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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 Oct 1936, p. 5

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•Thursday, October, 8,193# McHENRY PLAINDEALE* * FT^R' * STJJJ b$sv**f; ;iauiw , ^ 4 r ^ f'l J ^ > . ST."" X /" *!?' *. * *»¥ i ' ST. JUARY'S OUTPLAY OUR MCHS AND TAKE THE HONORS, 18 TO 7 •.;;o v» f. from Woodstock came over to our town last Friday afternoon and handed our squad an 18 to 7 trimming. It was an inspired team that Coach Stuessy turned loose to outplay our Y» favorites. The Woodstock boys have Been looking forward for some time ^ 'to the'day whenShey could hand McHenry a trimming and they did a neat jcb of it last Friday. . Larry Huck had the pleasure of Scoring'the first touchdown agairtst his 0ld mates when he reached his long arrtis out to take a pass, and cross the . jgoal line. St. Mary's scored again on a liri®, ; buck by Wickham to lead 12 to 0. McHenry came to life in the second jjuarter when the speedy Frisby wrapped his arms around a pass and rac- >.ed about 75 yards for a touchdown. The extra point was scored on a pass l>lay and the half ended with a 12 to 7 score. f , L d c a l f a n s had h i g h h o p e s t h a t McHenry team wotild snap into • j>: r action during the second half, but Iptopes dimmed when Dittburner took a '\.V|jjass just beyond mid-field and circled . ,;.;i(cHeni-y's right end for another touchdown. This boy Dittburner real- - ly showed some speed on his little '>.-jaunt. • •" "Bud!' Miller threw passes all ovei? • #><. lot during the last quarter, but • • was unable to connect with his receivers. The McHenry boys failed to protect their passer and he was continually crowded by those two high class ehdmen, Huck and Dittburner. Although the McHenry boys did pot show the brand of football we expect to see in future games, all credit must go to the scrappy little outfit from St. Mary's. The boys had every- • thing. McHenry ' lost another game on Monday night, but came to life in the "second half to make the score look very respectable at 24 to 20. ; Marengo will be here next Friday And the McHenry boys promise to TOake things plenty hot for theifr guests. Smartings under the sting of two defeats has put our-boys in a • rfighting mood. We can expect a battle. ILLINOIS DUCK' HUNTERS START SHOOTING NOV. 1 "SO I HEAR" ' : v- - • by EARL WALSH Now that the big leagues have" finished their season, the owners and managers can settle down to figuring out who will be who and where when the,spring of '37 rolls around. -- S * I * H -- Looks like the big problem will' be to figure some way of beating Duck hunters in Illinois are preparing for the opening of the season on November 1, although bird hunters will celebrate (tfee opening of the season in the central states on October 1 0 - . . * . • . , Wisconsin and World Champion Yankees. The Yankboring states of Illinois,,are permitted * . under federal law to start their duck ees are not great m their pitching deshooting^ Saturday, but Illinois must! Pwtment, bunch ® slugwait until November to open its sea- g?rs w ° ^° 0 a el®= or son, ,b e,in g in w,h a.t .is tk nown a_ s 4th.ue„ nine ,r un,s ^pe r gam,e on th,e av,e ra_gBe ', ' r° | you don t have to have a lot of Carl central zone. ... , iHubbels and Dizzy Deans - hanging South Dakota opens both its duck | arooud. and pheasant hunting season on Sat-1 urday and expects to entertain thous- ALL STARS TRIM SHAMROCKS 12-5 JEN FINAL GAME The All Stars beat the Shamrocks from Irish Prairie by a 12 to 5 score last Sunday in the final game of the season. Bill Kreutzer was on the hill for the Shamrocks ,but failed to flash the form expected. The All Stars pounded out seventeen hits, including five doubles, off Bill's southpaw slants. • "Spots" Thurlwell struck out 18 batters and had little trouble winning his the game- Considering the late start in organizing, the All Stars had a very satisfactory season. The boys can start making plans now for next* season and enjoy the winter looking over their handsome batting averages. Batting averages: AB H RANKS-OF AGING IN NATION IS GROWING S M * H - . j^|ih!nenstUVMi«,^;;.W 12" Guess there has been enoOgh said* ^ :19 about the city series. those White 42: Sox have it on the Cubs. If we want- > " ;JeU^. l^ed to be real smart about it, we. could ;Thurhvell remind people like our "S.B.C.," 'who'- wrote some very disparaging remarks | J. Freund ........ Bennett |'G. Anderson Wolf 46 32 34 41. -'44". 9 19 23 16 15 12 .14 2 Avg. .250 .474 f. .452 .500 .500 .441 .293 .318 .333 ar.ds Of hunters during the season which entfs Oct. 19, *s a good crop of pheasants is reported despite the drouth. - * The Wisconsin game law provides for shooting preserves where hunters may hunt phasants for a fee. , ab^ut us being a SqX fan m a; guest The migration of birds does hot! ;l«t -spring and Ande ^ come south until late in October when'Jo^ Drey miller (another Sox knock- b Anderson .8.. , .8. , .286.] the first cold snaps of the year send, el^ ° a, things. ,iTJ n'„ ^le them down along the Mississippi and anoJer fellow caMed Tagie.' Seems into Illinois. The heavy rains have ;*e w had the misUken idea that the improved conditions and marshes that1 C,uby°u'd manhandle those poor, poor were dry are .now filled with water and oa ^ * Whiting ss . - S ' I • H - \smith, lb ...Zl Pie boys say that John Bolger will j L Freund, If ... enjoy free shaves and "haircuts for j xhurlwell ' p some time as a result of his city ser-j King 3b ' !£*. 7V .286 prospects for a good season in Illinois appear to be good. Bag Limit Thie bag limit on ducks in Iljinois is ten birds a day, while geese and! ies bets with Dreymiller. Hope "Pag brant are limited to four a day. Hunters may take as many as fifteen coots, rails or snipe in a day. All hunters, Over 16 years of age, must obtain a federal duek stamp as well as a state license, the stamps being on sale at all postoffices. Hours of shooting are from 7 a. m., to 4 p. m., central time, and the didn't bet any new Fords ' -- S * I * H -- Don't let anybody tell you this game of golf is so simple. And don't let 'em tell you it's easy on the muscles. We went out with those i turf-dig- Weekdays, 7 - 9, Standard Time 10c - 25c Perfect Sound U FRIDAY (Last Day) . Warner Baxter « Myrna Loy "TO MARY, WITH LOVE" Also--Pcpeye The Sailor World News Events SATURDAY -- ONE DAY Fried Stone -- Louise Latimer "GRA^D JURY" Also--Selected Shorts SUNDAY AND MONDAY OCTOBER 11 Robert Taylor- Barbara Stanwyck "HIS BROTHER'S WIFE" Also--Sunkist Stars Atf'Palm Springs. World News Events Sun. Matinee, 2:T5 Continuous TUESDAY, BARGAIN NITE "SPENDTHRIFT" Also--Short Subjects WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY OCTOBER 14 - 15 "GREEN TASTURES' placing of feed to attract the birds is J gfcrs th* Married Mens' Cltib again prohibited. Shotguns must not be this year. capable of more than three c o n s e c u - - ] -- % * I * H -- - tive shots. ' , You never saw so much dirt fly in Three-ZoneS Approved all your life. "Kindly replace the Three zones are approved for hunt- turf" meant nothing to our gang. If ing this year, the northern zone, in-1 we'd been chasing that turf around eluding Wisconsin, where the season (all afternoon, there wouldn't have been ens Oct. 10. and closes Nov. 8, the much time for our golf.-- McHENftY AL,L STARS AB Phannenstill, •-••...-..4 • ..5: J. Freund, c .'.....4 Bennett," 2b ; ISVclf, rf ...4 lotal 39 12 17 SHAMROCKSAB L. _Witt, ss 5 W. Kreutzer j 3b .6 V. Miller, If R. Miller, lb 5 B. Kreutzer, p 2 Pearson, lf-cf OLI litt ermediate zone, including Illinois, where the season is Nov. 1, to Nov. 30, and the southern zone, Nov. 26 to Dec. 25. BOY SCOUTS C. Stilling, cf . G. Larkin, rf i V. Freund, 3b J. Larkin, 2b B. Witt, c ....:.. 2 2 ....i.,.4- R 0 1 1 0 •1 0 0 j,!- 0 0 H 1 2 J/J i 0 0 2 40 by Thurlwell, 5 l6> Total Struck out Kreutzer, 7. SCORE BY INNINGS -- McHenry 101 421' 030--12 Shamrocks ^.,..000 000 302-- o -- S * 1 * H ; . Apd what golf! Boy, did we go placesL Everyplace. They didn't have to build any special hazards for us. We created our own. -- ' -- s • I * H -- ' . V ' - V ; Last week we Scouts learned, in a George Stilling and Elmer Freund letter from "Tug" Wilson, director of completed our threesome. George was athletics al Northwestern, that we, th® scorekeeper and was very kind. were to see the Northwestern-North i^ou know how tis. There Are so, ? , Dakota State eame instead of the m.any ^tle things a good scorekeeper family left the hrst of the week on a SonhwesteSi-Xowa game So' this can overlook George was b^admind-«•! ' to Now York sUte. Mr.| . ed. * rcikins is enjoying a vacation from Saturday, barring another postpone- ^ • I • "H !his work with the telephone convpany. During his absence H. C. Hughes is; PERSONALS Mi-, and Mrs. James Perkins and ment, we will meet at the Grade School and "shove off" exactly at 10:30. So come along and be there on time for you won't want to miss the thrills of a college game. Don't forget to bring a lot of coats, for you can't be too warm, and there isn't working in this locality. Mr-, and Mrs. Alvin Baur of Bar- Sunday visitors in the Michael Bauer home were Mrs. Christine Breield, son, Carl, isses Mary and M e l i n d a H a m n v e s , M r . a n d M r s . R. i Elmer got a lot of exercise. ' -- S • 1 * H -- A1 Justen was the only "switch- rington visited her parents, Mr. and hitter" in the crowd. A1 played six- Mis. George Kramer, Friday evening, tten holes right-handed, then started Mrs. W111. Spencer went to Wau- . . . , , swinging from the other side. Didn't kegan Monday for a few days' visit anything worse than being cold at a make much difference_ Al's good eith- in the home of her daughter, Mrs. football game. er wav .Dick Stenirer The troop is now organized for the • • _g , . R • ' ' ' Albert Purvey, Earl Dowell and coming year with Harry Conway, Ei> _ ® f " . . . . -JJames Sayler attended a meeting of win Laures, Joe Gausden and ye scribe Our big disappointment came m not: • , - ., W leaders o1 the Mohawks, Sequoias,; having Georee "Bobby Jones" " Gle» »lyn, Mon- Kemosavis and Cherokees, respective-: with us. Now there's a fellow that - T . ly. Dick Williams is the new troop; knows how to dig the turf. o EK" scribe. The best patrol will be given! Some of us will never be able to '; °r k a trip by Mr. Schoenholtz to any city i look A1 Purvey in the eye again after | S]iri^0,T within a radius of 100 miles at the the way we dug those trenches on his end of January, so the interest is high .fairways. / for the prize. By "best" I mean the --*• S * I * H -- ' , troop with the greatest number of ad-j, a nice, sociable little time yith Tedz and Mrs. Joe Cavanaugh." vancements. Each new tenderfoot1 refreshments,:in the club room after! M'r. and Mrs. Ben Dietz attended a! gives his patrol 50 points, new second thfc lualch: was funeral in Chicago Tuesday j class scouts, 5 points, first class, 10 ^ -- S * I * H-- ^ : Mr. and Mrs. John Bonhen of WilJ S?ir%Z7Xa ' n d ^ h o n o r s w e n t ^ J a c k McC.rr6n-,|.m..e .pent the weekend here and at-, The SQc.o " uIt s and1 younger .b oys 'p res-' team over tlhu,e: curcew" lvecdv by Lou Smith.'tgended the Steffes-Schroeder wedding: a^uiday ent had a great time playing Crows, y u • ~ S * 1 * H ~ . 1 Mr. <md Mrs. Robert Weber spent' and Cranes, Prisoners Base and re- John Mulder, manager of the Sham- Tu(,S(iay and Wednesday in Chicago., lays of different kinds. That's all for rock*, tells us that his team will share Ml. Weber" who just purchased a t.hi« wpplrf -Ithfc McHenry diamond with the All '• Trend Means More Older Workers in Industry. New YcJrk.--Changes in the "age distribution" of the population that ar^ occurring as the immigrant portion ages soon will present a "new challenge" to American business management, Dr. Robert E. Chaddock, professor of statistics in Columbia university, asserted. Declaring that oldeV persons are increasing numerically in proportion to the rest of the population Dr. Chaddock estimated that the number of those over sixty-five years old. now about 6,500,000, will be trebled in fifty years. With the population approaching a stationary lfevel, he asserted, the general d6ath rate sooJMvill begin to rise.. Burden of Aged Grows "The period of youth in our industrial organization is passing and our Economic structure must be adapted to age fchangies;'* he wrote. "Institutions, and agencies for the care of the aged, the burden of oldage pensions and the costs of dependency will increase ^rapidly. "The increasing burdert of the aged upon the productive workers ni :d not aflcc^ adversely the stanila. d of living, because the proportion of persons in the productive ages, twenty to sixty-four, is not decreasing and the burden of support for the young dependent group is declining." Adaptation of the industrial structure to employ the ever increasing number of older workers, forty-five to sixty-four, will be necessary if ffie high American standard of living is to be maintained, Dr. Chaddock declared. Otherwise, an" increasing number may become semidependent, he warned, thus increasing the total burden of support resting upon the productive workers. Aged in Industry Due to the restriction of immigration and to the aging of the foreign-born here, the percentage of those who immigrated to this country and are ncAv over sixty-five is twice as great as that of the native Americans over sixty-five, -Di---:Chaddock-obserred. The net result of all population changes, he wrote, is a steadily declining proportion of persons under twenty and a corresponding increase of those over forty-five. There is little change in the proportion of the productive group, twenty to forty-foi^r, the survey noted. Discussing the sex composition of the population, Dr. Chaddock said that the trend is toward numerical equality of the sexes among whites. He noted that the proportion of people twenty to sixty-four years old is much greater in the cities than in the country. In the rural districts the number of children in proportion to the entire population was found greater than in the urban areas.; 7' OWNER Of" WONDERMERE FARM FATALLY INJURED IN UNUSUAL ACCIDENT Funeral services for Charles" F. Henning, 5$ years old, 909 Sheridan road, Chicago, a director and vicepresident of the United States Gjpsum company, were held in his home at 2 p. m. Monday, with Burial in Graceland cemetery. Mr. Henning r.ecently purchased Wondermere farm near Wonder Lake, where he had made vast improvements preparatory to making it his silmmer home. ^ Mr. Henniii^r died Saturday in Highland Park hospital cf injuries received in an unusual- motor accident on Friday morning. He and his wife, Mrs. Jane Boeck Henning, were driving south on Highway 41, north of Deerfield, when their automobile ran out cf gasoline. Hoping to attract aid from a passing motorist, Henning stopped his car on the side of the road and stood in front of the car, squarely in front of the headlights; , A few moments later a car, driven by Peter Lanners, Lake Forest, ramined the rear of the Henning car, pushing it upon Mr, Henning. At the inquest,. Saturday, a coroners' jtiry charged Lanners with recjcless driving, v^ ; ;"r > , -V•' Mr," Henning was born- in . Chicago and graduated from Lewis Institute then going to work for the Gypsum Company. Surviving are hisr widow, and two daughters, Mrs. Adam Cornelius, Jr., of Buffalo, N. Y„ and Mrs. Percival- Hunter of Niles Center. During his brief ownership of Wondermere farm in this locality Mr. Henning had become known for his herd of blooded and registered cattle. In his herd of twenty-ftve cattle ar? the prize animal Carnation Peeijess Calantha 716457 and twelve high bred and pedigreed cows, one of them be^s: Carnation Josephine Johana' Elk 16395$p. - ; m i i n , ' . - j SHOW CORN GROWN BYG.J.JEPSON A FEW choice ears of corn, samples of corn grown by C. J. Jepson on his • farm at Ringwood, are now on dis-jr ^ play at the offices of the Elgin association of Commerce. ^ Clark G. HuArrf-of Elgin, the father of Mrs. Jepsqji of, Ringwood, who _ knows good corn when he sees it, displayed the corn in Elgin and stated * that he had never seen anything to beat it. The ears of corn averaged from 10 to 11 inches in length and are all the : more remarkable because grown in a drouth year. Mr. Jepson, who raised the corn, is a progressive farmer, managing a 230- acre farm and milking fifty-three cows. : MlvHuscn, 81 years old; has been V interes'ted in farming all of his life. \VAs a young„man he hVmesteaded land in Kansas and spent many years on :;*? the old Huson farm at Volo. "Although ]. Mr. Huson now lives'in Elgin,,he is a frequent visitor in this vicinity, where he visits ' his" daughter at Ringw-ood.- He was a l s o one of M c H e n r j * ' s C e n - ' tennial visitors: -'*•••',M "Vl MRS: GERTRUDE UECKER DIES IN CHICAGO '4. Births Mr. and Mrs. Jos. L. Bauer,jvho reside nertr Tneleside, are' parents of a lifTresttn, born Oct. 1. " Mrs. Gertrude Uecker, 74 years oldv of 9003 Wallace street. Chicago, died " Friday,, October 2. Befpre her marriage to Louis Uecker, who preceded her in death, she was Gertrude Heimer. the daughter of Peter and Kathrine Heimer, and was born on the old homestead near McHenry. She is survived by her son,' Louis, ; Jr., Chicago, a sister, Mrs. Kate Trapp, Chicago, and two brothers, Mat and Henry of McHenry. Funeral services were held Monday at 9:30 a. m„ from the chapel at 63rd and Harvard to St. Kilian church, Chicago, with burial at St. Maria's cemetery. " . Those from McHenry who attended the funeral were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heimer and their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Karl Bradley ! ,of Crystal Lake, Mat Heimer. Mrs. r- Josephine Heimer, Mrs Stephen Heimer, Mrs. Delia.*MattheWs, and Mrs. F. J. Aicher. i this week! 1 Scout Herb Reihansperger ANDERSON'S WOODSTOCK! . 175 REASONS TO ENJOY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY FRIDAY ONLY -- A GREAT MYSTERY WARREN WTLLIAM "CASE OF THE VELVET CLAW GUY K1BBEE SATURDAY ONLY--BRET HARTE'S MASTERPIECE ANNE IN "M'LISS" SHIRLEY JOHN BE ALE SUNDAY ONLY VAUDEVILLE 4 ACTS"r, From Best Chicago Loop A Guaranteed ... Mas* Attraction of Real Quality Entertainment & A Hip-JIooray Show (^f (rirls-GesVGiggles World's Fastest Dancer ELEANORE WHITNEY "THREE CHEERS FOR LOVE" William Frawley - Roscoe Kams 100 World's Most Beautiful Girls Drive Over to NORTHERN ILLINOIS' GREATEST SUNDAY SHOW Continuous Sunday After 1:30 Adults 30c to 3:30 - After 40c -- ---- -- Children 15c TUESDAY, BARGAIN NIGHT 10c Guy Kibbee 15c "THE BIG NOISE" With All Star Cast / „ WEDNESDAY--THURSDAY "MARY OF SCOTLAND*1 Kathryh Hepburn Fredric March Stars -next year.' . :"v : -- S * I * H -- John will plough the whole diamond and seed it down this fall. Some real wurk is planned and McHenry caa li.ok forward to seeing two good teams performing on a well-kept next year. ' --"--_-- new, cai, is enjoying his vacation from bank duties this week. i Mr. and Mrs. Anglese, daughter, Eva, and Mrs. Agnes Gaffey of Mor-! rison, 111., spent Sunday with Mr. and! Mrs. Clarence Anglese. | Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Krug, and! diamond j daughter, Elaine, who are enjoying aj \acation this week, spent Tuesday at' .. S * I ' H -- ' The Shamrocks will play Marengo (Mi the McHenry diamond next Sunday. S * I * H -- ' , With the end of the baseball season at hand, we have decided to dis- K.ntinue the baseball questions for a while.. Hope you liked them. • -- S * I * H -- Answer To Last Week's Question The decision of balk took precedence over everything, and the ball became dead when that decision was render- Brookfield, and left Wednesday for a two days' visit with relatives at Ash-1 ten. They expect to spend Friday and j | Saturday in Chicago. On Sunday they j attended the funeral of a relative at! Ashton. ^ . Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Buss left Saturday morning on a motor trip to the Centennial at Dallas, Tex. They expect to be gone about ten days. Acieiding to a card received from then; by Mrs. Buss' parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. F. .Newman, they visited friends at Springfield and spent the first night Man, 60, Weds Girl, 22,' Son Weds Her Sister Helmetta, N. J.--William B. Tilton, sixty-year-old Gravel Hill farmer, married Julia Scott, twenty-two, his housekeeper, as his son Ernest, twenty-four, married her sister, Celia, eighteen. • The ceremony was performed at the Holy Trinity Catholic church by the Rev. John Budziak. The two sisters wore white satin veils, as Tilton said they would, and the groojjis were slicked yp in their Sunday clothes just to please, them. Tilton, who wanted a "quiet little; wedding," one that wouldn't inter* fere with his "business routine," found traffic blocked by a crowd gathered in front of the chufcii: When the party arrived. Following the ceremony, the two c o u p l e s l e f t f o r F r e e h o l d , w h e r e they planned a wedding dinner in a hotel before returning to Tilton's. ninety - nine - acre farm, where all, fo\ir will live together. The farmer saw no reason why his age and that of his bride should interfere with their happiness. He said: • "Happiness in married life depends on how much love one luis" for the other. "Marriage is like business. You have to take .a chance." Starting October 22 I will be at my McHenry office, in the A. E. Nye Building, every Thursday afternoon. Glasslf Fitted Dr. Paul A. Sctiwabfe OPTOMETRIST Eyeis Examined ftione 674 -- Woodstock (for appointment) Monday Wednesday Saturday ed. The pitcher could not'pitch a dead Ira 11. The batter was not out, but the runner was advanced to second by the balk. CAR JUMPS DITCH ANI) STRIKES TREE Two men, Occupants of a Chevrolet cai, were injured Sunday morning in an automobile/accident which occurred en Route Ui^S. 12 at the McCollum Lake turn. It is said the men were enroute to McCollum Lake and the driver of the ear, intending to use the brake in vus slowing up for the turn onto the graV-M-0' tl road, accidentally stepped on the aceelerator, .shooting the car over a culvert and across a ditch into a tree. The car was damaged and the steering gear became bent from the im- 1 act while the occupants of in Missouri, covering 478 miles the first day. The trip requires ' about three days. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner, two .. [daughters, and Bruce Orton of Elgin visited relatives here Sunday. We write the most attractive forms of automobile insurance offered today. We also write a three dollar towing and road service coverage. It will pay you to go over your automobikinsurance with us before buying. 20-tf . EARL R. WALSH. ARN FLOWERS Among the antiques to-be seen by itors at the Audubon Museum ords' Park at Elgin is a wreath of yarn flowers presented to the museum by Miss Edith Carpenter of Wayland, Mich., who is well known by old timers in McHenry. The wreath was woven by Miss Carthe car|penters' mother, the late Mrs. E.-C. were badly cut from the broken wind- -heild. They were taken to a local lector for first aid treatment. - SEASON TICKETS Season tickets for football basketball games aiv being sold members of the High School Athletic Association, which is also sponsoring a song contest in an effort to secure some good school songs. Prize for the best song will be season tickets. Carpenter, in 1875. More than 100 various types of blossoms are included in the wreath, which is mounted in 8 frame, under glass. Miss Carpenter has been visiting her brother, E. A. and I Carpenter, in Elgin. by Pnre White Coral Piire white coral is -not particu* larly rafre. More highly prized are specimens showing both pink and white. Uses First Pay Check to Repay Relief Fund Paterson, N. J.--Amir Hassman, a forty-^even-year-old Arabian who believes, he said, that "a man whp breaks promises soon breaks friend* ships," has started to make good a; debt of $29.10 to Paterson. Several months ago Hassman^ who has been in this country sixteen. years, lost his job. At first he refused to take relief because, h£. Said, it was against his "principles." ' • -' -. Finally, however, Hassman was convinced that at least he should get enough so that he might buy food. So he reluctantly applied to. Poor master James O'Gorman. Insisting he needed little on which to live, he accepted a $1.50 a week food allowance. He ° lived on that until two weeks ago whpn he obtained a job at 66 cents an hour. Today he received his drst pay check and went, immediately to O'Gorman. He turned over $10 of his salary and prom-red that the' other $19.10 would be forthcoming, weeks. Tor the HOTTEST MUSIC Come To HOOT'S TAVERN On U. S. 12 -- McHenry, 111: DINE AND DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT BOB PETERSON S ORCHESTRA I NOLA BRAND CHOICE ITALIAN VPhM . . 2 can*25C ----PINEAPPLE JUICE VM Monte • • *CAN 5C CALIFORNIA •v^Pudies . "TOMATO JUICE VUWby'* • • BLUE LABEL 2CNAON. S2 J*V* VKaro Syrap . 1&Nb 10C •; '•MCKENZTFS N/Fancake FIOMS . 3^B- 19c , MCKENZIE'S ^ w i c k w f c e a t a o s a 2 3 c HOME STTIE VHeinzSMps . 2^127c . IRISHSTYL£ V Bacon A^rfSE . LB- 25c TXCEL THUHINGER_OR LIVER \ZSaasage - FOR BLEAC VCTOROX J • BOTTLE 25C V&iiue Tissae. 6 ROLLS 25C 8-OZ. PIECE • ACHING _ m Ntm U the time to stock-up oq food* (or Fall and Winter. Ttie«« •plendid value* present a grand opportunity to ftock-ap and in* (~) RED CIRCLE COFFEE 2 BAGBi 39e i BOKAX COFFEE . 2{^FT45E • AAP BAKERS' DOUGHNUTS SUGARED DQZ- IOC • SAWYER S 8ALTINES • • >KG! 15 c , [~| IONA PEACHES , SLICED OR HALVED n2-A2N' 15c ' ? SUNSWEET PRUNES MED. SIZE 17c SUNNYFIELD • Pancake flour . 21 c BLUE LABEL f~l Karo Syrup . PWBL 29C COLD STREAM PINK • Salmon . . $8?} 10c SWISS FOOD DRINK • Ovaltine . ^6CAN°z' 49C EXCEL SLICED " ["I Bacon . S ?KG!; 25C DEL MONTE • Peaches SKwfvEDR. "55*17c RIVAL I i Dog Foo^ . 3 CANS 25c VACUUM PACKED V IWs Bros. CoffM .1^ 29c PILLSBURY S V Pancake Flov • ££? 9c TABLE SYRL'P V Old Mans* . . <33! 15c TWENTY GRAND y/ Cigarettes • y nn* 25c & K'CQCto&tc* Jonathan Apples, 4 lbs. 25c Cranberries, per lb. ... 19c N. H. Sweet Potatoes, 3 l]bs. for : Lettuce, 60 site, each Spinach, per lb. 136 10e 10c FOOD STORES :'JL .Jt£iA

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