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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Jul 1938, p. 5

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*SO I HEAR" ferry. EARL WAL&H A contribution! ' j --1|-- j We all enjoy your cotartm, ^" fs 1 For with .all the subjects dealt --,s fitfd "So I Hear" just dbesii't land * * • :'r. • i pjMch b«jgw the belt. dO^Y^I ?>' Thanks, Dopey, cM kid. As stated if lotne months ago, ire deal in all subjects but problems of the love birts |.i|i this space. No one man gang etti handle those problems. Guess we are guilty of picking on people in this chatter. Mrs. John Stilling was just telling us that she ' Watches every week, wondering who •1; •; Ihe next victim might be. (All she - has to do to find out is to carry out a ' . threat to go horseback riding.) W^sn' We're guilty, but as Dopey gener- ""** ously states, the punches are aimed iigh. We're glad to have you contri- » bute. Don't worry about sending a lew punches in those contributions-- Just keep'em high. guns, but had eye trouble. There's a felhm that was and is misled: He Hrove in runs. Maybe the whole team would be in betetr standing if Little Augie, * converged second-baseman who wks supposed to be long on fielding and short on hitting, could have stayed in t here. Still, we haven't found that fence buster. --IFrank Demaree, on whom all the rival clubs cast goo-goo eyes when winter trade winds blew, is batting just a notch above the pitcher as this is written. That isn't whare fence posters bat. . •' • -if.fa I. • -f-L. • . Hh' Joe Marty, #ho ^ven better than DiMaggio" has been good in spots, but hi# .200, and a little more, average isn't enough for a big league outfielder. . / • It is our humble opinion that Joe Marty is a real outfielder and will be a great outfielder the day that his manager tells him so--then puts him in the lineup for keeps. Those rookie outfielders who were supposed to fairly sparkle this season have failed to blind the f«hs with expected glitter. , , So, now. What to do about it? Let's turn out the lights and go to sleep. --I--' But hold your horses. Couldn't we DOUBLE HAIR EVkriT i Octopu. U Iki AHD SPECIAL FEATURE i k,SMn$.cn.i«H BOUTS AT 09AYSLAKX Dreaded by all small sea crea- - I tures is the octopus. It likes to A double main event and a special .hide in crevices on the seabed and feature attraction will headline the 'n wa^ f°r unsuspecting crabs fourth all-star heavyweight wrestling ?n<* Whenever a shellfish card of the season at Peg's Open-air 1S_ wi*hin reach out go the long tenta- Arena, tlrayslake, Friday night, July es' <luictly but swiftly, to fasten J5 ] upon the food, and there is very lit- Rudy Kay, the most hated wrestle*.*1® f°F *"* creature thus ever to appear in Lake County ¥e- r5,u;«»rfirv * octopus has •srs.rrt a-sce matct i C. ",^ soft body; eight arms, or tentacles, lind clever Italian star. Kay it will be; curl restlessly about in the water, remembered held Jim MeMilen to a, These whiplike arms are. covered one hour*draw at Rourtd Lake a year with TOWS of-strong suckers along ag^and heldre that won seven pro, the undersides, and they hold their starts in succession over all comers. ( victims by suction. When an octo- He will meet Garibaldi in » one fall match to the finish in one of the feature goes Friday. The other feature on the twin windup show pits Ferd "Legs" Grubmier, famous Iowa scissor expert and tops as a Lake county favorite, against Hans Schnable, vicious and powerful German heavyweight who conquered Rudy Strongberg in a great match at Grayslake last week. - Uncrowned Champion' pus is sitting in its den the arms are coiled up underneath the body with the suckers outward ready for a pounce. >; But one of the strangest facts about the octopus is the way it breathes. Its whole body throbs slowly with breath-beats and water is taken in at the same time to be forced out again through a small, funnel-shaped tube |>ehirid its head. The creature swims as it breaths, tdZuces' fffors tshe £firrstti mtim"e't kth"ec tu,nnc?r owned wit's a sudden powerful spurt This sudheavyweight champion of the world, den rush of water often drives the undefeated Ralph "Duffy" Silverstem. ' octopus along in six-foot jerks. To Ruffy, the greatest college wrestler make the journey more comfortaever developed, and thrice winner of ble, too, the arms are held together The C. O. F. Bowling Club held their , put infielder Lazzeri, catchers Garback the National Collegiate Championship' s_o they t_r_ ail behi_n d the body--but. annual picnic at Frankeh's Grove, Lily and O'Dea, first-baseman Collins and ^ while at the University of Illinois, de- even then the octopus travels back- Lalce, last Sunday and had a gmtriJmaybe^Ol' Di* in the outfield? We feated Jim McMiller before 28,000 p^o-1 wards. Thus, in order to go forpie in the Chicago Stadium last winter1 ward, the creature must face oppo- "Suicide Clul»M Joke Halted by Crocodile Wyndham, North Australia.-- The "Suicide club" of this city has been' abandoned as a result of the discovery of the fact that the name and practices of the club might not be a joke after all. The constitution of the club was based on the assumed principle that ,a crocodile will not attack human beings in the water. The young men members of the club swam in the crocodile infested waters of the gulf here. All went oHiL #i J8-fdbt rtptile ma'de a dash rer ember who jyas swimming some 20 yards from the jetty. v*i * LBOfcAftft**. BARRETT FARMERS TOIL FOR DAYS TO SAVE DOG Terrier Caught in Hole Ground Chasing Fox. time. might try. --I- & year the court adds to the | We wouldn't be smart enough to . regular kitty to give the dub a "what's the matter with the v little sum for a real picnic. Cubs," but even before we took up a j bludgeon to "fire the manager" as championship. to win the Illinois State Heavyweight site to the direction .it wants to go. Championship, and is rated by the Illi-j ' nois Athletic Commission as the num- (ber one ranking contender for world's -tf The boys had what tfcey term * j many fans do, we would look over oar i lunch at 1:00 o'clock. If they want to outfielders. lij&ll 50 pounds of roast beef, 10 pounds of hot dogs, a truck load of bread and *'• a wagon load of potatoes a lunch -- -Hub it's a lunch. - f 1 • • After that little lunch. a quantity of cigars showed up. The Palace Recreation Parlor really donated the '{Edgars, but what did "Prof." Nye do but pass them out under false pretenses! -I-- Through long, hard weeks our sen stive ears have stung with burning in- Names El bridge, Eldridge Have Different Meanings Differing by only one letter and Well, they fixed that fellow when founded Ruffy will have a tough time of it going against "Slugger" Jack Conley,' sounding so much alike that it is of Boston, whose favorite hold is a- difficult -to distinguish them from sock in the jaw. „ " I each other, the nartfes Elbridge and . ,tX~ .. _ ... In the preliminaries, El Sayre,1 Fldridge nevertheless have entirely ?v,riwv^ a v-I* "l*Tvr ^. iformer captain of the University of, different meanings, writes Florence «i 4ii ®°*T write Illinois' football team and now coach- A- Cowles in the Cleveland Plain and tell as. . ling Colorado U. football and wrestling Dealer. _ _ . tm . teams, will tangle with "Bull" Curley, Elbridge; is of Anglo Saxon origin George Schreiner says: "How do powerful mat artist and means "dweller at the little you get that w«y~Pjcking on my whose home is in Waukegan, will have fridge," a place name which was ^ ^ m ^ i a world of friends at the ringside. : first a surname and is now also used It- ^ ^ v Geo^e Mansor, giant Arabian.'88 a g,yen name' Ji" We' 80rt of dmHb- meets Jim Hefner, diminutive Texan' Elbridge Gerry (1744-1814) was a he tried to sneak off for a game of golf. --I | i(i the other prelim. Lou Gordan will | s'^nfr of the Declaration of Inde- ~ "Prof." made a great umpire. You've than Louie heard of umps going to sleep. This | If thatr Ananias Club is ever re-orexclaims George, ve seen ^re. Usual ticket prices of 50c and pe"dence- governor of Massachuthat water so high you couldn't - - -")$1 wi„ evail free setts and vice president of the But we stopped him. He's worse ^ ^ held Saturday in cage of ^. ^1^ States. His name gave rise •- ' vx imi"' to the political term gerrymander, -denoting an unfair division of elec- =^Sne really did. Anyhow, he called 'em ganiied in McHenry, we want George PLAYGROUND NOTES while lying in the shade of a tree near in the ranks. -- center field. --1 McHenry tennis team beat Wood- --|-- j Since Krug left our corner, we can't st°cll 9 to 8. WJho do you suppose was the star,handle the outlaws. performer of the day? Believe it ori . -- H-- not--^Vernon Knox. He speared hot) City Sights: Leo Heimer riding a Monday afternoon on the local tennis courts the McHenry tennis team1 sorne°ne toral districts. When governor, he isigned a bill dividing the state into new senatorial districts bringing many Federalist votes into one district. One of the districts was shaped like a huge salamander and coined f°r it' the word grounders and line drives like no-jbicycle down Main street, hanging on ^ Wodstock in the matches which r^rrv matt ,0™ hodys business. How did he hit? Say! to the handle bars for de*r life. postponed from last; Saturday, j 0 J**e T• Who does this DiMaggio guy think he' -||- All of the matches were well played,' fa^^and ^ ^er way back when Alderman, a"d several of them required the full of the fo_ th^ prevention a printer's devil and used to three sets before a winner -could be Gf Crueltv to Children .'1 -11 A. Ml » ' a I * * "Tike,' Remember ~ --| ** |Buss was The C. O. F. Canadian Club that ride a bike all over town without determined at Schaefer's took on the Palace j touching the handle bars? >_ | crew, but were no match. The Can-' l Remember way back when Dick adians went down 12 to 3 in the first, Overton used :|jame, then decided that slow pitching, it rolled ' was the fault of it all --I-- I -I-- With the mighty "Speed" Stilling to In the Married Men's Softball step to the mound, the Canadians; League Tuesday night, Roy Kent was challenged for a return match--fast | °n the mound vs. George Weber and pitching. No go. They went down 5 his Dippy-Do ball. It was a great game--ended 2* to 1 ] Eldridge has two orgins and. two , . . . ' meanings, its Teutonic meaning is playing number one position "mature counselor" and its Angloi to stand up on his bike on the McHenry boys team beat Phil-! Saxon meaning, "fearful, terrible," along--and folks thought ^P8 of Woodstock 6-1, 6-0. . (related to the adjective eldritch. "that boy will be killed!" ? " Vernon Freund beat Austin 8-6, 6-1,J Eldridge is mother form of Elj dred or Eldredge and related on Guy Duker lost to Woolf 6-4, 8-6, the Teutonic -side to the word elder. 4-6. Don Maarer lost to £. Austin 12-10, 2-6, 3-6. .to 3 this time. Now, who's the best? --8-- Along came the ladies in the afternoon for their share of the fun. The 'et's not be too technical. Ifen were real nice. They kept 'em lor supper. --11-- > Msgr. Nix, Father Thiry and a visiting priest joined Father Miller about six o'clock and promptly found themselves in a tug-o-war. The four mem- Bible Facta All book-lovers read the Bible for Adele Froehlich playing number one the beauti•f«ul«, ->di-gnified English it Well, it was actually 20 to 10, but position on the girls squad beat Miss contam*. « jwr po deeper reason, Elizabeth Thomas in straight sets by •V* ^n^°n Tit-Bib Magazine. Men scores of 6-3, 6-0. ^ ^ •nal" Jr*»»J>f the^Bibl^agf ttat it con- 'fain# 3.56Mil le^hi^M,m words, 31,175 verses, ), The boys had a new ball that, sailed like a rocket. Home runs wei* no novelty. Tony Frethfid pulled the play of the evening when he left his catcher's box ^chapters, and 66 i and" occurs no Anita Althoff also won in two sets 6-2, 6-0, beating Francis Garland of "Thl' Wood8tock- j fewer than4i,6fr.times «d the ~ . . . I w ° r d " L o r d ' / l ,58g times. Those ... „ Eleanor Althoff was forced into who order thetft livae by the Bible hers of the clergy pitted their power to back up a play at first base. The three sets before she finally beat Mar- could not choose a better set of - . . . . . . . ». " * " " -" p r a c t i c a l i n s t r u c t i o n s . The Book of Proverbs contains tte sanest ad- " Varley, Iowa.--A man's loyalty to his dog resulted the other day in the rescue of the animal from a crevice 23 feet under ground, where it was entombed for nearly 11 days. Spotty, a little black and white fox terrier, ran into a hole in the ground while chasing a fox on the Chester Baker farm near here. Another fox terrier, Tuffy, followed Spotty into the hole. Tuffy came out but Spotty didn't. No trace of the fox was found,' \ , The imprisoned dog's 'master, Emmet Simon, a tenant on the Baker farm, and companion hunters, immediately set about to dig the animal out of the limestone rock. But they found the hole much deeper than they had expectea and winding down through the rock. Nevertheless, Simon vowed he would not give up until Spotty was found^-dead or alive. His sister, Hilda, seven years old, kept a tearful vigil at home beside the bed she had fixed for her pet when he was found. Simon enlisted the aid of his neighbors and friends and rounded up a crew of 12 men. They worked night and day in three shifts of four men each, digging and blasting their way down the path on which Spotty disappeared. They could hear the little dog's bark, seemingly urging them on to the"rescue. Then for a day the dog's barks were not heard. For a while it was feared be had died of thirst or starvation, but Simor^ and his men kept on. Shortly after the next day the workmen reached the point where they could see Spotty wedged in an cpening six inches wide. Tender .hands picked up the ten pound dog and carried him to safety. Spotty was still in good condition although quite weak. He showed his appreciation before a large crowd .on hand to witness the rescue by wagging his tail and barking feebly. Hilda was summoned from her classes in school to see her pet. She raced homie and hugged the little dog as she exclaimed: "I'm so happy Spotty is safe, but I knew brother would bring him back to me." against four stalwarts of the club. It 'ba11 bounced high out of the first-sack- garet Phillips 6-3, 2-6, 6-3 Was a tie until the whole crowd decid-er'8 glove--right smack into Tony's'" ed to get in and tug. 1 hands. Big league^stuff! Tony Blake and Bob (old Bob) Fris- ,0ur Pfcindealer force has gone haywire. Harry Frye was discovered on mond 6-2, 6-0. the local golf course before sun-up one recent morning. Lyle and Kathleen The McHenry doubles team made up vice on behavior ever given to man. of Frank and "Sket" Schackeneberg In the earlier books tpere are rules l««l A.TT 1 • 1 « T\ • J m. were the cheer leaders of the and 'twas a day of good cheer. --I lost to Coach Hendricks and Drum- This Saturday afternoon on the lo- Have you noticed the number of were found swinging tennis racquets cal courts the McHenry team is playears parked near our choo-choo depot hy lantern light one recent evening, ing Palatine and some other interestjihese days? Looks like the McHenry j Too bad. _ jing matches are sure to be the result, ^^mmuter trade is perking up, Vlhat's the matter with the Cubs? --IWe won't call for help until "Mose"j A series of baseball games between v..* ..»»«« -.w. v/uvo. is c*ught mowing the lawn before two teams representing the East and 'fhat's what everybody is asking. They breakfast some morning. Well take West sides of McHenry are being playfor eating and drinking, for sowing crops and the maintenance of bodily health. Historically, it is accurate; it contains a comprehensive list of the flora and fauna of Palestine and the surrounding countries, their merchandise and mineral products. f\ had so many injuries last year that our heart was touched with pity. --»-- Pity h&s left--it's done gone. Now, we face facts and ask you--How many teams are going places without at least one long distance hitter? We -mean a fellow who can belt that apple out of the lot. --n-- Fellows like Frank Sehreiner teU'us that the Cubs (on paper) are the best in the league. We used to think BO. --I-- There' are many reasons why the -Cubs are not on top of the league right now and among those reason* nre*the Giants, Pirates and Cincinnati Reds. That's reason enough, but let's ~ on. -- - - --- • ---•* - ---- :™ v. . -I- ' Let's grant that the Cubs have the best infield in the league. When ol' Gabby is in there, they are still tops in catching although Schnozzola Lombardi of the Reds and Willie Terry's hoy Danning are using their war clubs ^0 great advantage. The pitching? Well, let's he on our , way out to that outfield. "Now, any of us dubs know or have h#ard that outfielders must hit the Mill hard and often if they are to be of importance to a team. The woods are full of good fiy-chasers. You may SKke exception, but fielders are made --hitters are born. --1-- „ . What's in that Cub outfield? Carl! Reynolds, who is no kid in the game,1 is outstanding. In spring training plans, Reynolds was a gap-filler. They! can't kick on Reynolds. He hits. But,! •till we haven't run across that guy .ipbo belts 'em out of the park. \ I Little Augie Galaa started great immediate action then. may be catching! Thomas Jefferson's VersatUMjr Summing up his versatility in oth- | er fields, one writer observes in part HEIR GOES TO WORK Those things ed on Monday, Wednesday and Friday that when Thomai" Jefferson" "spoke mornings by the boys of grade school j of law one immediately thought him age. The first game of the aeries was a lawyer; when he talked of mewon Monday morning by the East side chanics you thought him an engiteam 8-6. ; neer; at the mention of medicine one -- -- . w a s s u r e h e w a s a d o c t o r , a n d i n a A 'Badminton court ;has nei«r been j discussion of literature your mind set up on the playground and this new, was made up that he was a college and popular game is being enjoyed professor." Fifty years to the day ivgry much by the children. . after the signing of the Declara- Pion of Independence, Jefferson died and at his request this simple inv scription was placed on his tombstone: "Here was buried Thomas Jefferson, author of the Declaration of Independence, of the Statute of Virginia for religious freedom and father of the University of Virginia." Lifted from the obscurity of a tiny Greenwich village fiat to multlmillionairedom, Elisha Hudson Waterman, thirty-aiae-year-old heir it the Waterman fountain pen fortune, has gone to work as executive vice president in the company's offices at Newark, N. J. It was a strange homecoming for Waterman, who left' the family business 15 years age after a dispute with his father, the late Frank D. Waterman, over his choice of a bride. Since then, the husky Tale graduate and World war maekine-gwn sergeant has followed a precarieas living writing trti-- thrillers. DEATH TO BrOS Long Lost Diamond Ring It Recovered From Sewer „ Spokane, Wash. -- Repeated dreams of burglars stealing her $350 diamond engagement ring so worried Mrs. Joseph Ryan seven years ago that she pinned the ring inside the clothing of her four-month-old daughter, thinking it would be safe. Mrs. Ryan forgot to remove the ring once when she washed the baby's clothes. The pin came open and the ring went down the drain. Mrs. Ryan notified the sewer department and for several days city employees searched fruitlessly. Among the workers was Tom Higgins. Years passed. The Ryans moved to Seattle and Tom Higgins continued to dig out sewers. A month ago Higgins' eyes caught the glitter of a diamond in some muck he was shoveling. He remembered the search for Mrs. Ryan's ring. The woman was located in Seattle and the ring returned. Discovery ia Athens "I am the boundary stone of the agora," reads the inscription on a marker which helps determine the limits of the Athenian market place of the Sixth century B. C. Its height is approximately four feet and it is a foot thick and four inches wide The personified inscription is cut with carefully made archaic letteVs across th* top edge and down the right s de. The white marble post was found standjng erelct in its original position, just under a roac bed containing pottery of the Fifth century. Saad the Want Ads No more need midsummer night's dream be made a nightmare by bussing and biting bugs. While not at all shocking to Jane Gilbert, this eleetrocutkmer lamp is fatally so to more than M varieties of our winged tstsM«/1he current carrying strips de the work and the eatefc-pan below collects them. F*" Astral Lamp Invented bj CstiBt The Astral lamp was invented by the American-born Count Rumford in order to eliminate the shadow cast by the heavy base of the Argand lamp. Birds Sit on Town Clock Hands; Time Goes Haywire Bellefontaine, Ohio.--The time here has gone haywire recently because flocks of starlings have been using the hands in the Logan county courthouse clock for a merry-goround. The birds use all four faces of the clock as a perch. Then, when the minute-hand starts its up-swing, groups of them hop aboard and ride until a band approaches^ the hour mark. They then return to their perches and await another upswing. The practice has kept the "clock doctor" busy each morning getting the hands back "on time." ---^ Midget Hides in Rug St. Louis.--Police searched everywhere for a three-foot, forty-fivepound midget, for questioning in connection with the shooting of a showman, but gave up after 17 hours of searching. The midget had rr lied himself up in a rug while police searched all about him. In a Is£ge factory where dynamos were made, , a porker's hand 7. clenched to ,a h a m m e r w a s about to strike a' , piece of steel, ^wjifen the first ^pund of the Soonday whistle fas heard. Immediately, without striking the blqw, the hand .. Relaxed, the ham- <mer was thrown liown, and the workman retired to, ^is lunch. He , waf- within his rights, as the finest ,sound of the whistle announced the mid-day recess. But the questjgn is, would he not have .made, tUat strike of the hammer, if lie. bad been seriously interested in the wotk, he was doing? P^rbaps.< several more blows of the hammer might .have finished the job and cohvificed others of the sipcere Spirit' of. hunible toil. What is true' of the'fdc.tc.ry mechanic is true of 'all af Service. Achievtmen! is attained not so much by d^fag whst others demand of us, bpt what we .demand of earselves. .. j.ub "v -i s Externa} ^aws>goverping time and wages ar^ impo^t^nt end must be honored, but no tSKStec^ of external forces ever ^spired the spirit of sacrifice and loyalty ; which alone makes men tr^y gre*t. The difference b^tywq tjip jirqrk of genius and that Je$4<0fjf£ee is not only in the pv*jibfr^,taleoie but also in their uff. $gtk })Ours of daily practice mayj .^skilled musi* cian, bufi.te^.lpoj^fg, a day might disclose^ uf a genius. No true /(pi^at^. over closes the door of ^, la when the required ntmniW of working hours has been lulnnea. Indeed, he will remain ty\h» ffcst tubes far into the night, If ;it,,tfe'tiece$sary to study reactiortt telittfte to the solution pf a difflealt;«*|*riyH*M It is said* of the latt»Th^ddbre Rbbsevelt that he did some of >his best work after his second wind. The business man is compelled to obey certain legal and social obligations, but the greater part of his success can be accounted for not by his obedience to obligations forced upon him from without but by.obedience to those within. It is the second stroke of the hammer that expresses our interest in and love for our work. The force compelling us to deliver the second stroke is not .outside , of us, but in* side, afrif urgfcto ^6' oh despite weariness, or1 difqeucagement or apparent defeat. t What tasjc challenges our loyalty? For What end are We willing to sacrificed When we have answered that question, we shall have discovered the pathway leading to satisfactioiv atifi achievement. The result is never'so ihiportant as the spirit of thef beginning. The perfect automobile has not yet been made. The laboratory of science hos mqny secrets still unrevealed. The problem of social adjustment -has. sot been solved. The best poem has nofc been written. The woedi "Finis"-*has no place in any form of creative toil, The whole world Um all *bput us, still unexplored. its highest reward fldyin, wq have, given good measure; for that measure will return "good measure, pressed down, shaken together.'.Oniy as we give of our nnelltlVederthe inner self expan^ff^Lvgy}|49e are compelled to do by external forces, but what we are-ittwell^l W by the "inner urge" dewrmiriefcf 'our status in the field of ^rtVhwienV values. The spirit of our worte^rtiurt exjirfess the quality of *tfr*4dAirfr M ' • UnioM. Sweden of 1637 In tte autumn of 1637 two frlgatsa set sail from Gothenburg, Sweden, carrying a band of pioneers who planned to found a Swedish colony in the new world. The ships-- the Kalmar Nyckel and Fagel Grip --paused at the mouth of the Delaware river, then sailed on to the future site of Wilmington. The leaders dickered with the Indians and bought a piece of land. They took possession April 8, 1638, by erecting a post bearing the triple-crown arms of Sweden. Johan Printe became the first governor of New Sweden and for 17 years the colony prospered. 1 Then the Dutch e^fPtured & A Bumper crop A bumper crop is an unusually big crop, "filled to t'he brim" or overflowing like a. bumper or glass for a toast »!i«W ARE HERB! Clever new sty{q|, for sport and let* are. Fashioned by; Wilson Brothers; *1 PILLSBURY GOLD MEDAL or CERESOTA M-LS SAO •-ls. sao st.es IONA FLOUR W »5c Bkbmm 2 S>Uis .3 wWitVoiM K&nftji COFFEE MPKOl < A» HtM. 23< %&2Sc toaustc scsis* MtlSc W29t »lh Icwlfc FLRKES5 25' Giant Shark Landed Vancouver, B. C.--A giant mud shark -- weighing approximately 1,000 pounds--was caught by two fishermen near Howe sound. Subscribe for The Plaisdeakr Ike Masterful Man "A masterful man," said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "is like a good horseman who. controls by a word a: -l disdains the use of whip 9id spur." : • . C<*> ERTIE 'I ') Ji.. I** • ) > ,io-vS.ijV^3Pr 2'%8M5« •ssi 111 p»-oa.CAwsts* . 0O0T Sz.. wwe 2 PKM, 3 OOZ. 10c SOTTLC 21c . «*I~1SC COOKIES . 10c ia Alberta Peaches, Per bushel $L9f Golden Ripe Bananas, per lb. 5c OAMSilSC "If the countenance- is the index of the mind a blank page would cover that item in some cases." oakmSOC f SOWS 111 2 0AM* 23c 2 m£$kSS. 35c \ f O O D S T O R i .? 'bW TIME DANCE featuriqg ' G u y C o l b y • PopWUur WLS Caller -- Every Friday Iffgfrt BffTJSIO ^ "bLD MAN" NEILSON'S ORCHESTRA -am DEITZ' STABLES est of Mundelein 111. -- Car Routes 176 and 59-A 1 » • 1 Clip this ad--it will admit one free MODERN D A N C I N G Every Saturday Night--Music by Silver Derby Orcbaftra Added Attraction: 16 Exhibition Square Daaoum m. *' jV Friday, Evening, July 15

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