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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Jun 1934, p. 7

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•>'. . v,'! . - \ Tliwridfty,Jw» ?f 19M "SV"'-* . I f /,-v „ _v:3»*^?S FLAINDBALS* ..-.4 - - ^ . <4 J , ' *V 'J «f. 7',7-ij • 't* ,: T' ;, ; <,'1, t i- ;...,* I, 1.*' £U\' - < K- * »\ Home Bureau News HOME bureau annu-al "meeting, GREENWOOD, JUNE 29 ICra. Homer Johnson, former State Home Bur^jlu Federation President, will give the main address at the annual Home Bureau meeting to be held at the Greenwood church, Friday, June 29, 10 o'clock, Standard time. A cafeteria .dinner will be served by the ladies of the ciltfreh. This is the one and only county business meeting of the County Home Bureau organization, the professional, organization of homemakers. It is hoped that all members will start planning now to attend.--Guests •re always welcome. ; *'£ANNING SEASON IS NEAR Cwi more fruit, vegetables and food products in general, might rightfully be used as a slogan for thrifty homemakers- For the benefit of homemakers who have had problems in canning or care to learn how to can the easiest apd best way, Miss Gienna Henderson, will can either strawberries or cherries and >>^ans or peas at a canning demonstration to be held at the Union Town Hall Monday after* noon, June 11, 1:30 Standard tiow. The public is invited. / - *, STUDY OF HOUSEHOLD ' ' LINENS • .v • :.y ' < Ma83 Isabelle Hitchcock will" train two local leaders from each unit to* give the regular July Home Bureau lesson on the Buying of Household Linens, on Tuesday and Wednesday. June X2 and 13. Miss Hitchcock will prive the lesson in Greenwood on Tuesday a^nd Marengo on Wednesday. This is a PQrt of the regular program of the Home Bureau and anyone interested in knowing more about wKat to look for in the Buying of Household Linens should attend the Home Bureau Unit meeting nearest them in July. This is one way to prepare fbr the July and August linen sales. :&• - CLUB GIRLS ON TO' Kiss Helen Harrison of the Hitfgwood Sunshine girls club will play the cornet in the All-State Club orchestra at the Junior 'Club Tour on Friday, June 8. Helen has been,a club member for six years and was chosen county1 champion for the club year 1934 and she has all expenses paid to the tout by the County Home Bureau which is tire award for the county champion each year. * Other girls attending the tour are three from the White Oaks Club, Sharon, one from the Big Foot Prairie Club, two from the Lawrence Live Wires and Miss Ruth McComb the leader, and Gladys Howe, another member of thej Ringwood Sunshine Girls. | The girls wiu drive down Wednesday morning ^nd return Friday afternoo: Fag* -w§-~ \wH-: CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Ancient and Modern Necromancy," •lias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced," was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, June 8. The Golden Text was, "Oh let the wickedness of the wicked come rto an end; but establish the just: for the righteous God trieth the hearts and reins" (Psalms 7:9)^_ Among the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible1: "For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing.even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints'and marrow, and is a dlscerner of the thoughts and /intents of the heart" (Hebrews ,4 ;12); The Lesson-Sermon also Included the fqilowing passages from the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health withiKey to th* Scriptures," by Mary Baker Eddy: "All we correctly know of Spirit comes from God, divine Principle, and is learned through Christ and Christian Science. If this Science has ,been thoroughly learned and properly digested, we caijfknow the truth more accurately than the astronomer can read the stars or calculate an eclipse. This Mindreading ts the opposite of clairvoy-. knee, It is the 'illumination of the : Spiritual understanding which demonstrates the ea pa city of Soul, not ,<^f material sense" (p. 84). » t jonstipatlon I If constipation causes you Gas, Indigestion, Headaches. Bad Sleep, Pimply Skin, get relief with A1 ough action, yet gent AD L E R I K A Thomas P. Bolder, Druggist In Ringwood fey S.W.Brown,'I>ruggi8t Aft of Land Surface* The land surfaces of North America -are older, more prominent, and more J!2&rfslve than those of Europe; and "Tand surfaces of Africa are older than either. ^ Diamond Hitch A diamond hitch Is a methllt'llHill* enlng the load on a pack animal In which the ro\>e is secured by a cinch and crosses so as to leave a diamondshaped snflf*e on ton M'HENRY COUNTY MUSIC FESTIVAL TO BE HELD JUNE 15 Friday evening, June 1&, at eight o'clock, Standard time, the grand festival of music will be held at Woodstock opera house. The chorus will consist^ of ', fout groups of Home Bureau women from different parts of the county. Much study and practice has been put into this work under the direction of Dorothy Young Smith of Algonquin. This program will show the co-operative work that our communities a doing under the C. W. E. S. projects. One feature of much interest will be an original operetta, composed and presented by the young people of Rinp-wood and vicinity. There will be folk dancing and other features to be announced later. A complete program will, be. published' next week. In the meantime plan to enjoy the fine work of this group of women and young people ir our county on June 15.. ...Nash Dealers Everywhere are Giving a MILLION DEMONSTRATIONSUt3o4a^f C. , tho very1 beginning of Nash Motor*, , Nash said, "I will never build a cheap motor car." ® "Today-Rafter having built more than a niillion fine cars upholding that pledge of quality--C. W. Nash again says, "I will never build a cheap motor car." The Nask -policy continues to be... Quality first, last and all the timer ' To celebrate the building of a million cars--to reveal the , auality attained in Nash and the new LaFayette--Nash aealers everywhere are demonstrating these cars to » , million people in 30 days! A million revelations of Nash Twin Ignition power and r the "jeweled movemert" smoothness of LaFayette. . ...A million demonstrations of superior comfort... of a real , improvement in clear-vision ventilation... of easy handling.. .of safe contrpl... of results that verify the very latest in engineering and the : ' best of both quality and workmanship. We, invite yoa to drive eithe^a Nash or a LaFayette, or both. Learn first-hand what it means to an automobile when a manufacturer- carries ouf a life-long quality policy to die letter, and to the tiniest detail. NASH 4-DOOR SEDAN *775 f. o. tt. factory $906 DELIVERED READY TO DRIVE Jhulividually-SprMng Propt VTheels Optional TWIN IGNITION TIUBJK-RUD WASH Big Six, 116-inch Wh--lbarn. 88It. P. . Z . , $775 to $865 JLdTancod Eight, 121-lMah Wh--lbam*, 100H.P. . , • « IJQ65 to $11-4S _ SLmbammador Eight, 133-inch Whrnmlbamm. 123 H P. . . . $1575 Ambassador Eight, 142-iBch Wb--lba--. 125 H. P. . > j. "p2820 to S2035 ihw Nosh-Built LaFayttt*, Piam Car of Lowest Prte* PUM *595 to *695 . ' (AUpi»OML o. l>.!«cto«rMbfMttrf(&aa««wltkMtaattc«. Sp»ci«l tquipm«nt Kxtr*.) . ^ B. H. Tel 185 SALES SM> 90-K ^earl St MOVABLI: BROODER « BETTER THAN HEN Affords Minimum of Labor, . Cost, Mortality. " By 1L E. Cray. Poultry Specialist, Ohio Stkt* CniverWty.--WNU Servlc#. .A jpbvable Orooder house large enough to house 350 to 400 chicks at a time, small enough to be moved easily, and cheap enough to be within the means of any poultrytaan, has proved its superiority over the hen for the average farmer as a means of brooding chicks with a minimum of labor cost, land mortality. Success In raising chicks with the brooder 4stove depends to a large extent on the kind of house In which Jt Is used. Th^ Arouse described is 12 feet square, ls\ large enough to permit good ventilation, and ,aiso to allow the chicks room to get away from the stove-and into cooler air. •, ,f - Succle^ In aepends on raising strong, vigorous pullets. This can best be accomplished either by mpvfng the chicks to fresh ground where there Is an abundance of green f€<ed, or by raising the chicks in strict confinement. I The brooder house cannot be moved uhless.lt is portable, but a portable brooder house cjan be used for confinement brooding. The. hpus,e, described has been designed for a brooder house, but can easily be changed into a laying house to accommodate about 85 birds. Ferehes and dropping boards are all that need be added to change the house into * laying house. • ; v SThc SOY BEANS WILL NOT FLAVOR MILK No Undesirable Effects Are . Found in Illinois Test Sunlight Puts Vitamin ' • D Content in Egg Yolk The world lias milk "from contented cows; sqme day it may have eggs,from Irradiated hens. That seems possible from an announcement hy the Department of Agriculture that 15 minutes' exposure of a" hen to a carbon arc lamp will increase the vitauHB'D content of her eggs. There are relatively few potent natural sources of vitamin D, and egg yolk is one- of the most valuable of these. ' • The studies of the department Indicated the diet of the hen and the amount of sunlight she receives during the laying period make-considerable, difference in the vitamin content of the egg yolk. . ' tit was determined1 that the vitamin, which in human food promotes the -««ssimllation of calcium and phosphorus and thus aids the development of bones and teeth, can be increased In the egg by feeding the hen cod liver oil or by exposure to natural or artlflcial suiilight. t Distinguishing Sex Experience Is the great teacher In distinguishing the sex of young chickens. This is comparatively easy with Leghorns and other noQslttlng breeds. At six weeks of age the cockerels of such breeds will begin to show cotljba and wattles, while the pullets will im backward in head points, but deveK oped In talis. In heavy breeds deter-* mlnatlon lsi jnom_dl(ficult, but the following method Is said to be successful irf most cases: Pluck a few feathers (pat grow from the saddle abound the tail1. If pointed, a cockerel Is denoted, authorities say, but If round at the point, a pullet will be found. It Is asserted by many that the best way to tell the sex of young ducklings Is by their voices. Young ducks {females) will give loud quacks, but drakes (males) will etqlt a hoarse croak.--Los Angeles Times. -{By W. B. N1?VENS, UBi.ueraitjrr^ of Illinois.) I. . Complaints that the feeding of 4oy bean hay or ground soy beans to dairy cows affected the flavors' of milk, cream, and butter to stich an extent that the products wert either not salable or their market' vglue was Urtvered, reached tlie department of bus bandry during ,the/fmst year. Tliipse complaints originated In several different counfles in state, shoivlng that the trouble was- not confined to one locality. , Experiments, therefor^, were und»^rtaken to Ignrii the cause of the trouble and; if possible, a remedy for- If. Three groups of eight each wfere fwi during six consecutive weekly periods oh rations consisting of either red clo ver hay or sojtr bean hay, and a con Centrate. mixture w ith or without ground soy beans. The ground soybeans formed from 10 to, ,25 per cent of--the mixtures. -'The milk produced was used; in studies of flavor and com position, and butter was made from the-cream V , .Neither high-quality soy bean hay nor poor quality, hioldy soy bean hay was found to have any effect upon the Havor of the milk (raw or pasteurised) skim miifc, cream, or .butter. Grounil soy beans were likewise without ef feet upon flavor. The fat content of the milk w/fs affected btft slightly, and the acidity was not changed appreci ably. Marked differences in cream volume were noted, but these seemed to be associated with individual cows. The mofft pronounced effects of the rations were upon the body of the butter. Gfound soy beans caused the body to be gummy and the con dition became worse when the pro portion of soy berths in the ration was Increased. S«y hetw- hay had a similar effect but to a fies^jlegree. There was a tendency , for .the iodine number to Increase slightly with the larger amounts of soy beans in the ration. While the effects of soy beaus upon the body <^Hhe~ butter were not serious, the scorfe of the body of this but ter was 1 to points„lo,wer thnn that of the butter produced 'by. the 'ration-without soy beans. The studios of this problem are being' continued, and it Is hoped to be able to combing some feed with soyabeans wlift-h will ovjWcome In a great measure the on 'desirable effects upon the body of the ,butter. '; ---r- -; -rrV RINGWOOD Mr. and Mrs. George Young entertained the Five Hundred cl^b at their home Thursday evening. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Ray Peters and B. T: .tier and., Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. ' Mr. and Mrs. George Young and son spent Saturday evening in the Stephen Schmidt home at McHenry. Norman- Carlso:n, 4-months-old - son of Mr. %nd Mrs. Stanley Carlson of Woodstock, passed away at his home in' Woodstock early Saturday morning, a victim of the heat. Mrs. 9®^* son was Alice Anderson, formerly of Ringwood. Burial was in the family lot in Ringwood Monday. There were thirty from here that attended church '-at' Greenwood Sunday. A pot-luck dinner, was enjoyed. Mr. and- Mrs. George Shepard and family were visitors Woodsto<ik Friday. .. , . y--: •. 1 ' - Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young called on Mrs. John Freund and baby ,at Dr; Brand's hospital in Woodstock TKuifeday. ^ - Mr. and-Mrs. George Bacon of An-, tioch vi'ere callers here Fri^is^ ' '•"Clarence Howard " of El#jn spent Saturday with his sister, Jifrs. Genevieve Dodfro, and fanjily Mr. a^d^rr^/Alec^nderso'n .and family, ifrS?"Rillah Foss apd son, Wayne, were visitors' at Woodstock Friday. y Mrs. Frank Dix and children are visiting with her parents tit Salem. Morton Romie, who hSs spent the past few weeks in Ihe Dix home, returned home with therti. ' Mr. and Mrs- James Gonw'ay of Crystal Lake were visitors' here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Foss of Richmond spent Sunday with Mrs. Rillah Foss and son^ Wayne. Mr, and Mrs. Clayton Bruce are entertaining the former's sister and brother of Rochelle. Lenard Carlsoh is enjoying a two weeks' vacation from hia duties a,t the Bowman Dairy plant. Mrs. Ray Merchant and daughters were visitors at Woodstock Friday. Mrtf. Libbie Allen of--Woodstock was a visitor "here Saturday. Mrs. Lucinda Francisco of Woodstock spent Sunday afternq&n with Mrs. Nellie Dodge. _ Mr. and Mrs. Matt^imsgdrn and, family of Spring Grove spent Sunday afternoon in the Nick Young home. Clifford Peters of Belvidere is working in the' Bowman Dairy plant thissummer. - « ^ Mrs. "Lester Olsen of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. fHmer "Olsen attended the funeral of Mrs. Mipnie Oetzel at Highland. Park Monday. , Mrs. S,, H. Beatty spent Monday in the home of her daughter/ Mrs. Chas. Frey and family, at tL»eerfield. FVed Wiedrich and son, Roy, and Frank Wiedrich attended the funeral of Mrs. Minnie Oetzel at Highland Park Monday." " Roy, Ethel, Lora and I^esiie Wiedrich spent Sunday at Walworth. Miss Dor>tl y Ca^r and Dewey Beck of Chicago spent Sunday in the Chas. Carr home. Mrs. Jennie Bacon is'visiting relatives in Elgin. . ;'A' Mrs. Fred Wiedri^fe Sj^nt Tl^^4®y at Crystal' Lake.- Mr. and Mrs. Harold^ Qdfean and daughter of Western Springs spent Decoration I>ay in the s! H. Jtekt'tyi home." •.:• • iff.* .STtSr'. Eugene',' of Chicago spent D^oratiori Day in "the George Shepard" home. . Fi-ank Wiedrich was a caller at Trevor Thursday afternoon, v Mr. and Mr?. W. O. Fisher and family and Mr. and Mr?. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Sunday <with * relatives at Huntley. . Mrs. Malissa Gould and daughter, Jane, Melvin Wagner and Louis Abendroth of Elgin and John Wolfe arid children of Woodstock spent Decoration Day at Mrs. Jennie Baton's.* -- James-Low and Sadie Campbell of Kenosha and Mrs. Leslie Allen of Hebf^ n spent Wednesday evening in the S. H. Beatty home. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Roy Wiedrich Spent Thursday in Chicago- Mrs." Ge'Orge Bacon of Antioch spent Decoration Day with her mother, Mrs. Nellie Dodge. Miss Mildred Jepson of Evanston spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson. Mr. and Mrs>. George Youtig and family spent Sunday in the Fuller Boutelle home at Lake' Geneva. Mr.-and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens Avere callersfdt Aurora Sunday afternoon. ii ••mVPm'S Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grayj* lake spent Tuesday evening here wittr the latter's parents, "Mr. and Harry Passfield. ' . Miss Edna Fisher returned^ to he|:. home in Waukeaan Thursday After visiting her mother, Mrs. 'Sara* Fisher, for the past two weeks. * Mi* and Mrs. Alex -Maytini knd soo *-~ of Wauconda spent Wediies4ay eveb*' irig at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Wagner. , ' ; ^ Mr. and Mrs. Paul' Kruppa of IJvart#^ ston visited Mr. and Mrs. Frank St*'v. George Wednesday. Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., and daogjfc ter of Wauconda called • at the hon^t*' of Mr, and Mrs. • Roy Passfield Fri« . day.. . V.rf: Mr:' and Mrs.--Chirles Miller .$$0., son "of Libert'yville spent Wednesday evening here with the latter's par^*: ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Oeffling. : • S Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hafer of Frfc- ;; montj Frank Henkel. Jr., of Waucoijfc • da spent Thursday evening with i'nd 'Mrs; Uoy$ .Fisher- Mr. and Mr?. Earl IlirQmmuscfili^vi family of McHenry visited -•Jtr./luSt^ Mrs. Frank Hirohirflus Wednesday., ; ; The Volo Cubs baseball team pla^At ed -the Gage's Lalce•Vft&ijnf Sunday the Volo diamond. Volo won by * . scored of 13 to 5. ; Mrs. Sarah Fisher spent Sunda^' with her daughter, Mrs. Leslie Davis, at Slocum's Lake. ' . "i? Mrs. Vaurasdale of Chicago is iting• hfrr'daughter, Mrs. Frank Kinfe, , Mrs. Cliarence Hiroriimus and so$ spent Tfiiirsday with her parents, Mr,. and Mrs., George Khigge, at Wat^i conda. •' ... ^' ,Mrs. Fra.ik Wilson and son, Junior," attended^; the „cotnmencerijtent exer^l ci'ses at the Wauconda Township hig^ school FViday evening. y^mwd Mrs. Kochens of Chicag) fflDent SiWiay evening with the latteSa. padents, Mr. and Mrs. Frsnk Hironinms. ' Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker aod family visited Ittchard Hayes at the Belvidere Hospital flunday. ; Mrs. Richard Dow ell and daughter spent Sunday evening at the, home qjtj, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Pavis at Slocum's Lake. i ^ Cure foriPullorum Control of pullorum disease, Or bacillary white diarrhea. In baby chicks," appears within reach of the average poultryman, as a result of pullorum testing work carried on among Mlnnesotaihatchery flocks for the last three years, according to the Dniversity of Minnesota agricultural extension division. Tests, carried on by local veterinarians, under the state live stock fcanitai^ board, detect pullorum-lnfected hens so that they may be discarded and only eggs from/the healthy henA^ufted for hatching. • -- - J} l^ultiy Notes Feed costs amount to from 60 to 70 per cent of the cost of poultry production. Cockerels should be caponized when they weigh from one and one-half to two and one-half pounds. -j- rr Too many troubles are tracked Into laying quarters to allow one to. take a chance. I^et the visitor look In, but not go In. - . Of the 6,000,000 farms In this conntry, only 22,000 have chicken, flocks numbering 1,000 or more. Roundworms infest chickens reared on the same ground year after year. Tapeworm Infestation Is spread by flies, andther result of unsanitary practice, an expert points out. Cream Producing Cows ^ Return Monthly Income When properly fed and cared for the^ cream producing cow will return a sure profitable Income each month in the year. On farms where only obe or two cash crops are grown such an In come is badly needed to meet the oper atlng expenses of the farm while the cash crops are being grown and- marketed. A good average cow when ^property fed, will produce 000 gallons of milk.annually containing 232 pounds of butterfat. This milk at 30" cerjts per gallon an average wholesale price, is worth $180. The manure from thl» cow Is worth $20 per year as a ferti llzer, making a tot&l Income of $2(K>. Where a milk market Js not available the butterfat from this cow, at 40 cents per pound, will bring $92.8<). when sold to • creamery for butter making, and the skim milk left on th farm is worth $25, as a calf, chlc|| n and pig feed. Dairy Facts t now MA TO BARGAINS For Your Pleasure ana Frofit fcOCC WHAX MONEY -J*-- OFFER NO. 1(1 M'HKNRY l'LAJNDK Country Home .. BreederGazette ^ Poultry Tribune ,KR. yewc 1 year ' v . 1 ^ y e a r . ' . V'" - - 1 year HOUSEHOLD MAGAZINE year TkLL 5 ONLY $2.30, Value OFFERNO. M-7 M 'HENRY PLAINDEALER^. Pictorial Review ^ : Shadoplay •; ... ....^. ;•--1 yeai H ?CALL 'S MAGAZINE ye* ALL 4 ONLY $2.75, ^°° Worm infestation may be suspected when the flock shows a loss of appetite, the wings start to droop, the feathers become ruffled, the flesh fades away and the bird becomes wobbly. '• AfM of PrMidtato - The oldesf President when Inaugurated was William Henry Harrison, who was sixty-eight; the youngest, Theodore Roosevelt;' who Was fortytwo, AiciMt Stmt MmimI Finding of s weather-beaten StoiM BMnnment near Lake Winnebago, Canada, Indicates thst that region may have been the scene of explorations as far back as 1861 Poor land Is scarce where cows are abundant. ' ~V * ' , . Slilp cream at least .tbi^jtlmes a week In hot weather. ' * * * . Dull knives In the ensilage; qitter Increase the power requirement about 50 per cent - ' Ha'il you ever thon^htjthat scouring of calves may be caused by a lack of scrubbing. feed pails? : - • • • Good breeding and good feeding g<> hand in hahd.r Success depends upon combination of the two." Cold drafts are yesponilWe f"r pneumonia, gargetf-^c. Ventilation should be provided without drafts. 0FFEB NO. "M4-"" M^HKNRY PLAINDEALER^ year Capper's Fanner ••1 year. Country Home 1 year Poultry Tribune ! -"V"' ' '1 year PIOTt^RlAI, REVIEW 1 year ONLY $2.40, Value, $4.00 v OFFER NO. M4: '}; M 'HENRY PLAINDEALER^ .....1 year Country Home 1 year Poultry Tribune .„ji \ - 1 year MPCALL'S MAGAZINE year ALL 4 ONLY $2.35, Value $3.75 COFFER NO. M-I: OFFER NO. V M'HENRY PL A IN DEALERl year CGtlNTRY HO^fE 2 yeare and ,^'our choice of any TWO (2) of following magazines fo^ ' ONLY $ 2 . 5 0 ^ The &fest method for one man t<> lead a bull is with a staff. T|iis np piles with equal /orce to the -and the cross bott. 1 r- ' Feed flavors enter mflfc malfih through the body of the cow and nut by absorption from the surrounding atmosphere. * • . Feed flavors and odors produced 3n milk usually show a decrease in In tensity four hours after feeding, and practically disappear-in-seven hours ! ' * '• *-• ' ' Highly flavored feeds may ?be fed Immediately after milking without s<> rlously affecting the flavor and odor j?f the milk produced at the nfr:;; milkiuf. . ' M'HENRY PL AIN D E ALER_ 1.1 year Pathiinder (52 issues) year Capper's Farmer ..... , < 1 year PICTORIAL REVIEW 1 year ALL 4 ONLY $2.50, Value $4.50 Sports Afield , Shadoplay Pictorial Review Household Magazine American Home Silver Screen Parent^ Magazine Market Growers' Journal^ Poultry Tribune ,•...... Boys'Life (Boy ScoutsJ „ American Cookery unior Home Magazine _ elineator Magazine American Fruit Grower ^ Woman's World I / ^ OFFER NO. M-5 Y M1TENRY PLAINDEALER._„.l year ^ „ Household Magazine . 't" 1- year Breeder's Gazette 1 year Country Home - 1 1 year y^dPftultry Tribune v-,. ,1 yelur f St'CALL ^ MAGAZINE year' % ALL 6 ONLY $2.50. Value *435 tf .1 year .1 year ,1 year years Ll year „1 year ;„6 month^ as 1 year 4 years , 1 year J> months 1 year 1 year years i year _6 months 1 year _6 months .2 years' ...1 year "t OFFER N6. M 6 Etude Music Magazine Hunting and Fishing ...i^ Popular Science Monthly, Breeder's Gazetto - --L. National Sportsman DON'T MISS THIS WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO OR|)ER THE BEST BIAGAZINES AT SPECIAL LOW PRICES-SEND IN YOUR ORDER TODAY M'HENRY PLAINDEALEB» McHenry, Illinois r ° Enclosed find $ t T f T Tf M'HENRY PLAINDEALBR. Woman'r World Househ^y Magazine Country Home Poultry Tribune ... year year year year PATHFINDER- (52issues)_ year ALL 6 0»LY «2.50, ValMUSO ^TATE_ for which send me t^Tnagaainee marked with an X. ' NAME',;^ TOWN R.'F, D. ^ & .j,:

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