McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Mar 1941, p. 2

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'•/iff *^i . ?. * »:.>** *'^r ^>rr,-vy^ ^^7;tr^;u( v. 1 -t"'; * ' Iv , ;:r.*s >•**.*.. v*#* *•. ;?-,* "" 4/* -«f * • - i <• -•*•. '" •'tj* »,*iip ','3" j ,-\'-V=~f "»vv ;,, jvt: ,>v ^-4 - -..-' |^n v ' ^ •%Y? : By John Harrey Fmrhy, PhJ> SHE MONITOR AND MittWK WERE MOT TO! FUSTIMN; cup us.. 1 ' , *T -Washington W. letter -By- National Editorial Aaoditioa Washington, March 5 -- With the SLOCUM'S LAKE Mrs. Celia Dowel! and daughter, Jennie, were callers at Waukegan last Friday. Wm. Krneger of Chicago was a dinner and afternoon guest Sunday at the home of Mr- and Mrs. Earl Converse. Harry Raeburg of Belvidere spent highly controversial lend-lease bill j Sunday with his wife and family at now taking the final hurdles in its leg islative course, attention is turning to the administrative techniques when it becomes a law. 11 is an exciting guessing contest as the occupant of the (White House is the only person with I the correct answer. The situation is The Confederate ship Merrimac I somewhat analogous to betting on a was begun in 1861 and finished in j horse race on basis of estimating from j Mrs. Ella Parks at Park Ridge the home <rf Mrs. Celia Dowell Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pearson and two children of Zion were callers Sunday afternoon at the home of Willard Darrell. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney. and Otis Phillips spent last Thursday afternoon at the home of 1882. Its famous battle with the Fed- ! past performances. The paths of aceral's Monitor took place at Hamp- j tion which Mr. Roosevelt will follow ton Roads, Va., March 9, 1862. This ] are not easily predictable for the legwas the first battle between two j js)ation gives him untried opportuniiron- clad fighting ships, and proved j tjes which discounts older policy patterns. The pending bin confers so much the superiority of this type of ship so that the navies of the whole world were made obsolete. But, strangely enough, neither of these ships was the first of the American navy's ironclad vessels. The U. S. S. Michigan was built with iron, sides 18 discretionary power that Congress will be hard pressed to hazard even Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wagner and son, Gerald, were callers at Waukegan last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Case and son, Lyle, of Roseville were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wagner and son, Gera'd, were Sunday dinner and guess as to Administration policies j afternoon guests at the home of Mr. in aid to Britain. It is expected that f' '• • •V;', of this "daddy of 'em all." . (Public Ledger--WNU Strvicc.) Twic« Told Tales years before either of ihft&e famous the first inkling will come with .the ships, but little has ever been heard j issuance of a series of executive orders transferring certain authority to the Army, the Navy, the Defense Commission and other governmental 1 agencies. No doubt exists that the Chief Executive has already drafted these orders in readiness for urgent situations which cannot be handled until the power is actually bestowed by thfe national legislature. Admin- • istrative leaders on Capitol Hill have consistently fought off all attempts to itemize what the President may and j may not ao under the measure. It is ; a general authorization plan which j provides the White Home with plenty | of leeway. The enactment of the lend-lease bill ' will not mean that Congress has finj ished its chore. Many legislators, in- ! eluding those voting for the plan, i have publicly declared they intend to ' keep a watchful eye on the operations I under the proposed statute. In real- | ity their scrutiny of administrative acts under the authority vested will avail them little relief for pent-up feelings. Objections to the manner ift which the executive branch construes the legislative grants of power are futile until the lawmakers are asked for money. The dissenters then have in opportunity to express their disnleasure by curtailing appropriations. The current measure indicates little disposition for Congress to stint on money for British aid. Grumblings of the solons about dofhe Fles of the PldaMi ef Tsars Age TWENTY YEARS AGO Vw th»t th* automobile traffic is once more on the increase, wouldn't it be a good plan for all of us to p*y a trifle more heed to the traffic jSosts about town? The body of George Schreiner, who died, while in service in France, is expected to arrive in McHenry shortly. Very good progress is being made in the work of razing the old Schneider block on the West side, which was recently purchased by Messrs. R. B. Walsh and M. A. Thelen. The. store building on Water street owned by Mrs. Peter Rothermel, is j in^g at the Defense Commission preundergoing quite extensive improve- J sage a spirited Congressional inquiry ments. The stairway on the north: which will probably escape political side of the building has been removed. (controls. Those instigating the move- THIRTY YEARS AGO Butter was declared firm at 25% cents on the Elgin board of trade Monday. ment for a probe of this emergency agency thought it would be confined to activities of business men now temporarily in the government service. The epidemic of strikes in defense industries leaves the investiga- Geo. J. Schreiner is again employed ; tors with no alternative but to include in the Chas. G. Frett meat market unior, labor in their alleged fact-find-1 last Thursday. and Mrs. Edward Wirtz at Ivanhoe Mrs. Ella Parks and son, Hugh, of Park Ridg*e spent Sunday afternoon at at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Ceorge Vasey of Waukegan, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Wagner of Lake Villa and Mrs. C. H. Hansen visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner Sunday afternoon, having called on Mrs. Mary Sable who is seriously ill and confined to her bed. Mr. and Mrs. Pete Anderson and son of Cary were Friday afternoon and supper guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. Ed Wagner of Waukegan spent Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. George Lundgren and guests, Mrs. Forren and son, of Chicago, were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and Mrs. John Blomgren attended the annual meeting of the Lake County Home Bureau at the Waukegan Baptist church last Tuesday. Mr. Matthews extended greetings from the Cake County Farm Bureau to the Lake County Home Bureau. Mr. and Mrs. Marlett Henry and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Raven attended a masquerade party at Odd Fellows hall at Crystal Lake last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons, Robert and Lyle, Willard Darrell and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ebping spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marlett Henry. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Burkhart were recent dinner and evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Knockemus in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burkhart of Chicago were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests at the home of the former's parents at Williams Park. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Burkhart of Williams Park were callers in Chicago and grocery after a few months' ab sence. j mg. Two separate probes are sched- Robert Matthews and several class- »n» u n o ! uled on the same subject which may j mates of the Agricultural class of the Tne McHenry Brewing company is J confuse the reading public as to the j high school attended the school on having all of its wagons repainted in .true motives of the Senate and House, j tractors held at Grayslake Monday anticipation of the opening of the I One of the major features to be ex- and Tuesday, sponsored by the Lake spring and summer business. j plored relates to methods of letting1 County Farm Bureau. F. O. Gans has moved his family > defense contracts. The legislators I Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett were f0ni»^le ^ ^ church parsonage into want to know whether any scandal atthe Riverside hotel, where things are taches to contracts obtained by combeing prepared for the opening of the panies whose former officials or empopular hostelry. FORTY YEARS AGO R. O. Lamphere and Miss Mayme Besley were quietly married at Geneva, 111., on Wednesday of last week. Station agent Buss, after a long service with the North Western railroad company is retired from active service and placed on the pension list. Lewis H. Owen has retired from the firm of Owen A Chapell, having sold his interest to S. S. Chapell. "Butter, was declared firm at 22% cents on the Elgin board of trade Monday. *IFTY years ago At the time of writing, Tuesday afternoon, the "beautiful snow" is falling rapidly. March is indeed here. The Modern Woodmen, of Ringwood. will have a dance in their hall, at that place, Friday evening next. Tickets for dance, 60 cents. Supper, 60 cents per couple extra for those who wish. On Saturday night two ice trains between here and Nunda undertook to pass on the same track, going in opposite directions, and the result was several demoralized cars and a badly battered engine. . F- B- Ellsworth, who for the past few years has lived on the Tanner farm, on the Woodstock road, moved this week to Iowa. P. S. Martin will occupy the Tanner farm. 8IXTY YEARS AGO The blockade was broken on Tuesday and on Tuesday night we got the first mail that had been delivered here for eight days. John Fitzsimmons, of Osborne City, Kansas, is rusticating among friends in this village. Doran & Co., have bought the lumber for their butter and cheese factory, and F. A. Hebard has commenced getting out the window casings and such other work as he can do indoors. . E-M- 0wen « repairing and putting m shape the store latelv occupied by J. Story, opposite the mill. By order of the Pone, the Vatican , Guard will be armed with muzzle rifles of a type in use 100 years ago, Instead of the modern ones heretofore used. This guard never shoots at any- One. anyway, so the kind of gun carried is not important. ^John Maley. retired farmer of Plainwell, Mich., was rejected by recruiting officers in the Civil War be Cttise he was "too frail." He recentlv celebrated his 06th birthday. ployees have been drafted into key positions. Another series of questions will be directed to the unionism aspect, primarily to ascertain whether trade union leaders have taken advantage of their Federal posts to force compulsory bargaining upon business seeking government defense jobs. The Army's plans for defense airports are hitting snags in some localities. It seems that many groups imbued with ideas as to artistic designs have attempted to have a voice in the matter. Hard-boiled Army leaders insist that for practical reasons camouflage features should be utilized to screen the airports. In event of emergency, removable markers are necessary to prevent enemy flyers fromspotting their location. Full camouflage would require such measures as providing uniform-looking surfaces for entire airports rather than the usual clearly delineated landing strips. The military will dominate as they have the last word in providing the money for airport facilties. The feasibility of landing strips along Federalaid highways, especially at major intersections, is now under study. Private fliers would like to see smaller fields developed. The thirst for knowledge in our youngsters is proven in the latest Bureau of Census reports this week showing that books and pamphlets written especially for this group were among the best sellers. The demand for juvenile publications far outranked tlfe Bible and fiction. Over half of the/total output of 180 million books in/1939 were used by youngsters either in private reading or in school work. The popularity of the radio apparently did not diminish interest in reading matter for the census reports tremendous increases in demand for books in the last two years. callers last Thursday at the homes of Mr. and Mrs. Mort Ritt and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. VanNatta at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett were dinner guests last Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Litwiler at Round Lake. Mr- and Mrs. G. J. Burnett and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Van Natta of Elgin attended the funeral services of Thomas J. Wright at the Justen funeral home at McHenry last Sunday. Relatives and friends from Round Lake, Elgin and Barrington gave G. J. Burnett a pleasant surprise last Sunday on his seventy-fifth birthday anniversary when they gathered at his home with a large birthday cake and other food to make up a delicious dinner. Mr. Burnett received many gifts and cards. SP1UNQ GROVE cience C Science Service.--WNU Strvln. Fever Therapy for Qrgans of Body May Be Develo T RINGWOOD Pasadena, Calif. -- New researches at the California Institute of Technology here hold the possibility of offering the longsought goal of selective treatment of various organs of the body by those ultra-short radio waves now being employed to produce artificial fever in the therapy of disease. Cancer, rheumetic feyer, arthritis, syphilis, gonorrhea, St. Vitus Dance, and certain ocular diseases are among the afflictions of mankind which have been treated by artificial radio waves. They all represent potential directions in which the treatment may be extended with new and, perhaps, more successful results. * Wave Absorption Studied. Prof. G. Potapenko of the physics department is the man whose findings may yield these important practical results. For more than a year he has been investigating the absorption of short radio waves (8 inches to 4 feet in length) as they pass through many substances. Contrary to present-held theories the point of maximum absorption seemed not to depend greatly on the size of the molecules in the substance, but rather on the size of part of the molecule which can be called the "tail." This "tail" seems to rotate freely about the axis of such molecules as those of alcohol. To Produce Selective Heating. The exact knowledge of the maximum of absorption is necessary to produce the selective heating of specific organs or parts of the body. Those parts containing molecules with orienting "tails" can be easily administered the sought-for selective heating treatment. All that is necessary, points out Professor Potapenko, is to tune the radio wave generator to the wavelength corresponding to the maximum of absorption. Otherwise the effect is one of general heating like that now used to produce a general artificial fever in the whole body. Ball-and-Socket Joint in Skull of a Dinosaur Washington.--What use wa^there for a ball-and-socket jointed bone at the back of a dinosaur's skull? Charles W. Gilmore, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the United States National museum, would like to know. At the back of the skull of a hadrosaur, a rooster-crested monster that lived in Montana about a hundred million years ago, he has found a bone arrangement that has never been found in any other kind of skull. A relatively small, triangular bone bears on its front edge a socket or cup, which fits neatly over a ball-shaped projection on the bone in front of it. Whatever was the use of this unique skull joint, it could hardly have been to make room for the hadrosaur's massive brain. For the hadrosaur's brain was anything but massive. It couldn't have weighed more than two or three ounces. It was enough to see, hear, and probably smell with, but that was about all. But then, very likely a dinosaur never bothered to think--except possibly once in a, another dinosaur. •MsnnaHBi Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiedrich were •Upper guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schultz near Greenwood. Mrs. George Young spent Saturday and Sunday in the home of her brother, Edward Smith, and family at Crystal Lake. Mrs. McKelvey was a caller in the FVed Wiedrich home Friday. Rev. and Mrs. Collins spent Sunday in the Milton Peterson home at McCullom Lake. Mrs. Patrick Coyne spent from Thursday until Sunday with her daughters and families in Chicago. Mrs. A. C. Merrell of Solon Mills spent Wednesday with Mr.s S. WBrown. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Block and family of Kenosha spent Sunday with Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Muszy and family vipited relatives at 'Marengo Sunday. Mrs. Cora Walter of Crystal Lake was a caller at the Wayne Fosb and Hawley homes Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown spent Friday in Woodstock. Mrs. F. N. Muxzy entertained the Home Bureau Tuesday. Mesdames Clinton Martin, Kenneth Cristy, W. B. Harrison, Glenn Benoy, Charles Peet, Joe McCannon, Paul Walkington, Ben Walkington and Viola Low attended a kitchen shower for the.benefit of the Greenwood Dorcas at the Arthur Peet home Friday. The Home Circle will meet with Mrs. Weldon Andreas Wednesday, March 12. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens of Forrest Park spent the weekend fn the B. T. Butlen home. ~ 1 Miss Florence Zapfe of Chicago spent Sunday in the Andrew Hawley home. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Peet and family of Greenwood spent Sunday afternoon in the Charles Peet home. Fred Wiedrich and daughter, Mae, spent Monday at Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Kemp of Woodstock spent Sunday in the B. T. Butler home. Quite a few women of Ringwood met at the home of Mrs. Louis Hawley Thursday and worked for the Red Cross. Mrs. J. M. Butler of Bath, 111., is visiting in the home of her son, B. T. Butler, and family. « Mr. and Mrs. George Young spent Tuesday with relatives at McHenry. Mrs. Roy Wiedrich and sons spent Thursday with her mother at Genoa City. Rev. and Mrs. Collins called on Mrs. Viola Rawson at Greenwood Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger of Greenwood spent Sunday with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Quite a few from here attended the dinner given by the men of the Methodist church at McHenry Sunday. Rev. and Mrs. Collins attended the Lotus Club at Spring Grove Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Berg celebrated their twenty-fifth wedding anniversary at their home Sunday. Those to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Myron Sanderson of Kenosha, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yanke of Genoa <3ity, Mrs. CharlegyMountford of Genoa City and Miss Inez Norton of Kenosha. city 4ttnr OOOTITY roaiMeCHsoRHAB 8KA1. SALS WITH $133.: McHenry turned in a total of $132.60 in the annual McHenry county Christmas seal sale, according to Miss Cora Manaton, county chairman. Amounts secured other county committees using the mail sale were: Woodstock .$426.07 Crystal Lake --170.49 Marengo ; 128.84 Hebron ^ 85.20 Richmond .............. 80.96 In the county as a whole $1,717.28 was received, for a per capita contribution of slightly more than four cents per person. The state receives twenty-five per cent, $429.38, which goes to, the state tuberculosis association. This amount, coupled with the expenses of the 1940 campaign which included cost of supplies and mailing, leaves a balance of $1,132.42 in the county treasury. The money in the county fund will be used to defray costs of clinics, immunization projects and care of individual cases. HARRY MATTHEWS HEADS LAKE COUNTY FARM BUREAU Harry Matthews of Slocum Lake was elected president of the Lake to devote time to the work. OOUKTY SHIPS SXOOHD quota or (umm FOB BSD OSOSS JUD Valued at more than $1*500, the second quota of garments produced by the McHenry county Red Cross chapter for civilian war refugees was shipped from Woodstock during the weekend. The shipment weighed 844 pounds and consisted of eighty-eight children's wash dresses, thirty-three men's rind women's sweaters, fortyfive children's sweaters, sixty-six caps thirty pairs of socks, thirty pairs'of mittens, five mufflers, three afghans, and forty-five layettes, each including twenty-six garments. Last week more than $2,000 worth of new supplies was checked in at the Woodstock Red Cross headquarters. and these materials now are being issued to the twelve branches ill the county doing garment work. Besides its regular quota of more than 7.000 separate grarments by May 31, the county chapter also is handling extra work being transferred in from outside chapters unable to fill their quotas. Sewing phase of the garment program now calls for tailored woolen dresses, skirts, and shuts, and Red Cross urgently needs the aid of experienced sewers able and willing I ;.. County Farm Bureau at a meeting held at the farm bureau offices in GrayBlake last Wednesday evening. Matthews succeeds Earl Kane of Diamond "Lake as president of the bureau. , The bureau officers were chosen by the board of directors elected at the annual farm bureau meeting two weeks ago. • An optimist is a fellow who expects to get out of debt some day. Seven more county women have been presented with 144-hour merit pins, making a total of twenty-five volunteers who have received the award in recognition of their services. The United States is now turning^ out steel at the rate of about eighty million tons a year, or more than all the rest of the world is producing. All the steel required for ships of our new two-ocean Navy will be less than one million tons. Farm Cash Income From Milk*; Records New Three-Year ffigh Business for the portable jail in Rodessa, La., is so slack that it was loaned to a neighboring community. 1938 *1,396,000400 1939 $1,355,000^000 1940 $1,502400400 NEW YORK--Farm cash income from milk for 1940 totaled $1,502,- 400,000--an increase of $147,000,000 or 10.87 per cent over the 1939 total and the largest since 1937, according to a Milk Industry Foundation report. Figures for 1940 show the importance of milk as a mainstay of farm purchasing power," the report •ays. The increase is also impressive as milk is a cash crop paid for monthly and not at the end of the season as in the case of most crops. Milk cash is widely used for current farm purchases and merchandise. While 1940 figures are not yet available for all Individual farm products, it is indicated that n»mr is again the largest single source of term cash income. While cash Income from milk was m> 10.87 per cent the. income from all other farm products rose only 7.39 per cent during 1940. Milk production • of 111 billion quarts was the largest^ on record. More significant, farm cash income from milk for the year 1940 " was 91.3 based on 1924-29 as 100, * compared with 77.6 for total fana, Income. The milk figure for December, 1940, was 104.6, while all farmincome was 84.0. This shows how farm income -from milk has been v relatively mnch better maintained. than farm Income from all other crops and commodities, contrasted with the latter half of the more prosperous 20's. Fqr 1940 the . Milk Industry Foundation monthly milk sales reports from 136 leading U. S. cities indicate increases in sales of fluid milk of 1.4 Der cent ovar tin „ PUBLIC LIBRARY NOTES>» • New books to( be found on Hie shelves at the public library are as follows: "For Whom the Bell Tolls," by Ernest Hemingway; "Mrs. Miniver," by Struthers; "Invitation to Live." by Lloyd C. Douglas; "You Can't Go Home Again," by Wolfe -- Oliver Wiswell," by Kenneth Rob-1 of the Community church. Mrs. Frank Sanders and Mrs. Geo. Sanders were Woodstock callers on Wednesday. Allen Freund, small son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Freund, is confined to his home with measles. Albert Britz and Burton Stevens enjoyed the International Sportsmen's Show at the International Amphitheater in Chicago on Thursday. Mrs. Britz and sons, Terry and Tommy, accompanied them and spent the day with Mrs. Frank Prosser and family. Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer returned home on Sunday having spent several days the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson in Rockford. Mrs. William Roewer of Crystal Lake visited Mrs. George Sanders on Thursday afternoon. Joseph Kattner was released from St. Therese's hospital on Sunday and has returned to his home. Mike Wagner of Chicago spent the weekend with his children at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. Charles May and family were visitors in the home of Mrs. J. J. Freund on Sunday. A nice crowd attended the Rummage Stale and Chop Suey supper at the. Town Hall Saturday afternoon and evening. It was held for the benefit Normal American Maflt. Doesn't Look So Good erts; Quietly My Captain Waits," by Eton and "Wave of the Future," by Anne Lindberg. Besides these there are a few new books for girls. The public library is located in the high school and is open on Wednesday afternoons and evenings and also on Friday afternoons. Superior people are necessary, but we common folks don't like for them to keep reminding us of .their superf. onty. - Paul Weber is taking up flying, having taken his second lesson on Saturday. Guests in the Frank Sanders home on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph James of Rockford and Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Pollock and daughter of Minneapolis, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Westman, sons, Roy and Donny, John and Evelyn Sanders of Woodstoick and Mr. and Mrs. George Sanders- Miss Alyce Nodland of Chicago visited friends here on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund and New York.--Homo AmericanUs (male) took a debunking at Cooper Union here, at the hands of Dr. John Dollard of Yale, who has studied the species intensively, taking thousands of measurements of attitude both physical and mental. Here's what you look like, Mr. Proud American Man: Physically, you are • potbellied, flat-chested, round-shouldered. You believe what you read in the papers. You think the competitive system is all right, and expect to thrive thereby yourself, but you'll take your beating without whining if you do chance to lose out. Win or lose, you're ^or the status quo. You are married or expect to be. But you're not averse to a bit of philandering before marriage, or even after. On the credit side: You don't like too much talk. You keep clean; You believe in education and in democracy. Almost a Vacuum Berlin:--The most nearly complete vacuum ever achieved under laboratory conditions, states Prof. C. Ramsauer of Berlin, is represented by a pressure of one fivebillionth of a millimeter of mercury. (Ordinary atmospheric pressure is about 300 millimeters.) children were supper guests in the home of his mother, Mrs. M. J Freund, in McHenry Sunday. Mrs. Norbert Klaus and Mrs. Albert Britz visited Mrs. Arthur Klein in Johnsburg on Saturday. Mrs. Klein had the misfortune of breaking her ankle when she slipped and fell on an icy walk. Mr. and Mrs, Joseph James of Rockford were callers in the home of his sister, Mrs. Ernest Peacock, on Sunday. Beadthe Wa»t A* Gel ^CHEVROLET And Get The Combination That Counts' VAIVE IN HEAD w 90-iLF. VAIVUMMB SB--the only one in the biggest-selling low-price groupl "VMVE-lti-HEAD'S IHi VICTOR" in perfoN* Once on land, sea, and in the air! w save you money on gas, ofl and upkeep I l o w - p r i c e d car t h a t b r m t j s you t h i s combination! . . Why Pay Mort* Why Acct to ss ? Remember mo/e people buy C h e v r o l e t because H't thoroughly thoroughly KKNMMf--as Bom upon millions of owners will testify! rhon buy any ofh *r make of car r o g a r d i o s of t y p e , s i z e or p r i c e ! SCHWERMAN CHEVROLET SALES 1 McHENRY, ILL.

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