McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 Aug 1941, p. 4

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<»* • Published Benry, IB, by Charles P. A. H M< Bitter aal Mn>|« Entered m second-elass matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8, 1879. One Year. fix Month* ~T.-- ,«S.M .41-00 4 &K' ssr%^«« f FOR SALS 83f ft., on North irfne Schneider. FOR SA Park Phone Spaniel pops 14 FOR F- Kurt* BY UNDER* perspirafits in with make it in McGEE'S, 14 WEA varied g in West Phone 48. 14 FOR McHenr*. Residence Chaises "ft*- and Mrs. Roy Schaefer and baby have moved from Chicago to the Schneider apartment recently vacated by Miss May Justen, who moved into the lower apartment in the Rose Hoemann house on Elm street.- RUPTURED? • OfeOhuioMd b*smm-- --.art «•*- J: i•m dI ordti ads. •< Mi* so-saBM ou! fi I •qwrk. spamUca freriT fom ma«T nif to •«»•» ereeter Oitan w« mut>. ta ro- •MttoMCttOM at th* irotM lor r*ltot o»1t •» s iSemmA oa rtiost*t erm H «fnfu »JfsmJ (ig/t mm community. ™ Expert fittiay ad lynqf atretic riattsg. coBMnd through nonr jmar* el •aepcrianc* are ot jout jUipesa; \', * lector* tlx famous Hn« oi Won-Skid spot Fad Truss**. Abdoniso: Support#!* Elastic H--i»ry. ShoaMw Bracss. »lc. Bolger's Drug Store Phone 4# Green Street Gash and Carry. Cane Sugar, lOttrrt' Peanut Butter, 1-lb. jar . Ivory Soap, *3 large bars. Dreft 23c Silver Dust. Little Boy Bluing Ctarosal Bleach, qt. btL Cider Vinegar, qt btL Vanish, 2 cans Eagle Condensed Milk, can 20c Catsup, 14-ox. bottle 10c Certo . 21c» Sore-Jell, 2 pkgs l 25c Grape Jam, 2-lb. jar *„.25c Tissue, 4 1000-sheet rolls 19c Boys' Fall Caps .25c Boys' Sweaters __79c - $L40 Boys' Suspenders Furniture Polish. Child's Wool Sweaters - 80-sq. Percale, yd. John Stoffel FOR FINER QUALITY in Poultry and Eggs,, call or visit the Urban dale Poultry Farm, under new management. 8 miles east and 14 mile south of McHehry. Henry Veldinizen. Phone McHenry 680-R-l. *14 FOR SALE--Six room bouse on John street, near schools. Reasonably priced. Also double garage on lot. Inquire Mrs. Will Blake. Tel. 611- W-l. . 4-tf CHOIC1 _ ft. in MtSMte^ sidewalks, at less Howard, G LOTS -- 66x132 (Jity water, sewer, tricity. Priced ivements. 320. *12-4 *«« nmhrnrkum Tot centuriM ^M* liave porta fron aatonMied generally unverifiable, of mice that burst Into song. Now recent experiments indicate that mice probably devOte a good deal of their time to singing, the songs being perfectly audible to other mice, and doubtless highly pleasing, but pitched so high that only a very rare human ear can hear them. The people who do hear the little mouse melodies probably have the same auditory endowment as the few people who are said to hear the "silent" dog whistles. .,v I. One-Way TraSe First traffic regulation tor way traffic appears to have been established in New York city, December 17, 1791, when a regulation incidental to a performance at the John Street theater requested that "Ladies and gentlemen will order their coachmen to take up and sit down with their horse heads to the East river to avoid confusion.". * Nassau Point of Interest One of the points of interest for cruise passengers who visit Nassau is ancient Fort Montagu, guarding the eastern entrance of Nassau harbor, built in 1741 and named after the duke of Montagu. American colonists during the Revolutionary war took Fort Montagu from the British. for a brief period. WE AR1 with Ful Poultry dale Pov 680-R-l. READY to serve you p Feeds and Hudson t ©airy Supplies. Urban- Parai. Phone McHenry ^ *14 FOR BSNT FOR REST --River front bedroom with private bath and use of living room with pianoj-fe^One mile from town of McHennpl_'ftflrite Box "O," care of Thi> Plaivnler. *14 19c • 39c 79c - 90c McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Mad rising Carroll aatf. . Fred MacMurray "OWE MIGHT IN LISBON" Ala* -- in eoier. "Miss Swing.' C.- Newttaid Novelty SUNDAY -- MONDAY Aaguat 24 - 2S Clark Cable B--HM feaaeeii THEY MET IN BOMBAY'1 -- Also -- News Cartoon Sunday Matinee -- 2:45 Coutiauoue EAR COR# WANTED --McHenry Flour Milts. Phone McHenry 92-R. 14 WANTED--Girl for general housework in small cottage, two in family; Sundays free; home nights; transportation furnished. Write "C," care of The PlaijjdffU *r. *14 WANTED DO BUY--Good used rowboat. JohR< Kleen.-Lake Villa, 111. *14 MALE INSTRUCTION--Would like to hear from reliable men we can train to overhaul, install and service Air Conditioning and Refrigerating Equipment. Must be mechanically inclined. No interference with present occupation. For ioJterviey Jf rjte at once, giving name, address, age. Utilities Inst., Box "U," &A «aindealerf *14 WANTEDL ^^•rttkeeper«f --and:-- srt--eno~ grapher, experienced. Vlrite full details to Boat .'iF,'.' care pjE -The McHenry Plaindealer. *14 Lake Ladoga Ladoga is the largest lake in Europe, 7,000 square miles in area. It is called Laatokka by the Finns and Ozero Ladozhskoye by the Russians. Though formerly half Finnish and half Russian, it is now wholly within the U. S. S. R. Bahama Islaads >'• The Bahama islands carf^':"TO three times more trade with the United States than with any other country. Imports amount to more than $4,000,000 a year and exports are $700,000. WaU Decorations Wall brackets and hanging shelves were first designed by Chippendale in the middle Eighteenth century. They were either made of mahogany, elaborately carved, or of soft painted wood. Gay Filler Scatter portulaca seed in the cracks in crazy paving. It will come up next spring and give a gay picture in midsummer. It will not germinate until the weather if warm. pifnow New Mineral Pigment A newly unearthed mineral ment called green bauxite is being mined in the southern Pyrenees. This is proving of value as a raw material for paints. $10 REW ing to the single-end Deputy Shi for information leadturn of an "Old Town" H. Hobbs, 155. *14 LOST Vicinity lotte ave> Country ward. ng Jacket, airplane cloth, mt ave. beach, Char- River street, McHenry Addition. Liberal rein Welty, 506 Golf View, Ph.-. *14 GARBiUSttOLLBCTING -r- We have route territory. OgrHtwhiSlUMke daily trips. Can StaM*» Jttoa* KfeBsnry 6S8-M-2. t *11-7 in McH<9!r^ana surrounding (1J (2) TUESDAY Admits Me "They Met M ' Argentina" - "They Meet Agafe" WEBNBBDAY --. THURSDAY (1) "SAN ANTONIO ROSE" Cscney Pat O'Brien "DEVIL DOG3 1 OF T H E A I R ' t , _M, No h^^ilMfcdr-foi kMttnci (MM artjtfsnitarr ITsi ilm Daf va±Hi&jE£Ljk and Holidays CLIFF'S RAlM SERVICE --• New location, 1^7 Htrttlid4 Drive, Phone RHWiBMUUtil jadios and electrical home appiiinces. All Work guars Prop Largest Cireulatieii Tte News of the World, a weekly newspaper, published in London, has a circulation of 3,750,000 copies per issue, the largest circulation Qt any newspaper in the world. False -Teeth in 50T Scientists in Italy claim that false teeth were used in 500 B. C., specimens of Etruscan bridgework of that time having been placed in the Corneto njuseum. . < Love Robs Girl Clerk* ^.Jip four years all five of the peridnable young women who occupied clerk's jobs in the court of.one Judge in Berkeley, Calif., have quit--to be married. . ' Least NieeifaM '^- 6^ Bur ley tobacco has less nicotine in it than any other type of tobacco This is the variety from which chew IDS tobacco is ordinarly Optimist An optimist is one who looks out in the dark and sees a light which isn't there.. A pessimist is oq£ ^&o blows the light out. ranteed. CLIFFORD WILSON, 9-tf «v Relax at The BeauttM GARBAGE 't^OLLBCTINCfc--Let us dispose of y^ur garbage each week, or oftener if desirwj, Reasonable rates. Regular yew . round route, formerly George Hirers'. Ben JSmith. Pfiorle 366 or «ll-M-l. 11-tf Inexpensive Picture* Colored magazine covers mounted on stiff paper or cardboard make inexpensive and attractive pictures for children. Expansion and Restriction 'The Japanese enjoy expansion of their territory, but they tie down trees and enjoy dwarfing pines and maples. larovAi! mm CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. McHenry Co's^ Leading Theatre C - O - O - L - E - D FRL - SAT. -- AUGUST 22 • 28 ' Guy Kibbee in | "SCATTER(;< )OI) PULLS I . ; THE STRINGS" Also - The Merry Macs with Robert Paige Eve Ard«i and Jane Frazee In "SAN ANTONIO ROSE" BUN. - MON. -- AUGUST 24 - 25 Sun. Oont. from 2:45 p. m. 25c to 6 p.m.; 30c after. Children,. 10c. William Powell - Myrn* Loy in "LOVE CRAZY" with Gail Patrick - Jack Carson ,r "It's Just One Long Howll" > .. TUESDAY 10c - Special - 15e Maureen O'Hara - James Ellison in "THEY MET IN ARGENTINA with Buddy Ebsen - Alberto Vila WED. •Sfe.' \ THUR---AUGUST 27 - 28 Abbott and Coetello "IN TBB NAVY" wit|i Dick Powell • Andrews Sisters A Gratvf Musical Comedy" HAVE YOUR C3DERMADE at Kattner's Cider. mfll^ .S^ang Grove, 111. Please c^Q, Richmond.9^.2 before bringing »ppl«S. .Pressing price, 6c per gal. *14-4 White Camellias Over 50 varieties qf white camellias are & bloom at famous Orton (dentation, near Wilmington, N -C. OS Gallons Yearly It is estimated that the average motorist uses 683 gallons of gasoline and 35 quarts of oil in -a year. rERTS SHELL SERVICE Stail J|l. Si John and Front streets, BUCH tion on electric UMsWing, la^he work, saw filing, sharpefrfe lawn mowers by machine, blacksmith work, sells and charges batteries, repairs tires. *14 Mrs. Chester Frasier of Grinnell, Iowa, spent the week with her parents, Mr. and J4rs. ^ohg R. Smith, and other relatives "here." Mrs. Haic^i -Conway and daughter, Mrs. Howara Cairns; visited in the Edward Holle home at Oak Park on Tuesday. Gregory Cairns, who had been a visitor there for a week, returned home with them. , Mr. and Mrs. Chester Ames of De Kalb were callers at the Ed Sutton home Sunday. Mrs. Waiter Manning of Oak Park visited her mother, Mrs. Margaret May, a few days this week. Billy Kinsala, Charles Albers, Bill Cole and Ted Anderson of Chicago were weekend guests in the Henry J£insala home. Mrs. Alex Adams, and .Vandelina Died* rich called on Edward Blake, Sally May King and Rosella Regner Tues» day at St. Therese's hospital, Wauke» gan. ,) Mrs. Henry Kinsala spent a few days this week, in Burlington,. Wiswhere she attended the funeral of Henry Siehoff on Monday. Some nuts are almost half wi when they are fresh, but not the almond 1 It is about as dry as an# nut Nature makes. Only me part in 17 is water . The small amount of water in an almond helps to explain why it is a rattier hard nut to bite into. It isn't a* hard nut to crack, at least not when it comes in the soft shell, or in tlia Mfeer shell form. Some hardshelled almonds are on the market, and they are not . so easy to crack. Becauie the nut itself is rather hard. Some housewives "blanch" almood* before placing * them "in salads or cakes. In other words, they soak them in hot water and take off a kind oil skin from each nut Then the part under the skin can be bitten without much work The walnut is another popular member of the nut family. There are several kinds, among them the black walnut, the white walnut and the English walnut. Die black walnuffs round and has a very hard shell. If you crack it with a hammer, you must be skillful i<o get the nut meat out whole. Some black walnut trees grow to a height of more than 100 feet, and the trunks may become as much as five or six feet thick. The wood is valuable and in past times was widely used in making beds, tables and chests. Black walnut trees are found here and thefe from the Great Lakes region down to the Gulf of Mexico, but they are not nearly so common now as in days gone by. • New Defense Against Mildew--Laundry Soap All it takes is a good laundry soap and a few ounces of cadmium chloride crystals to make shower curtains and similar fabrics mildewproof. Bureau of Home Economics' scientists in the U. S. department of agriculture have just announced .a new mildew-proofing treatment using these two materials, reports the consumers' counsel of the department. The way to do it is this: First make a good suds using about two ounces of mild soap or soap flakes to i galloarof water. Then, in another container make a solution with the cadmium chloride crystal, using about two ounces of (he crystals to a gallon of water. The crystals can be bought in a dnlg store at about a dime an ounce. Heat both'solutions to a boil. Put the fabric to be mildew-proofed in tiie soap solution first, leaving it there 10 minutes. Wring it out and then let it soak for a half-hour in the cadmium chloride solution. Hang the fabric out to dry just as you would any laundered material. The treatment should be repeated after about five launderings. It will not damage or change the color of the fabric in any way. SAN L In hit conte His thoughts were Interrupted by a Mddng case floating at a spot where a feeighter had jettiawied part oi her cargo. Tony opened It--and found 200 diapers. Legend Of Peer's Cuf-se Is Revived Tradition of Lambton Worm Fulfilled; Sff tb^DON.--The fecentfof a tragic curse In the Lambton family has been revived by the death of Viscount Lambton, son and heir of the earl of Durham, who was found shot dead on this lawn ot Fanton House, Northumberland. Viscount Lambton was only 20, and had registered £or military service shortly before the tragedy. According to the tradition, concerning the Lambton -,vorm, the lords of Lambton for nine generations were doomed not to die in their beds. This tradition dates from the Crusaders when the Lord Lambton of the time slew a worm so huge that it could wind itself round a hill near Lambton castle. But there was a price for the triumph. Lord Lambton was pledged to kill the first living thing he met after slaying the worm. Unhappily it was his father whom he met, and he would not pay the price. Because the father went free, the nine-generation curte has visited the family. Tragedy has dogged the family for generations. Beatrix, countess of Durham, died in April, 1937, on the day that her granddaughter, Lady Rachel Douglas Home, married Lord William Scott. Death resulted from a fall in a shop where she was choosing a wedding present for the bride. Her husband, the fourth earl, succeeded to the title | in September, 1936, but died in the following January. Their son, Geoffrey, was killed in action in 1914. Two cousins of jthe present earl died tragic deaths. In October, 1937, Mr. Gervame Lambton was lost at sea while traveling to Kenya in a liner. Little more than a year later D'Arcy Lambton was killed and his wife injured in a motor crash. But some of the family enjoy long life. There is Brigadier General Charles Lambton, member of the Jockey club, fourth son of the second earl. He was 83 years old. George Lambton, fifth son ot the second earl, is one of the most notable race horse trainers in England, and a fluent writer on turf topics. He still has a fairly big string ol horses at the Stanley House stables k-in Newmarket, and is active in looking after them despite hip 80 years. *«mtatjyie lcjifil and appropriation ordinance far road and bridge purposes Ot llolTiwy Township in the County of' MeHenry, State of Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning September 2,. 1941, and, ending September 1, 1942, will be on file and conveniently available to pubUe inspection at the McHenry PsatsMce from and after 3:00' o'clock P.M., Saturday, August 28^ 1941. Notice is further hereby given that a public hearing on said budget ana appropriation ordinance will be held at 7:8# o'clock P. M., Wednesday, August 27, 1941, at Town Hall in this' Township, and that final action on this ordinance will be taken by the Highway Commissioner at a meeting to be1 held at the Town Hall at 2;00 o'clock P. Tuesday, September 2, 1941^ JOS, J. FREUND, ~ V """*•' Highway Commissioner. *W ROBERT OONWAY/?5H ' , Cletffe" MARRIAGE LICENSES Willard H. Sherman, Woodstock,. HI., to Mrs. Laura I. Gorham, Woodstock, HI. w at Hui Bvariston hosptfl Mr. and Mi*k<l Anderson and family of Chicago spent a two day weekend here. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Crick entertained Mrs. Crick's brother over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Goodyear and family of Chicago spent several'days here. James Clarit ef, Waaler Lalce spent Sunday at Me^iifsBt^ake. Tom Hardy of Chicago spent Monday at his home bsMfc Mrs. Burg andr daughter, Joan, of Chicago are spending a week at their home here. Mrs. John Jerak and daughter of Chicago were visitors at the Jos. A. Schaefer home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Henry Green and family who spent two weeks here have returned to Evanston. Mrs. John Pardell and family of Chicago spent Sunday here. Mrs. Joseph Pardell and friends who spent two weeks here have returned to Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. R. Stenstel and friends of Chicago spent Sunday here. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fritz and fam. i?y of Chicago spent a two day weekend here. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Rush and daughter called at the L. K. Bennett home over the weekend. Miss Genevieve Thomas and sister of Chicago are spending a week here. Miss Marguerite Ohern spent several days this week at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Anton. Pratraski of Chicago spent Sunday her? with friends. Visitors at the Wilbert Turney lome on Saturday were Dr. and Mrs. Horace Buttery of McHenry; Mr. and Mrs. Emil K la witter and Mr. and Mrs. Herman Klawitter of Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Anderson and Mr. and Mrs. ^Joseph Matterer. On Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Turney were guests at the Blanche Carr home at Island Lake with twenty guest from Chicago. Mrs. Wilbert Turney and' Mrs. Hopace Buttery of McHenry spent Tuesday with eighteen other guests at the home of Mrs. Wan. Parker of Petite Lake. Mrs. Zimmerman of McHenry was also a guest at this party. IS ir doctor CAN WA Zti::l Yes. soost of us have said that; ... , . *£f thins* at one time - ^ another. amueUy pcoespc^ in paying the other bill* we owe„ bat somehow the Doctor sN _ to tbtlskji* bottom of the stack. Wekno^ that he "won't sajr anything' if j •••%•. we ere a bit tardy with ^ end so great a service lor Let's resolrs right now thai^V^"" this month well at least pay tb4fe Doctor "something on »c^!'Ar, He trill appreciate it. o * Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry Controlling Moths ' - Suggestions for controlling moths in clothes closets: Brush all .clothing and clean the closet thoroughly. Seal all cracks in the plaster and about the baseboards with crack. fillers. Equip door frames with rubber or felt gaskets against which the door can be shut tight at all points. Place on the top shelf, ot hang in muslin bags from hooks,, one pound of Sake naphthalene or paradichlorobenzene for each 100 cubic feet of closet space. The fumes given oft by the slow evaporation at. the crystals quickly stop snath, larvae from feeding and - turiittftir in proper fere tfsn of the will km them if ktttf enough It is therethat the concentrabe'maintained by the cloaet 1a pera tight-fitting door. Eyed Examined fSk. raid 1 Schwabe Phone: McHenry 11S-J Woodstock 894 A. K Nye West MeHenry OfTOMBTRIfiT THURSDAY MORNINGS BY APTOINTMlMT ONLY , Highest Over-Flow Dam Hiwassee dam in Cherokee county, North Carolina, is the highest over-flow dam in the world. Unforseen Beauty Re finishing the wood often brings out unforseeri beauty in an piece of furniture. Handy for Coffee Pelt A slender brush is handy to keep the spouts and grooves Of coffee pots clean. Japan's Long Suit Hospitality is Japan's king suit, but prisoners pay for their own meals. Beet Sugar Canada produced approximately 8^000^000 pounds of beet sugar in 1939. . A buyer should look for a number of things in Judging the qi rug. A flood bat the serviceability of log or carpeting. To test the quality of the backing, grasp it In your hands and fad it Note whether it aeems firm instead of limp. In a pile rug examine the density ot the pile-^that is. the number of tufts per square inch and the length of the pile. Bend the rug over your hand and notice how thick the pile is. The length of the pile varies in different types ot weaves and: so can't be considered alone as an indication of quality. Obviously a long pile that is sparse (having fewer tufts per square inch), would not be as serviceable aa a shorter pile that is thicker A knowi5geCof "^"typgf c* de- Water Barrel as Trap Homemade Burglar Alarm Is Better Tkan His Aim LIMA.--Philip Tregalia's "homemade" burglar alarm system was better than his aim. when a thief appeared on the -V. ' Treglia, who hvfg, near JLima, recently was the victim ot ti&vef ,w)k> stole 100 chick&s f*oife a eoQ|^n4& his barn So he rigged up a bell alarm system "just so I'll be ree if the burglars come back." They cant back--or at least one of them <ttd-~ebout 5 a. m. Sure enough, the aOann worked Aa Treglia poked his shotgupa out a Slidln nf tjla hsdnarmi hi saw a man jump pon* tbe bisrn and start to jump over a fence. "I let go with both barrels, one after another," the farmer related. "But the feller juet went qp over the fence, then jumped another, and disappeared." Bop, 10, Gets to See Move Than tbe Fire Engines PHILADELPHIA.--A false alarm, which City Detective William Me- Menamin aaid a 10-year-old boy had admitted turning in because he "wanted to see the fire engines run" brought this result: Injury to IS persons, wreck of s new city fire engine, heavy damage to a streetcar and the detailing ol three police cruiser cars, one emergency patrol, 90 patrolmen, two sergeants, a captain and two accident investigation Squads to the scene Five flretfcen were tossed into the street when the engine and the trol ley collided. The streetcar motorman and six pa«sengers were injured. All were hospitalized. 1 The boy was taken to the Juvenik House of Detention. ; r • V-." Thursday, Aug; 28 is the daU for the first public skowin* of tht •jmw;?. • <* fp; I* our showroom. We claim that this new PlymontH-is the tMit automobile ever boilt.by Plymouth. mestic rugs -oii the market may help you to make a good selection. Axminister is a rug with a pile fabric and ootton, linen or jute backing. A peculiar characteristic of an Axminister rug is that it can be rolled only lengthwise because it's made stiff by the crosswise ridges on the back. » Broadloom is not a particular weave or quality, but means any seamless rug made on a broad loom 54 inches or more wide. Frieze is a rug made with especially twisted yarns which gives the top surface e pebbly or nubby effect. . c.y , -c v ' Mr. and Mrs. George Weitl of St. Charles, Mr. and Mrs. John Ifiannenstill and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blake attended the Wisconsin state fair in Milwaukee, Wis., Wednesday. Frank Sullivan and children, River Forest, were Sunday guests in the homes of Mrs. M. J. Walsh and Mrs. W. F. Burke. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Purvey, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. George Jones and Mr. and Mrs. Hal Plumb of Woodstock, attended a wake in Waukegan Wednesday night for their aunt, Mrs. Charles Nellis. n* ' Reduces Rut Population AXTELL, JCAN.-A steel watew] barrel has turned out to be a -good rat trap on the farm of Earl and Paul Landreth near here. The mechanism of the trap ii very simple, the Landreths say The rats run up a board that leans against the barrel. On gaining the top, they reach out to get a drink of water. Then comes the blow The water is just out of reach. The rats lean over too far, lose theii balance and fall in. They drown like rats. In fact the Landreths get rid of about 50 thai way in one week. Mrs 'Mary Heckman of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Jessie Yous, and Miss Gertrude Heckman of Chicago are vaca tioning at Lake Defiance. r Mr. and Mrs. Ben Justen and daughter, Bernice, in company with Mr. and Mrs. J. Brock of Woodstock returned home last Friday from Springfield, 111., where they attended the state fair and they also visited the Lincoln village at Salem, 111. Mrs. Ben Justen was called home by the serious illness of her _ mother, Mrs. William Rothermel, who' Is now slowly regaining her health. •« , Ii**' Remember thedate ^SQIfrDAt, XVOUST 2» eM'iJ.- Blake Motor Sales Pearl Street Tel 156 --McHenry, I1L C -ifri-f 'i i' LADIES' SLACK Simnl reg. price $1.00 - $1.25 ^ LADIES' SLACK &UlTi> reg. price $1.96 LADIES' SLACK SUITS, reg. price $2.98 LADIES' SLACK WRMk reg. price $3.96 *2.49 r to Oft 111 .I p,! '"H| ^ SLACKS --as low Its 69^ BOfiN'S SLACK PANTS, ' sises 29 to 40, reg. price $1.19 to ll.89, now $1.00 M5N S SLACKS, now selling at $1.50 - $2^39 - $£.95 -- Lots of other summer wear on sale!* ---- IP 3c NOTION SALE NOW ON .: Pall and winter -goods are coming in daily^ at reasonable prices. . Open Wednesday and Saturday evenings | Sundays until noon. -- <9r#9n Street Phone 182 Mdfciirji ^ Vis ••••Ml m 3*5 &mn " •' -*»•*' T!«• th. *•:•£•• ...... ,.rr , •; .J,, * -""i" *j£.m • : -j' .-i. -* ? ? -v». \ r\;':

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