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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Jul 1938, p. 3

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thursday, July 7,1931 • f- '/U./'V - * '~*jrr. 3£~ " • v " • -- Our I: -V'-' : Washinglp ^Letter ABOLISHES GEOGRAPHIC BARS Speed and Extent of Communication Modern Wonder. '• # Washington, July 6--Reports to th* . JJemocmtic and Republican high comf, mands show that the politicians took L foil advantage of the national holiday I to peddle their wares from public ros- [ trums. The bookings at neighborhood t picnics and other gatherings gave the ^ home folks a chance to hear and see [ their local and national leaders parade " ing their best platform manners. While the show goes on in each Congressional district, the money-raisers find it difficult to locate willing donors in private life. The enormous outpouring of Federal funds for relief and other projects has completely over shadowed the methods of old-time campaign fund collectors. As usual the man passing the hat h&s a thank- ^ffcss assignment. Business is at such t low ebb that corporation are now poor pickings at best. Besides the prospect '*^if being summoned before a Congressional campaign expenditures commit- ' ffee effectively checks normal impulses provide the sinews of political warfare. . , . Cfci The business world is watching with Washington. -- "Modern wonder* of radio communication and the axtent to which radio has abolished geographic barriers were emphasised by the broadcasting of President Roosevelt's recent message to congress by short wave to many parts of the world," says the National Geographic society. "Foreign radio listeners, hearing the President's speech or a translation of it on their short-wave sets, perhaps did not all realize that the sounds they heard were traveling to them in a series of giant 'bounces' between earth and sky," continues the bulletin. Waves Bounce Up and Dm. "Radio short waves, in crossing the ocean, are not content to chug along JMM sedate , ocean liner. They afe iar^too exuberant for that. They must bouncy up and dovro bar tween sea and sky, as a rubber bah' bounces between your hand and a sidewalk. (They trftvel on land the same way.) "What is there in the sky for them to bounce against? Mot clouds, for they bounce far higher than the clouds. Looking upward, nothing is visible, but there is something there. It is a nebulous layer of elec- FLAME AND WATER Your match box contains a hundred possible forest fires. About 40 per cent of the fuel energy in an automobile is used in cooling water alone. Fire has been made to burn uif der water. It took six years of research but the apparatus has been perfected.^ ' NEW IDEAS miles up, a kind of shell surroundj| een interest the procedures adopted j trifled particles, between 100 and 200 by' the National Economic Commission " fin jts many-sided investigation jnto gafeurrent problems. The monopoly study js perhaps the most important of the ^ Studies for the conclusions reached by the Commission will have an impor- ,tant bearing on the Administration program for the next session of Congress. The Commission struck" some snags at early meetings, but plans are fairly well shaped to permit hearings. The activities of the group will be tlosely examined to determine the v|rend of its inquiries. The suspicion - persists at the start that a majorty of Commission and its advisors recruited from Federal administrative. agencies is biased. Until the position ( ypt the probers is clarified, it is obvious, that the inquisition will proceed under j a handicap. Despite strong denials that the Commission is destined to, conduct, a "witch-hunt" for political, purr oses, business leaders are hopeful j if, t a note of impartiality will ddmiiiate the studies as a means of dispelling uncertainty and misunderstand-, armed with ^he nd melon. • "Sometimes this is called the 'radio roof or the 'ionosphere.' One can see through it, on out toward the stars, and if one were in the middle of it he would not know it was there. But nevertheless it stops the radio waves, and reflects them back toward the earth as a mirror reflects a beam of light! Amaslng Speed. "Modern radio makes it possible for a man's voice to /'put a girdle 'round the earth' in far less than the minutes required j by Puck in akespeare's 'Midsummer Night's Dream.' Not even 40 seconds is required today. In a recent test, a man's voice, traveling by a combination of radio short-wave circuits and telephone wires, girdled the earth in one-third of one second. "How far flung an audience was brought within easy range of the President's voice by radio is indicated by the vast distances bridged every day by ordinary, every-day radio telephone conversations between the United States and foreign 3L ing. The commission is 'subpoena power and plenty of money. Among the politicians in the national capital this week, conversations' lands turn to the forthcoming Indiana Dem-, "TJ»e radio telephone gi^pcratic State convention. What hap-j Australia,' for example, consists of _3bens to the candidacy of Senator Van: a channel across the Atlantic, linked Nuys for re-nomination will probably] with another from London that jumps influence the activities of Senators of, eastward to Sydney, a distance of the Democratic faith who fought the, 10,000 miles. And when radio transbite House on the Supreme Court isiue. Van Nuys was a key man in this ^ontroverss' and was the first slated for the party "purges" as an insurgent!). Rumors of a reconciliation with pow-' erful Hoosier leaders! have through, but the outcome will not known until next Tuesday or Wednesday. The retirement o|f Representative Bert Snell, the G. O. P. House |eader, has already started a battle jroyal for leadership with Joe Martin of Massachusetts out in front. Of course, the \ returns next may eliminate many potential bidden for Republican floor boss. The raiik-j jng Republicans resort little opposition in normally G. O. P. areas. Talk also veers to the absence of FM. G. Farley,! the Democratic National Chairman,' now enroute to Alaska for a vacation.1 His remoteness from the scene of par-| ty strife gives him some solace but confuses his lieutenants. Farley is reported hostile to current reprisals | Sgainst Democrats who turned their acks on the White House. \ Besides going to bat to protect the membership from wage cuts in tne de-j pression, the A. F. of L. is now at-, "tempting to convince the country that c vernment employees are not loafin ie Federation has taken cognizanc of popular impressions that Federal jobs "are mainly political sinecures, and that government employees are overpaid and underworked." The trade •union has many members on the Federal payroll. This thinking, they say, "Is regarded as extremely harmful to them in their efforts to obtain betterment of their wages and working conditions through recognised trade union channels." The htige presses at the Government Printing Office are working night and day turning out thousands of reprints from the post-session Congressional Record. It required five editions of the Congressional Record averaging [\ 125 pages to an issue to print speeches! withheld for revision or extension of ^remarks as authorized by either the' Senate or Hous*. An overwhelming j majority of "speeches" were never, heard on the floor of Congress. The last of the series of special editions | appeared this week. The main purpose, of ti^ese reprints is to place the material Jn the hands of registered voters in various Congressional districts jat an extremely low cost. Expense of republication are made from the funds of the, Republican or Democratic campaign committees or from the private purse of encumbents seeking re-elec- Circuit to mission is better in the other direction, as it sometimes is, the Circuit runs westward from London to Syd ney, some 14,400 miles." LaAy Codi™ Half-Pern* Discovered in New York New York.--A Lady 4odiva ha! penny, worth s hundred times its original one-cent value, was disco' ered recently among coins to: by tourist* into the Spanish wishi November^ in Rockefeller t Center's ' Gardens kere. ! The Lady Godiva coin, struck Coventry, England, in 1792, bears ul on one face the figure of Lady Godi va on horseback. It was identified by Howland Wood, president of the American Numismatic societyj from piles of pennies, nickels, dimes and coins from China, Can4 ada, Holland, Italy, Germany, Rus-1 sia, France, Great Britain and the\ Philippines. Oldest coin from the wishing well is a soldo, one-cent piece cast by Austria in 1777 for the northern provinces of Italy, which Uncontrolled. The soldo is not valuable today. \ Artificial yarn is being made from skimmed milk in Italy. An Ohio meat packer claims a new formula for curing hams to give the meat a maple flavor. A. new water faucet has a double outlet. On top there w a hole which serves as a fountain when you want to drink. A new paint for factory winddws is designed to keep out hfat and glare without - interfering unduly with light.*" • A new steel rail, only 7 per cent heavier than the older rails commonly used, will stand an S& per cent heavier load. - Some of the newest schooThouses have large sections of wall made of glass block, for light and for advan tages of insulation. "Disdwery of titanium, a common metal of the earth, in the almost complete vacuum between stars was recently announced. ^ Recent experiments have shown that orange juice can be dried and still retain its health-giving vitamins after long periods of time. Hunting (^oyotes in Auto Is New Sport in Alaska Seward, Alaska.--Ingenious Alaskans, who perform such unusual feats as transporting livestock and mining machinery by airplane, hailed coyote hunting by automobile as the latest in winter sports. Lake Kenal, a large body of water thirty-six miles long and frozen over with a coat of thick, smooth ice, ii the scene of the hunting parties. To date the number of bounties claimed on coyotes bagged by this new method has been negligible, But promoters of the sport declare it is "lots of fun anyway." x tion. . It is noteworthy that few, if any, of i copies are printed in the print shops ml their home towns. The Government j Printing Office, with its subsidies, j finds it impossible to provide legisla-j tors with printed material at a cost >jfar below quotations given by private, 'printing houses. In addition to these! Dogs Tumble, Thai Make Meal on Rabbit Regina, Sask.--A 50-foot tumble down an old coal mine shaft didn't spoil the appetites of the hunting dogs of Joe Howe, Readlyn, Sask., farmer. Howe took his dogs out to do a little rabbit hunting. A' rabbit was spotted and away went the dogs in full cry. Suddenly dogs and rabbit disappeared. Howe found an old mine shaft. He thought his dogs were dead. But he got the owner of the pit to take him into the mine by way of an air shaft. The dogs were found at the shaft bottom, greedily making a meal of the rabbit. First Foreign Salute to Flag „ The first foreign salute to the excerpts from the Congressional Rec- Stars and Stripes, the new Ameriord, the Superintendent of Pnblic Doc- can flag, was rendered February 14, uments is now distributing millions of 1778, when John Paul Jones, in comoffical publications ranging from the mand of the U. S. S. Ranger, en- • care of babies to government hints on tered Quiberon bay, near Brest, caring for the garden. The candidates France and received a salute of for Congressional office do not possess nine guns from the French fleet, these prerequisites of a sitting law- under Admiral La Motte Piquet, maker and consequently their cam- _ ; 7 paign expenses are much higher. With hents are watching their step to avoid public interest aroused into campaign unpleasant publicity as to ways and •methods and expenditures thf encum- meaas of attaining high IN OUR HOME LAND Georgia produces one-half of the country's turpentine. x No Florida town is ipbre than 75 miles from salt water/ -- / More than 24,500,000 American families own radio sets. The United States, cotton belt covers about 700,000 square mites. The navy's rope is made chiefly in its own navy yard at Boston. Natur found The American Museum oi al History, in Nqw York, f4 in 1809. r Registrations of 8844,,552253 d received by the American club last year. igs were Kennel The United States produce* all the wjorkl's pecans except for a rela tively small quantity grown lin Mcx >i . - ' tailroad traffic is heavier between New York and Philadelphia than between any other cities, in the world., I : \ ' •.-j GEMS OF THOUGHT V The multitude is always Jn the wrong.--Roscommon. , Age and sorrow have the gift reading the futu:r e by the sad past Farrar. ft Man is a social animal, formed to please and enjoy in society.--Montesauieu. Is not he impudent, who, seeing the tide making toward him apace, will sleep till the sea overwhelms him?--Tillotson. If sensuality were happiness, beasts were happier than men; but \human felicity is lodged in the soul, »ot in the flesh.--Seneca. Every step of progress which the viforld has made has been from scaffold to scaffold, and from st^ake to state.--Wendell Phillips. The more accomplished wajK of using books at present, is to serve them as some do lords--learir their titles, and then boast of their acquaintance.-- Swift. A LITTLE DIFFERENT Spiders are kept alert with eight eyes. Garbage collectors In London are known as dustmen. Moscow has a new library specializing in sports literature. V Quill toothpicks are more pMmla\ than wooden ones in England. There are two men to every woman in Richmond, Yorkshire, Eng. Waiters in a new German restauint ates. T j? res rant in London are university gradu- Russia breeds some horses especially to produce hair for violin bows. Evan pigs receive„^un ray treatments at a British sanatorium for sick animals. A London optician's best customer has 36 pairs of glasses--one for every room in his house. Three Gat to Ocean Via While doing repair work ip the sewers of Flenburg, Germany, three workmen ware trapped when the water rose rapidly after a cloudburst. They desperately swam through the sewers until they finally reacted the ocean, where they ware rescued, completely exhausted. at Philosophy aims at inteDoctual atisfaction, in other words, at ulti- UFE OF FAMOUS ALASKA WOMAN IS FULL OF THRILLS Nam* Neal Hardalupa With a Smile. North/Mentor, Ohio.--Down from the Yukon valley and the land of the caribou "there came to North Mentor * womkn who talked as rapid as a mountain stream and called herself Alaska's Nellie. Sprightly sixty-four-year-old Nellie La wing amazed Ohioans "with her tales of the north country. She came here from the land of the gold rushes on a visit to the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Hindes. The talkative little woman with clear, unwrinkled skin and eyes that sparkled is known as one-of Alaska's foremost citizens. Tourist trains stop for -10 minutes at the village of Lawixig, which rite owns, so that tourists may gape at Alaska's largest game collection, valued at $16,- 000 and owned by Alaska's Nellie. She shot most of the animals herself. nts--Harding, Coovelt-- met and tajked old lady of the wildar- Two Hearts Throb in Laborer's Body Perth, Western Australia.-- Physicians were puzzled today about the case of an Italian .timber clearer, James Alvara, fiftyseven, who has two hearts. The doctors found the equivalent of a normal heart on the right side of the body and larger thanf average size. The second heart, on the left side in normal position, is much smaller than the average and has what is called a "subsidiary beat." It was reported that Alvara several years ago turned down an offer of $20,000 for his body after death. JOHNSBUHQ " w v • ; , T C v r . •- s -j ' $ - JAIL PARENTS IF OFFSPRING FIGHT Invoko Ancient Roman Law in ^ Neighborhood Quarrel. Three lidge and with the lit ness. / Ltfe Like Fiction. Her liff in/Alaska runs close to the fictional;! She tells of the time she shot and killed a 1,200-pound brown bear which had attacked her --and she added that the bear was killed With the last cartridge in her rifle. A mountain slide nearly sent her plunging to her death over the edge of a 1,000-foot cliff. A man tried to beat her to death, and she has 40 marks on her right arm where shi "Vas bitten by wild animals. - She was given necklace of pure gold nuggets and a diamond centerpiece-- a reward for saving the life of a mail carrier, then carrying the mail herself, by dog team, through dense northern woods. She once lived for three months--alone--in an isolated cabin in the Alaskan wilderness. t^ar Mrs. La wing as a^gBT long had dreamed of living in the "romantic" north country. Her dreams were slow in coming true. Her mother died and she was left to take care of her brothers and sisters In 1903 she married Neal and went to live in Cripple Creek, Colo Then, during the famous historymaking goldmine strike, her husband was killed, scores of her friends were shot and she suffered from severe beatings. After these experiences, Mrs. Lawing kept a re-, volver close at hand- By 1915 she was ' alone in the world. And she was forty, a point which made her decide it was about time to seek her Alaskan dream. Thus, she headed Alaskaward. Became Lonely Taxpayer. She first cooked and trapped^ game in a mining camp. She spent the winter alone in an abandoned cabin, trapping food and fur-bearing animals. When the, iron horse-made its appearance in that part of the country Mrs- Lawing saw her opportunity. She set up a centrally located roadhouse, obtained permission from the railroad company to feed crews working on the line. Her venture was successful. Her fame spread. , / She married William Lawing, one of Seward's outstanding citizens, in 1923. They purchased a five-acre .homestead on the banks of Lake Kenai. The spot became known on the map as Roosevelt, later as Lawing. It is Lawing today, a summer camp. Lawing died in 1936, but his hardy wife says she intends to carry on. Terrier Rouses Guests as Fire Sweeps Hotel Chicago.--The lively antics of Skippy, a smart young Boston terrier, have endeared him to Mrs. Helen Huth, a widow of seventy-four,' and Robert T. Faulkner, a cripple of sixty-five, residents of toe Washington Park hotel. The dog is owned by Mrs. Ethel Shaffer, wife of the hotel's owner. Now they are glad of the friendship. A fire started in the basement and roared up an area way. The whole rear of. the place was in flames when Skippy raced madly to Faulkner's room on the first floor and began to bark and scratch on the door. Firemen brought Faulkner out just in time to save his life. But Skippy had raced upstairs to Mrs. Huth's room, also near the fire. Firemen brought her down on a ladder. Skippy ran on through the halls barking and whining, until all the 30 residents of toe hotel yrere jf.fjpfr out. Bare-Handed in Cabin,"" He Conquers Huge Bear Sioux Lookout, Ont.--Alex Firchuck tells of winning a one-round catch-as-catch-can bout from a 150- pound bear with his bare hands. Firchuck was in his cabin when the bear ambled in for tea. Unable to flee, Firchuck socked the bear on the snout. That made the bear mad. Firchuck managed to stay away from bruin's jaws, but got his shirt ripped and hands badly clawed. Finally Firchuck slung a rope around the animal's neck and anchored it to the leg of a bench. By enticing him with meat the man finally managed to coax the bear into a wooden box. Oldest GynuuMftic Orgaafcniisa The Sokol is the oldest gymnastic^ organisation of its kind. It was founded in 1882 by Dr. Miroslav Tyrs, philosopher and author. It is one of the largest gymnastic organizations, having more than 800,- 000 members. Czechoslovakia ia its home.'.,." .rltttfrlagsf To pair with another in the senate is to agree with ana of the opposite ttom Detroit.--A feiice so close to his house that he couldn't wash his windows irritated Julius Daiek* next door neighbor. Daniel goloski, put it up nearly ten years ago, Daiek told the judge. It was only six months after he moved in next door to the fence builder. > Then Gogoloski put up a concrete fence, according to Daiek, which caused the rain to trickle into Daiek's basement and loosen the foundation. Then, Daiek related, Gogoloski heaved a brick through a window , of the Daiek hopne, knocking a picture off the wall. Gogoloski readily admitted that he threw the brick, but insisted that Daiek threw it first. Gogoloski merely caught it and tossed it back, he contended. The hostilities were being prepared for an airing before Judge Guy A. Miller, with attorneys ready to call about 50 witnesses, when the judge called a halt. "This has gone far enough." he declared. "I'm going to take this case'under advisement and invoke an old Roman law making husbands and fathers responsible for the acts of their wives and children." The "court thereupon granted Daiek and his wife, Henrietta, an injunction restraining Gogoloski and his wife, Jennie, from interfering with the tranquility of the Daiek household. The Gogoloskis obtained an injunction placing similar restraint on the Daieks. Each couple has four children. , • j "Hereafter," the judge warned, "if either of you men violates'these injunctions, I will fine you $250 and send you to jail for 30 days. If either of your wives violates them, I'll impose the same punishment on both the husband and the wife. "And if any of the children in either home disobeys these injunctions, I'll send the whole family to jail--father, mother, and all the children." Frank Nell is visiting with his mother at Effingham, 111. Mr. and Mrs. George Landre and children of Chieago spent a few days wiwth Mr. and Mrs. Joe Karls. Mr. and Mrs. J. Skifano and friends of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Schaefer and Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Walsh of | Waukegan were Sunday dinner guests Jat the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm, J. Meyers. John Bert rang of Aurora spent the Fourth of July with Joe Schmitt. Mrs. Laurence Bier of Chicago at- tion ~in*"i879* tended the Freund - Stilling wedding here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bode entertained friends from Evanston Tuesday afternoon. A few relatives and friends Surprised Jacob Thiel on his birthday Thursday evening. Those present were Mr. and Mjp. Mike Gorski and children, and Mr and Mrs. George Zornstorff of Woodstock; Mr. and Mrs.. Earl Hofc fien and daughter of Genoa City, Wis , Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller, Mr. and Hia ; Mrs, Wm. J. Meyers and Mr., and Mrs. Go-:[ Peter Freund, Joe Karls was s Chicago caller on Friday.' Mr. and Mrs. Bob Wilkie of Chicago spent the weekend in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter F. Freund. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young of Spring Grove called on Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Michels Sunday. ^to Oneida CsmmaeHy The Oneida community was a settlement founded at OneidaJMadisoe county, N. Y., in 1847 by John Humphrey Noyes. There was no formally chosen leader, as it was believed that the most fit would natuf^ ally control. The distinguishing features of the social life was the system of, complex marriage. Marriage was not permanent, but licenses did not prevail, as the marit«l relations were carefully regulated and the community assukied support of the children. An unusual feature of Che life waa the plan of mutual criticism. Ontaide opposition to the system, especially by the churches. its abandonment and dissdji Gave loha Sherman OBea . John Sherman of Mansfield, congressman, secretary of the treasury and secretary of state, early evinced an interest in politics, but his friends didn't hold high hopes for his future. For example, tat 1848 he was a delegate to the national Whig convention in Philadelphia. As the convention was being organ* ized, the chairman of the Ohio delegation asked the leaders in other delegations to elect Shenryurx secretary of the convention. He was a young man who could never get an, Office unless the convention gave him one, the Ohio chairman said. Sn Sherman was chosen tfecretary^ _ : _L_ " - "/>• -*« •* 1 Ctrareh Bed Exiled - Several centuries ago, church bells were believed to possess a Mr. and Mrs. Weber of Milwaukee, ^ whic,h ^ c°uld Wis., spent the weekend with Mr. and ^ Mrs. Hfcnrjr Klapperich SmeA w^Ily! ^hen"^ Mr and Mrs. Joe P Miller were trius> ron of Czar Feodor j ot Ru-. Grayslake callers Thursday. sia, was murdered in Uglich in 1581 Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schmitt of Spring the local bell was held responsible Grov* were callers here Sunday. and therefore was flogged, deprived Miss Katherine Althoff of Elgin of its clapper and exiled to Siberia spent Sunday and Monday with her for three hundred years. mother, Mrs. Wm. Althoff. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gerlach entrtained relatives and friends from Milwaukee, Wis., over the Fourth. Miss Katherine Pitzen of Chicago spent the weekend with her father, John Pitsen. Mr. and Mrs. George Frett and family of Woodstock visited with relatives and friends here over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Michels and family spent Sunday afternoon with Paris Leag Largest Cllf Paris was the largest city in world for 1,000 years. leeberg Above Water Only one-ninth of the mass at iceberg appears above water. Lowell Nye of The Independent Register, Libertyville, spent the past Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young at Spring week of his vacation in southern Indi- Grove, • Dr. C. Keller OPTOMETRIST Is now permanently located in McHenry at his summer home On Riverside Drive. Forty-six years experience testing eyes and making glasses. Call for Appointments', of Repairs Telephone 211-R .V •' Whale Scratches Back on Scared Fishermen's Boat Newport, Ore.--To be "rocked in the cradle of the deep" was the experience of E. J. Eliasen, Newport business man, who, with Jack Mc- Croskey, captain, on board the troiler Yakima, were anchored off the fishing banks some time ago. - They were awakened from their sleep by a terrific rocking of their boat. They turned on the lights and stepped out on deck, and the spotlight picked out a large dark fin sticking out of the water on the port side. They debated on whether or not to Use their harpoon, but in the mejmtime the dark fin moved farther away and the boat resumed its normal roll in the sea. In port they compared notes with friends and found out that a black whale, usually 25 to 30 feet in length and considered dangerous, had used the bottom of their troller to scrape the barnacles from his back. If* they had harpooned the mammal while he was underneath their craft they would not probably be alive today, for a flip of the powerful tail of the black whale would have sent their craft spinning into the air. Cat Brings Lost Canary Unharmed to Mistress Amsterdam.--When a cat catches a canary, is that news? It is in Holland because: i In the village of Whilp a yellow canary escaped from its cage. Next door lived an old-fashioned cat, the nicest one in the land, according to its mistress. For many days there was no trace of the canary. Then one aftenloon the cat slunk into its mistress' room, disappeared under the cupboard and started mewing. After much coaxing, the pet appeared, carrying in its mouth a yellow canary. Heavy-Duty Burglars Poughkeepsie, N. Y.--Burglars pried loose a 150-pound safe buried two inches in concrete and took the vault and contents away with them, when they burglarized an oil company. 18 Mesths for tea Coals Woodbury, N. J.--Richard Jonesboro, twenty, of Swedesboro, was sentenced to eighteen months to two years in State prison. His crime was robbing a service station of two five-cent tarts. ( r«gH«h in Early Ohio Schools Iir 1873 the Ohio general assembly passed a law providing that the English language be used in teaching all subjects in the schools. Previous to that year, the German la» guage was used in many schools "Father" ef Henry Purcell, the "father* English music, was appointed ganist at Westminster abbey In lfTI» when he was only eighteen years of CENTRAL GARAGE When your car or truck needa attention, we are prepared to serve yon. One of the best equipped garages in northern Illinois. ' 'Full Line of Atlas and Goodyear Tires Bectric and Aoetytaie Welding Car Washing and Polishing Phone 200-J Towing Johnshttrg •-VALL PURPOSE CROCK WITH ' "PLIOFILM" COVER ti Both of these useful household items for the price usually paid for the crock. 7'/2 inch earthenware crock can be used for baking mixing or storage and is attractive for table use. Trans- H A parent Pliofilm cover is sani- H tary, odorless and washable. A 35c value. MILK STRAINER. Nft in MILK CAN BRUSH. 8 in. Handle 39c MILK BOTTLE CAPS. No. 2 Sa«. 500 for 29c Cotton FILTER DISCS. 6 in. Single. 1Q0 for 45c DAIRY PAILS. 12 qt„ J for i $1.09 ALL PURPOSE CHAINS. 12 ft....... .. $1.39 GRAIN SCOOP. Sixe 12 r: .. ..ii....... $1.89 True Kaln TANK SPRAYER. 3'/i gal $3.49 ACME PARIS GREEN. I Ib. ._ -49e ARSENATE OF LEAD. I lb _..C35e HOUSEHOLD SPRAYER. S on. 0|>. .~ .10e FLY DED, I pit. •••»« Wm. H. Althoff Hdw Main Street West "• V

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