McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Sep 1935, p. 3

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-- v ' " ^ T- - T* ~T^) McHBNRY PLAINDEALE* »*. .• - - >" •'. • •< - Thursday, September, 26,1931 B . GOING BACK 38 YEARS St. Paul, Sept. 12, 1935. Today I'm going back 38 "light + years" and take a look at the good f Old town. We are all more interested , fn ourselves than in anyone else, so I'm going to look up me, myself. I have a very powerful telescope. , Wait a moment until I' get it adjust- ,*;'--'jfcd just right. There I have it! Sure K is a splendid view. I know about where to find myself. It will be down around the Colby building, next to Mat Engeln, < '-(good old "Flint Maddas.") Yes, "*• -there I am sitting on the fence, idly f , jvatching "Miz" Engeln as he leans v against the corner of his father's v'^aaloon.' ; Mrs. Gates is locking Wilson inside • 1 while she goes uptown. Here, you r%;vtake a look at her. See her? Chin • up. Severe looking, and suspicious, well she may be..'. / \ As Mrs. Gates gets out of sight, V, *,"'*'Miz" pushes himself away frorii the '-r\ Vail, produces a key, unlocks Mrs. '^Gates' rear door, and lets Wilson out, " :#ays something, to him, and then goes back tc lean against the corner. Ed Lawles is approaching. See? Black suit, red neck tie, black hat with a G. A. R. band around it, dark dyes, Ifhin featured and wajks as ' though something is wrong with his ' legs. (Long" John Thelen is ap,r _ lproaching with a shotgun on his Shoulder. .A fat fellow, named Mag- ..ihussen, comes into view. Then Joe Holly. Here comes "Sox" and "Devis" Joe Engeln. Some strangers are passing by. The group closes in. "Sox" points up into the air. Long Johpf points . the gun in the same direction. The Strangers "break their necks" to see : what' the excitement is all about,l and-- ;; . The wags are made happy. While: you all were looking through the telescope, I on the fence, took a picture of the scene. Want to see-it? Maybe the Plaindealer would reproduce" if, if the "Old Timers'" pep Up, and write in their appreciation, Jind m&ke this column the best in the good old U. S. A. ' You keep gazing as I Am going to the postoffice, to get the 10 a. m. mail. Wait a moment, I hear singing. It's Mrs. Woodburn. Aich, but old soprano; Listen--? ' "He flew thru the air, With the greatest of ease*. This daring young man, • • On the flying trapeze." The ycice eomes from theeottage just north of the Riversidej and is one of the oldest buildings in town. ^ John I. Story is sitting in aA arm chair on his hotel veranda smoking a good five cent cigar. Look, Simon Stoffel is going over to see John I. Insurance, of course, Smd some short but friendly talk. Our •yahoo, that's me, short cuts across the vacant lot up onto the plaform in front of Julia Storey's Drug Store. Have you ever smelled a drug store that smelled so druggy? Across the road is the Kelter block. Part of it is occupied by a baker, who wants to ^alk to someone about his going to the Klondike. He hails the "yahoo," who crosses the street, and sits down beside him, and idly watches Mrs. Mat Niesen pushing a baby buggy up the streets She stojwsjn front of the drug store, leaves ttt£4^fcgy outside, and enters. Suddenly the*"baby carriage starts to roll along the platform. A washout at its east end full of rocks. A flash, and the baby is saved, just a*, the buggy tips over the edge bf the platform. Didn't know that, did you Mrs. Niesen?- Well, you are seeing it now. Let's go into the drug store and see Miss Storey, John I's sister. Want to, look around a bit? There is a quantity of Sweet Caporal cigarettes. Kickapoo Indian remedies. Lydia Pinkham's stuff, etc. / "Anything you want today," asks Miss Storey. \ Her voice is somewhat husky. Mr. Merriman enters the store to buy « pack of cards. Remember how -he liked to play poker, and the 'rottener* the cards dealt to him, the more he laughed, and the more his belly shook. Go "Outside, and you are seeing "Put" Lamphere drive past with a dray. Good old "Put," his pretty wife and sons, Charles and Ray. But more of them later. Bill Tilton next gets our yahoo's attention. Mr. Tilton is bfazing thj front forks .to a bicycle. He is telling Will Whiting that if the frost holds off another three weeks, the corn and late potatoes will make quite a crop. (To Be Continued.) , . ' FRANK BENNETT. WASHER SALE v fmv, improved model 35 ONLY $2 Down 66 cents a week # Here is s big value. Large size porcelain tub, super-agitator that will not tangle or tear clothes, balloon wringer roils, improved safety type wringer, quiet, rubber-mounted motor. . - While they last, take advantage of special terms. Pay only 66 cents a week. Free trial if desired. Phone or call at your nearest Public Service Store today. tr iatmmtmnJ nbtr ctto, m itmturkjt priet u cksr&J ft mppUmmttt i»U < " 1d pttymnts. Tt th* Pruts f»lW i •fjd, fSLmfbJ* it Hi* <uUm «mw»«/ mddimmsl tax txprntt. {PUBLIC Snmci COMPANY 'Ttkyfeoat: flqvli) Lake 280 MCHEK'RY'S TWO BANDS . Dundee, Illinois, Sept. 21, 1935. Enjoyed reading old timers' page again, especially the one by Albert Holly. We were great pals when we were kids, also were his brother, Joe, and my brother, Frank, who now is assistant postmaster at Tuscon, Ariz. He gave Joe the surprise of his life last month when he drove into his service station and asked for a tank full of gas. Another one of our good neighbors was Mr. and Mrs. Lawless. He had a dog by the name of "Prince," who took many a licking from our old cat. He had a shrill cat call to scare the dog whenever he would venture our way. No one could imitate him but my old pal, Matus Engeln. It so happened that on- one of my frequent visits with my sister, Mrs Theo. Bethke, he died. Mrs. Lawless came over to Bethke's to ask if I wouldn't watch with Matus that night, and it was the first time he ever spoke to me. Everything used to be by signs However, at promptly midnight, on our rounds to view the remains, Matus let out that (Yeow) call and I vas surprised old man Lawless didn't rise up in his coffin. Albert touched on bands, you remember when we had two, the Ice Cream Band, as we boys called "them, and the Beer Band, led by Cal Curtis. My brother, Lew, who, by the way died this spring at Pasadena, Cal., played with the Ice Cseam outfit until Bill Barbian and the rest of the boys kidded him so much he quit them cold and joined the Beer Band. . Remember when Matus Engeln used to parade the old town with his mother's wash boiler as a drum and four empty shotgun shells on one hand and a potato masher in the other, and how he could drum. Hoping this and last week's letter will admit me as a member to the Old Timers' Club, I remain, *Yours, C. F. (SCOOPUM) BLOCK. LILT T-AlCtt Uncommon Sense *] SPRING GROVE John Blake ©. Bell Syndicate --WNU Service. A card and bunco party was held in the Jewel Tower Tuesday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. B. Pankonen, Mrs. G. Wegener, Mrs F. Sharffe, Mrs. N. Abjin and Mrs. W. Swanson. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Miller of Cicero spent the vfeekend at Lily Lake. Weekend guests at the home of Mrs. Mae Budil were Mr. and Mrs. Ted Budil. A party was held in McHenry at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weber in honor of the birthday anniversary of their son, George. About 40 people were present from Lily Lake and games, dancing and music was enjoyed. A midnight lunch was served. B^ll Pankonen spent a week at his home at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Swanson of Chicago spent the weekend at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Swanson and Eleanore Wegener jrere visitors in the Fred Dosch home Friday evening- Visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Fast Tuesday evening were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pankonen and Mrs. Fred Mock. Mr. ana Mrs. C. Bloom spent the weekend at their home at Lily Lake. Mrs. Edward Wiesbaum has returned home after spending a. week lit Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. John Tysler and Bon, George, and Mrs. Clara Winter spent the weekend at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Daly and granddaughter, Genevieve Daw, motored to Fon du Lac, St. Peter ,and then to Oshkosh, Wis., over the weekend. Two brothers,. Charles and Thomas Vigorito, are expected to be opposing candidates fcr mayor of Pater* sea, J. ia November. , - From the time of your early childhood you are always engaged In some &lud of a eompQtl- Competition j u you have brothers and sisters, you learn early to compete with them for things that you want As you grow older, you begin to compete for a job In life. After that, If it 1s a good job, you have to compete with others in order to hold it Now if you are going to get whit you want out of existence you have got to work against others. Many of these "others" are people you never hare seen, and never Will see. But they are trying to do what you want to "do, which is to gain some of the prizes of existence. " . • • '» Thomas A. Edison was not the only man who was thinking about the new unseen magic fluid called electricity after men found out that there wfcs such a thing. "V '• v»'-' But he was 'the first man to realise its futurfe possibilities, and to. experiment with them. :'S The Wright brothers Were not the first people to believe that flight was possible. Many men had done that. Professor Langley built a plane long before they did. He would have flown It If the gusoline engine had been perfected in his day. To Ishow how right he was in his belief, after his death other aeronauts took his plane, equipped It with a gasoline motor and flew It. * Today men in America, in England, In France and many, other countries are all working to develop machinery of all sorts, and from time to time the announcement coihes through the newspapers that one of them has succeeded. Remember as you work at- your Job that while you are doing it, other people whom you have never known, and whose existence you never have suspected. Are-dolng much the same thing, and are matching their wits against yours. If life were not organized in that way there would be very little progress. It is likely that we would be still rolling around in ox carts, or sailing in junks as many of the Chinese do still. • • It is this battle, this competition thai puts men on their metal and enables them eventually to do things of the greatest importance. A nation of back slappers belonging to a mutual admiration society would not be of any value to the world. • * • I know it Is fashionable to sneer at the "speakies." But, since there is we, . . „ »o way to put an Speakies en<1 t0 ^em--»nd oughtn't to be--why not make,the most of them? It Is true that some of them are cheap melodrama. ~ But even In these, people who would otherwise lead very drab lives, And real enjoyment. And to the thousands of people who live in little country towns, where the' chief occupation used to be to go down to the depot and See the train come In. they have been a positive blessing. Th« people of a back woods town no longer gape at high buildings when they come to a city. They have seen them in the "speakies." They have seen important men and women from many parts of the world, and moreover they have heard them talk. They hare had an opportunity to see the world's best plays, which sre often staged with an elaborateness and a fidelity to truth that would not be possible In the ordinary three or four-act drama. • • • The kind of person called "hick" has ceased to exist since the films were made to talk. -- - -- I admit that some of the films are stupid and some of them are bad, but just the same they are, next to the newspapers, a fine means of promoting general knowledge, not only of one's own country but of practically all the countries In the world. I, who in the course of my life had only seen one iceberg, saw at least a hundred of them on the screen. i»" I have seen European capitals and 'Africa's Burning Sands" and the Russian steppes and the pyramids in Egypt. I have seen the Amazon and the Volga, and the Tower of London, and the Place de Bastille in Paris. With the exception of the two latter I would have bad no Idea of the ap pearance of any of these. - • • » / • 1 ' . For the people who live In the lonely forests and on the wide plains the "speakies" are a blessing. Some of the melodrama la them might be easily eliminated. Some of the sexy ones could be cleaned up without doing any bara. But at a whole they have tww a groat benefit, and will become mora uteftd mud mora valuable to tha people of tha world at time takes itt way. As for a dangerous effect upon children, forget it Children are children, and the in . fluence of anything does not materially change their lives. < f Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Freund and children attended the wedding of Mrs. Freund 8 brother, Albert Pepping, Jr., to Miss Lucille Zubeck at St. Thomas church, Crystal Lake Tuesday morning. , Miss yeeda Schmeltzer, Rockford, visited in the home of her brother, A1 Schmeltzer, this week. Mr. iand Mrs. Anton May and Martin May motored to Michigan Tuesday to spend a few days in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Sheets. Mr. and Mrs. Frank • May entertained members of their club .Tuesday evening. Six couples were present to enjoy the evening which waa spent at five hundred and several prizes were awarded to those achieving high scores. A party of friends gathered at the home of Mrs. James Oxtoby Thursday to enjoy an afternoon: of cards. Three tables of five hundred were in play and several prises were given. A lovely lunch was served by the guests to complete the party. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Berthing enjoyed the game between the Cubs and the Giants at Wrigley Field last 'Thursday.- . John Sanders was .confined to • his bed last week with ah attack, of appendicitis. ' The ushers" of St. Peter's church met at the home of Anton Meyers Thursday evening. Following the meeting lunch was served and cards were enjoyed. Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern visited Robert Nimsgern at St. Therese's hospital, .Watfkefcan, Friday night, where he has been for the past two weeks due to a nervous breakdown. Mr. and Mrs. John Hay and three children spent a few days last week with Mrs. Hay's mother at Madison, Wisconsin. Miss Lucille May has accepted a position in Wilmette. At the games played by the softball league on Thursday night a large turnout saw Spring Grove beat Johnsburg to the tune of 6 to 2 in a game which was a ba^tlr all the way with both teams fighting for first place. Our tfeam continues to hold the lead having lost but two games. On Friday night a^teani of Freunds came up from McHenry to play the town team in a game that turned out to be a ^slugging match. The town' team was the victor by a score of 13 to 12. , The many friends of MarHTh^^ung. Green Bay, Wis., will be grievetPto hear that he is seriously ill following an operation. . Misses Lucille and Betty Weber of McHenry spent the weekend at the home of their uncle^Charles Freund. Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern and sons visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Schumacher at Pell Lake, Wis., one day last week. . Martin May has returned to Highland Park to resume his duties there having enjoyed a vacation with his parents the past two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Sweet and Mr. and Mrs. Reed Carr spent a pleasant day with friends at Irene,, 111., Sunday. Mrs. John Wagner entertained friends from Chicago Sunday. A nice crowd attended the card party held at St. Peter's hall Sunday evening. Mrs. Joseph Berthing was the lucky winner of the grand prize. • Six Live Mice Slow Down Hii Motor Car Turners Falls, Mass.--A stranger drove his car into a local garage and told the attendant that sometimes it would run extremely well and at other times it would not start at all. The garage man tok the car out for a short run and found that the man was right. Investigation disclosed that the fuel line was clogged. When the line was taken apart six live mice Jumped out and ran away. "DREAM BABY" HEIR , TO BRITISH TITLE Daatli of Grandfather Makes Him Lord Ampthill. London.--A thirteen-year-old; "dream baby," whose birthright was established after a sensational four-year battle costing $200,000, became heir to the barony of Ampthill. The death of his grandfather. Lord Ampthill, former viceroy of India, of pneumonia, put the boy, Geoffrey Rus sell, next In line for the title. The new Lord Ampthill, John Hugh Russell, whose efforts to divorce Mrs. ChriStabel RuSsell were frustrated by the house of lords, now faces divorce action brought by Lady Ampthill. The case is scheduled for hearing this term, and Lord Ampthill Is not defending It. Geoffrey won the title of "dream baby" because Russell, In his divorce actlgn, Insisted that he had never had marital relations with his wife. « His counsel told the court that Mrs. Russell had been Informed by a fortune teller that she was going to become a mother.. "It must be a miracle," she was quoted as saying. i In her defense Mrs„ Russell testified she "had conceived the child In a dream," and the house of lords supported the mother's version, and denied Russell's plea. Then followed four years of trials and legal moves* Suddenly the house of lords called a halt tu the proceedings, reputedly at the behest of King George, who in turn was rumored to have been persuaded in the move by Queen Mary. The late Lord Ampthill was sixty-six years old. His widow Is lady-ln-wait Ing to Queen Mary, * HOW LONG WILL CONSUMER BUYING POWER HOLD UP? Washington, Sep*. 24--According to an editorial in a recent issue of the Oskaloosa (Iowa) Herald, extension economists at Iowa State College state that the question about which farmers ^ are most concerned is not how long, will farm prices continue to go up and be maintained, but "how long will consumer buying power hold up?" That question is bothering not only the farmers, but also the city folk. The latest bulletin issued by the United States Bureau of L*bor Statistics, upon the retail prices of food.for the two weeks ending August 27, 1935, compares those prices with prices a year ago, two years ago, and five years ago. Retail priced for all foods for the tw6 weeks ending August 27, 1935, were 14.9 per cent higher than tha two weeiks ending August 29, 1933. The .price of the cereal group is 8.2 per cent higher than two years ago. White bread is 8 per jpent higher; corn meal, 36.8 per cent; rice 29*2 per cent, and rolled oats, 20.3 per Cent higher than two years ago. Meats are 53 per cent higher than in August, 1933. The greatest in crease has been in pork and pure lard. Bacon is 94.9 per cent higher; ham, 59.5 per cent; pork chops, 86.3 per cent, and lard, '122.4 per cent. Up until recently, pork has been the food of the poor man. It has'been universally true in this country that during previous periods of depression the consumption of^pork materially increased, while that of beef, particularly the better cuts, decreased. Under the "New Deal," however, while^ pork chops have increased 86.3 per'! cent, sirloin steak has increased only; 36 per cent. k Fruits and vegetables, which, up to/ now, have not come under the control of the AAA and other New Deal agencies for bringing about "more abundant life," have decreased nearly V - )- 30 per cent in price since August,. 1933. There is something a little ironical • about the fact that there has been a: larger increase in food prices in the ^ agricultural sections than in the industrial sections. The average in-L crease in all foods since August, 1933, is 14.9 per cent. The New England and Middle Atlantic districts,- era ' bracing all the United States east of' the Alleghany Mountains, show an increase in food prices below the aver- .• age for the entire country. However,, in the Central states, particularly ^ ^ Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, the Dakot&s, Iowa and Kansas, the in- - crease in price of food over August,, V 1933, has been 18.6 per cent. This ; • - V"* !•£« ;- is the section of the country which ' "•r" the Agricultural Adjustment Act is /' supposed to benefit the most. , The city Council of Ashland, Wis., has cracked down on all gambling* schemes, including • bingh wmm . jtwi '... church quilt raffles. t A 500-foot sea wall just completed ' k \ \ near Youngstown, O., sank beneath the waters of Lake Milton aod entirely disappeared. ; , v Richard P. Turner of Jfiiinson City, Tenn , has sued for divorce, charging that his wife left him 23 years ago to visit relatives and has not returned. Executioner Is Hidden by Secrecy in Prison Columbus. Ohio.--Ohio has no official executioner, as have many states where the death penalty prevails. Warden J. C. Woodward selects three of his guards to throw switches when a person is to be executed at the penitentiary." Only one of the switches Is connected to the chair. In this way the guard* do not know who threw the switch that sent the charge through the prisoner's body. In underworld parlance a "C" note today covert the state's expense of an execution. That 1100 Is divided four ways. Three executioners split $50 three ways and the remaining $80 Is for burial expenses. Central Garage Phone 200<J . fred J. Smith, Prop. Johnsburg The best equipped garage in Northern Illinois, W© can take care of any kind of an automotive repair job and guarantee our work, j Standard Service Station 24-Hour Towing Service : (liandy Location for Summer Residents) FRED SMITH, Prop, m JOHNSBURG Mrs. Peter Wegener and daughter of Volo spent Wednesday afternoon in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff. Leroy Meyers and Billy Gerlacb spent Saturday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Gorski and son, Kenneth, of Woodstock were callers here Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund and daughter, Nancy, of Chicago are spending a weeks' vacation in the home of Mr. and Mrs^ Stephen H. Smith. - Mr. and Mrs. Math Lay, Mr. and Mrs. John Lay of Spring Grove were callers at the home of Mrs. Stephen Schmitt Sunday afternoon* Mrs. Joe Huemann was a Woodstock caller Saturday. Mrs. Steve May, Mrs. Fred Smith and Mrs. Peter Freund spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wilkie in Chicago. Bill Smith and Leo King were Burlington callers Friday evening. * Miss Annabel Meyers is spending a week with Mr. and MVs. John Bonhen at Wilmette. Mr. and Mrs. George King and son, Junior, were Woodstock callers Wednesday. Joe Schmitt motored to Aurora Thursday. Miss Katherine Pitzen of Chicago Spent the weekend with John Pitzen. Joe Schmitt, Ben Hiller, Fred and Norbert Smith attended the ball game at the Cubs park at Chicago Thursday. T Mr. and Mrs. John Degen and daughter, Jeanette, were Woodstock callers Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Meyers were called to Racine, Wis., Wednesday by the serious illness of Mr. Meyer's brother, Ben H. Meyers. Mr. and Mrs. George Zarnstorff of Spring Grove spent Wednesday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George King. Mrs. Jacob Thiel was a Woodstock caller Saturday. Mrs. Joe Skifano of Chicago visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers Saturday evening. P*tato Facta Fifteen pounds of potatoes equal one .peck. There airs usually about three medium mature potatoes or five to eight new potatoes In s pound. Ooc»y ti«p IttS Mttfr to be engaged i* ---- laeifatpesnt occupation in the world rather than to look upsa half an boar M of ao Importance. Groggy Worker Fastens Himself Inside the Job Beachwood, N. J.--The man who gets out ofi a limb and then saws himself off into space has his twin in s carpenter in this Ocean county community. Called to s cottage to repair the crlsses and crosses of an ailing lattice work screen about the porch foundation, the carpenter reported for work slightly fortified with liquor. In his mildly befuddled state he de eided to crawl Inside and bail the loose slats. In so doing he nailed himself In. With the aid of nearby relief workers and the village fire chief, the carpenter finally was extricated. Prisoner Jams Lock anal Police Do Jail Break Reading, Pa.--Police were forced to do a little "Jail breaking" to give one of their own prisoners a hearing. ~ Turnkey Robert Mung tried In valBto open a cell door. ^ The fact that the prisoner could not be released did not prevent his hear-' ing. Officers gave him his hearing through the bars. The prisoner was found guilty and in default of fine was sentenced to Ja|i for ten days. Before he could be taken to the Berks county prison a locl£| smith was called In. Ther lock was jammed with a piece of wood. Thinks It Rope of Pearls but Finds K Has Fangf Istanbul.--A waiter in a Turkish restaurant near Saint Sophia mosque opened a drawer to get some spoons He saw what he thought was an Iml-' tation snake of false pearls. But when he put his hand In, the Imitation snake got Us fangs well Into his first floger. Cats Give .Fir* Alaraa flfcojer, Ore.--Pet cats saved h* JOhVson, eighty-four, from severe burni If not death. Johnson, deaf, noticed the cats running from room to room, •taring at the ceiling where a Are had started. Johnson and the cats cscaped, hut th» house was destroyed. Loag Lost Gam . . Portsgevllie, Mo.--Mrs. proper Ifeatte Is wearing her diamond brooch again. She found It at the cemetery, 16 years after It was losL ' M : Wreckers employed by J. W. Park* er to tear down a house in Joliet^IlU demolished one belonging to J. J Cleary by mistake. Now Cleary it suing Parker for damages. Sylvia Fruchtman and Marion Kahl, both 17, got a free sea trip from New York to Havana and re* turn as stowaways on the liner Or* iente, but were not permitted to go tha* vara - /• • . • - ' • i: - ;v': : Announcement BORDEN-WIELAND MILK, CREAM, BUTTERMILK AND OTHER DAIRY PRODUCTS ARE NOW AVAILABLE ON DAILY DELIVERY THROUGHOUT THE YEAR TO RESIDENTS OF McHENRY AND VICINITY. ^complete line of all special products, including Irradiated Vitamin D Milk, Certified Milk, Certified Vitamin D Milk, Chocolate Milk and Kozal will be han died Bulgarian Buttermilk and Acidophilus will also be available on order for people on special diets. To place an order or lor further information call-- BORDEN-WIELAND, Inc. Phone Genoa City 1 Genoa City, Wis. ' v* " MODERNIZE NOW! PAY FOR IT ON " EASY N.H.A.TERMS Our simple finance plan gives foa the privilege of making much needed repairs or r*- modeling NOW, and paying foe the job ia monthly installments out of income- Complying with sllN.H.A. regulations, it oiars • 1. Very moderate rates ^."Repayment in monthly installments ^7e will help you with the whole ImiMtag operation--advise as to what should be done, put yo® in touch with a responsible contractor, furnish materials, provide building services, GET THE MONEY. Come in today for comte information on the Finance Plan. YOU CAN DO IT BlJST With 4-SOUARE LUMBER Setter lumber as no higher co*- improved, guaranteed and id****" jted. You'U like it. • 'McHenry Lumber Co. Hwee 46 : WrtKcHMTMR.

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