McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jul 1941, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ipM PSill PuMBebed henry, B; >F Chsrlss F, A. m. Intmd us neoond-dass the postftTlce at the act of May8, 1879. One Year Biz Months FOE SALS FOR 8ALB--Si* room house on John street, near schools. Reasonably priced. Also double garage or. lot. Inquire Mrs. Will Blake. Tel. 611- W-l. FOR SALE -- Choice Mack-raspberries, 16 qt. cases, parcel post delivered, $3.50 per case. Cash with order Mrs. D. Disher, Bangor, Michigan, route 1, box 16. YOUR MONEY BACK if yon font agree men's Jockey Underwear is the most comfortable you have ever worn. Varied kg lengshs, masculine support. Originated and manufactured by Coopers. 50c. McGEE'S. Green Street, McHenry. 7 should brings FOR SALE -- Two-wheal trailer; strong, good body and tires. Tel. McHenry 630-R-l. 7-tf FOR SALE--Bantam chickens; $3.00. Tel. McHenry 630-R-l. pai*S 7-tf FOR SALE--18-ft. Canoe, refinished inside and out. Phone Woodstock 1610-M-2. Gordon Clark. 7 FOR SALE--Combination radio; 26- ft launch; dinner tiMe; 6 chairs and buffet; library table; kitchen table; bookcase and law books. Phone Pistakee 671-R-l. 7 FOR SALE--7-piece Dining Set; buffet; double bed; 18-in. electric fan. L. A. Blomgren, McHenry, east side Pistakee Bay, Regner Road. *7 CURRANTS FOR SALE -- CaP McHenry 142-M, 10c per quart. 7 FOE EKNT KIRK'S KOTTAGES AND EAB1NS -- Tel. 661-M-l. Waterfront cottages, $10 - $15 week. Kabins--boats, $1.00. Outboard motors. 60c hr. Balloontired bicycles, 25c.hr.,. 3 hrs. for 50c. 7 FOR RENT--Furnished 2-room cottage by day or week. Inquire across from Peterson Beat Co. Geo. Steadman. *7 WANTED ;%f- - i'1':,. •' IMPOSITION WANTED--Expert electrician, mechanic. Also experience as gas station attendant, all around handy work, truck driving. Write Box "B," care of The McHenry Plaindealer *7 WANTED--Girl or woman for Saturdays and Sundays, $3,00. Stay. Cam two children, assist housework. Write Box "P," care McHenry Plaindealer. 7 WANTED--Room and board for two boys, thirteen years old: for summer monthhss,. farm a•ir ilake home. Address Mrs. M. Miles, 5155 Schubert Ave., Chicago. Tel. Berkshire tm. *7 WANTED--Two full-size beds and mattresses, two three-quarter size beds and mattresses, drop-leaf table. Tel. 661-M-l 7 MISCELLANEOUS DEAD OE ALIVE AWIMAIJ f L00 to $15.00 Oa* Cows -US*aer . Bes»* No help needed for Mtaf! Prompt and Snitiiy Barries Day and Night, Sudaysand Holidays PlweWkWlteg in ftwmtWiiii GARBAGE OOLUBCimO--Let us dispnsi of yo«r garbage each week, or oftener if desired. "issinwkTi ratoi Regular year round rests, former iy George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone MS or 6S1-M-1. t-tf 5?3g;. GARBAGE COLLECTING--We have bought out the Russie garbage route in McHenry and surrounding territory. Our trucks will make daily trips. Call Staines Bros., McHenry 638-M-2. 52-4 «t el dares ask it on a ah.-If she saleewoman T&Ma she would sit in front the' Store mitror all day. Women started a campaign a tew years a*fr ** get iaen to wear matchingr In fettir shirts and necktie MedMMg them into hat and suit colors. Without much effort they NMiM hi-gfting to their menfolk % ndeh -nor* pleasing appearance. - The question automatically arise*: Where ia the good taste now? If women an WD|ii|Qbd judges of men's clothes whyhave they gone so haywire oohate themselves? Once upoyatimo men complained that woqaen's hats changed in style so often thatit kept a fellow broke trying to. keep up. Now there are no grounds for such complaint. It would be aaffe to challenge anyone, even an /jssjpes*, *x> tell what is in style an&whQt is put The variety is $0 wide that last year's hat can be wonn agaiq thin year without fear of recogpSkinr~byt Just try to get her to wear it. 8 Th« hat manufacturers got rich changing de#ptut so that the women would have to buy aeveral hats every season or he considered old-fashioned They are maintaining their profit margibs ti&w by making hats that even t^fcttnuta who wear them can't starid for more than a few a«f«. •*' "WiW-fr >J jxa 1, . / yomwiwifiiT Raeborry Has litowiliit History Blueberries have become one of, the most important of cultivate*! fruits. A few jjetrt ago, wild berries were plentiful and everyone could help himself to this delicious native food. 'As wild land was absorbed for industry and roads, or bought up for fttmi and country homes, free blaeberries became scarce. Mean White, fee cultivated blueberry came an the market. Its history is highly interesting, because this larger, improved fruit is the result of an amateur's determined effort and years of work. The "godmother*' of the modem blueberry of commerce is Miss Elizabeth C. White of Whileebog, N. J. Living in a Mugbcrry.bog district, she came across a bulletin from the U. S. difS&m&iret S>lfcrulture describing the localities in which the wild fruil arqp&Atfioinmenting on ville ofu»d<$fcrtaftnt in growing plants from cuftmgs. Ibis was m 3910. Miss White promptly wrote t>r. Cokvilk and* to cd^2nalt^^Uhvccimen« in her vidinH&Mtortt which ha might propagate improved new varieties. From toi* pknee£ beginning, has grown tHe ftewlmtuStry, steadily increasing in volume in popular demand!*" - WHAT BAY? A soft-voiced man walked into a lunchroom where the counterman wait trifle hard of hsariag- < . "Rice pudding," said the Mb* tomer. "What's that?" "Rice pudding," repeated the customer. The other cupped a hand to his ear. "Sorry," ha apologized, "I didn't hear you." A stevedore, sitting at the end of the counter, became annoyed. "Listen, tin ears!" he shouted. "The guy says he wants rice pudding." The coimterman excused himself and hurried ever to ihe longshoreman. > "Did you call me?" ha askefl, v The stevedore bellowed. "Yes," he cried. "I told you to give that guju| plate of rice pudding and get it ovlr with." The deaf one's eyes narrowed. "Look here, you," ha growled. "Are you trying to tell my customers What they should eat?" §&• KRAI, HUSBANDRY Autograph liufttefs fisve different methods and habits in different cities, say Hollywood motion picture stars. Every city has a different ypsCfps qf signature smkfr, !$ew York pecde^ait seldom actually on their the main York autoin San motion the huapior celeb; autografts: UkA hunting* gadtmrls of graph hum Francisco Anit picture celebrities, but they are not rabid fans. They art quiet and mannerly, nearly always say "thank you" after ^ih|y,Vfr_folr the auto> graphs thajfrs^L gpfcliicsgo, thejr on the strtfffe.^Rmni&y do sea a star, the welcome is warm and friendly. There are probably less autograph books in Chicago than elsewhere. MjfedlMvasd people, of movie convery vocal in iphs. course, Cle is art though since a steel He uses $100 REWARD for the name of any man living or dead who has sold mora McHenry County real estate than has Dan Quinlan--that's all he does. He knows the soils and sub-soils -- the corner stakes of nearly every farm. The oldest reliable land office in northern Illinois. % century old. It is a good time to sell. List your farm now with Dan Quinlan, Woodstock, IJ1. He has buyers--he sells 'em. large ones, small ones. I sell farms. ~~ *4-4 LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED -- Expert saw filing; all kinds of tools and knives sharpened. H. W. Ahr^ps, route 81 and John street, West McHenry. •7_2 Donor a, Pa., ile mechanic been blind * explosion in his eyesight. Vftysteg)--to see motors. He be- *'My wife is always buying things for ninety-nine cents, so as to get change of a cent out of a dollar." "What does she do with the cent?" "Asks me to give her enougfe make it up to a dollar." Hot Staff A colored preacher was trying to the fury of Hades to his cofc> gregation. "You all has seen molten iron runnin' out from a furnace, ain't you?" he asked. The congregation said it had. "Well," the preacher continuad, "dey uses dat stuff to' ice cream in de place I'm talkin' 'bout." Hoaaa Gainaa Pig Dinar--I beg your pardon, but why do aB these girls stare at ma? Waitress I'm not supposed to tell you, sir, but we got same of our food from the school of cookery and home economics, next door, and if you get sick after that omelet you've just eaten, thoaa girls have istt fa&ad in their examination. 8aHe BuT1bf3 -o£ldEe^?anr?in 'd His son now keeps his mamory green, By burning midnight gaso! of toll. > Waiter Gat I said, "I've a gift What t "Now waiter, for yon, If vou serve me a dinner nioe." AM whenl was finished I kept my word-- I gave him some good advicfi. Tastes SwaU, Use Ted--My feet burn like the dUftans. Do you think a mustard bath would help? Ned--Sure! There's nothing better than mustard for hot dogs. GOOD REWABD Saint Castorina - .A new saint, called Castorina, has *tade her appearance in the'vicinity of Casa Branca, Brazil, and the city is reported to be the mecca of thousands of the devout. Predictions received in Rio de Janeiro are that Castorina is destined to surpass in ffeme even Manoelinar de f/unianrM fee present idol. w ™ ^ hen t cost: "toi what is' Wrong w , came a tnechanic atdy after he be> came bDad. He bought a car, took it apart, and with additional work on cars of neighbors, he soon got a detailed knowledge of the workings of «ut«HiaM|hlhH(n explains that he sees just as much as others, except that his are all mental pictures. JMNtea&ftt<ltig eyes, his touch tells hM^htfw ^feong. What he hears jmKfei®h*iHe him to determine thawout|^kj(,we has a garage of his own in the rear of his home. He is a member of the state board of the Pennsylvania Federation of the BlingMttyn^lil spare time tries to lesseriOTe mrabns of other blind persons, t# ;S> i^; Mr. and Mrs. Math Glosson and daughter, Francis, Mrs. Harold Rolfs of Kenosha, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Glosson and Bill Glosson drove to Woodstock early Monday morning to say goodbye to John Glosson, the formers' son, who left for Chicago via train with ninety-four other young men from the county to answer the Selective service call for June. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. N. Miller, wha have made their home for many years on Pearl street, McHenry, left this week for Turtle Lake, Wis., where they will make their $ermanent home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank May and family are occupying their heme in McHenry. rator Cookies Excellent Refrigerator cookies are just the thing for those who like their cookies baked M^h fltery day. Pack the dough fctnly^to a square pan (8 by 8 incfkes> «at has 4>een greased with pure veglteble shortening, then lined with waxed paper. Then store the dough in the refrigerator and 'slice and -babe them as needed. Cookies made with;j?ur«? vegetable _shortening are crisp, tender and de Trick ©I Sino-Jap War Four Fiyers Lond on Enemy Field and Clean Up• PEKING, CHINA.--The commander of a Japanese naval base in central China reports the neatest trick of the While Sino-J apanese war performed Inr four of his fliers. Thay mnded their pfauies on the Chinsna airfield at Chengtu in Stefhw provinoo in the course of •n afcr attack. "On th^ air field reverberating with the raMptat of machine g«ns and rifle ftd, the four airmen sprang from th#r machines, firing pistols in their right hands and tightly gripping a Ml of matches in ttxe other. "Like rabbits they ran here rfhd there, pitting Are to still intact Chinese planes amid a rain of enemy ballets. "With flames suddenly enveloping the machines, one pilot rushed to the enemy headquarters. Unseen by the enemy, he brought cans of gasoline and set the headquarters on fire," Thus reads the Japanese report, undaniad by Chinese sources. "Their Work completed," continues the report, "the four pilots sped to their plates and took to- the air through the black smoke covering the field." These deeds reportedly were carried out after a Japanese bomber had dropped its load and the fighter planes had downed Chinese planes which had gone up to combat them. Juke Box Enthusiast Makes Fatal Mistake MEXICO CITY.--A nickel in the riot *hi«i}. brought girth this swing tune "Woodpecker Song" from a cantina "juke box" also brought death for Jesus Valenzuela. Patrolman Uriel Prado had a particular aversion to the "Woodpecker Song" and when he heard it in the barroom he demanded to know who had made the selection. The bartender pointed to Valenzuela. Prado pointed to Valenzuela with a gun. Valenzuela died a few minutes later. Prado was murder. Pitcairn's Re-Discoverer Will Receive a Tribute MASSILLON, OHIO. - Authors of "Mutiny on the Bounty" have been asked to assist in honoring the memory of ibis old Yankee skipper and early IfasaiDon settler who more than llH)laiii ago found the secret South Sea island refuge of the Bounty nrat&aaers. Citizens here plan to erect a memorial mwrker at the grave of Capt. Mayhew Itolger, the seafarer who re-discovered Pitcairn's island.. - Lord Nc&oh's GrantUoB Lhi Qmetly in Maup DENNV^fiXe. MAINE --In this quiet town 1,606 nilles from Europe man eagerly watches for ne#i ofHhe whr His concern is deeper than most Americans'. He is Hotatio Nelson Lund, grandson of England's Lord Nelson, * , Lund has grea^ faith in Britaiffs "tzhimate victory. Ha aeaa success because ofvJSta #aa power that his ancestor^mlt to greatness. Co»>id Writis in tbe Sky v To Tell mf Couple's Troth LAKE ARROWHEAD, CALIF.-- Miss frtnl ffaij Hamilton, iBriardifl Junior eoBaga gmduala, and mewiyspunttor jSiillinu jti, Stanford univeisHy student, had tiiieir engagement announced with a flourish. At the home of the bride's mother here, 40 guests watched an airplane skywriter llak their initials in the sky and encircle them with a heart- First Actor--Did your backer get anl;y thing om cf your iast production? Second perienca. Actor--Yes; a lot of ex- Wew, Aayway! j City Girl--Whatb this rtrit that I've just picked? He--Wow' that's poison ivy I City Girl--Don't get excited, not going to eat it. Smithsonian Sdentkt Says The Ttfflw Balm WASHINGTON.--A full flowering civilization, not essf^tislhr inferior to that of &e Aztecs in Mexico or the Mayas in Yucatan, vanished without a trace in North America, piMf a few gpiaratiiMis before the first landhtf oftOdugkbus. Ths* K^tfas conSu^Sn of Trahk Setzler, head curator of anihrepdlogy of the institution^ His Umis waa constructed from such scattered diss as are available in the history of the Hopewellians, moond buildars of the Ohio and Upper Mississippi valleys. From tbe results of more than a century of reaearch, Setzler explained in a study published hy the institution, a tentative picture can be drawn of the ways of life of this mysterious people. Conetructka of the large mounds, the surrounding earthworks and the hundreds of smaller monads, he said, clearly required a dense popu* latios and a «w«l co-ocdinated society. Thia population must have had some stable economic basis. Extensive Farming Heeded. "Hunting and fishing, no doubt, were of soma importance as evidenced by barracuda jaws and other fish remains and by the representation of birds and animals m realistic carvings on pipes," Setzler said. "But even though direct evidence of maize is lacking, the practice of extensive horticulture must be admitted, because H alone, could have supported the large-population aggregates -to'/whiAti»»>4in*,v*'1 people obviously lived. "The specific form of government organization cannot be known, but certainly some regimentation is indicated1 by the great communal work. 1 incline to deduce, from the widespread influence of these people, that if a select ruling class existed, they dominated a very large portion of the Mississippi vall«y. Possibly their political organization was a northern extension of the system that prevailed in Mexico and Yucatan, although very few specimens can be identified with Mexican deities. Copper head ornaments and adored woven garments decorated the fresh-water pearls and mica suggest insignia of authority. At least persons with such attire would be sat apart." Sasa aa Base Apprt. This strange civilization, Setzler believes was-result of impact of two peoples, probably without definite conquest by either^ A survey of the field.shows the same eutture; but in a simpler form, in the Lower Mississippi valley and around the Gulf coast. It appears to have moved northward until it came in contact with a more primitive but apparently vigorous and" progressiva paople; Then, perhapa by conquest and parhaps by ahearpMon, the- inventiveness and energy of tbe Northern Indians and the coaaplax eocial organization and religious system of the migrants from the jkxifhwere amalgamated-- greatly to the improvement of both. Jo dtt* has been ,*jifccoverfdt Setzthan sometime between the beginning of the Christian era and the coming of Columbus. There certainly were no HoPewetiiatts left when: the first white hunters and traders came into the Ohio valley, for net a single artifact of European origin ever haa been found in the niiedi. gh fact, the musilij waa then inhabited by woodland Indians who had no memory of their predecessors, or even legends concerning them. British Murder LONDON.-- from a Blind Gift, 18* Writes Prize-Winning Fantasy SEATTLE.--Ia Marion Anderson's world of darkness there is no room for buttei flies. She is blind. Yet the It^ear-okl girl won a short story contest sponsored by the Braille Searchlight magazine. A. fairy tale, entitled "How the Butterfly Got Its Name." ' * . With her prize money Miss Anderaen contemplates purchase of a cello.1- ••••'« : ' ' • I'm 1 Said 80--' told him it couldn't Twins, 58, Go to Hoei^tal Together for Operation ROCKVILLE, CONN .--George and Henry Gackeler are twins in every sense of this word. They're 55 years old, do the same sort of work, find identical enjoyment and have the same likes ami dislikes. So it wasn't unusual when George went to a hospital for an operation that Henry had to haye one, too. "They done." "So what?" "a, "So he did it!'!?. V "Then what?'* • "They said, 'I told you someone would do it'!" Good Niekname •"John calls his girl the 'Queen of tha-tjnks.' ? "Ah, so she's a golfer', I presume "No--far from it. She sells hot dogs at a roadside stand . -Way When Jane Huahoi), University 0f Indiana coed, is whittling, she isn't wasting her time. Tuition, clothing, books and spending money have been carved with her 75-cent knife, so the company laughed! and she tf&bcts to'keep on whittling her way through school. C. C. Bates, grocer of Charloee, N. C., recently received twenty-five dollars in contracted in 1960 and written off his books fn 1901 as uncollectible. Graved Adolatfea Campbell, the poet, craved adulation so much that he fled mortified from a house after seating himself on a chair whose rollers slid hint against a wall and rebounded hinr tytatfoc'i Richard Steele, great essayist, spent his life doing wrong and vowing to do right. He penned a piece that denounced drinking and brok* ofif in writing it to tipple ties* with a at 9 tavern* Smithy Too Mighty; ^ Village Indicts Him GRAYVILLE, PA. - Davis S. Sukay, the viHage "smithy,*' was indicted by me county grand jury for maintaining and causing a common and public nuisance. The former tinkle of hammer on anvil constitutes an unnerving clang to flla ears of Grayville, F. Jablonski, tbe prosecutor maintains. f: aijia •iifea \ jt* MiM.-: Fish (dbr Is Destroyed By Use of Antisaptic Ice SEATTLE, WASH.--An sntiseptic ice which destroys fish odor is hailed by Puget Sound flahermen as "One of the major developments in their industry. The ice, laboratory experiments showed, reduced bacteria count to a little more than 1 per cent of the usual quota. - It was estimated north Pacific flshermen will use about 500,060-4ons of the newly developed Ice next year. UpTax Token J^rallowed Penny " .--DrDavidE. , Utah, reported this one hi a letter to the state* tax commission. A worried mother took her fouryea/- old son to Dr. S. B. Rigby st Fairview, Utah. The boy had swal lowed a penny. Suddenly the lad coughed and. up came the penny, acctagpanied by a retail salea tax token. . ..I • Pilgrims' Descendants ' . Believed to Total 10,000 BOSTON.--When the Eddy family met here in reunion 'to celebrate the 310th anniversary of the landing a* Plymouth of John and Samuel Ed dy, they estimated the descendants of these two Pilgrims numbered more than 10,000. John Eddy was a founder of Wa tertown. Samuel Eddy was one of the purchasers of Middlehotja,Xro» the Indians. ' ?"• i-t. • v ... % floor varnish are that it must be dry, hard and tough without being brittle. It should, be resistant to both water and ordinary soap solu- It should be rapid dryiiig. On Friday, June 18, the Philippine {Clipper of the American Airways returned to San Francisco from the Orient, completiag the 500th crossing of the Pacific made since the air service was begun in IMS. letters on him sweetheart's -an army private, 'it was cuubh by the prosecution, shot her died. "You have not been true to ma," he is slleged to have toM the giri. "I do not hit«d >«|i to bave, another man to fool ]Ukf fpu have me." The soldier, Driver Edsnund George Beealey, 30 years old, <af Oxford, England, BritWi army private, was charged ^t Oiini mtb .the murder of Miss Zrehe Sherfyt 28 years old, whose reHl natne aras bene Wmifred Edwards, of Craven Arms, Shropshire, a don^esllc servant at Oxford, by skocting her with his service rifle. Prcefecutor E. G. Robey said Miss Sierry had been friendly with Beesley for a number of years, and it was obvious that he wanted to marry her. In July of this year she became acquainted with Corporal James Fuller of Totnes road, Reading, and apparently they made up their minds to become engaged. Kejected Admirer Calls* On September 16 Beesley went to Oxford because he was anxious about Miss Sherry, not having heard from her for jNime time. .He went to the girl's lodgings and waited in her room until she returned at 16:30 p. m Shortly afterwards the fatal *hot was iheardv Boe^ey, |irh3e- waiting, had seeia^ some letters Iriikh were ^ written by Corporal Fuller. They arete obviously loveMetters and they showed that Fuller and the girl were hoping to marry. After reading the tetters, alleged Robey, Beealey discharged his rifle, with the result that the girl was through the heart at close range while sitting in an armchair. Counsel alleged that in a stateikkcsnt Beesleysaid: I waited until Miss Sherry came in. She seemed surprised to see me. I asked her why she had not written to me for nearly a month, and told her I knew the reason why. I asked her who Corporal James Fuller was, and she said she did not know. I produced. sotne letters which I had found on her dressing table and she tried to grab them from me, but I pulled theta Irak and. put them in my pocket, Treats It as a Jake. "I saiJ to her: 'You have art 1m£o true to me while I Waa in the araay. It is about time you'nxade up your ipind after going witi^me for aeveu years. I do net fatteM you to have another man to fool like you have me.' "She then skid-She wou!d#please herself what She did. and laughed and treated it as^ a joke. "I picked up my gun and pointed it at her as trite sat in the chair. The next thing I hesrd was a^ shot. I thought I had missed her, an4 left the room and the house by the front door. • ,4 •' .« "I walked up jftfomoad road to the myself up at the Central police station." Prosecutor Robey said that when at the station Beesley asked if the girl was dead. When told she was, he said he did hot care what happened; he did not mean to kill her. Beesley was committed for trip] at Oxford Assissa. Jtme«V 1JM1- to m, daftisee B. Hansen, Woodstock, 111., to Marjorie M. Hutson, Woed- JWS 24, 1941. Bftftenner, Belvidere, HL, to Iacfli Moore, Marengo, 111., June 28, 2MO. Walter F. Feidt, Woodstock, OL, te Celia V. Mkhaiek, Woodstock, ID* June 24, IMS, Earling Coonky, Genoa, 111., to Lorefta Weishaar, Marengo, HI. Henry.X Weber, McHenry, I1L, to Agnes M. Smith, MciTenry, Illn Jidy 1. mi. Ralph David Kinrade, Antioch, . to Mary Ifasek, Antiofch, til., J^ne 1941. Clarence KOpsell, Crystal Lake, Ift, to Eldora MarA, Huntley, UL, Jane 26, 1141, Robert Glen Siwnson, Chicago, BL, to June Cleone Ndson, Chicago, III-- June2T, 1ML ¥ M f O-o-m-i-a-g SAT. IRHTS For the Summfir Dsmdxig Swot! OAY CLARIDGE and Hit Music witk Color -- featuring -- the songs of Doris Knight THE FOX PAVILION Route 31 -- MeHenry Forest Raafar at Last Fiadb aa Hoaast Hwrtw GLOBE, ARIZ.--It took iWast Ranger Carl Scholefield 32 years to find an honest hunter. Scholefield's candidate is 17-year-old Richard Harrell of Phoenix, who accidentally killed a doe in Crook National forest. He promptly reported what he had done to the ranger. The ranger said Harrell was tbe first hunter in his 32 years of service who surrendered voluntarily after kOling a doe. Justice of the Peace Erastus Grkt dismissed the case, saying, "This young man hss given an exhibition of sportsmanship very rare among hunters. His license has been restored to him with toe admonition to look more ckisely for horns the next time he gees-hunting." THKATRE IN FKIDAY - SATURDAY aae CairGraat , LOUIS - CONN ^ FIGHT PICTURES SUNDAY -- MONDAY July 6 - i Leretta Yaang Prestea Feeter : Briward AmeM "THSUkM rtOM OHSTXHMS" ----1 Also---- News - Cartoon - Novelty TUBSDAY Adaiissiea -- 16c - 26e (1) "Barnyard PoUIm'V (2) "Piratee on Horseback" Identifies 3 Kidnapers, .#• . Then Collapaes and Dies LEXINGTON, KY.--Georg e Maxey » 68 years old, was called by the police to identify three men suspected of abducting, robbing and beating him. He identified them and prepared to swear to warrants. Then he collapsed. A few minutes later he died--of a heart attack, £a"id Coroner Hervey Kerr. The suspects were released. There were no witnesses left. New Method Is Devised - To Combat Dog TUerei SCR ANTON, PA.--Frederick W Earlley, Lackawanna county dog re corder, is tattooing dogs' ears with identification numbers. Earlley said the practice would facilitate police and owners in identifying lost or stolen dogs. . 1 • 1 1 • Beport Costlier fhsa theft •jt' V - It cost one Danville, HL, resident |7.80 to tell poUce about a $6. "theft." A man walked into headquarters, complained that his wife had "stolen" $6 from him. He promptly was booked for intoxication, had to leave $7.50 to cover fine and costs. When Mr. and Mrs. Charles Baran of Chicago seemed a divorce recently, over who was to have picture. The Judge cut itin half, giving1 a part to each. 3D AY 'ADAM HAD £ ; FOUE SONS * * Relax at Tht Beautiful I.I JOVAI 1 VP OcK YSIAL LAKE, ILL. Co's. Leading Theatrt C - O - O - L - E - D FRL - SAT. -- JULY 4 - 5 Matinee Jnly 4th "GONE WITH THE WIND" Nothing cut but the Price! Time Schedale and Admissions for Friday, July 4th, Matinee: Doors open, 2:45 p. m.; Show starts at 3:30. Children, 22c plus 8c tax, total 25c. Adults, 36c plus 4c tax, total 40c. < Evening Showa, Jaly 4-# Doors open, 7 p.m.; Show starts at 8:15. A1 seats 50c phis 5c tax, total 55c. ' SUN. - MON. -- JULY 6 - 7 Son. Coat, from 2:45 p. m. tie to (..f,-n.; 30c after. CMflbea, 16c. Ray MiHami in n W1ANTHD WINGS" with Wayne Morris, Brian Donlevy and an atf-star supporting cast! The Thrilling Saga of America's Flying Youth! TUESDAY -: . 10c - Special - lie i >-.ME COWBOY AND THE BLONDE" with George Montgomery aad Mary Beth Haghea WED. - THURS. -- JULY • - 1« Bette Davis - George Brent in THE GBHAT UET with Mary Astor . . . . rj^ , L 30k'* W8&

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy