FORETOLD PROGRESS OF JHOUSAND YEARS In 932, Predicted the "Astonishing" Advances. Paris.--One thousand years ago the monk Theodoslus sketched In broad lines what might be expected of the world In 1932. He foresaw a great Increase of population, astonishing advances in the sciences, especially in botany, soology and astrology, and so great an'increase in the demand for books that "pious monks will sit night and da* copying and recopylng the manuscripts of the great bishops of long ago." Some of Theodoeius' guesses went as far afleld as others wept true, according to Charles Richet, who gives In Le Matin, a translation of pertinent parts of the manuscript, which, he says, he discovered by chance in a Franciscan monastery at Ravenna. "Will there be a year 1000?" Theo'r 'dosius 'asks.. "Many good Christians imagine that the year 1000 will see the end of tJie world and the final cataclysm. But this is probably an error. God is too good to wipe out the human r a c e . ; ' V ; ; : ' "What shall we find after the year 1000? To seek to know that is not Impious. One thing* is certain, that well before the 1000 years which I have in inind, the terrible religion invented and propagated "b? Mahomet will be destroyed together with the hideous book called the Koran, which was dictated by Satan himself. The armies of the infidels, triumphant as they seem today, will have disappeared as dust In the wind. There will be none but God's servants. The Cross will have conquered the Crescent. Safety on the roads would encourage travel, Theodosius said. "As to the sciences, they will make astonishing progress. I do not speak of magic, that redoubtable science inspired by the Spirit of Evil to deceive unhappy men, but of botany, zoology and especially astrology. Thales saw that amber attracted small bodies when it is rubbed . . . but that is a trick of nature and there is nothing to be hoped for from it. Archytas of Tarentum thought he could build a flying machine, but it Is madness to think that man could raise himself into the air like a bird. learoa g&ve •ad proof of that" Twice |Told es Items «f later est Tikca Frwe thsFiles of the Plsindealar of Years Af o - FIFTY YEARS AGO H. M. Holmes was appointed Marshal of this village, by the Board of Trustees, at their meeting: on Monday evening last- Jacob ffetzel and Miss Barbara Wendell, of this village, were married at the Catholic church in this village by Rev. Father O'Neal on Tuesday afternoon of this week. F« A. Hebard of this village, has taken the job of building pickle tubs sufficient to hold 20,000 bushels of cucumbers for Murphy & Co., of Woodstock. * Our Public school opened Monday with the following corps of teachers S. D. Baldwin, Principal; Miss Etta Torrance. Intermediate Department, and Miss Bell Stoddafdv Primary Department Rev. L. J. Dinsmore, Teacher of the Gagetown Division,. Loit Battalion Site It Found After 13 Years Varennes, France^-A searching party in the Apremont woods of the > Sunday marked the beginning of s Argonne forest has uncovered the whole setting of one of the most dramatic incidents of the World war, the fight against circling Germans, thirst aiy! hunger of .the famed American "Lost Battalion." Under the leaves of 13 autumns, the searchers found remains of at least one of the American heroes. As searchers brushed away the leaves and cut through the young saplings that have choked the forest, they found on the north side of the gulley between Binarville and Apremont historic evidence of the great struggle. The side of the hill Ig.honey-combed with "foxholes," cut into the shale and just large enough to hide a man. : There 600 men took cover when they found that they had lost contact with their own troops. Only 194 came out alive. Even after IS years it Is possible to picture the heroic struggle of the besieged men. In the "kitchen" hole is a great rusted can, punched full of holesi which shows -that the cooks sought to build a fire and heat water for coffee and tea. All around are pieces of equipment, rusted bayonets, rifles, gas masks. After hostilities, the bodies were taken to Romagne cemetery, but it was 13 later before the setting of this Ltlc. action was found again and It will now be thoroughly hunted. FORTY YEARS AGO Oar pttblic school opened <m Monday. with a fair attendance. The Kickapoo Indians are among us and will give a free exhibition at their tent, near the City Hall, every evening. Prairie chickens are scarcer than ever in Northern Illinois this year- The extreme wet of the early season destroyed their eggs. The edict has gone forth froft the Northwestern Railway that all em ployes of the company must be vaccinated and a physician sent out by the company is now carrying out the order. The McHenry county Fair, which was held at Woodstock last week, drew out a large attendance each day and financially was a decided success. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO All the hotels in McHenry along the river and at the Bay were crowded to their, utmost capacity Sunday aijd Monday. the fall hunting season, and a number of ducks are reported to have already been victims of the more eager sportsmen's guns. The old warehouse which stands just north of the Peter B. Freund building is being razed to the ground this week. The building is an old landmark, but its removal from the street will mean a decided improvement. Quite a little excitement was caused at the depot last Monday eve ning when the last section of the 6:17 train pulled in. The excitement was forthcoming when Marshall Walsh boarded the train and nabbed a man alleged to have been implicated in a robbery committed at Lake Geneva the previous evening. The suspect was taken back to the Lake on the 6:40 train the same evening. Jos. Rothermel has the distinction o/ having caught the largest black bass that has been taken from the Fox in twenty years. The monster was a most beautiful speciman of the finny tribe, measuring two feet one inch in length and tipping the scales at 6%. pounds. Artist Colony in Iowa Lives in Ice Wagons Stone City, Iowa.--Gaily decorated ice wagons, painted in the gay grand manner of a gypsy caravan, have revived the crumbling ruins of Stone City, deserted ice cutting camp whose stone i towers have been a curiosity here for several years. Almost 100 Middle Western artists have taken ov^r the camp, installed pallet and brush in the old ruins and are using it as a, summer studio. The artists live in deserted ice wagons, redecorated in modern lines. Some of the early arrivals established themselves in a rounjl stone tower which formerly was an ice house. The artists liave hired a business mansger who pays living expenses from tourist trade which has flocked here to see the exhibitions and view the artists at work. TWENTY YEARS AGO Jacob R. J us ten recently purchased the 92 acre farm owned by the Anton Meyers estate and located near Johnsburg. The purchasing price was $166 per acre. Five carloads of canned corn of last year's crop were shipped to Chicago from the McHenry factory during the past week. The factory will open for the season's run next week. The police officers of McHenry have received their new uniforms, which gives them somewhat of a metropolitan appearance. This is another good move on the part of the village board and we wish to commend that body for the action taken Sunday and Labor Day were record breakers for the hotels in McHenry and from all reports we should say that the afternoon and evening trains of Monday carried out at least one thousand people from this station. The special train that was made up here proved far too small to carry those out who were homeward bound. Chinese Girls Bring $13 in Flood Area Harbin, Manchuria.--Daughters of the poor were offered for sale for 50 yen ($13) apiece as floods and guerilla fighting with Manchoukuo and Japanese troops reduced millions of Chinese to desperation. In Harbin, flood waters of the Sungari river- rose in the streets, carrying away the small possessions of destitute families. Mobs gathered, clamoring for aid. Acting at the request of local Chinese, Liueteuant General Hlrose, of the Japanese forces, assumed command of the district and declared what amounted to martial law. 7L, A m e r i c a * Sm Horsa IbPtcfly a salt-water deniien, the sea hone is found all along the Atlantic coast from Massachusetts to South Carolina, and although our variety seldom exceed seven Inches in length, those from the Pacific shores of Mexico grow over a foot long. When you happen to come across them, you find them swarming in the.moss and seaweed in droves, and if you reach down Into their midst, they crawl all over - 1 -- « . : TEN YEARS AGO " The McHenry ice cream factory, on account of the great demand for its product, was forced to operate during the entire night Sunday. It was the biggest business experienced by the proprietor, C. Unti, since locating in McHenry. > • Now that all of the employes of the Borden bottling plant here have taken their vacations, the pay roll is being trimmed down a bit. Among those who have received notification of a lay-off are Wm. Parks, Henry Heimer, Jr., and George Steilen. The Julius Keg dredging outfit, which during the past few weeks has been cleaning up the river front at the Owen, Stenger AAllen subdivision on the west shore of Fox river, south of this village, has been making very satisfactory progress having thus far cleaned up more than 500 feet of river frontage. It is expected that the entire 700 feet of frontage will be cleaned up within the course of another week, when the McHenry Artificial Stone & Construction Co. will install electric light posts every fifty feet along the entire sea wall. .W*t«r la the Sahara In almost the entire region of tfce Sahara desert there are no permanent water courses, but from time to time temporary and even tempestuous streams are developed by heavy rainfalls, which soon dry up or are abwrbed By CLARISSA MACK1E e by If cClur# Newspaper Syndicate . (WNU S«rvtc«) ELEANOR BROOKE went up to her room and sat down. She had told her family that she had broken her engagement to Mark Allen "and her brother Roger ly»d informed her that it was good luck, "He is a rotter," muttered'Roger from his book." The others all murmured something or other, and her mother had smiled sympathetically. None of them had liked Mark Allen. That was not the reason she bad broken her engagement She had received a letter from a broken-hearted girl in another city who had told her of Mirk's*" perfidy. Eleanor thought she was breaking her own heart when she decided to let him go; now, to her surprise, she did not care The next day she spoke to her mother about taking a trip West, to visit an uncle who had a ranch. The ranch won Eleanor's heart She learned to ride, and soon the wide-open plains were her own playground. "I wish, Uncle Alfred," said Eleanor, "that you bad some hopeless bachelor cowboy who would ride around with It is pokey riding alone, and all of yonr cowboys are too gallant." *. Uncle Alfred thought for a long time. Then, he removed his pipe from between his lips and smiled- "I believe I know Just the man to go about with you, Eleanor," he said slowly. "Over on the next place to the south lives a man whom I have known for a long time--his name is Walter Jamieson-- bachelor--sort of a recluse--lives there alone with a Chinese cook and one man of all work, reads and writes and rides all day the year around, excepting when he is traveling. I heard that he was disappointed in love once upon a time. Has lots of money. Is perfectly bullet-proof where women are concerned 1 He is your future escort!" The next day when Eleanor came downstairs'with the morning in her blue eyes, her uncle called across the table: . • "Be ready at nine o'clock, Eleanor. - Walter Jamieson is coming to ride with you--going to take you to his favorite canyon beyond the first hill. Don't be frivolous--Walter can't stand much of that, you know." "Now, Alfred," protested Aunt Laura. But Uncle Alfred only laughed and went out to men who were starting on a ijpi ride. Eleanor talked to. her .aunt about various matters, but they did not speak of Walter Jamieson again. Eleanor believed that he was probably some tired old bachelor and Uncle Alfred was really making fuh of her, but presently when she was ready to go out she took a last look at herself In a trim khaki riding outfit, her soft hat on her ruddy hair framing her piquant face. Aunt Laura sat on the veranda talking to a young man in riding things-- very correct as to texture and cut, with a wide hat swinging from one shapely brown hand. The sun shone on the golden tan of his skin and pronounced him a handsome young man-- perhaps thirty-three, with very nice brown eyes and hair to match. "Eleanor, dear," said Aunt Laura,{ 'may I present Mr. Jamieson, our very good friend and neighbor," and then Eleanor found herself shaking hands with Walter Jamieson. Soon the two of them were riding out of the yard. Eleanor was sure that her aunt en- Joyed the joke as much as Uncle Alfred had done, but she soon found that there would be no time for retrospection with Mr. Jamieson. He wanted to talk and he wanted her to talk. He could ride well and he was the nicest, friendliest sort of a young man! They were very good friends before the ride was over. They had confessed at being completely fooled by Uncle Alfred and Eleanor blamed herself for forgetting so soon that she would never love another man after Mark Allen. Her good sense told her that perhaps Mark Allen was not the perfect man. - She and Walter Jamieson agreed that they would not permit Uncle Alfred to believe his jest had succeeded, so when they came back to the ranch, each maintained a puzzling solemnity that quite devastated Uncle Alfred. "Gosh, Eleanor," said her uncle frankly, "1 Just believed that you two would eat each other up! He's writing a book, yep, he sells a lot of them, too, so they say. But you're so young and pretty--gee whiz--the young men •of today have no pep at all!" When Eleanoi; reached her own room she sat down and laughed and laughed, and then, after awhile, a ten? der little smile curled her lips. As for Jamieson, he smoked three pipes one after the other that first night, and then he locked up all the sheets of his latest story, closed his typewriter, and spoke to the dancing flame on the hearth. "I see all the attributes for my own love story--and I am going to write it, too--for the first time--she Is the dearest, sweetest thing in the world!" After two months of this, Eleanor came home one day with a dreamy smile on her lips and a large diamond on the third finger.,, of her left hand. When she told Uncle Alfred and his wife, thej laughed right out. "We have known it since the first day," they told bar,. after congratulatory kisses. UCITS • nraHU •/ NEW YORK Many of the artists who asv occupy fashionable apartments, penthouses and big ateliers used to live in the old Van Dyck studios on Eighth avenue. They jjere happy, young and poor. Everybody knew Iind helped everybody else. If anyone sold a "picture or illustration, it was an event celebrated by all. One day a painter who now is well known, but then was Just beginning, got ab Invitation to a fashionable wedding. Though he thought there was a fair chance that the invitation was a mistake, he was more than anxious to go. He always had heard that at these big house weddings the food was excellent The trouble was that he didnt have the proper clothes. ' He did have a shirt, which would do for a foundation, and he also had a collar, a necktie and a pair of gloves. The Van Dyck turned Itself upside down to outfit him. One friend contributed a pair of striped trousers, another u morning coat, still another shoes and silk socks. Nobody owned a silk hat, bat one Of the artist's friends knew a man who had one, and borrowed it The hat was a little large for the wedding guest, so they stuffed a little paper under the sweatband. The day came and* with the help of all, the invited artist was shiningly arrayed. He wished to walk the mile across town to the wedding but that idea was vetoed. By a unanimous vote of the Van Dyck it was decided that he should take a taxi. He really was not going as an individual but as 1 a representative of a district. With a due sense of his responsibility, he entered the cab and stuck bis head out to wave a dignified farewell to all the friends who were leaning frotn win-' dows. The taxi started with a Jerk. John Nested spent Sunday with friends in Waukegan. f Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, spent Friday at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons were callers at McHenry Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and sons were callers at Waukegan last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren and Mir- and Mrs. George Landgren of Wauconda attended the movies at Crystal Lake last Tuesday evening. Mr. arfa Mrs. H. J. Schaffer of McHenry / were callers last Tuesday taorning at the home of Henry Geary. Miss Frances Davis and Robert Paddock of Volo attended the Elkhom fair Labor Day. , Mrs. Henry B. Schaffer and sons, Bobby and Do&ald, of McHenry spent Thursday at the home of MTS. Harry Matthews. Miss Helen Bernier of Chicago spent the week-end with Iter sister, Mrs. Jack Geary. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lank and daughter, Betty Lou. and'•Paul Larson, of Maple Park spent last Friday at the Blomgren home Miss Dorothy Dowell was taken seriously ill last Wednesday and. rushed to the Elizabeth Condell Memorial hospital at Libertvville, where she has •shown improvement. She expects to leturn home Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. George Lundgren and Miss' Nelson of Wauconda and Mr. and Mrs. Robert D_uncan and daughter of Chicago were callers Sunday afternoon at the Blomgren home- Mr. and Mrs. Louis Shembri and Mrs. Ella Wiant of West Chicago spent Sunday and Labor Day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Willard DarrelL Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, called on Miss Dorothy Dowell at the Elizabeth Conflymonth and DeSoto Cars REPAIRING OVERHAULING WEEDING TIRES ACCESSORIES TOWING - DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Garage Phone 3li Residence Phone 208-R The silk hat, never too secure, toppled to the street, bounced under the'rear Memorial hospital at Libertyvi'le wheel of the car, and became Just a memory. That is one of the tragic stories of the old Van Dyck. Those were the days when a certain well-known illustrator was so poor that, while he had a cake of soap and a tin basin, his only towel was a piece of an old curtain. This aroused the finer feelings of a faithful model. Each day she used to bring him a present of one or two nice linen towels. Finally he had more than a dozen, and they were all marked. They bore the names of most of the large New York hotels. • • _• A New York family has a young dog of which it is very fond. He is a good puppy, except for the fact that he will on occasion chew things he is not supposed to masticate. His worst exhibition in this line happened at the family's country place on Long Island at a time when several guests were staying over the week-end. It was warm and some of the guests left their doors ajar. In the morning the dog was discovered by a member of the family chewing on something, but apparently making little headway. Examination disclosed that it was an upper plate containing the "store teeth" of a rather sensitive guest, who wished it believed that his ivory smile was all his own. There was nothing to be done Those teeth were beyond wearing. The family could only wait In horror for their guest 4*^fr>ke to toothless tragedy. • • • • William O. Lengel, the editor, tells me that the first book he ever read of Theodore Dreiser's was "Sister Carrie." He thought he should read It because he was working under Dreiser at the time, so he bought a copy for 40 cents. He started it sitting on a bench in Central park. He read until It was too dark to see. He couldn't finish It that evening because of engagements he couldn't break, but the next morning he went down to the beach, where he figured he would not be Interrupted, and completed the book. After that, he never missed one. Preiser Is another Indiana author, having been born in Terre Haute. His flist Journalistic experience was on a Chicago newspaper. At various times he was editor of half a dozen magazines. « • • • There is honesty, even In New York and In these hard times. A woman came out of a bank clutching $25 In one-dollar bills. It was raining hard. In putting up her umbrella, the woman slipped and Involuntarily opened her hand to catch herself. The bills were scattered by the wind, but beaten down by the rain. Wet, they stuck to sidewalk and Btreet Passersby, for half a block, hurried to pick them up. Then they gave them to the woman. She counted the wet bills to see how many she had lost She had 25. 1 might aid that only a woman would do what she did then. The bills were caked with mud. She took them home, washed them in the bathtub, and then ironed them. Good as new! ©. 1932, Ball Syndic*t«.--WNU SATYlM. Tough British Bandits Are Ordered Whipped London.--Said to have boasted that they were gangsters, John Alfred Wright, twenty-two, a laborer, and Clifford John King, twenty, a butcher, were recently sentenced to an old form of punishment (in addition to Imprisonment) on a charge of robbery with violence. They were ordered whipped with a birch rod. Wright got 18 strokes, and nine months in prison; King got IS Stroke* aM six months In prison. last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Dinan and friend of Chicago were, Sunday afternoon callers at the home of Henry Geary. Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren were afternoon and supper guests Labor Day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Lundgren at Wauconda. Chesney Brooks and Wilbur Ccok of Wauconda were callers at Waukegan last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests at the home of Miss Lillian Tidmarsh at Wauconda; * Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell called on their daughter, Dorothy, at the Elizabeth Condell Memorial hospital at Libertjrville several times last week. Mrs. Lee Larabee and son, Carol, <>f Bristol, Wis., and Miss Lillian Tidmarsh of Wauconda spent last-Thursday at the HT. L. Brooks tyome. Mrs.. Ella Parks and son, Hugh, of Park Ridge spent last Saturday at the W. E. Brooks home. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer and son and daughter spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and' Mrs. Harry Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren spent Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks spent last Thursday evening at the home of Laura Courtney on the "Flats" Mrs. Lucile Rohman of. Chicago spent Labor Day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Brooks. Mrs. Jane Eatinger and daughter, Roberta, of Wauconda spent a few days last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and children spent last Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Davis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Broncheon of Wauconda spent Friday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Haas and daughter, Joyce, of Columbus, Ohio, were callers last Thursday at the home of Mrs- Clara Smith. Mrs. Emily Smith and son, Russel and daughter, Ruth Frances, of Edison Park, and Mrs. John Obee of Logansport, Ind., were callers Saturday at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son, James Howard, of Crystal Lake spent Sunday and Labor Day at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. .Mrs. Clara Smith and Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son of Crystal Lake were Sunday afternoon callers at the C. K. Werden home. Bearded Full Barbel, a well known fearu pean water fish, derives its name from a sort of beard hanging from its 4*w. Pumw Bwi i F«r*«rf The famous British museum bust Of Julius Caesar, the likeness of the Roman conqueror that has been reproduced in thousands of history books throughout the world, has been recognised as a forgery. . First Imdiaa CoaTtniM v <m>e first American Indian baptised by an English minister was Manteo, In 1587, in Virginia. From tb« Gr*«k r'- Hi werd "kaleidoscope" la compounded of three Greek words, meaning beautiful form and a watcher, which is to say, an instrument for viewing beautiful forms. The suffix scope is familflir in such words as tele* : •" Bee Figures Largely in Passages of Scripture The strange liking of bees for skeletons, no doubt gave rise to the opinion of the poet, Virgil, In the fourth of his Georgics or country poems, that bees were produced from the dead bodies of animals! Their Promised Land was described to the early Israelites as a "land flowing with milk and honey," because of the numbers of swarms of bees which stored honey in Its rocks and hillsides, and the luxuriance of its pasturage for milk animals, such as cows, ewes, goats, she-asses, etc,. Jonathan, the popular crown prince during the feign of King Saul, came near to losing his life by eating of honeycomb he happened to come across, during a battle In which his father, unknown to him, had promised death to anyone who tasted food until the day had been won for Israel. It Is thought that Isaiah 7:18 and Zecharlah 10:8, "I will hiss for them"; "The Lord shall hiss for the bee that Is in the land of Assyria," has reference to the peculiar hissing whistle with which to this dfty orientals In Bible lands strive to attract swarming bees and induce them to *ettle, as people do today by ringing bells and i(lanfta* pans. William Pmb In Armor William Penn, professing Quaker principles, <?as sent by his father. Admiral Penn, to Ireland in 1660 to manage his estate In Cork. When mutiny broke out in Carrickfergus, Penn volunteered for service and was offered the captaincy of his father's company of foot It was at this time that his portrait, in armor, was made. His" complete conversion to "Quakerism" PERMANENT WAVES SEPTEMBER FOR ONE MONTH ONVt SPECIAL * NEW PADS Revitalizing Oil Process For first 20 curls, each additional Curl Shingle, Ringlet Ends or Long Hair 'Haircut, Shampoo and Finger. Wave extra. We prefer shampooing the hair.) "Prom Queen" Vita-Tonic, $6.00 value, 2 persons for .$5.03 Stompanato'f. Reconditioning Oil,, Process< $10 value, 2 persons, $K}_. Complete with Shampoo and Fh$» ger Wave (Haircut Extra, Nd Service) Stom pa note's Special Method Haircut, Thinning Split Ends Treatment, $1.00 value for. 50c Neck Line Trim?, Cleanup Facial t;-' Eyebrow Arch ^ Henna Rinse ^ Nestle Color Rinse COMBINATION (Shingle Bob) Shampoo, Finger Wave or Push Up fVave 50c or each 35c RINGLET ENDS or LONG HAIB Shampoo, Finger or Push-UpWave T5c or each 50« Choice Beauty Aids 3 for $1.00 Marcels' that last Expert Manicure The popular low-prictd Thor washer is pictured above--now only $69-30 cash--only $6.9i down "Little by Little". Same model witb"skirf' is only $49.30 cash--$4.93 down. Public Service Stores Central Garage Fred J, 4jfmith, Prop. Johnsburg Chevrolet Sales. r General Automotive Repair Work / v Give us a call when in trouble Reboring Day Phone 200-? ' • ,* Night Phone 640-J-2 An Exceptional . Offer FREE INNER TUBE With each Goodyear All-Weather Tread Tire sold for cash at the following prices: 29x4.40--21„^. $6.35 / 30x5.00-- 8.45 30x4.50-- 7.05 31x5.25--21 =£• 1025 29x5.00--19... &25 33x6.00- 12.50 Other sizes at corresponding low price$ The^e^Tires are all Fresh Stock Firsts and Fully Guaranteed WALTER J. FREUND Tire and Tube Vulcaniiing-Battery Charging, Repairing Car Washing, Simonuing Greasing, Draining, Etc. First Class Job Guaranteed Phone 294 m ^ WEST M'HENRY ....JOe .--50c EVERYDAY STANDARD PRICES Full Line Nationally Advertised Permanent Waves ; 13, $5, $6.50, $8, $10 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 V . "~ZOTOS ^ Maehhi«>-Less Permanent $25.00 Value for $10.09 Free! Two Mar- O-Oil Treatment (fishampooe and )Finger Wares. (Standard Price Value $4.) With Every $8 and $10 Permanent Ware, Except Zotos. FREE--Airplane with haireat. Barber Shop Department Children's Haircut (under 18 yrs.) 25c Saturdays and before holidays..50e We use genuine supplies and wind the entire head regardless o£ the price AT YOUR SERVICE 3 BARBERS, 5 BEAUTY ARTISTB»;fe STOMP ANATCPS 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 save money f this way.** Hundreds of women ate doing their own washing today who never did it before. No wonder! Elcctric washers have never been priced so low--th«fr save you a dollar or molt every week on your lam*- dry bill. There's no hanl work, either. You simplf load die tub and the *gjp tator pibs clothes cleatk, (No preliminary soaking is necessary.) A motof*- driven wringer geQf;; clothes ready for the linfc. ^ In two hours the average wash is done. Let us denfeonstrate in your No obligation. . .x ^ '."i e-'-Zi