but you -gotta decide foh yohse'f whether de 'compllshments is goln' to git yon trouble."--Washington Star. Man Begs Meal, Then Tips From Big Roll Orange, N. J.--Proudly erect, a hungry looking man approached two men who were breakfasting in a restaurant here. Eloquently he explained his misery, his enforced idleness, and his hungry condition. Touched, one of the men bought him a substantial breakfast and the other handed him a frash package of cigarettes. Then the benefactors left. The man finished his meal, wiped his mouth with a napkin, drew out a large roll of bills, tipped the waitress, and departed, still proudly holding his shoulders hack. , ' , . Battery Rus Watch '..j|('Uny bittery Is used to m i watch made by a Swiss in 12 years. Driven by a fly-power motor, it needs no connection with outside wires. s.-;.". : s* ur* Nmpnw (WNU Ssrrtes) WRBN BALDWIN felt a spades of self-consciousness aa he strode into the boarding house dining room that second night of his residence there, dressed in his tuxedo. He assured himself that there was nothing out of the way la his appearance. Ao one, of course, would know that the reason he was thus formally dressed was because he had but one business suit at present in which, after he had returned from the office a quarter of an hour ago, he had discovered a ripped seam that had made It quite necessary to take It to the tailor for repalra. The ten boarders at Mrs. Haven's eat at one long table, and to hide any slight embarrassment Wren began to talk of the weather to the prim little old lady who sat next to htm. As he was talking he noticed that Miss Ames cast preoccupied glances across the table and when she could politely turn her attention from fetm she looked brightly across and said; "Goln' out tonight, Misa Drew?" "Why, no, Miss Ames," said the girl addressed as Miss Drew. "What made you ask that?" "Then you are expecting company," announced Miss Ames with th<? familiarity that she seemed to think living under the same boarding-house roof permitted. Wren Baldwin eating the watery soup before him felt a surprising twang of Jealousy; He had noticed this girl--Miss Drew as they called her--that morning in her trim dark business frock and noticed too the lovely gray eyes shaded with dark long lashes. After dinner the boarders adjourned to the boarding-house parlor and lingered there If for no other reason than to postpone the time of going to their Insufficiently heated rooms. "I suppose you're going out," said ^ the old woman. "Oh, to be sure," said Wren, remembering the suit at the tailor's and wandering somehow whether Miss Ames knew of his errand there. "I do have to go out for a few minutes later on." Then a pleasant man of sixty named Brown approached Wren. "If you weren't going out I'd ask you to make up a table of bridge," he said. "There'd be my wife and I and Mise Drew if we could get a fourth. It's too chilly to go up yet" "I'll play," said Wrep, and then, "only I imagine Miss Drew will have another partner presently." But apparently Miss brew had no other partner. The table was opened, Mrs. Brown went upstairs for the cards and the four sat down with Miss Ames constituting an uninvited audience with her chair drawn up between that of Wren and Miss Drew. So they played, and as they played and no caller arrived for Miss Drew, Wren's Jealousy abated, and as It abated his admiration for her Increased. All at once he looked at the clock and saw that the hands pointed" to half-past nine. He happened to be playing dummy at the time, so without much ceremony about it he rose and made some excuse about having to go out for a few minutes. Tueu seizing his coat and hat in the hall he hurried around the corner to the tailor shop, the terrifying thought that It might any minute close for the night quickening his steps. Back in the boarding house hall he tucked his suit under his coat and hastened to his room, then back to the card table. "Did you get what you went after?" asked Miss Ames, and Wren with all the nonchalance he could command said that he did. Then when it was eleven and time to go to bed, Mrs. Brown said that it had bsen a very nice party, and a very dressed-up party, too, she added significantly. Mr. Brown took his wife's arm on one side and Miss Ames on the other and started for the stairs. "We old folks will go along and let yon youngsters put up the table," he said, almost dragging the unwilling Miss Ames with him. Then over the table Wren felt that he ought to make an explanation--perhaps a complete confession to begin with would be best "So that's why I had to hurry out at half-past nine," he finished his explantatlon. "I would have explained then only that little Miss Ames was so anxious to know--" Miss Drew laughed delightfully. She explained, too. "I'm terribly poor myself," she said, "but before we lost everything I did dress for dinner and my first position was as a resident social secretary where I was expected to dress. Now I am working in an office, but it seemed so dingy here and I Just made up my mind that I'd feel a lot more cheerful If I dressed--as long as I have the old evening dress on hand." Their hands met as they were folding the card table cover and for a few seconds Wren held^fhe girl's in his. "Please dress again tomorrow night," said Miss Drew. "Just so Miss Ames won't suspect you had*a special reason." "I'll dress for dinner every night," said Wren, "If you want me to. It will give the boarders something to talk about" Put before many months had passed the boarders had more than that to talk about. Wren and Miss Drew were married and went to live in an Inexpensive little apartment a few blocks away--where they didn't dress for dinner. ^ • Cold Gray Dtom I experienced that general all-pervading sensation of getting up to be' hanged which 1 have usually found Fact That H«rts Insects, says an eminent entomologist compete with man for the food supply of the world. But even that wouldn't bother us so much, If they didn't go and regard us as. part of tlie food supply.--Boston Heeali. fe jyV,.-' /! . f ' K> ' . . . - . . . •¥> \ Another Dofoaso Mtciuiism 'A soft answer turneth away wrath and a long answer prevents people from asking you questions in the future.-- Terre Haute Tribune. Dodge and Plymouth Cars bkpairino overhauling wxldiko TIKES , . ACCESSORIES T0WIN8 - BAT ACT) NIGHT SERVICE Gangs Fhont 311 Residence Phone 208-R PERMANENT WAVES 8EPTEMBEB FOR ONE MONTH ONLY $1.00 SPECIAlv NEW PADS Revitalizing Oil Process For first 20 curls, each additional Oar! 10c Shingle, Ringlet Ends or Long Hair Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave extra. We prefer shampoo* ing the hair.) "tProm Queen" Vita-Tonic* $S.<X> value, 2 persona for $5.00 Btompanato's Reconditioning, Oil Procese, |10 value, 2 persons, $10 Complete with Shampoo and Finger Wave (Haircut Extra, No Service) Stompaneio's Special Method Haircat, Thinning Split Ends Treet- <1.00 value far. ...JOe Neck Line Trim Cleanup Facial Eyebrow, Arch Hernia Rinee - Nestle Color Rinse COMBINATION (Shmgl« Bob)" Shampoo, Finger Wave or Push Up Wave 50c or each 35c RINGLET ENDS or LONG HAIR Shampoo, Finger or Push-UpWave 75c or each 50c Choice Beauty Aids 3 for ..$1.00 Marcel* that last. 50c Expert Manicure $0c EVERYDAY STANDARD PRICES' Ml Uae' -MMfanally Advtiltoed Patt--atM Wavaa $3, $5,16.50,18, $10 Gorgeous Natural Waves With Fascinating Ringlet Ends. All Wares From $5.00 and Up Include One Special Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave. Sei-viea until Grcwa Out- Shampoo and Set ......50c _ - 20T0S Machine-Leas PemaaMjiL" ? $25.00 Valae for $10J# Free! Two Mar- O-Oil Treatment Shampoos and F i n g e r Waves. (Standard Price Value $4.) With, Every $8 and $10 Permanent Wave, Except Zotos. FTtEE--Airplane with haircut/ ° Barber Shop Department Children's Haircut (under 13 yra.) ..25e Saturdays and before holidays..50e Wa use genuine supplies and wind the entire head regardless of the price AT YOUR SERVICE 3 BARBERS, 5 BEAUTY ARTISTS ^ \ • ' S T O M P A N A T O ' S . " IJltja Modern Exclusive Barber and Beauty Sakw!. .Telephone 641 226 Main Street Woodstock, Illinois ^ Open until 9 'P. M. Prices subject to change. Clean soft water used M-' Let an Electric Motor Fill your SILO • • •' 1 . r A portable 5 h.p. electric motor serves the farmer weu during the silo-filling season. It cuts ensilage quickly and safely, and blows it into the silo. At the snap'of a switch there is even power for cuttuig all the corn one man can steadily feed into the cutter --all that one binder can cat in the field. One of our rural representatives will be glad to tell you about small electric motors and the many ways IB which they speed through farm chores. . " : Public Service Company C# MOJtTHBRN ILLINOIS S k Central Garage Fred J. Smith, Prop. Johnsbnrg S • Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work Oive turn call when in trouble , Expert Welding and Cylinder Reboriny , 7 Bay Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 LABOR DAY Specials TUBE With each Goodyear AlKWeather Tread Tire sold for cash at the following prices: 29x4.40~21^^^....|6.35 30x4.50--2t.. _ 7.05 2to00«rl9___-- -8.25 30x5.00-20.^^.__.l 8.45 31x5.25-21,™.. 10.25 33x6.00--21..--.; .,. UM Other sizes at corresponding low prices These Tires are all Fresh Stock Firsts and • Fully Guaranteed WALTER J. FREUND Tire and Tube Vulcanizing--Battery Charging, Repairing Oar Washing, Simonizing Greasing, Draining, Etc. First Class Job Guaranteed Phone 294 WEST M'HENRY 'V-'7 i"\ '•••V -'

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