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Herald and Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 2

Publication:
Herald and Reviewi
Location:
Decatur, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
2
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HIGH LIGHTS OF HISTORY 3-10 BY THE MIDDLE OF THE EIGHTEENTH CAME CENTURY THE ENGLISH SERIOUSLY COLONIES THEIR REALIZE JUST HOW TO WAS BLOCKED BY THE FRENCH, POSSESSIONS HEMMED THEM GROWTH WHOSE THE ST. LAWRENCE TO THE IN FROM GULF OF MEXICO. INEVITABLE THAT THESE IT WAS POWERS SHOULD BE AT WAR TWO UNTIL ONE OF THEM HAD GAINED THE SUPREMACY IN AMERICA AWARE OF THIS FACT, BOTH SIDES PREPARED FOR A GREAT STRUGGLE. SHELBY WOMAN WEDS IN DECATUR, Miss Grace Stewardson Becomes Bride of Edward C. Miller of E.

St. Louis SHELBYVILLE. June Grace Stewardson, well known and popular young woman of Shelbyville and Edward C. Collier of St. Louis were united in marriage at Decatur at 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon.

The M. Wilcox at Episcopal ceremony was by Rev. A. performed, church. They were accompanied by Mr.

and Mrs. George W. Williams and daughter Evelyn. Mrs. Williams is a sister of the bride.

Mrs. Collier is a daughter of Mrs. Robert Stewardson and is well known here where she has always made her home. She attended the local High school, graduating with the class of 1916. During the past few she has spent much of her time in St.

Louis where she met Mr. Collier. Mr. Collier is division sales manager of the Illinois Power Light Corporation with headquarters at St. Louis.

He served in the World war master engineer, First Gas Regiment, Chemical Warfare Service, with overseas service. After a two weeks' motor trip through Wisconsin and other northern states Mr. and Mrs. Collier will make their home at Signal Hill, Belle- ville. Family Dinner family dinner was given by Miss Kull at the Kull home on South street honor of her Mrs.

Rosanna, Kull, whe her ninety- second birthday on June 20. Thirty- -three, inrelatives and friends, were present. McDonald Funeral Funeral services for Mrs. Emma Stella McDonald. who died in the Shelby County Memorial hospital at 2:30 o'clock Saturday afternoon after a long illness from Pott's disease, were held at the Ridge church at 2 o'clock Monday afternoon, the pastor, Rev.

Mr. Lobaugh, officiating. Interment was in Glenwood cemetery in Shelbyville. Mrs. McDonald was born in Ohio on June 26, 1873, a daughter of Thomas and Sophia Beery Wagner.

She leaves her husband. E. A. McDonald, one son, Roland, living near Westervelt, her mother, Mrs. Sophia Wagner of Tower Hill, two sisters, Mrs.

Burr Wyandt of Decatur and Mrs. Ollie Riley of Tower Hill. Silas Wagner of Lakewood is a half brother. Announce Wedding Shelbyville friends have received announcement of the wedding of Miss Lillian Katherin Goldstone, who taught in the Shelbyville High school last year, and Granville C. DuBois.

The wedding took place at Evanston on Wednesday, June 17. They ate now at home at 2106 Maple avenue. Evanston. Spend This Summer in Wisconsin's Land 'o Lakes Up in the freshly fragrant pine forests of Northwestern Wisconsin you'll find renewed zest in life. Everything is new and green and invigorating.

The game fish are biting. Take the family up early and establish a home the Great North Woods. Ample hotel and cottage accommodations at popular rates. Bargain fares. ConVenient train service via Chicago North Western Railway.

For illustrated map folder, "Summer Outings" and full' information, call on or address F. B. Martin, Gen'l 200 S. Jefferson Peoria, CHURCH NOTES Members of the orchestra of the First Church of the Nazarene will practise this evening. The Seventh ward social club of the First Christian church will meet this afternoon with Mrs.

Roy Campbell, 1060 North College street. The Progressive Sisterhood of the Antioch Baptist church will meet at 8 o'clock this evening in the church. "DING" GETS DEGREE BELOIT. June N. Darling, whose cartoons signed "Ding" nave made him famous Monday was granted an honorary degree by Beloit college.

Years ago while an undergraduate there he was suspended for drawing caricatures of the faculty. The. honorary degree was of letters. A Good Thing DON'T MISS IT Send your name and address plainly written, together with 10 cents, stamps or coin (and this slip) to Chamberlain Medicine Des Moines, Iowa, and receive in return a trial package containing CHAMBERLAIN'S TABLETS for stomach troubles, indigestion, gassy pains that crowd the heart, biliousness and constipation; CHAMBERLAIN'S COLIC AND DIARRHOEA REMEDY for pain in stomach and bowels, intestinal cramp, colic and diarrhoea; CHAMBERLAIN'S SALVE, needed in every family for burns, scalds, wounds, piles and skin affections Try these valued family medicines for only 10 cents. Don't miss it.

Cause THE POPULATION NEW FRANCE 80,000 THESE RIVAL COLONISTS WERE VASTLY IN EVERY THE FRENCH COLONISTS SCATTERED OVER A VAST WILDERNESS, LIVING AN ABSOLUTE GOVERNMENT, WITH BUT LITTLE AND FEW SETTLED COMMUNITIES. MARY BURTSCHI BECOMES BRIDE OF JOHN BRETZ Ceremony Performed Monday Morning in St. James Catholic Church Miss Mary Burtschi, daughter of J. L. Burtschi, and John Bretz were married at 8:30 o'clock Monday morning in St.

James Catholic church, Rev. Fr. Ostendorf officiating. Immediately after the ceremony a ding breakfast was served in the Hotel Orlando, following which the young couple left for Chicago. Upon their return thesa will make their home in East street.

The bride wore a gown of ivory satin crepe with court train, and a cap of silver lace binding the full length tulle veil. Her shower bouquet was of bride's roses and baby's breath. Her attendants, Miss Cecil Chicago, Miss Helen Fitzgerald of Springfield, Miss Grace Breen of Kansas City, were in chiffon flowered with orange and yellow, and each wore a silver hat trimmed in orange flowers, and carried a shower bouquet. Little Jane Burtschi, the flower girl, wore yellow organdie with a yellow head band, and carried ward roses. The church was decorated with Easter lilies and banks of greenery.

Music during the ceremony was furnished by Miss Mary Marty, violinist, and William Neff, of Indianapolist, soloist. PANA WOMAN BECOMES BRIDE Miss Clascina Hinton and Russell Phillips Married Sunday PANA. June Clascina Hinton. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

Scott Hinton, was married to Russell Phillips, son of Mr. and Mirs. A. H. Phillips, Springfield, in tho home of the bride's parents.

Sunday noon. by Rev. C. R. Booth, pastor of the First, Methodist church.

Attendants were Miss Opal Hinton. and Loyalle Hinton, sister and brother of the bride. The single ring ceremony being used. Mrs. Phillips is the eldest daughter of Mr.

and Mrs. Hinton. She was for a number of years orchestra leader for the Palace theater in Pana, but for the past three years she been organist for the Strand theater in Springfield. Mr. Phillips is a graduate of the Northwestern Dental college of Evanston, and is located at Springfield.

Following a honeymoon to Niagara Falls and other points East they will be at home at Springfield. Dies of Burns Mary Canovie, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Canovie of Coalton, a mining town near Nokomis died at the Huber Memorial hospital here Sunday evening from burns received when she fell into a tub of hot water at the Canovie home at Coalton last Friday. She was two a and a half years old.

Her mother was preparing to do the family washing and unnoticed the little tot stumbled near the tub of boiling water and plunged head first into it. The body was taken to Nokomis Monday where interment was made. Swimmer Injured Ed MeAdams, a well known Pana youth, suffered a badly lacerated scalp wound which rendered him unconscious for several hours Sunday, when he struck the return iron pipe in the Pana swimming pool at Kitchell park. Edward was diving from the shoulders of another swimmer, and in some manner he was plunged beneath the waters too near the pipe. FATALLY INJURED BLOOMINGTON, June TV.

Ross, 44, coal dealer, 807 North Capitol avenue, Pekin, was fatally injured when a motor truck he was driving was struck by an Illinois Central freight train at Buck's Crossing, between Heyworth and Wapella, Monday afternoon. Kills Pesky Bed-Bugs P. D. Q. (Pesky Devils Quietus), makes a quart, enough to kill a million bedbugs, roaches, fleas or moths and stops future generations by killing the eggs and does not injure the clothing.

Liquid fire to the bedbugs is what P. D. Q. is like, bedbugs stand as good a chance as a snowball in a justly famed heat resort. Patent spout free in every package of P.

D. to enable you to kill them and their eggs in the cracks. P. D. Q.

can also be purchased in sealed bottles, double strength, liquid form. Just think, a 35c box of P. D. Q. of French and Indian War OF THERE WERE THEN WAS 1,300,000 PEOPLE IN THE ENGLISH COLONIES.

DIFFERENT ON THE OTHER HAND, THE ENGLISH WERE WERE ORGANIZED IN SOLID COMMUNITIES UNDER TO FARMING AND INDUSTRY, AND WERE FARMING, GOVERNING, HOME- LOVING PEOPLE. COPYRIGHT, 1925, BY THE MILLURE INEWSPAPER U. S. Determined to Stop Talk of Who Owns Arctic (Continued from page 1) for the time being at least the problem of who owns the unexplored area is not going to trouble officials here and they hope likewise that the Canadian government will not be perturbed about it. May Try For Pole Incidentally the failure of Amundsen to reach the pole by airplane has stirred up considerable interest in the exact a orders given Commander Byrd with respect to the flying he does in the Arctic.

Technically is under orders from the navy department and ranks co-ordinately with MacMillan. Commander Byrd is to be the judge of where the planes shall go, because he alone knows flying conditions. MacMillan's objective has never been the pole, but the area. Nevertheless, with unexplored, close to the region that has never been explored, Commander Byrd is anxious to accomplish for the United States navy the feat of having gone over the north pole by air. The announcement that a base would be established at Axel Heibergland is taken here to mean, however.

that the first work of the MacMillanByrd expedition will be to traverse the region between Greenland and Alaska and then if there is any time left and the planes are in good condition the flight to the pole may be attempted. If the pole were to be sought first, then the base would be much nearer to the than the placed at Cape Columbia, which 15. point in Spitzbergen from which Amundsen hopped off and also within casy cruising range of the north pole. The great achievement of the expedition will be to put an airplane base farther north than ever before. When this is accomplished there is no telling what remarkable things may be done by the American fliers and explorers.

STOP ITCHING SKIN Zemo the Clean, Antiseptic Liquid, Gives Prompt Relief There is one safe, dependable treatment that relieves itching torture and that cleanses and soothes the skin. Soon after the first application of Zemo you will find that irritations, Pimples, Blackheads Eczema, Blotches, Ringworm and simitar skin troubles will disappear. Zemo is all that is needed, for it banishes most skin eruptions, makes the skin soft, smooth and healthy. It is a disappearing liquid that man- be applied during the day. Trial bottle 35c, large size $1.00.

Zemo antiseptic and healing. 25c. ACHES "Yessir" "North Coast" Limited Famously Good Meals Keen enjoyment in travel comes not alone from one's satisfaction with luxurious train equipment, nor from excellent train tion by able men. Good meals, rich dining pointments, smart service -How essential they are! Going to St. Paul, Minneapolis, Fargo, Billings, Butte, Helena, Missoula, Spokane, Yakima, Seattle, Tacoma, Portland? "Brand" new all -steel Pullman Sleepers of the very latest design, observation car, valet, barber, bath, give utmost travel comfort on the "North Coast Limited" One of America's Fine Trains Lv.

Chicago Union Statioh, Burlington Route 10:35 a. m. Daily Northern Pacific Ry. "2000 Miles of Startling Beauty" M. E.

Harlan, G. A. P.D. 73 E. Jackson Chicago, Ill.

By J. Carroll Mansfield Per Capita Cost of Government Among Six Lowest Only six cities in the United States group having from 30.000 to 50.000 population had a smaller per capita governmental cost in 1923 than Decatur, according to the tables of financial statistics of cities just issued by the bureau of census. In that year. the average Decatur citizen paid $28.77 for all governmental costs, the lowest of any Illinois city of its group. Oak Park paid Evanston, Joliet, Aurora, Rock Quincy.

Danville, $44.23 and Moline, $45.21. with per capita costs bethespecter were West Hoboken, $28.54: Springfield, Hazelton, $25.21: Kokomo, $25.61: Pensacola. $25.76, and Lewiston, $26.39. a Other Cities Higher other Illinois cities larger than Decatur, Springfield had a per capita cost of East St. Louis, Rockford, Peoria, and Chicago, $56.90.

The assessed valuation of all Decatur property subject to general taxation in 1923. was $17,160,855, and only eight cities in its group show a smaller figure. Five of those cities with smaller assessed valuation are In Illinois, Moline, Aurora, Danville and Rock Island. Chicago's assessed valuation was $1,788,665,379. That of Springfield is $29,408,549.

166th in Size Revenue receipts per capita in Decatur in 1923 were $32.63, and 25 cities in its group are given smaller figures in the report. Decatur's debt per capita was surpassed by all but four of the cities in its group. Quincy had the smallest debt per capita of any city over 30.000 in the United States, $6.18, with the exception of Washington, D. C. The latter city reported only 35 cents.

Decatur ranks 166th in size in the United States, according to the bul- letin. OPAL ARTHUR IN DOUGLAS COUNTY Second Hearing of Case Against Monticello Man Starts July 6 TUSCOLA, June Opal Arthur of Piatt county, charged with the murder of Charles Martin of Monticello which occurred during the fall of 1921 was brought to Douglas county Saturday and placed in the the county second hearing keeping of Sheriff, Harley Ellars at of the charge against Arthur will be called in the Douglas county circuit court on a change of venue on Monday morning July 6th. Judge George A. Sentel of Sullivan will occupy the bench. Attorneys Joel T.

Davis of Tuscola and Grover C. Hoff of Clinton will appear in behalf of the defense. The firm of Cotton Nichols of Tuscola, Herrick of Farmer City and the states' attorney of Piatt county will conduct the prosecution the case. Mr. Harry Goble Tells How Cuticura Healed Eruptions "My back began to itch and burn and a rash of small pimples broke out across my shoulders.

The pimples were hard and red and scaled over, and would break and scale over again. They itched and burned causing me to scratch until my back was covered with sore eruptions. The eruptions were 60 sore that when I lay down I could not get a bit of "1 read an advertisement Cuticura Soap and Ointment and purchased some. In a few days I got relief, after using three cakes of Soap and one and a half boxes of Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Harry Goble, Lexington, July 5, 1924. These fragrant emollients are all you need for all toilet purposes.

Soap to cleanse and purify, Ointment to soothe heal, Talcum to powder and sweeten. Soap 25c. Ointment 25 and 50c. Taleum 25c. Sold everywhere.

Sample each free. Address: Laboratorien, Dept. Cuticura Sharing Stick. Will You Be A June Bride? Then ou'll want to know about wedding etiquette how the invitations should be worded and when they should be sent out, gifts should be displayed and acknowledged. the usual order of the procession, wedding anniversaries, and the many other important details that usually arise at the time of a wedding.

You. of course. wish to arrange your wedding so that it will be without social error. The Washington Bureau of this paper has a free booklet on Etiquette which every prospective bride should have. addition to telling about weddings it covers the subjects of street etiquette, christenings.

funerals, dress, telephoning, and miscellaneous other matters. Write for this helpful booklet today. Be sure to enclose two cents in stamps to cover the return postage. Frederic J. Haskin, Director, The Decatur Herald Information Bureau.

Washington, D. C. I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the ETIQUETTE BOOKLET. Nante Street City State QUEBEC MONTREAL POINT President Will Urge New Cut in Taxation (Continued from page 1) but the more difficult the task the greater is the reward of success. Government Has Strayed "In this great business of the government we are undoubtedly continuing activities which are no longer essential or productive.

The undertaking of new projects or lines of effort made essential by changing conditions should be marked by the out of those no longer essential." I refer, of course. to those which are within your addiscretion. the federal government has strayed far afield from its business. It has trespassed upon fields where there should be no trespass. If we could confine our federal expenditures to the legitimate and functions of the federal a material reobligationme duction would be apparent.

But far more important than this would be its effect upon the fabric of our constitutional form of government, which tends to be gradually weakened and undermined by this encroachment. Cure with People "The cure for this is not in our hands. It lies with the people. It will come when they realize the necessity of state assumption of state responsibility. It will come when they realize that the laws under which the federal government hands out contributions to the states is placing upon them a double burden of -federal taxation in the first instance to raise the moneys which the government donates to the state, and state taxation in the second instance to meet the extravagances of state expenditures which are tempted by the federal donations." The President, expressing the opinion that "greater ultimate economy in federal expenditures can sometimes be attained by larger annual outlays on some existing projects," said that in some instances it can be attained by undertaking new projects.

Half Million Employes do not advocate the withholding of additional outlays on projects essential to the best interests of the government," he added, "but our present objective is the relief of the taxpayers today, and any proposed increase of annual outlay on existing projects or any undertaking of new projects should be scrutinized with this objective in mind, and every ed doubt should be resolved in favor of the taxpayer of today who is carrying the burden of war taxes." "Pointing out that the number of employes in the executive civil service totaled 554,896 June 30. 1924. as compared with 440,000 nine years before, the President emphasized that every effort be made to prevent any surplus us in personnel, although he did "not advocate an undermanned public service." feeling "this would be false economy and disastrous in its results." DRIVER HURT IN SULLIVAN RACE Charleston Man's Car Turns Turtle and Is Struck by Another Racer SULLIVAN. June Waters. Charleston man and one of the drivers in the automobile races held in Sullivan Sunday afternoon, was pairfully injured when his car overturned as it started in the back stretch in the -mile race.

After his car overturned (pinioning him, underneath it. another racing car driven by Allison of Bement. crashed in to it from behind. Waters received a bad cut in the forehead extending over temple and was badly bruised on one jaw and on one shoulder. He was rendered unconscious, and for a time was thought to be dying.

He was taken to a physician's office in Sullivan for emergency treatment and then taken to a hospital in Charleston. Waters recently has been employed as a garage mechanic in Windsor. His car was in second position in a large field of drivers when the accidnt occurred. The car was demolished and the Allison car also badly damaged. Allison was not in- jured.

Arm Severely Burned Joe Minter, one of the superintendents on the hard road construction south of Sullivan. is in a hospital in Mattoon suffering from bad burns on his caused by the explosion of gasoline which he was draining from an automobile a few nights ago. The lighting of a match by a companion in the automobile caused the explosion. 'enough candy to satisfy anyone's "sweet tooth!" and GOOD I CANDY! too Oh Henry! Dollar candy in a 10c size FT. FRONTENAG NIAGARA OSWEGO BOSTON CANY ATLANTIC NEW PRE HE BOEUF FRENCH FORTS THAT MENACED THE PHILADELPHIA COLONIAL FRONTIER WHILE OUTNUMBERED, THE FRENCH I KNEW THAT IF THE ENGLISH TOOK THE OFFENSIVE THEY WOULD HAVE TO CROSS THE MOUNTAINS AND FIGHT ON STRANGE GROUND WHICH WOULD GIVE THE FRENCH THE ADVANTAGE.

TO PROTECT THEIR FRONTIER THEY BUILT THE FORTS OF CROWN POINT AND TICONDEROGA ON LAKE CHAMPLAIN, TOMORROW DISPUTE OVER THE CHIC VALLEY. COLONISTS DEVOTED A SELF- SYNDICATE SHELBY VOTES SCHOOL BONDS Proposal to Issue $75,000 Carries in Balloting Saturday SHELBYVILLE, June special election held at the high school building Saturday for the purpose of voting on the proposed bond issue $75,000 to be used in the building of a new grade school building, resulted in a vote of 375 to 66, in favor of the proposition. There were 441 votes cast. two ballots being spoiled. The vote was canvassed by the school board Saturday night.

The election was merely a formality as the board could, have issued the bonds without However. by putting matter to a vote of the the board saved the sum of $1,875. The new school building. which will cost about $125,000 is to be erected on the side of the old Main school building. Wed in Decatur Ralph Clark of Decatur and Miss Mabel united in Miller marriage of at Shelbyville Decatur were o'clock Saturday afternoon.

Rev. Wilbert Dowson received the vows in the parsonage of the Grace Methodist church, the ring ceremony being used. They were accompanied by Itev. It. H.

Clark of Decatur, a brother of the I bridegroom. Mrs. Clark is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T.

J. (Budd) Miller of Shelbyville and is a charming young woman. Miss Helen Richard and Curtis MeNeely, both of Beccher City. were married Saturday evening in the parsonage of St. Paul's Methodist church by Rev.

H. F. Powell. They were accompanied by Mr. and Mrs.

Leo Richard of Decatur. They will reside on a farm near Beecher City. ORDERS SPRINGFIELD BREWERY PADLOCKED SPRINGFIELD. June of the largest illicit brewery known to exist here was ordered by Judge Louis Fitzhenry Monday to close. The brewery, which was raided by federal officers in April, was said at that time to be producing mately 100 barrels of beer every day.

The order spells doom for all paraphenalia and the building will be padlocked for one year. TWO CHILDREN DIE AS CAR OVERTURNS BENTON. June 23. -Doris; Pulverman, 8, and Robert MeHugh Pulverman, 9, children of Moses Pulverman, prominent Benton attorney, were killed, and Mrs. Pulverman was probably fatally injured late Monday when the automobile in which they were riding turned over two half miles north of here.

Billie Pulverman, 4, received a broken right wrist. Mrs. Fred Heil, driver of the car, and Mimi Pulverman, twin sister of Robert, were unhurt. KILLED AT PLAY (Bu Associated Press.) ST. LOUIS, June Meeks.

14, was shot to death in his home here late Monday by Woodrow Wilson Talley, 12, with whom he was playing a game of "hold up." The Talley youth was held pending action by the coroner. The boys had been inseparable companions. DEEDS RECORDED Marion J. and Trenna Westenhaven to Percy W. Gebhart, lot 7 in block 1 of Levi Towl's second addition.

Glad He Picked This Good Stomach Remedy Puts Stomach in Fine ConditionEnds Dizzy Spells, Catarrh and Injudicious Makes eating You Sleep causes Wellte indigestion, gas, heartburn, heaviness and sour stomach--sometimes the distended stomach causes that dreadful feeling of near suffocation. Isn't it worth something to know of a remedy that will stop this distress in a few -quicker than anything else you can think of. This is no common stomach remedy for it took years of time to combine Pepgin with the other effective agents that make Dare's MenthaPepsin so good that the worst of indigestion and gastritis and other chronic stomach ailments are speedily overcome and the most deranged stomachs are made clean, strong and healthy. Calvin Dilks, of Alloway, N. a man of few words, knows this for he writes: "I entirely rid myself of an old catarrhal condition of the stomach with Dare's Mentha No mater what your stomach trouble is get a bottle today at Quaker Drug or any druggist anywhere with the distinct understanding that if it doesn't do you the world of good your money will be returned.

Quaker Drug Co. JAMES FUNERAL HELD IN URBANA CHAMPAIGN, June James, president emeritus of the University of Illinois, was praised as an educator, whose influence will be felt for generations "in the life of the University of Illinois and the people of in a funeral address by President David Kinley of the university, preceding the burial of Mr. here Monday. The bbdy of the former university president was laid to rest in a cemetery adjoining the south campus of the institution which he had served for more than a score of years. The funeral was conducted by the Rev.

James C. Baker, pastor of Trinity church of Champaign. CORE THROAT Gargle with warm salt water -then apply over throat'APORUB Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly A Mary First passed Saturday, cluding 4 QuanT Polarine In Five Gallon Cans In the New Tilting Crate This new Polarine feature is the finishing touch to a complete service. The efficiency of Polarine Oils and Greases and the advantages of using them are well known. The Polarine film affords the surest way of lengthening the life of your car.

It protects your bearings against the wear and tear of friction. Polarine conserves power by providing a perfect seal between the piston and cylinder wall. It maintains a flawless, unbroken film heat resisting, tough, resilient. Polarine yields nothing to any oil in point of efficiency or superior quality. Now comes the new tilting crate, making it as easy to pour from a five gallon can as from a quart container.

Drain your crankcase every 500 miles, cleanse it thoroughly with Polarine Flushing Oil and refill with the right grade of fresh Polarine. By so doing you will drive your car much farther without overhauling than by changing it every 1000 miles. Consult chart for the right grade of Polarine for your car. Order a five gallon can of Polarine in the new tilting crate. Standard Oil Company (Indiana) DECATUR, ILLINOIS 3845..

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