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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Jan 1934, p. 4

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THE McHENRY PLAINBEALia, THURSDAY, JAN, 18, 1934 v v-i '%3T » •- 4 ' * k * •«*>% ^ THE IVTHENRY PLAlNDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. f^Batared as second-class matter at the poatofflce, at McHenry, HL, un- 'Ar the act of May 8, 1879. Hm Tear .. fix Months ,.$2.00 .....11.00 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager Rational re-employment SERVICE EXPLAINED It is not generally known by resiodarita of McHenry county just what .jjerviw the NRS is able to render Individuals, merchants, offices, business and factory organizations throughout thp community. _ The National R^-employment Sertice is the employment division of the fFederaJ Civil Works. To date hundred of men have been assigned to w&rk only through projects developed by villages, cities, the county, the •itfcte and the federal government. . ' r. This does not mean that indivicfuai •home owners, merchants, business and factory organizations cannot avail. the in solves of this splendid service. Just suppose you are , a hohie owner J looking for competent and reliable help in your homo or" a man to do | workaround your residence. Whether X.' you want inside <>r outside help, the NRS can, supply you with just the 1 man or woman you(»,^Jrant. How -about a handy man The NRS can -B«hd you the handiest man in McHenry county because there are hundreds registered; a large selection to choose "ffcom. ; Or perhaps you need a servant girl Oir woman to do housework. The NRS can supply you with the proper one regar*dle«s of your requirements as to age, ability, integrity, color, etc. "And remember! When you request the NRS to supply personnel for your luwne you are helping someone who is unemployed and in need of work. Merchants, offices, business, and .factory organisations can also avail themselves of the NRS service. Many , capable store clerks, stengoraphers, Hypists, bookkeepers, accountants, salesmen and sales laides are waiting for employment. Of course, there is no charge to business organizations or individuals using this service. USE THE NRS--Phone Woodstock 198. Write National Re-employment Service, Woodstock, Illinois, or call at Court House, Woodstock, lit . QUESTION THREE IN PICKLE ROBBERY Plaindealers for sale at Wattles. Sheriff Lester Edinger has three Fox Lake men in custody for questioning in connection with the disappearance of four barrels of dill pickles from the Spitng Grove pickle factory last July. Those under arrest are Joseph Garrison, Ray Cunningham and Walter Anderson. ' The first two named were apprehended Tuesday afternoon near Fox- Lake. Anderson was apprehended on Wednesday morning at his home located between Spring throve and Fox Lake. Two bawels of pickles Were found in the Cunningham home Tuesday night and another in the Anderson home the next morning. Sheriff Edinger is trying to trace the disappear, ance of the pickles from the Spring Grove factory to those found this FOB SALE FOR SALE--^Potatoes, good cobblers, $1.25 bu. carrots, parsnips, No. 1 grade popcorn, wholesale or retail. Todd, Broad street. *34 FOR SALE--Complete barbecue machine and steam table. Will sell reasonable. Inquire at Plaindealer office, 34 FOR4 RENT, FOR RENT--House on Richmond Rd. Inquire of Jacob M. Diedrich. Tel. 117-R; *34 COtfNfy IN BUREAU AL MEETING Lightning ' ana Rain Lightning Is most commonly associated with thunderstorms because rain helps the formation of ions and the resulting difference of electrical potential by the separation of the electrical charges. The positive electricity becomes associated with the larger falling drops and the negative electricity with the smaller water particles that are commonly carried upward by the air currents. A thunder cloud has two electrical layers in it. The lower layer, if It be of positive electrical sign, induces an op'posite charge in the earth immediately be' neath the cloud. This Is because electrical charge# of opposite sign attract one another. FARM FOR RENT--Cash. 16^ acres. Mrs. Ellen Whiting, phone 607-Wg. 32tf FOR RENT--Farms, large and small, with" base, also modem homes. Call 93-M, McHenry 26-tf. WANTED WANTED--Reliable man or 'woman, well acquainted in and around McHenry to assist in life insurance work. Experiences not necessary. Legal Reserve company writing male and female risks ages 10-65. Family Iiieome and Annuity contracts. Apply to Mr. J. E,, White, District Agent, 343 Jefferson St., Woodstock, 111. Tel. 556; 33-2 SALESMEN WANTED--To run Heb. erling business in north half of McHenry county. Sell direct to farmers, Many make $40 to $50 weekly. Year round work, no lay off. Write today for free booklet. G. C. Heberling Company. Dept. 409,. Bloomington, 111. 33-2 MISCELLANEOUS WHEN YOU NEED A VETERINARIAN-- Call Richmond 16. Graduate veterinarian, prompt service. General practice. Both large and small animals. Dr. John Ducey, Richmond, 111. 12-26 ' : Fok Found Everywhere • ' , There is no animal so widely tributed over the surface of the world, nor one that meets varied conditions of temperature and environment with ao llttlfe difference of form and habits as the fox, an English scientist deejares. » DEAD ANIMALS REMOVED FREE OF CHARGE MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. PHONE DUNDEE 10 - Reverse Charges *20-13 El Tovar -4»¥WAL LAKE, ILL. Tel 644 the Pictur^" Bargain SUB. Mat. 2:45 p. m. to 6 p. m. 10-25c after 6 and weekday eve. 10-30c U+JL--------J-- ; : I ^--_--. THIIRS., FRL, JAN. 18-19 "JIMMY AND SALLY" James Dunn and Claire Trevor "A Rippling Romance at a Riotous Pace" fiAT^WA¥.aAN.;20 With a Special Matinee at 2:30 Adni. 10-25c . JACKIE COOPER 'THE LONE COWBOY' Lila Lee and John Wray Skippy meets another Champ! Here's Jackie Cooper at his best STARTS SUN. FOR 2 DAYS Jackie Oakie, Ginger Rogers, Thelnva Todd, Lew Codv in "SITTING PRETTY" It's Got Everything! Laughs, Sefs Appeal, Dancing, Music, and Rhy(hm, also the Pickens Sistree and 100 Hollywood Honeys " WED., JAN. 23-24 Lilian H^yey in "MY LIPS BETRAY" John Bolfs and gl Brendel. A »P!% --rry ci z hi aid who made a King, romantically told with music and song! THURSDAY, JAN. 25 BARGAIN TtflGHtf: --This Ad and one admission will admit-- Origination of Hurricane* Hurricanes that sweep the mid Atlantic states are said to originate somewhere in the oceau between Flor- ' da and Africa. ;; 1LLE] THEATRE „ -VOOD5TOCK "Hefij and High Water" Richard Arlen, Judith Alien "A cautious captain learns about women." Woodstock's Beautiful PlayHouse FRIDAY, JAN. 19 'TAKE-A-CHANCE NIGHTFree gift for everyone Reduced Prices Leslie Howard, Paul Lucas, Doug Fairbanks, Jr., Margaret Lindsey "CAPTURED" Adults 15c Children 10c SATURDAY, JAN. 20 Jackie Cooper 'THE LONE COWBOY' Kids' Club 1:30, Matinee 2:30. Matinee 10-25c Night 10-30c .i -£UN, MON., JAN. 21-22 V* Walter Winchell's "BROADWAY THRU A KEYHOLE" Abe Lyman Band, Texas Guinan Constance Cummings. Paul Kelley, hundreds of others, 200 girls CHARLIE CHASE COMEDY News and Cartoon Adults to 6 p. m. 25c after "6 p. m, 30--Chikfa-en 10c TUESDAY--BARGAIN NIGHT Adults 15c Children 10c Constance Bennett "AFTER TONIGHT" WED., THl ItS.. JAN. 24-25 "SITTING PRETTY" Coming Soon-- "Hoopla" "Little Women," "Duck Soup," and "Lady Killer." . CIIEEN STREET Shows--7 and 9 THE: McHENRY ILLINOIS ' Ada. 10-2&C Friday and Saturday, Jan. 19 and 20 . TIM McCOY in ^HOLD THE PRESS" • Be defied the underworld to get his story. feoMEDY--"MICKEY'S TENTSHOW" ilMMUy and Monday, Jan. at and MZ MARGARET SULLAVAN in v uONLY YESTERDAY" ^ With John Boles and ninety-three feature players and ^directed by John M. Stahl who made " Backstreet." l^4rednc«day and Thursday, Jan. 24 and V:. 1 *.SWM SUMMERVILLE and ZAZU ?ITTS in i^tOVE, HONOR AND OH BABY" SPONSORED by AMERICAN LEGION AUXILIARY Coming soon-y'Alice in Wonderland,»' "The Bowery/' Woin®^" "Take a Chance," "Sitting Pretty" C. M. McDERMOTT, Solicitor. IN THE CIRCUIT COUBT State of Illinois, » , County of McHenry, ss CIVIL ACTION IN EQUITY l No. 26468 Charles C. King, Plaintiff, 9 vs- Josephine King, Defendant. Affidavit showing that the defendant, J osephine King, resides in the city of Philadelphia, State of Pennsylvania, has gone out of this State and on due inquiry caftnot be found, so that process cannot be served upon said defendant, having been filed in the office of the Cler]k, of this court, notice is therefore, hereby' given to said Josephine King, defendant that the plaintiff in the above entitled cause, filed his complaint in said cause on the 15th day of January, 1934, and that said action is JIQW pending and undetermined in said court, and that you, the said Josephine King, defendant, must file your appearance in said action on or before the 3rd Monday in the month of February, 1934, and in the evont you fail to do so default may be entered against you. .WJLL T. CONN, Clerk of. said Court. 34-3 Win. M. CARROLL, Attorney EXECUTOR'S NOTICE . Estate of Jolm Pint, Deceased The undersigned, having been appointed Executor of the last Will and Testament of John Pint, deceased, late of the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court' of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, on the 5th day of March, A. D. 1934, at which" time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All ^persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 3rd day of January, A. JL>. 1984, GEORGE WORTS, 33-3 Executor. Plans havr,b«*n completed for the twentieth antiiaa] meeting of the McHenry County iParm Bureau to be held at Marengo on Saturday, Jan 20. "The Program Committee consisting of Fred Gay, Kentieth Cristy and Earl Hughes, have outlined a well-rounded program, which will furnish information, recreation and entertainment. The program follows: 10 a. ni. Call to order. 10:30 a. m. President's Addfesa-- Earl Swenson. 10:40 a. m. Secretary's Report--E. M. Hughes. 10:50 a. m. Treasurer's Reports- Fred Gay. 11 a. m. Insurance Director's Report. 11.10 Address, Donald Kirkpatrtek, legal counsel for I. A. A. 11:40 Election of officers. 12 (noon) Dinner served by the high school. « < 1:00-1:10 Music. 1.10-1:30 County Agent's Report.' 1:30-1:45 Report of M&nager* of Service Company--T. R; Roberts' 1:45-1:55 Report of County Cap^jan --Lester Siedschlag. . 1:55-2:30--Addres^--r^ather Nell of Effingham.-' 2:30-3:30 Select Country Life Queen 3:30 Report of Resolutions Committee. The well-rounded program is bound to attract a large number of membets and their friends. In spite of the fact that our farmers have gone thru one of the worst years in history the Farm Bureau comes through the year justifying its existence many times. This fact will be brought out over and over again in the reports whieh will be presented. The program committee has been indeed fortunate in securing the services of two outstanding men as speak ers. Mr. Donald Kirkpatrick, Legal Counsel for the Illinois Agricultural Association, is well known to the FaJrm Bureau irtemibers in Illinois. He always has a message. Father Nell of Effingham is also well known to Illinois farmers through his activities in behalf of the farmer's cause during the past several years. He is especially well-known in McHenry County owing to the fact that he was bom and raised in Johnsburg. Mrs. Dan Desmond, President of the. McHenry County Home Bureau, states that there are twenty entries in the contest to determine the 1934 Country Life Queen. The selecting of the Country Life Queen has been popular in the county during the past few yeans. Miss Dorothy Zickuhr of Marengo, who was selected as the Queen last year, sends the following comments to the Farm Bureau: "To be chosen Country Life Queen of McHenry County last year was indeed a happy event in my life. It was an honor to have the privilege of representing my county in the State Contest at Springfield last August. I believe that the Country Life Queen Contest sponsored by the Farm Bureau not only givefe encouragement and recognition to the girls on the farm but actually encourages the development of poise, manner, cliarm and other qualities that contribute to American womanhood. I honestly urge all girls that are eligible to enter the contest to be held the 20th day of. January at Marengo. HOW= BALLOONS AND LANTERNS HELP THE WEATHER-MAN.-- Small, free balloons currylnVlW® paper lanterns or tiny electric lights lip through the air, says Scientific American, make possible night-time forecasts of the velocity and direction of the wind of different atmospheric levels. The electric lights, which are'heavier and more expensive than the candle-lighted lari- "terns, are used only where there Is danger that forest tires might be started by the lanterns, which sometimes burst into flames. Meteorologists can follow the gleam of the Illuminated pilot balloons after dark1" as easily as they can watch the unlighted balloons by day. Each pilot balloon, about thirty Inches in diameter, Is filled with just enough hydrogen to insure ascension at a uniform rate of 600 feet a minute. The ascent is carefully timed and witched through a theodolite, an instrument something like a surveyor's transit, on which angular readings of the balloon's position are made at one-minute intervals. From the readings thus obtained meteorologists compute the balloon's direction and speed of travel for each ininujte of flight. This reveals the velocity and direcr tlon of air currents. . Continuing the pilot balloon runs by night gives nocturnal flyers the guide they need for steering clear of air levels and keeping in the levels of favorable following winds. SCIENCE KIBBLES EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of Michael Schaefer, Deceased The undersigned, having been anpointed Executor of the last Will and Testament of Michael Schaefer, deceased, late of*the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that he_will appear before the County Court, of McHenry County at the Court House in Woodstock, on the 26th day of February, A. D. 1934, at • which time all persons having c laims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the pur- 1k>s« of having the same adjusted. All Persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make Immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 8th day of; January, A. D. 1934. MATHIA5 M. SCHAEFER, 33-3 Extcutor. Processes for refining oUi at* being tested in Italy. *. ' Vegetable oHs are said to be ji good fuel for some Diesel engines. Small airplanes hate ijeen developed In Germany that are assembled by purchasers. Letters by radto, Just as they were jirritten by the Render, seem an early •possibility. ; " >V /:v' A new circuit* W* '$&§• a rotating table, permitting cuts to be made at •ny angle. A quick drying lacquer has been Invented for wall paper to aid in keeping it clean. •••£; Alore than 100,000,000^ pennies were collected in telephone boxes lo London last year. Use of spirits distilled from rubber as a motor fuel is being Investigated in British Malaya. A gasoline substitute tried' with some success in Ireland is creosote oil, which Is a waste product of th? gas Industry. A new alloy, composed of nickel, steel and aluminum, has been developed In " Japan for strong magnetic characteristics. The federal government has spent $35,000,000 on scientific research since the World war. The bureau of stand ards saves the government more than that in materials purchased every year. *"• Science a new coal tar color, known as Brilliant Blue FCF, which has beefl added to the authorized list of food dyes. It is expected that this color will be used to color breakfast cereals. mmL Tm and High Th T«a may be little more than the »arae Implies--tea accompanied by toast, muffins and cakes, while a high tea offers, in reality, a meal served earlier than a dinner would be. A choice of several meats, salads, breads of various kinds, cakes, a sherbet or !ce, and tea and coffee or other bererafcfeS' ire nsuattjr offefred the gueftp. Bay It a Ai The original bay rilm Is made b? distilling the juice of the leaves ot the bay berry, a tree which grows ex tensively in the West Indies. No par>> ticular attention is given to the cultivation of the tree. The making of bay rum was formerly chiefly a seasonal, local Industry in the islands. The distilled oil of the bay, however, Is only one Ingredient of the commercial bay rum of the present day. It Includes also alcohol, water, oil of orange peel and oil of pimenta. Most of that sold In the United States Is mixed In this cvMtairy by drug firms, bair tonic manufacturers, etc. How Strained Honey Is Kept in Natural Form The bureau of chemistry says that nearly all varieties of honey will crystallize, but the extent to which this takes place varies due to the variation in the relative amounts of dextrose and levulose in ' them. Some honeys, such as alfalfa and white clover, crystallize nearly completely while others, such as sage and tupelo, remain liquid under practically all conditions of temperatures, etc. Crystallization of honey which is bottled or canned on a commercial scale is, therefore, largely prevented by suitable blending of the types which readily granulflfe with those that do not. Honey which has already begun to crystallize may be restored to Its usual condition by emptying into a suitable container, which should then be placed Ih another of water, the water brought to boiling, and the boilir\g continued for a sufficient length of time to raise the temperature of the honey to 130 degrees Fahrenheit. The temperature of the honey should be held at that point until all crystals present are dissolved, as long heating at higher temperatures will discolor the honey and modify or destroy Its flavor. HoV Colonies Differed The Plymouth colony was settled by individuals who were seeking to make homes for themselves and their families in a land* where they could have religious freedom and opportunity for development. The Virginia settlement was by a company which desired to realize monetary profit. The first settlers were nearly all gentlemen and were absolutely worthless In settling a wilderness. In the Plymouth colony the settlers immediately built small homes for themselves and began to till small plots of ground. The director( f of the Virginia company held a large portion of the land, which was to be tilled by servants of the company. This colony desired to create estates of moderate size. How Bridge Began Recent alterations in the lawS of bridge ha^e stimulated Interest In the origin of what Is now the most popular of card games. Under the name of "Britch," bridge was played in Constantinople in the seventies of last century. From there it spread gradually to Cairo, the Riviera, London and New York. Everywhere it went it ousted its parent game, whist. The actual first game of bridge seems to have been played at the Villa Coronio, on the Upper Bosphorus, in August, 1873. Its inventor, M. Serghiadl, a gentleman of Rumanian origin, was one of the four players on this historic occasion. None of the four now survives. Of course, the laws of the game have been altered a good deal since then. The first formal code was drawn up in the seventies by a committee of members of a Constantinople club. " How Snow I« Measured Snow Is measured in two ways, by approximate method; on a lawn or other surface, where the snow has not drifted, and a more accurate measurement, with a ghowgauge, in which the catch Is melted and weighed or measured to determine the fall The weather bureau estimates that ten inches of snow equals one Inch of rain. ' .. " . * How Old Pottery Really la i Proof of its great antiquity is found In the fact that gracefully formed fictile ware was produced in Egypt be fore the potter's wheel was known, some pieces being painted by hand Over 7,000 years before Christ clay vessels were covered with hard glass glaze. How Par Camel Goes Without tMrtk When crossing the desert, camel* are expected to qanjy their loads 2.ri miles a day for three days without drinking. The fleeter breeds carry their ridef and a bag of water 50 miles a day for Ave days without drinking. •' ' • Perspicacity I tells my troubles," at|d tTncfe F.ben, "I tries to be polite enough to talk fast so as not to keep the other fellow waitln' too long for a disnce to tell hla*n.M St.rt of 1849 "Ru.b" The gold rush of California in tb« year 1849 gave the world a new flood of gold. The nugget that started the California gold rush Is In'the Smithsoniao institute. MILLIONS OF PORK CONSUMERS HOLG ATTORNEY 'A, .v-' LOST ADVISES APPLICAlTtti % Hog raisers -of McHenry county and the rest of the United States have lost the equivalent of 3% million consumers of pork and nearly 21 million consumers of lard simply as the result of the sharp slump in exports of pork and pork products since 1929, according to a-report which Farm Adviser W. A. Herringtan has just received from the extension service of the College of Agiculture, University of Illinois. This drying up of the export market, coupled with a decline of 11 million in the number of horses and mules in the United States, reduced consumer income and other causes, has made measures like the government's corn-hog program necessary if production is to be adjusted to demand and the purchasing power of millions of corn and hog farmers restored, it was pointed out. \ "For a brief period after the World War American exports of pork and pork products to Europe held up so well as to\£osJ«r-faIse hopes that; rising hog production in this country could profitably take up1 the com that was being released through declines in numbers of horses and mules. The total exports of hog products averaged more .than 1% billion pounds up to 1924. In 1923, the best post-war export year for the United States, a total of more than 2 billion pounds of pork and lard were shipped abroad. "After 1923, however, American exports of hog products began to decline European farmers, especially those of Germany and Denmark resumed pork production. Continental hog producing countries, such as Denmark, increased their shipments to the United States' largest customer for pork and lard. Denmark was able to do this because her farmers increased their hog production nearly fivefold following the war. As German hog farmers raised their production level, Germany the second largest customer, also need less hog products from the United States. "After 1930 the difficulty grew worse. Tariffs and quotas restricting h^or-product importations were raised sharply in several countries. Germany for example, successively increased hlsr tariff against lard importation until now it is nearly $15.50 a hundweight. The United Kingdom reduced the import quota of pork allowed the United States after September 20 1933. "The industrial depression in the leading industrial nations of Europe al?o has had marked effects on demand for American agricultural products. "These changes abroad explain why in 1930 the United States exports of pork and lard fell below a billion pounds for the first time in sixteen years and have Continued to decline since. Exports of pork and lard in BOMB OWNERS* ,LOA2t CO*f. . Washington . . , „ ;'\:',^iplii»ofa 'Agem* , . * McHenry County Office \ * . * ... January 9, 1984. To The McHenry Plaindealer: ^ I have been asked repeatedly wheth~ . er there is anything that individuals can do to speed the making of loan*, by the Home Owner's Lpab,, Corpora* V tion. There is very little that they ' can do. However, it will be of niaterw ial assistance if those applicants who* , have not already done so will eithef ' call at the office and leave their name#: > and the numbers of their applications or else send me a card or letter giving me that information. A great deal of the dleay in making* loans i® due to the fact that applications are filed with the CorporatioiV^ whieh are not complete or which ar^, -- incorrectly made out. We are trying" r to eliminate this factor in MeHenrsj^' County by offering to htelp applicant:* in making their applications., A nyon<f ;- ^ who calls at the office in the Unitecj^>!v;: State Bank will receive blanks an'l' whatever aid they may need to make a good clear application. i I am also anxious to aid those ap?' plicants who have not been able tat secure the consent of their mortgagees to accept the bonds of the Corporation in payment of the mortgagor. indebtedness. In mos« cases this refusal is due to some sort of misunderstanding which can be cleared up With little difficulty. Any difficulties of whatever nature pertaining to the Home Owners' Loarr Corporation, or any omission in the services supposed' to be performed by the Corporation should be called! to» my attention. There has been a great deal of new detail work to be done in Chicago due to the removal of William G. Donne as State Manager and the subsequent installation of Henry G. Zander as his successor. This has up-J set th© whole program throughout the state and is unavoidable. The Chicago office under the capable direction of Mr. Zandier and Mr. McNeil (special agent of the National Office)1 is rapidly working its way out of th» maze into which it had drifted. I do not want local people to feel that I am in any way responsible for* the delay. Since assuming the duties; of my office I have tried hard to bei • of service and feel that it is throughno fault of mine that several dozen loans have not been closed. WALTER F. KELLEY,-Co; Atfc'y. • . ' 1932 were the smallest in fifty years.. They took less than 6 per cent of the country's total production, whereas the average annual exportation in the« period 1910-1914 was 12 per cent of the total. In the period 1928.1924 the proportion was 16 per cent." DEL MONTE SLICED OR CRUSHED, Pineapple DEL MONTE SLICED OR HALVED Peaches • DEL MONTE FANCY Spinach DEL MONTE BARTLETT Pears • • DEL MONTE SLICED OR CRUSHED PINEAPPLE . 3 cans1 25c NO. ZH NO. 1 CAN DEL MONTE ASPARAGUS TIPS 10fr?z-•. 1 lc DEL MONTE FANCY CROSBY CORN . : 2 2?nI25C 2 NO. 2 OQr CANS *yC DEL MONTE SUGAR PEAS . . DEL MONTE ROYAL ANNE CHERRIES * 2 22ns 25C DEL MONTE TOMATOES , I £&! 25c DEL MONTE FRUITS s;25> 2 CANS 29C UNEEOA BAKERS BROWN EDGE WAFERS . 2 doz. 15c V DEL MONTE SEEDED OR SEEDLESS RAISINS 3 ss 25c DEL MONTE Tomato Sauce 8-OZ. CAN 5c Grandmother's new large sliced white BREAD . . *ooz. loaf 7c Grandmother's Sliced White Bread.... 12-oz. loaf 5-c Grandmother's Prune Bread 16-oz. loaf 10c Sparkle Gelatin Dessert, all flavors, 4 pkgs. 19c Kre Mel Dessert B pkgs. 10c Campbell Pork and Beans, No. 1 cut 2 for 11c Iona Peaches, sliced or halves, No. 2Vi can 2 for 29c Candy Bars, all 5c bars , 3 for 10c Fresh Baked Graham or Soda Crackers ._...2.-lb. box 21c Brooms, each . 29c Popcorn, bulk, lb. L. -- l~5c E. & 0. Bacon, whole or half slab, lb. 15c R. & 0. Pure Pork Sawsage ™....14b. pkg. 10c Fels Naphtha Soap .. ..-...10 bars 48c PRODUCE SPECIALS Florida Oranges, med. size, dozen Michigan Bu. Jonathan Apples Fresh Spinach , :...... Texas New Cabbage •. Hubbard Squash _l»c --.....4 lbs. 23c lbs. 19c lb. 5c 3 lbs. 5c k,,'. a a i* i ooi» s roit i:s 9

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