McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Mar 1937, p. 4

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* v v ^ V* > x * " -^'} f '* ^ ^ *"~ X, ' **T t' *" ** J • > ,y? - -* *r * **" *A ^ * * * ri-/^>k ^tJiZ*.^-* 'vSfc*'-* 42 . * > *mv >*>. > , K* f r®^ 1 ^ - ^g -** -(-*-* j , ^ V" *\ ** ^-1 ?s 4 $*~ • v* '* ;a-* >? i * % •*, i ^ 9 ^ * 7T_-^" •* \- * t 14 v< - -•Up-iflkJV "••«;,.v.T-, '. y ; \ .^' • ! ^ ^ JThunday, Mardi 4,1937 fHEv M'HENRY PLAIN DEALER Published ev^ry Thursday at McHenry, IH* by GharltsF. Renich. Entered as second-class. matter at tke postoffke at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8, 1879. r One Year ... Six Months ! ........$2.00 11.00 A. H. MOSHERs Editor and Manager Lillian Sayler, Local Editor -- Telephone 197 HEIR TO EBBETS* MILLION DOLLAR ESTATE STARVING -/ - -- •-%•;•: •" Wife bf Cadore, Famed Pitcher, Found 111 and in Want in Brooklyn. . York.--Mrs. Mae Ebbets Cadore is a daughter and one of, the heirs of Charles Ebbets, the Brooklyn baseball magnate who left an estate of almost $2,000,000. but today she lies ill in a cheap furnished Tobm in Brooklyn without money* enough to pay a doctor. And though, she is entitled1 to' two^ fifteenths of the ihcoine of the estate, she said that for four years she had been unable to get a penny • " from the executors. ; ^ m From the time her father died in 'i, 1925 untii 1931, she received an in* ; come of about $6,000 a year, she : said. But, she added, only one of' the heirs has received anythingrfrom "the estate since some of them £ began litigation that ^lhcluded objections to the ac.counting\made by the executors. f ODD BITS All Japanese kimono designers are men. Water wheels still power more than 2,?00 li^lt Pennsylvania, flour mills,. There are five types of phosphorus in the nerves of a lobster's claw. STRICTLY AMERICAN h;" c. > :H/; 'A;/ •:;•••;• Married Famous Pitcher. :'J Mrs. Cadore's husband is Leon Cadore, who was a pitching standby Ctflhe Brooklyn Dodgers in her fathers time. He pitched a 26 inning 1 to 1, tie against Joe Oeschger ci • the Braves, in 1920. They were rnar- / ried after the death Of her father, who had sold his half interest, in the Dodgers. She said she and her husband • tried to get him thej job of western r scout for the Dodgers, but the baseball club didn't even answer her, letter. So now, she said, her husband works on commission for a - dfcug house. ^ * "It's entirely out of his line," she said> "He never earns more- than a little, and sometimes not that. "Despite alT my efforts to get something from the estate I couldn't get a cent, so I had to,apply for home relief "about a year ago. My husband couldn't get any job then'. :•* "The home relief people said, "This is a queer case. We never had anything like it before. Here you are Dart owner of an estate of $1,000,OCX) ""lor* Tr*2r? and ygu're ^king for re*, /lief.' ^ v laid them 'I can't eat th$ benches at Ebbet's field,S?aii Iff Funds for Party; ; , - ' Mrs. Cadore said she understood the estate was now valued at afcout $1,000,000. She was a little bitter as che recalled that her father had left - a $5,000 trust fund to pay for his annual birthday dinner at the Brooklyn club. „ £ "Just s few weeks ago 1 read in lh< f aper how they held this year's dinner as usual and drank toasts to • my father,4' she said. "But though I'm his daughter. I can go hiingry for all the money I can get out of the estate." _ v ' Mrs. Cadore said she was putting *' herself up as a candidate for the vacancy on the baseball club's directorate created by the recent death of Harry M. De Mott. Her brotherin- law, Joe Gilleaudeau, is one of the, officers of the club. V "If I can't get the directw^s job I'll take a job as scrubwoman at ED- - bets field,'* she said. "I'm an heiress, all right, but right now I've got to get enough to on." Pennsylvaniapublic forests total 'approximately 1,700,000 acres. ^ iSiblical characters cannot be tised for advertising purposes in New York, • . " -In" Massachasetts -cities bicyclists must ridift Indian file along'/high-: ways. • Lakeland, Ga.t if'sole possessor of a railwy^'jfee^fa^iHyl.ing 9 .miles to Nay lor, 'Ga.' ' i - San Fripcisco ha^^the only consolidated eitjft - cownty government in California. ^ The journal fin which the , dail/^ business of congress is reported is the CoQCfessiomal Record. -- Waters from all continents must be kept on hand by the New York aquarium to care for certain of its fish. « Santa Clara County, Calif., has 11,363,600 fruit and nut trees, of which more than half are prune trees/' " ./ > . There are more thafn 150 thoroughbred farms in Kentucky, most of which are located in the Blue Grass : 7 . - ' - ® • • j The largest auditbrium in the world fs the Atlantic City Auditorium, with a seating capacity of between 40,000 and 45,000. CRASHES MOVIES *HE HcHENBY PLAIMDSAUC PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Reinansperger and family visited at West Chicago, Sunday. / a VOLO of Chicago were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Freund. Miss Frances >Hug|*es, who an industrial nurse at the Abott laboratories in North Chicago, . spent the weekend at her home' here. Raymond Hughes and Dan Malloy are making daily trips to apd from Chicago where they attend Diesel Motors school. Miss Kathrine McCabe spent the weekend in Chicago with her mother. Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Beverly of Elgin were local visitors Sunday. „ Miss Mary Alth<^T of Coral spent the weekend with home folks. W. Sears and daughter, .Ellen, of Barrington, were local callers Sun- Kay Stewart, seventeen-year-old day- , Northwestern university coed cheer I Miss Eleanor Bolger has accepted a leader who was held responsible for ' po^ti^ as 8teriographer for Rep. the voca! support that helped the Adam;wski at Springfield. She makes 5sh?iipn, Chha«s LbeLen Bs'iigLneJdr ttno a seven- the, t,o and. .f.r om, the, s t.a, te capv>i tal year motion picture contract. Miss ?? week with her father, Rep. Stewart is the daughter of a Shen. , Thomas A Bo,Ker. , andpah, Iowa, theater operato^ :/; M *nd Mrs. A. -W, Krug and /,"„/ • , " . - ; /,;/. daughter, Elaine, visited Mr. and Order your nibber sUmjw ai l^ Mr« E/*ard M»tson at Waukegan Mt. B«./i Ur. r Walter Dillion of West Bend, Ind., Mr. and Mrs. C. Menschel apd son is 8pendi„g his'two weeks' Vacation CITY CO Plamd'^aler.' OR Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Joe May %ttendedl the .boat sbpw in Chicago Sunday.Y " | Mr. and Mrs. John Stilling/; were I Chicago visitors Sunday. ; ; //• / I Mary Celine Adams of Elgin spent Sunday with her ^parents, Mr. and Mrs. Qeorge Adams. ^ Miss Ethel Biggers of Chicago was a local visitor Monday. j Mr. and Mrs. Paul Stutzke, Jr., FOR SALE. Alfalfa, Clover and Tim- gpeni the weekend with her . parents, •thy Hay. Ben J. Kennebeck, Rt. 1, the Pichs. On their return to Chicago IcHenry. *40-3 Mrs. Pich accompanied theiti to spend FOR SALE IL IN MEETIN6 At the city board meeting held on Monday, March 1, the matter of here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. lic®nsi"S a" retailers was discussed William Dillion. and referred to to interview the retailers and asthe licertae"*committee Meeting adjourn^d«t an early hour. FOR SALE--One Drill Press, $35.00. the week in Chicago's leading whole- Pine Tree Dairy Farm. 39-3 saIe millinery houses. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Brefeld and Mr. FOR SALE--Bargain List, Recondi- and Mrs. B. J. Brefeld and family vistioned Radios. Small table models, ited in the home of Mr; and Mrs. Ed $3, $5, $6.50. 1936 Crosley, $15. Re- Brefeld in Chicago Sunday. The Occonditioned sewing machines. Nation- casion was the confirmation of Kathal Drop Head, $8; Singer Rotary, like rine Brefeld, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. new, $24.50; Singer Electric Portable, Ed Brefeld. $39.50 Nye Jewelry, Music and Radio Rose Mary Hettermann, Lorraine Shop, West McHenry, 111. 41 Knox, Louise and Evelyn Weingart POP o |i „ ni> TP ATM? rw and Mary Jane L®""8 wel?e callers *.;t ? « C J ^ Regist- the st Therese's hospital en Monday ered Milking Shorthorn Bull, 3 mos. evenin« 2d-T,S°J??/eedi?g corn and seed corn. Miss Beulah Larkin of New York ' T ° iter> p^ai'slake> city is visiting for two weeks with Round Lake, 26-J-l. *41-2 BELIEVE IT OR DON'T her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edward FOR SALE--25 Tons Straw in barn. Larkin of Elgin. Good for feed. $6 per ton. John R. Mr- and Mrs. R. F. Conway, Miss Justin. « *41 Florence Conway and Harold Lindsay -- -- ii ' were Elgin visitors Tuesday. WORK HORSE FOR SALE -- Good /Mrs. F. E. Covalt and her mother, farm horse, 12 years old; wt. about Mrs. G. A. Himler, visited Mrs. M. A. 1500; $50.00. Waldmann .Farm, on Stewart, at Elgin, Monday. Cork weighs only one much as water. fourth as Route 20, in Volo. "41 Canvas pouch ballot boxes are .taped ifl Wybwing. • / Voters are disqualified fbr duelling in seven states.- "Kiss Me Not" ^s tlvii name of a club founded in Vienna, Austria, in the interest ef health. Eight of the American colonies imposed religious or moral tests on their officials or voters. Professional "best men," who arrange an<i~t!l5iidTjerttre*entire wedding ceremony fWi clients, have -appeared in Budapest, Hungary. After rh ifcsing eg^s from nests for several Week^-^ fajrner of Munro Bay, Soiith JU^ic^, found $2.50 in cash left'in the CtJopt by the thitef. -- A pos^eVj cafd with no city /or state ajjldre^s ^ was delivered promptly jo* -a. man at Piedmont, Ala. It wat iSfetmahked Terrell, Tex. „ Charles F. Pich spent the greater part of last week in St.-Louis, attend-!a* t. "ome of Mr ing a meeting of the Board of Su-!9ei* in, Grayslake. fwJim!!i,Pa^d^k °f TL 4U,kegan sp€nt certain their needs and protection de- S h s ere h" Pwents, 8ired. Th^reys already a milk deal- . Mrs. Ray Paddock^ ^ ers' license and a request for a photo- Mrs. Henry Krueger of Wauconda graphers' license. called at the Walton home Thursday., The regular order of business of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey were reading and approving of the minutes Elgin business callers on Tuesday. ,of the previous meeting; of the treas- Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grays- urer*s reports showing a balance on lake spent Tuesday evening here at hahd of $5,741.19; oolkCtSrVreport the home of Henry Passfield. of receipts of $1,852.81. and of clerk's Ed. Bacon of Round Lake called at receipts of $316.50, was followed by the Bacon home Thursday. the reading of the regular bills Mrs. Catherine Wagner of Slocum's amounting to $1,058:21. i?,kVPe,£ Fri& hV • Witli her| Mr- Ahrens entered a complaint as daugrhtei^Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. (to the noise made by the swinging Mr and Mrs. Roy Passfield, Mr. and Bign at the Bucherit service station. Mrs^ Joseph Passfield, Mr and Mrs. Night officer Wirfs was requested by E. Rossdeutcher Mr. and Mrs. Joseph the mayor to see that the sign was Lenzen, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher, greased. / Mr. and Mrs. Charles Miller, Carl Thorsell, Frank St. George and Joseph Wsmer attended the boxing bouts at OTe Gray slake" school auditorium Friday evening. Miss Vinnie Bacon motored to An- : tioch on business Friday. • Paul O'l/e&ry was a McHenry caller Monday evening. " I ; Mrs. Charles Miller spent Wednesday in AVaukegan with her sister, Miss Hilda Oeffling. • ' y j Mrs. E. Rossdeutcher visited her sister, Mrs. H. J< Martini in Chicago, Monday. | J. B. Wagner and son were Chlcago business callers Tuesday. - /" - I Milton Dowell and Lloyd Fisher galled orc Frank Dowell in .Elgin Wednesday. j Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser and son spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Vasey in Waukegan, 1 Mr. and Mrs. William Lohmann and son, Raymond, of Libertyville were Sunday evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. I Mrs. Herman Rossdeutcher^and Mrs. E. Rossdeutcher were McHenry business callers Tuesday. I Mr. and Mrs. Atex Martini and family spent the weekend in Chicago with relatives. I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Gould and fam-' ily of Libertyville spent Tuesday evening here with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. • j Mrs. Jacob Wagner returned to her home here Monday, aftet spending a few days in Chicago with her sister, Mrs. Florence Moberg. ) Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lenzen, Mr. and Mrs. L. Littlefield, Mr. and Mrs. E- Rossdeutcher spent Friday evening and Mrs. A. Sies- MBS. ETTA OBASHIL, 71, DISS AT CRYSTAL LAKE Mrs. Etta Grashel, 71 years old, of Crystal Lake, died Sunday morning , at the home of Mr. and Mrs. *M. Av< Stefeart of Etgifi, where she had been/ since Friday. , She was a member of the Woman's Relief Corps and Royal Neighbors of Harvard, and the* Rebekahs of Crystal Lake. She wais knoton to many Royal Neighbor friends in McHenry. Funeral services were held Tuesday at 2:30 p. m. at Warner's Chapel, Ciystal Lake, with Rev. Miron Morrill, officiating. Burial was. in Union cemetery, Crystal Lake. ^ Mrs. Grashel was a member^f the County Past Oracles' Club. ^ Those from McHenry who attended the funeral were Mrs. Charles Ensign, Mrs. James Perkins, Mrs; E. & Bassett and Mrs. George Johnson. /' Tricks Are foolish Tricks and treachery are the practice of fools that have not wit enough to be honest. '•"J ANNOUNCEMENT • - J . THE AUTO INN, located at the corner \ (Jrpen and Pelarl streets in McHenry, is tempor^T7^ •arily closed for alternations. it %ill reopen in a x few weeks under the management of HARRY / • FREDRICKS, who is now coplidEctiftg the Oak Park Tavern at Pistakee Bay. .".;/: ; ••••' / ' • v FOR SALE -- Clear Alfalfa, baleB; also alfalfa and sweet clover, mixed Arthur Wackerow of Slocum's and hammered m 100-lb. bags. Sample ^ America Lake and Miss Edna Fisher of Waudelivered on request. Write* J. Kuc- Mrg Wil',lam Bonslett has return- *e*an v«ited Mrs. Sarah Fisher on zynski, Lake Beulah, Wis. *41 ed home> after spending three Wfeks Sumlay evening." FOR SALE -- International t Tractor with her sister at Evanston. 'win Won and John Deere Plow. Price, $100. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Walsh, Miss jury m Waukegan for a few days Percy Phillips, on Dr. Nye Farm, Ellen Doherty and Quentin Walsh Ringwood 111. " *41 were Chicago visitors Wednesday. They also expected to motor to Whlt- Herman Dunker attended the annual Farm Bureau meeting and election -of officers at the Farm Bureau FOR SALB--Eating and seed pota- ing," Irtd., to visit relatives. office .t Grayriake Wednesday. Mr. toe.- H.- P. Meyer, one-Hall mile w.Hi.m Bonslett and P.-ed Cooley Du"kcl e'Kted SCT,e "s * ^ north of Johpsburg, on River Road. , were Milwaukee visitors Tuesday. vector of the Farm Bureau- Mr. and Mrs. Louis Young and -cliilr 'FOR SALE-ALFALFA, $7.50; 99% Jren of Waukegan spent Sunday with MEDIUM CLOVER, $15.60, both per jj®r ,parents' Mr* and Mrs- M- Jbushel. Postal card us today for w?Jsh samples and illustrated circular giv- „ , _ , . . . „ . ing complete purity and germination P»k <* Mr' »"d tests. H.I1 Roberts' am, Postville. M™.Ji~rge John^ Iowa. Herman Dunker and son, Robert, ^attended Drum and Bugle Corp practice and installation of officers of the American Legion Post1 in Crystal Lake Mrr'arid Mrs. A. TCrBurnsTof ~0ak -evening#-- Mr. and Mrs. Tony Seisser of Grayslake, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lenzen 1\ 1 Mrs. F. E. Covalt has returned from *anndu Mr. and Mrs. E. Rossdeutcher t ^r' x*"8a"cult"" 41"4 . I spent Sunday evening at the Home of Why Buy New-? When we can alt€T"and re-model anything in Women's or Men's Clothing to conform to the new spring styles at "5/verir low dost. When we clean your woolens, we will Moth-Proof them Let us do your fur coat cleaning and repairing and save you from 25 to 50%. A \ / Suits Tailored A To Order McHENRY CLEANERS, LODTZ AND LO^TZ J Phone 104-M McHenry, 111. :V FOR THE SCRAPBOOK Convict Tunnels Into /_ [ Arms of Waiting Guard . "^T^StefTersQn City. Mo. -- A young "(Convict whp had lived underground two months in a plot to free himself and two cellmates tunneled from under the Missouri peniten- ' tiary walls into the arms of a waiting guard. Warden J. M. Sanders said Fred Turner, twenty-two, had hidden between the walls of two cells and by removihg a sewer piDe leading into his cell had openea the way for the other two to help him tunnel. - The three had dug 140 feet. Turner •was breaking through on the outside of the wall when the plot was discovered and a guard stationed to wait'for him, "Turner and his two cellmates had strung an electric lighting system along the h,pie, with fourteen light bulbs attached. A screw driver, chisel, and pliers were used in tunneling.. His cellmates supplied ^Turner with food. Sanders said he ^.^had not been out of the passage ^ since he dug his way. in shortly - after his disappearance on • October /iSTxty-eigfit fruit .varieties' thrive/in Florida. , • Streamlined hairc|ressing is gain-1 ing popularity in Italy. ' The Chinese seapefrt of Pakhoi was opened to foreigii trade in JL876. BuentSS'-'^Sfres "has*", the world's largest meat refrigerating plant. / Porto Rico was known as Borinquen to the pre-Columbian Indiana. The latest census shows Shanghai, China, has a population of 3,770,986. Over Sweden's government -owned telephone tbre^TOinute talks to any 500-mile point cost 20 cents. , The capital of the Chinese! Republic is * pow ,,Nanking, in the •Province of lUaiusuj near^ the city, of Shanghai.' 1 •, In its century of existence* only one royal parsonage has died in Buckingham Palace, King Edward VII, who had been born thpr*. USED CARS 1936 Pontiac Sedan. 1936 Chevrolet Sedan. - 1936 Ford Sedan. 1935 Ford Tudor Sedan. 1934 Pontiac Sedan. 1934 Buick Sedan. 1933 Chevrolet Sedan. 1930 Chevrolet Sedan. „ a Florida trip with Chicago friends. ,T T .... „ .. Miss Marion Krause and Mrs. Lois!Mr-and L-L^efield. Britz spent Tuesday and Wednesday and T Mre- R* Kl"g °f L®ng in Chicago, where they attended the!and J. Jones of Wooster Lake Mid-West Beauty Trade Show at the'^ Monday evening at the home of , . , ' Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Lenzen. | Mr. and Mrs.' Arthur Krause and lit- , ^rs-. J*£enzen ^tend,ed her.C"d tie daughter, BBaarrbbaarraa Ann, werelclub m McHenry Thursday at the 'Joliet visitors Sunday. i home of Mrs F. Masquelette. West McHenry, 111. 41 FOR RENT FOR RENT--Seven-room house on John Street. Inquire of Wm. Buchert. Phone 28. . . *41 HELP WANTED Sfcepherd Dog Hauls Man From River and Vanishes Et. Louis. -- While Henry Ur- •pruch, a watchman, frantically paced the levee waiting the arrival of police, a stray German shepherd dog trotted by, stopped and saw jiixty - year - old Ernest Gustafson -floundering in the Mississippi river. The dog leaped into the water, pulled Gustafson to shore, wagged tail and disappeared. Gustafson< was dismissed from ttie city hospital recently aone &£ Worse for his experienc Keys to Jail Are Lost / Hempstead, L. I. -- The old cellr vj|i the basemeilt of the Hempstead Town h'&ll probably never will jbe used again, because the keys are \lost. The cells aren't used much, anyway, and nobody was inv them the other day vNien a policeman went to headquarter^ to look for the keys to lock up a casual culnrit and found that they were rot .on hook. 6 SHARP PARAGRAPHS Without keys, money or a jack knife, eta.'. JMen, coi^rfcry to women, wear their clothes out -- and often still longer. ^ ,• People must be able to control their heady, "leaders" before they can stop war. Mrs. Elmer Sehjnalfeldt and son,! „ . rp.,.*,. . nruorxi atip Buy From the Old Reliable Dealer 1 James, of Kenosha visited her mother, virmov raviufDc m arph t R. I, OVERTON MOTOR SALES Mrs. M. N. MaV, Sunday! VICTORY DlNNfcKii, MAKtH I „Mr; *nd, Ray k Coni25,' s?St "Victory Dinner" pl.M nearly' Monday at Aurora, where Mrs. C6rt- \ . • » - i! wwaayv aatttteennddeedd aa ccooookkiinneg ddeemmoonnssttiraa - cmbmpleitet a nwdi lla bne etvheen oinrdg ero fo f gethnienrgasl 1 tion given by the Western United Gas , , %M . . ., and Electric Xompany. The demon- Th»rS<toy, March 4, «t Crysta ssttrraattiioonn wwaass mmoosstt iinntteerreessttiinngg, boeeimngg ,i Lodge>d iC rny stianlv ited to Aben yw ^itdhi vuids u0a1l1 put on by a six-year-old girl fromj*: . , f T .. . DenVer, Colo/ ' | that night Miss Loretta OColTnoi i Mrs. Lester Bacon, president oi Mc- accomPanied by Mr. Henry Kaprow will furnish many lovley musical numbers during the course of the evening. An -eight course turkey dinner will be served by Beal and his helpers. Dinner will be served at 7 p. m. Join your friends at the Crystal Lodge this Thursday evening. The committee in charge are cochairmen Dan Desmond, Hon. Thomas A. Bolger, Henry J. Miller, Mrs. Henry Greeley, James Riley, Jr., Tom Nolan, Ray McGee,s Mrs. Elizabeth Butler and general chairman, Clair T. Carney.' »--v,; "ALL THREE" COST ABOUT THE SAME WANTED--Man to work on small Henry unit of the American Legion farmr Impure at Farmers Mill. *41 Auxiliary, attended an Auxiliary -- • '/ ' - board meeting at Crystal Lake Thurs- ^ WANTED >' ' day night. She was accompanied by -- ' -- Miss Inez Bacon. FARMS WANTED-^-We have a de-, Mr. and Mrs. C.'W. Goodell and mand for Farms For Rent or Salei_^ajniiy motored to, DeKalh Sunday, EARL R. WALSH, Phohe McHenry 43. MISCELLANEOUS $2.00 CASH $2.00 ' for "DEAD HORSES AND COWS * Hogs and Sheep Removed MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. |*hone Dundee 10 Reverse Charges^ *34-23 , they visited Miss Marguerite 34-tf Johnson. Taking her with them, they called on the^r. cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Drew. Mr. Drew is athletic coach at the DeKalb high school. GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 157 or 631-M-l. 2-tf WITH OVRHAUL -- You get more power! You save on oil and gas. If your car needs Ovrhaul, oil, gas or a paint job, Drive in Today. Ovrhaul Service Station, Rt. 20, West McHenry, 111. *11 Foresight i§ de^&abIe, (Buritt oT3 age it is mostly concerned)'-with approaching death. - J - ^ * Handshakes, they say, spread disease. Well, so do doorknobs. Can we abolish either?^ You throw off a great yoke when you decide not read the new ^FEDERAL FARM LOAN& 4 Per Cent Interest On Long Term Loans See E. L. Johnson, secretary-treasure Woodstock .National Farm Loair Assn., 134Mi pasg St., Woodstock, Ilk Phone 334. ' " 41-4 noi to books--unless you want to. Those who are too indolent-Ixl plot out an impregnable alibi, simply take retuge in the plain truths NO REASON FOR UNSIGHTLY | FLOORS--Worn places, spots, diijt, paint, varnish, everything, unsightly: removed. Work guaranteed. Reason-: able prices. Estimates givenl Also resurfacing office desks, tables, bars.! HENNING NEWMAN, Floor Sanding j Contractor, 434 Seminary Ave., Woodatock. m. -Phone 730-M, 41-6mo. T;>. CHIC DANCE DRESS ATTEND FUNERAL Mr. and Mrs. Dan O'Shea were -called to Chicago Tuesday by the death of his aunt, Mrs. Nicholas Dore. They returned again this Thursday morning to attend the funeral services which were held at 9:30 a. m., from the residence at 613 W- 43d place, to St. Gabriel churcK. ^Burial was at Mount Olivet. Mrs. Dore is survived by three children, one brother and three sisters. Births Mr. and Mrs. Joe Frett of Johnsburg are parents of a son, born Monday at Woodstock hospital. IZut USED CAR PRICES PLYMOUTH'S GREATER VALUE l.y ST. MARY'S CHURCH White flowers with bright green rfeJS^s embroidered on black mous- »llne"cI^Soie add a gay note to this informal dance dress. The tiny cap is of bright green feathers with a flaring black tulle veil having feathir dots. Masses on Sundays will be at 8 and at 10:15 o'clock. The Holy Mass at 7 o'clock will be discontinued until the summer schedule starts. . . -tf First Canned Tomatoes " Tomatoes were canned for the first time in 1847 by Harrison W. Crosby, a chemical engineer at Lafayette college. •*>- Compare year-old prices of "All price cars. Even though "All Three" cost aboul v the same when new, you'll find that after a yea* or more, Plymouth brings as much as « nundred dollars more than the other two. ' Safety-Steel Body and Hydraulic brakes p\ut the ' Hushed Ride" ... the 18 to 24 miles pe* gallon reported by Piymov «.h owners . . . greater size and longer life . . . are worth more to used - • car buyers. Worth more to you, too, in yoti* 111 new cart _• j- Come in today. Prove fpr yourself that Plymouth give* , ^ou more for your money. ' • BLAKE DODOS AMD PLYMOUTH Pboa«lM

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