«- The boys had some hot times fighting it oirt to enter the semi-finals of the Stenger Cup matches last Sunday but everything finally cooled off enough to discover that Don Granger and Gene Sayler, finalists in the last cup event, are still in the running' and ait least one of them is favored to go to the finals, Woodstock came from behind to hand the McHenry Softballers another defeat at Olson Playground in the County Seat Monday night. McHenry was lagging 3-1 when they put) on a spurt that netted them four runs and a 5-3 lead. Then Woodstock startfed in and, aided by McHenry errors, piled the runB up until th« final tabulation was 11-5. •: Boat races on the good old Fox are tlie order of the day again for next Sunday afternoon with the start a>nd the finish scheduled to "be between the tw0. river bridges. Spectators are warned to stay against the railings of tl»e bridges providing they choose vantage points from which to view the races. Traffic will be heavy and the chances for accidents very great unless unusual precaution is exerciseo bt the sightseers. v. *' Don Granger took Hewy V«gelrth£ easy going golfer, by a three up and two to go margin. Gene had a little tougher time with Nick Freund and had to go the entire route to get the dceision. Tom Gill pulled the big upset when he took Carl Schmitt, club champ. Carl was eratic on the second nine after * 37 on the out course. He finished with 84. Jack McCarroll continued to be a stumbling block and bested Milt Mazurek. Next Sunday it ia Granger against Gfll with Sayler meeting McCarroll. LEVnrSKY CAMP AT ROUND LA^E The popular and one .of the most tmusual camps, that of King Levinsky at Round Lake, closed Sunday when the King made his final appearance at his training camp preparatory to his bout with Joe Louis at Comiskey park, Chicago, Wednesday night. This strange camp has been divided into three parts with the ring pitched at Peg's haunted house, which as one writer said undoubtedly had plenty of spirits, but no ghosts, then Levinsky's cottage, from which reporter's have been barred, and Renehan's resort, •^hich might be termed the social headquarters. Spectators at the King's workout Sunday included his mother, and other relatives, friends and associates of the fight fraternity. Barney Ross, a golden gloves champion ip 1929 and world's welterweight ' champion, who has been summering with his parents at Shalirnar on Fox river at McHenry, was expected to watch Lewinsky's secret practice Monday. « WHY= BtJSHGASSEfeSVS, McHENBY BREWEBS The boys' are home FridHy night to play host to Poplar Grove. Monday night they travel over to the western limits of the county to engage Marengo, providing Marengo wants to play any more ball since they expressed a desire to drop from the league. Then Wednesday night, August 14th, If you have not seen a good hall game this year, make arrangements to see the "Guy Bush Gassers" in action against the highly touted McHenry Brewers of Volo. The Brewers have been playing A-l ball since the acquisition of Harold Katz, a pitcher of Northwestern University. He has been pitching marvelous ball and has carried Volo to new heighths. Perhaps you remember the "Guy Bush Gassers" when they came to McHenry in 1932 to be beaten 5-4.»in 13 innings. Each year they hfcve an equally good team. Their players are almost always absorbed each year by the minor leagues. Warps Best of Woods After Installation. The best of woods are apt to warp after installation. This is due largely to the fact that the surface Is covered with a moisture-resistance face while the back is left unprotected. When ever the unfinished surfaces are near damp plaster, stucco, concrete, brick or other tjfpes of masonry, wood will absorb dampness and expand. Inasmuch as the coatings on the finished surfaces retard moisture changes on those surfaces, unequal stresses are set up In the wood causing fct to assume an abnormal shape. The drier the wood and the more moistHre resistant the finish or coatings applied to the face surface of the wood, the greater need there Is of protecting the unfinished surfaces from dampness. The danger of woodwork warping, as a result of moisture absorption on the uufinished surfaces, can be largely eliminated by protecting the unfinished surfaces with paint that assists in preventing moisture absorption by the wood, such as a paint containing aluminum- or zinc oxide. One or two coats can be applied, depending on the moisture resistance requfredWashington • Post. • STANDING OF TEAMS Laundry Riverside Dairy Winkel's Park Sides ......... w L Pet ... 7 4 .686 7 - : .636 .... 6 6 .545 ... 2 .182 RAIN STOPS TUESDAY NIGHTS GAME WITH SCORE TIED Due to the fact that ttfe Park Sidea did not have enough men on hand to Harvard comes" to^town'for"" what i®tart the Same,.they forfeited Tuesshould be a real tussle if past.hfstory lay mght* c™test to the Laundry, means anything. Every time that H°wever- by filhnST m with men from bunch from up north tangle with Mc- iotber teams' a Jrame was staged and Henry history, is in the making, even and was called at the end of the sixth if someone has to chase someone else over the fence in order to terminate a game 'peacefully.' inning on account of rain. The score at the time was tied. The score: PARKSIDES < R PD The annual caddy tournament ig on this week with the quality of the opposition making up what it lacks in number of entrants. Eight boys entered and but four of them have played their matches but there has already been one upset. Don Granger, the lad who is burning up the club competition, has also entered the caddy tournament but met his Waterloo in Clarence Anderson, high school golf star, who sAot a 75 to take the Granger family entry. In the other match Sonny Johnson, another high A. Justen, If ........ ...0 0 ' G. Freund, lb :..w« 1 4 Tonyan, p-3b 2 • 4 3 Frett, 3b-p 1 0 Rothermel, cf 0 •4r. 3 | Gerasch, rf 1 . i 0 1 McCracken, ss »... 1 i 3 A. Freund, c 1; : 0 • 4 Granger, £tr LAUNDRY 1 .2 18 A. Schmitt, 2b 'Faschool player, took John McCormick. Schaefer, Sonny now meets the winner of the Schmitt, 1 Vale Adams - Jack Hart match while ' „ ?fr' p, "2 Anderson must meet the survivor of Freddie Meyer and Dedo Granger. McGee, cf Adams, cx. Ed Linke is reported to be coming f** Wortx, If....;, out of his recent freak accident in f Buss, rf quite good shape though he probably won't be back in tl|e regular lineup of the Senators very soon. Ed was hit in the head with a line drive so hard that the catcher caught the ball on Williams, r? „... ...1 2 3 ..1 1 1 ...87 .1 6 1 ...J.02 2 0 ...0 ' , # :• 6 .7* 0 ?1 • © ..0 o ; 0 9 14 18 Wfity "High** Hand-Shake of Fashion Leaders Is Used The vigilant eye of leaders of fashion, always ready to imitate the habit* of royalty, explains the or^rin of many peculiar customs. Not the least interesting among these are those that had their Inception in the physical dlsabiH ties of royal families, an illustration of which Is this method of shaking hands. Several years before a certain prince of Wales ascended the throne of England, he had the misfortune to be affected with boils under his right arm. As a result, In shaking hands with his friends, he was compelled to raise his right hand and elbow to the level of his chin. Society matrons, thinking it a whim of fashion, perpetuated the custom among the "smart Europe and America. uated aejta'* of Wly Bird* Stag It always has been believed tlitt « bird sings to attract its mate. There are ornithologists, however, who claim this Is a secondary use of song. Anion? those is H. E. Howard, a Britisher, who says that the primary use of a bird's song Is to warn away other males from ji. selected territory, thus avoiding much fighting that might otherwise result. Male birds will often select a "singing tree" which i* their headquarters for the area in which they wish to be unmolested by other birds of the same species. Why Colonel It "Kuruel** , The "r" sound in "colonel"' is a hold over from the Sixteenth century; when the word was spelled "coronel" and pronounced "kur-o-nel," This pronunciation was later shortened into "kurnel," which became established about 1800. "Colonel" is related to the Italian "colonelle," meaning little column, and the English spelling was. gradually changed during the Seventeenth een tury to conform more with the original. The colonel was so called because he led the little column or company at the,head of the regiment. SCORE BY INNINGS Park Sides 0 0 0 0 0 8--9 ttfe third base line and threw to sec- j Laundry 1 2 3 2 0 1 9 ond for a double play, Ed getting | Left on bases--Park Sides, 5; Launcredit for an assist on the play though *^7' Double Play--Rothermel to he was knocked flat by the impact 1 Tonyan. Bases on balls--Off Tonya* and had to be taken to the hospital. j°I off Frett, 1; off Meyer, 4. Struck _____ out by Tonyan, 0; by Frett, 3; by With Gabby Hartnett out of the j Meyer, 3. Two base hits--Tonyan, Cub lineup the boys aren't going so !A- Schmitt, J. Schmitt, Meyer, McGee. hot these days. Stevenson and O'Dea , Three base hit--Geraach; Home run may be all right as hitters but when --Granger. Umpires--G. Weber, it comes to putting the old pep into Weber. the gang it takes Gabby and no one else. Then, too, Gabby fen't hitting so bad as he is one of the Big Six with a mark of .347 at present. \ Get him back in for ttye eastern trip\und it'll make a big difference. RIVERSIDE DAIRY SHUTS OUT LAUNDRY, * TO • The Riverside Dairy team registered the season's first shut-out last Thursday evening, the victims being i the Laundry team. Green, pitching for The Boy Scouts, forty of them from the winners, allowed but two hits. McHenry troop, ^re in watcl ing the The score: Cubs perform today as guests of the] RIVERSIDE DAIRY management of the Chicago National I League Baseball club ahd the courtesy I Kent, lb ..................v...v. of Miss Margaret Donahue, the c l u b . Bacon, c secretary. Tl\e boys ought to have E. Freund, If some fun and it'll be a big red letter Green, p day in the lives of more than one cf j G. Justen, rf tha youngsters as it. will most likely j McCracken, 3b ... i *•' m B PO I 1 6 2 > a 6 .4' 2 3 1 2 0 .0 8 0 .0 ?:.-2: 4 be the first view of the big for some. SIX YEARS AGO IN LOCAL SPORTS The Union Giants trim . med Johnsburg by a 4-1 score with Bohr getting two hits. . . . for the losers. ... A crowd of 600 witnessed the game. . ... Ring wood trounced Hebron 12-5. ... The Foresters blossomed out in a naw regalia in the Fraternal league. . . . Cecil Rothermel again upset his racing boat, the same one wrth which he broke the course record last Sunday. . . . Chicago and North' Shore residents protested LAUNDRY A. Scmitt, 2b. iHess, rf [J. Scmitt, lb Meyer, 3b-p 14 . 18 o o mi, 0 -r P. Freund, p-Sb 0 Adams, c 0 G. Worts, If --.0 BUSS, Cf 0 0 PO9 © 7 1 0 4 0 0 Why M.n Can Fly Hi«k, Why men and animals exist natural ly and without discomfort in altitudes of 15,000 and even 20.000 feet while an aviator soaring to those heights finds an oxygen tankman absolute necessity is that certain chemical and physical changes take place in the body when there is a sl<iw or gradual ascent Natare permits human beings and anl mals to adapt themselves if they take it easy going up, but she rebels when they insist on speed. Queen Elizabeth MuiicjJ; Could Play the Virginfil The word harpsichord was invented because It was seen „ that the instrument had a harp-like shape, and when a keyboard was added chords could be struck on it. Virginals, spinets, and clavichords are all like the early liacpsichords, the difference being in the way the string is plucked, whether by a quill or wedges of brass. Queen Elisabeth played the virginal well, and in her day set musical fashions. Instrumental-makers, and composers were very busy in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth centuries making better instruments and writing music for them. Later harpsichords had a device for opening and shutting the lid to Increase or decrease the sound, and there was n separate keyboard with single strings to make soft sounds. All Eighteenth-century orchestras had a harpsichord, played generally by the conductor.; " ' By tjje Nlnet^nth^clhtury' the piano had arrived, for people wanted more light and shade In music, and the harpsichord could not produce tt. Curiously enough, a Spaniard wrote the best early harpsichord: music, Dom^ nico Scarlatti, whojge njusic *ouq£s firesh even tod a y,--Montreal H er aid* • • ANNUAL ICE CREAM ^ PARTY AT KARLS' Color, Luster, Shape, Determine! Pearl's Vitliie -Four factors determine the. value of a pearl---color, luster, shape atid it**, according to an authority in the Washington Star. While man^ kinds of oystfh* 8 make pearls, the kind in demand are a few only, made by mollusks possessing a special type of shell with an Inner lining of mother-of-pearl-- that is, a lining with a fine I rides cence. This same iridescence Is imparted to the pearl, giving it the rare beauty desired fci gerps. While pearl colors are largely a matter of individual taste, most people seem to prefer the'white stones. But to the true expert the pink pearl of a fine delicate tint is most desirable. Golden yellows "fcnd greenish blacks are also highly prized by connoisseurs. The.technical term for the characteristic liearly luster Is "orient." This exists in various intermediate stages between dull and bright. If a pearl has the finest orient--that is, an unusually brilliant one--it might be worth many times the value of the same-sUed pearl with inferior luster. Large-sired pearls of exceptional quality are exceedingly rare. Generally speaking, the most desirable shape Is a perfectly spherical pearl. ; • :' Tulip, the Wonder Flower For centuries the tulip has been looked upon as a wonder flower Tn many countries, but it has long been associated especially with the famous tulip fields of Holland. It has often been called "the flower that set a nation mad" 'because of the craxe for these gay but simple blossoms- which began in the Netherlands in lr>91 and reached Its highest point In 1637. During this period, when only two bulbs of the September Augustus were to be had, one was purchased for 4,000 florins, a new carriage, two horses and a complete set of harness, while the other was sold for 12 acres of land. This tulip mania reached such proportions that hundreds of families had become impoverished and the government was forced to interfere and pat an end to the gambling, in tulip bulbs. John Karls will put oh his annual party for the kids Friday afternoon when all the youngsters who come to his restaurant on Riverside Drive between 2 and 2:30 p. m., will be given, a free ice-cream cone. If this were not fps busy season Mr. Karls states that he would lika to givj» the children a more elaborate party but this treat will be all that he has time for during - the busy August days. Mr. Karls has always be«sn a friend to the kids of the community and for the past ten years has accomodated them with a bathing beach and given them the free use of his grounds even leaving his car out of the garage that the kids might have a place to dress when through swimming. Each season he has spent considerable time in cleaning up the beach and has tried to make it as pleasant as possible for the bathers wh6 crowd the place each day. The beach at the Kkris' restauifcr.t haa been practically the only beacli ^McHenry for the accomodation of the public and it ftas been much appreciated by the young people. •' Mr. Karls states that the kids have always been wiell behaved and hav<3 never damaged his property artd it is in appreciation of th> co-operation With him that he-is giving, them this treat. " The Karl3^ restaurant,' with its daily varied menu all the way from a dollar dinner to a thirty-five cent plate lunch, a hot weather special or a sandwich, prepared by a Chicago cjief and his assistant, is a very busy place these days and the genial proprietor reports that business is the best in five years. It is said that business, like everything else, is what we make it, and for the past fourteen years that Mr. Karls has been in business in McHenry he has worked hard to build customers the b«st service possible, at the Same time proving himself a friend to the people of the community ever ready to assist in any ctyte projects. . ;• PERSONALS Miss Marguerite Johnson and Eleanor Pries left Monday for two weeks at the Girl Scout camp, "Camp Hickory Hill' at Rk-e Lake, Wis. Th« former's mother, Mrs. George Johnson, took the girls to the camp. Mr. and Mrs. George Glassfprd, SrM and Mr. and Mrs. George Glasafora, Jr., and daughter of Chicago were weekend guests of Mrs. Mary Simon. The Misses Elsie and Frances Vycital with their cousins, Mary, Elsie and Adeline Masik of Racine, left Monday on a trip to the Black Hills.. They will probably be gone about two weeks. Mrs. Roy Kenny and Janet, of Lincoln Neb., are spending a few weeks with Mrs. Mary Simon. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Matson of Waukegan spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Perkins. Stanley Vycital'returned home Sunday from a few weeks visit at Washington D. C. , „ V ; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Simon and son of Chicago visited his sister, Mrs. Mary Simon, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. H^rry Lindsay; anu daughter, Janet, were Waukegan vj#. itors Monday. . • Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence McChesnsj-- and baby of Chicago are spendrng their vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Keg. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Freund and Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontz visited the Boy Scouts at Camp Rotary, Sunday. TfH local boys encamped there for a . returning home Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert /Weber speak Tuesday at Lincoln Park. ' ! Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Long of Chicago were recent guest& of Mr. aa& Mrs. "Peter Doherty. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Dwjrer aacl family of Huntley were Sunday caQdaughter, era here. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Carey, daugfl**. ter, Babara, Evelyn Justen, Mr. ami and Mrs. C. Reihansp«rger and family " expected to leave this Thursday mo vacation In ' Plaindealer Want Ads Bring results Paying for Parking - Why CO Seconds Make tfiailo v The ancient Babylonians found 00 a convenient number for use In dlvi sion, and employed It much as we do 10. The Greeks and Romans adop: ed the system of time calculation elmployed by their eastern neighbors. And because the old Babylonian astron omers bad divided their hour into minutes, and thfelr minute Into OO ac?- onds, we do the same. Why X-Rayi Are So Named X-rays were so named by the dlscov c*rer, Wilhelm Konrad Hontgen, Jn 18S>f> In mathematics the letter "X" stands for an unknown quantity. Rontgen called the new rays X-rays because he did' not understand their nature, the "X" representing that which had not yet been explained by science. They are also often called Rontgen ra^p, ; : Aatawl Ecology Ito a general way antmal ecology is a science which seeks to give some definite form to the vast number of observations which have been accumulated during the last few hundred years by field naturalists and various other people interested in wild animals. Ecology Is concerned with reducing and co-ordtnatihg vast available Information concerning habits, life histories, and numbers of the different animal#, with a view to solving some of the urgent practical problems arising ifi« a result of man's becoming civilized and interfering with 0 2 15 SCORE BY INNINGS against the noise from the unmuffled jMcffenry L'dry 0 0 0 0 0 0--0 outboard craft on Lake Michgan. . . . 1 R'v's'de Dairy 2 3 2 2 0 x--3 and the hue and cry was taken up by Left on bases--Laundry, 2; Dairy, 7; gammer residents long our own Fox. J Double Play--P. Freund to Schmitt to . * •. IA dams. Bases on balls--Off Freund, - Why Dried Plums Are Prunes The reason for the present use of the term prune is very similar to the ust of the word pork. Pork is the French name for pig, just as prune is the French name for the plum. Tlu French terms gradually came to be ap j plied to the finished food products ; rather than to the living animal or f fruit. • - •--- j Li cheat of Importance . _ Several species of lichens ara of economic Importance, yielding dyes and foodstuffs. Iceland moss is edible, yielding a nutritious jelly. Reindeer moss, is the principal food oi; the Lapr land reindeer in the winter. Archil, a violet dye, is obtained from Roccella tinctoria, Roccella fiiclformis, and Lecanoria tartarea. Litmus, also a dye-- stuff, is obtained from these lichensby exposure to the air In the presence of ammonia, potassium carbonate, etc. Oklahoma City, Ok la., Is the first <!ty In America to charge its citizens a fee for parking on the streeta The photograph shows one of the new parking meters which are being installed as rapidly as possible in the downtown section. They are placed at 20-foot Intervals along the curb and a motorist upon parking drops 5 cents in the meter which entitles him to park for the length of time designated upon the meter. This time varies In different sooes. The meters are actuated by clockwork mechanism. Practicing on Oscar Why It f* "Datcfe" Elm Dii-saie The disease of elms, (iraphium ulmi which is causing so much concern throughout the United States lias been called the Dutch elm disease not be cause it originated In Holland, but be cause Dutch plant pathologists were L the first to discover its specific fungus I cause.--Literary, Digest- Whaleboae Serve* as Teeth Whalebone (its true name being baleen) is the curious stuff that grows in place of teeth in the upper jaws of whales, writes Jeanette Mirsley in "To the North." Baleen acts as a sieve,, strains the many barrels of water gulped down by the whale as with wide open mouth ft grazes the surface of the water, protects It from swallowing anything but the myriads of small molluscs on which It lives. 4-H GIRLS TO CAMP A party of thirty 4-H club girls from the county with Mrs. Clara Sweeney, home adviser, left Monday morning for their annual camp out-! ing at Lake Zurich. Miss Helen Garvin is camp director, Mrs. Sweeney, camp manager and Florence Kimmelshoe in cha §;e of handicraft. The Ringwood girls whof went to camp are: Amy Harrison, Pearl Smith, Lucille Peet, Marian Pees, Esther Smith, Virgina Jepaon. From Spring Grove are, Alice Stewart, Ethel Ainger, Helen Stewart. Want Ads 1; off Meyer, 1. Struck out by Mey. er, 3. Two bass hits--Bacon, Green, McCracken. Vellum Vellum Is a fine parchment, Calfskin, used for expensive bindings for books' and also for written manuscripts. It Is clear white In color. Egyptians Not Caanibab Very early Egyptians were accused of cannibalism when bones In their cemeteries revealed what looked like gnawing marks, but later Investigation showed that beetles had infested the cemeteries and caused vthe damage. . : ' : •• V •• ' Why Mongoose is Barred Th#JUnlted States maintains a M*4et baa on this animal because of the havoc It caused In the Island of Jamaica when imported tber# to eee trol vermin.1 , •' Opium for the Needy Chinese cnarlty dispenses more than ecessltiea Sometimes the destitute,' starved for opium, can secure it at a j Buddhist temple. There' Is one in J Lichow In which a life-sized idol always has a handful for those who ar<j£ too poor to buy their^own.^ The supply is maintained by the wealthy citizens of the city.--Freling Foster In bonier* Weekly. Aadeat Huagariaa Manuscript During excavations In Hungary a manicure set one thousand five hundred years old, but similar to those of day. was 'discovered. Caa Depead ea Slgaa fiiroBghoujt ,jhe rural districts «f Mexico, Spanish Is so completely augmented by a sign language that if the traveler kngws these symbols he can at least make his main , wants known without having to utter a sound. "Oscar the P'.sminy" is an Important institution at tUt bu:eau of iuvesiigation of the Department of Justice In Washington, for the "G-men," and the police force students there use him as a target Some of them are here seen inspecting the "bullet holes in Oscar. Junior Champion Scatter Rugs Saturday, 46c up to $1.9^ Regular up to 12.75 . Nobby Style Shop. U, Miaatrpls af Middle Ages It Is said that the minstrels of the Middle ages were usually of questionable virtue and honor, and laws were enacted to repress th4m. They were called shadows of roving men, and under the law they were not permitted to fiaherit property, to collect debts, or to take part in Christian sacrament ... x . Mavis Freeman, winner of the 109- meter free 6tyle national Junior A. A. U. championship at the title meet held at Jones reach, L. L ing for a week's __ north woods;- . ' '. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Kinsala of Chicago arrived Wednesday night to via-,;' it his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Heiwjv Kinsala. '• ' - „ Mr. and Mrs. IL V. Powers visits#. their son at Chmp Rotary, Sunday. '• 25% Off On All Goodyear G-3 : Kelly and Mohawk Tires 5? (Limited Time Only) xl/ 2 gal. can Sinclair Oil 97c Ford and Chevrolet Batteries $3-95 up All Grades of Tractor and Motor Oils at the Lowest Price -- Compare them anywhere. Good Used Passenger Car and Truck Tires. All Sizes. p Walter J, Freund Phone 294 Road Service West McHenry a s y to S erve SUMMER FOODS That's what your A*P store features this week--a very timely sale and a moneysaver, too! HORMEL'S CHEF BOIARDI SPAGHETTI BEEF STEW SLICED BACON . 2 <4-02. CANS 29c V4-LB. PKG. IK 10« & MEAT BALLS • RAJAH RAOAMO MUCTARB, ML MTTLMR BROADCAST CORNED BEEF just heat u-°z- AND SERVE CAN CAN 17* BROADCAST SLICED DRIED BEEF, S JAM M« ANN PAGE PORK & BEANS RAJAH SALAD CA"* DRESSING t01 -fiAN CAMPBKU*! 0CAM, * IS-OK.CAMI lit 5C MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE u. |gc COFFEE BIGHT O'CLOCK 17« BUNNYFIELD FLOUR 24*4-lb. bag 81^ 49-lb. bag $1.61 GOOD LUCK OR NUCOA MARGARINE % 39c 8NIDER'S CHIU SAUCE 12-OZ. BOTTLE 17« BORDEN'S CHEESE BUFFET. EARLY AMERKiAN ANDOTHE;« J4-LB. PKG. 15* OAJUTE CLEANER PKGS. 19* 17« OVART JAM. SO* PINT JAR ArmttlxrV Dainty 8pnad( . 3 fjft SBo Libby s V*al Loaf . . . 2&3Sr23« Llbby's CooM ComW BMI l\»- 17e Lobby's Potted M*at . . 3 19o Lobby's D«vil«d Ham . 18s Lobby'• Vionna Sauaag* . 3 28o D«1 Mont* Pooch-- . . "felP 19e Manhmallow Pianut* . . uw 10a Unooda Biscuit • 9FM*>13O Unooda Bakon Ritm Crueh-- W 13o SWMUM CooldM ..... W. SBo Rajah Sandwich Sprood • 18e Morton's Salt . 2tta-18o Ivory Flak-- , . , . . . 21o College Inn Sale/ Soups 2 >4<&tSr* 81# Maghetti * k* c« Dinnw Otngr Alo . Plus Bottle Deposit Boned Chicken, 5%-ox glass 46o Eg-g Noodle Dinner, 16-oz. glass 25c Bananas, 4 lbs. Green Peas, 2 lbs. Celery, stalk Seedless Grapes, 3 lbs. GRANDMOTHER' WHJ> 24-C2 .Tito Twistsd fc* i c i:.dd your « will «Bjoy. GRANDMOTHER'S WHITE BREAD . . GRANDMOTHER'S DOUGHNUTS . GRANDMOTHER'S CINNAMON ROLLS Ic OF* Fresh Bakt Crackers, 2 lb. box P. L. Peas, CoYn and Tomatoes, 3 No. 2 cans Laying Mash, 100 lb. bag ^ ^ .. : Growing- Mash, 100 lb. bag ' V-' ':-'-.i Fine Chick Feed. 100 lb. bag -.v. . . .• Starting Mash, 100 lb. bag Scratch Grain, 100 lb. fog Bran, 100 lb. bag .. . •. • . Middlings, IQ0 lb. bag • -• •. Bulk Macar^ki, 4 lbs ' Yukon Beverages, Ass't, 2i-o* Bottles 3 for J Excel Bacon, ^ 2 lb. pkg. A&P F o o d S t o r e s M I D D L E ^ F . > T E ^ S