Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Oct 1930, p. 7

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

„.,r, - ;'V -V. •-5.' :• "i •••'.' >J - * r-- . •• • mP-. •.•••7' **$ * ^ All Linen Bridgt . Embroider *wV* #, v '*>JC . UNEN SCARFS ud sums SETS ^_a tor $1.00 GLASS TOWnS _..^5 for SI .00 PILLOW CASES, stamped and hanstitchad, and. six states floss ; $1.00 LEJKH BDEST TOWELS, valnw op to *125 LINES HAKDKEK0HIEF8, --2 for $1.00 values up to 65c 6 for 50^ REGULAR $1.00 SILK HOSE % pair for $1.00 REGU1AR $1.50 SILK HOSE, service or chiffon „ _ per pair $1.00 Swj&iTCRS, sixes 1, 2, 8, all wool, regular $2.75 • ^ .-$1.00 OFF See our table of glass and pottery and giftware--greatly reduced. Select your Christmas Gifts during this $1.00 Day special marking. - FREE On Dollar Day we will award one Hand-Embroidered Bed Spread to one of our customers. * ' WMWM rr.V"* 1 1 1 1 MI 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 MX of NEW YORK f*l*L*- Shop FEW. REASONS FOE TEST VARIATIONS * Saturday, Nov. 1 Political Advertisement and Radio Shop r.v FURL CHOKERS AND NOVELTY 1TE0KWEAR, $2.00 values FAITCY BRACELETS, $1.50 value, each -,,, SUEDE PURSE SETS '"v 'S -"i* • JT' ,-i' --Smim % Jtamcy bill foLds, $1.75 values _ lai, LADIES' FANCY DINNER &INGS, *"» Tal<l« -- : . « .fc COMPACTS, $L75 values . WALDEMAR CHAINS, $150 to $2.00 values LATE SHEET MUSIC, 4 for H&s-- i>,i.".'wiyil")ni."A^ii i<i»iij mi'iM'i'i tl $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 $1 Many bric-a-brac articles suitable for prises. JNnmeEons other items, $1.75 -to $2.00 values, will beoffered on Dollar Da?for ~ £*| aQQ < J There are many articles which we offer 'on Saturday, Nov. 1, at $1.00, which will make .suitable Ckiatmui: gifts. Why not select them nowt At Nye's on Main St. Cream Separator May * Be Blamed for Differences. / When cream tests vary there Is nsaally a reason, and before doubting the test ft Is well to consider the things that will en use the differences, suggests K. S. Outhrie of the department of dairy industry nl Cornell university. A difference of ten tarns each mln ut^on the separator crank will change the test nearly three alid a half per cent. The tempemture of the milk at the tinier of sepnrntion. If at 70 degrees Instead of Mh lowers the cream test and lets more (at go In the skim milk. Cows which may be added to the herd or a fresh cow may change the herd test. Uadcr uniform conditions at the college a S per cent milk gave a 23 per cent cream, a 4 per cent m^lk a 30 per cent cream, and a 5 per cent milk a 38 per cent cream. The percentage of fat to the skim milk increased with the richer milk. •Cleaning the separator is not only a good sar.itary practice hat It Is essential to efficient separation; clogged and dirty tubes hinder the normal Sow. Mr. Gnthrie cites Cornell extension bulletin number 151 as useful (a ttie care and operation of a cream separator. It will be sent free to anyone who applies for it to the college of agriculture at Ithaca, New York. Proving Dairy Bulls Is- Becoming of Importance Proving dairy bulls is becoming an Important and, apparently, necessary part of the breeder's program In his needs for better cattle. The dairy extension service of New Jersey recently reported some very good evidence of the breeding value of three bulls In that state. Twenty-two daughters of a Holstein bull, sold by Henry Schmidt to the Newark Milk company farm, averaged 11.919 lbs. milk and 382.8 lbs. butterfat at an average age of three and one-half years. "Old Contemptible," a Guernsey bull owned by Locust IJine farm, has 10 daughters that averaged 375 Ihs. butterfat Nine of these were two-yearolds.- The average' mature equivalent of these records is 528 lbs. butterfat. The senior Holstein herd sire of the New Jersey Agricultural college herd has 10 daughters that ayernged 13.- 500 lbs. milk on official test in Class C, 10 months' division. This was 11 per cent more than the production of their dams at comparable ages. This bull Is a son of a proven sire and was secured from the United States government dairy farm at Beits villa, Md. Importance of Quality * of Legume Hay for Cow Over in Michigan there la a herd that has a six-year average of 13,000 pounds of milk per cow. This la splendid production. It would be a creditable average for one yeac. - For a six-year period it is wonderful. The owner of the herd, Mr. Hunt, was Interviewed- and gavejils views on feeding to Hoard's Dairyman. His main emphasis was not on this or that grain mixture but on the quality of the legume hay fed. He believes there la an important relationship between the qiiplity of the hay and the health of the herd. Well cured legume hay contains essential vitamins which aid in asaUBiletlea of minerals, and mln* erala hat* a very Important bearing on health. oooooooooooooooooooooooooo Dairy Hints OOOOOOOOOOOOO^OOOOOOOQ&OOO TRAVEL VIA LAKE ERIE CLEW BXAMD--lUJPfcALO DIVISION fSTri a. a - Jane 20th to September 6th. *we IJ OO One War; $5.00 Round T*. Auto Rate *4.50 sad up. [w AU <>«» t T+ittforfrnfrUtrmmdAmUi Map. AsJil JOT dttuihtm C&BLrm TnaxgU. Cmlt i _ D* IMM 1KB CLEVELAND AND BUVHUkO TRANSIT - B. etfc Street Pier Cows in milk need plenty of water at all times. • • • Many of oar dairy herda are unprofitable because ef underfeeding. • • • Plenty of succulent feed for the dairy herd means more milk in the pell and a smaller expend!tore fat the more expensive grain. * * • ^ Take a look at the heifera oat on pasture. They may be short of water or feed or both. It paya Imp the young stock growing. • • • Soy beans, oats and peas, Su^an grass, and the millets are emergency hays. Of these soy beans are the best They are nearly equal to al|klfa la feeding value. • • • Proper culling of dairy herds will help to reduce the surplus of dairy products and to Increase the profits of Individual herda. __ • • • An abundant supply of ftW water Is essential if the dairy utensils are tp be washed and sterHized properly. Many farmers who are using a gas engine as a source of power for their milking machines or cream separators are finding that water can be heated quickly and tjonomieally by the use of an exhaust water heater attached Jp tbtff fas engines. " Stop| Reflect IB the tawdry Thirties, to my mind the onloveliest section of the city, one may walk for blocks without finding a thing worthy of attention. Dingy women's clothing shops, wholesale mostly--and I mean shops for dingy women--line streets between Fifth and Sixth avenues, and the floors, above them contain the sweatshops where all the $14.95 copies of Paris: models are made.v The streets are' Jammed with delivery trucks, and the sidewalks overflow with sweat-shop workers. There is, however, one Item of note--a men's clothing shop. On the sidewalk in front Is a twisted mlrror of the kind one finds at the penny arcades of Coney Island. I'assersby stop and stare at the strange reflection of themselves. Then they read the sign above the mirror. "Just picture yourself," It says. "Isn't It time fMi <uw in and selected a^new soltf* * • • Mystic Reporter A youfig reporter on a morning newspaper Is proud of his record for scoring beats, and confesses to me that he seeks the advice of a clairvoyant on every mystery story to which he is assigned. He is no ordinary reporter, either, but a titled and wealthy Englishman who thinks reporting Is the grandest fan in the world. Recently he #as put on the trail of new clews in a five-year-old murder mystery--the slaying of an actress. A few weeks ago a woman met death by accident or design at a dance, and she had been known as a close associate of the murdered actress. The titled reporter was assigned to find out whether the second woman, too, was murdered. He went to his clairvoyant and told her what he had to do. "Yon must find the orchestra leader," she kept repeating to him. So the reporter sought out the orchestra leader who had played at the dance, and got from him a clew which may help In solving both murders. • » • Historic Signatures $£e catalogue of a dealer la autographs reveals what are to me some strange vagaries In the value placed upon mementos of great men. Signed letters by Czar Alexander I of Russia. Napoleon's enemy, and Sherwood Anderson are quoted at $25 apiece. A letter from Calvin Coolldge to a relative is listed at $35.. A sample of Garibaldi's handwriting Is worth $15, while one of Benjamin Franklin Is worth $775. Among men of.modern times, the late Warren O. Harding's letters are most valuable, one being quoted at $550. An army order signed by Abraham Lincoln bears the price of $250, and a long letter by Lonls XIV can be had for ^25. A signature of J. Plerpont Morgan, Sr.--not a check --Is priced at $5, and a letter of Thomas Nelson Page's la a bargain at $3.50. A George Washington letter Is quoted at $750, and tha most expensive Item in the catalogue is a m>te from Lafayette to an American woman living In Parla, priced at y> yyt . e e • '";-f M«i0s ~ Chinatown, according to alt tn8fra tlona, is passing as a lure for out-of town tourists. Business in the fake Chinese dives near the Bowery is so bad, in fact, that the really enterpris Ing Chinese showmen have moved across the river to Newark; It I. whera pickings are bettea, • • • Naw Racket A m version of the "writeop' fMdtet It being practiced with success among big bualneas men. The "write tip* business is passe. No longer will a captain of Industry pay $200 to $500 to have his biography inserted in a mythical volume dealing with the lives of America's great men. But they will 'pay $200 to have their pictures taken. The photographer represents himself as coming from a news picture bureau which will insert the subject's portrait in every newapaper rotogravure section in the country, with an appropriately flattering caption. tC. »». Bell ayndley.) "^1% Carman Railway* to „' v Drop Word "Verboten" Berlin.--The word "verboten," once the favorite and most conspicuous term on any official German ordinance, will soon be obsolete--at least in the "realm of the German railway administration, which recently decided to replace the ominous "forbidden* by loss pre-emptory admonitions. Cathedral Figures - The Cathedral of St John the Di* vine in New York city was incorporated in 1873 and its cornerstone was laid In 1892. The site occupies the entire area bounded by Amsterdam avenue and Mornlngslde park, One Hundred and Tenth and One Hundred and Thirteenth streets. It consists of litt acre% and east $850, ooa Girl Invalid Faints; Is Strangled in Bed ;; Los Angeles.--When she suf- • * fered a fainting spell In her !* home Louise Dahlquist, thirteen. • • strangled to death. Her head !! fell between the bed post and • • the bed springs, causing death by strangulation. She had been I ill for some time and subject to fainting spells. i i t tit111111n11111 Jjearalng the Casse I | Is Interested In Ijport" reads a headline. I know a parrot who must have spent his early days on a zolf coarse.---London Passing ALEX M. ADAMS Democratic Candidate for the Office of "ff County Clerk jjfc McHenry County ^ •?**% IHection, Tuesday, November 4" ? Your support is respectfully solicited g Sho*j| National Capital* Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Venesuela and Mexico have created federal districts for their capitals. The United States and Australia do not permit inhabitants of their federal districts to vote. Asbestos Lh| Ksewt The noncombustlble character and spinning quality of asbestos fiber were undoubtedly known to the aclent world, Plutarch mentions "perpetual" lamp wicks used by the Vestal Virgins. WESf SID] 5 GARA6B Otto Kdm 1 >0 8 ' e ^General Automobile Repairing / ' 1 Res. PhoneT ^I US S'V •I"' ¥ >£+ A $1.00 Long Tie4 and a 50c Bow ^ Tie for $ X All $2.00 and $1.60 Fancy Colored Shirt. " t Y *L50 Hml'i Dress 3 | V'V •' '• X Jffl ti.50 and ILSB Boys Y Xnicker Pants Y 4 I T \ 5 pair Ken's 25c Canvas Gloves 220 weight Men's 5 Men's Suits, small lot sises,£ * 35-3* -- Men's Salts, snail tot 37-38-39 > -IS W W. FREUND MAIN STREET •if. Madagascar's Original Name Madagascar, the fourth largest is> land in the world, was originally named the Isle of St Lawrence by a Portuguese sea captain, Dlogo Dias, Who discovered It In 1500. .. ., Cats MeUtara Freai Air Spanish moss can thrive on "telephone poles because It is a true epiphyte. An epiphyte Is a "plant which derives the moisture required for Its development from the air. Ort ef the Otdtsny A Istter was delivered to a Baltimore address 35 years late. This is unusual as there are very few inaide coat pockets that will wear that long onder any circumstances, and very few husbands who could carry a letter around for 35 years without stumbling across It by accident--Detroit aT* ; /I Iodine Hainan Need Observation has shown that occasional visits to the seashore render people practically immune from goitre. Sea spray blown Inland Iodizes the soil, the plants, and to some extent the air. Marine foods, such as oysters and fish, contain iodine in useful qu&nv v i i • • • - 1 d - _ . • ' . i h i * : • Leave Theas Ale4» Every once in a while we hear some one making a plan for the preservetlon of wild life, and the young people aver they can take care of themselves.-- Florida Times-Union. mm • Shouldbegiven to any per son whci can sell a better TIRE than the * M famous •'A' ':5sj HIGH PRESSURE 30x3 30x3Va,ref. 30x3^, extra siaa 31x4 30x5 (8 ply) 32x4 . 32x4% 32x6 (10 ply) 33x4 33x4'/a L „$ 4.68 . 4.89 . 4.98 . 8.65 . 19.46 . 9.35 . 13.10 . 8110 . 9.95 . 13.55 for less money prices' quoted: , "»•' " H. ik . }! r Reg. 29*440 $ 5.55 $ 8.15 6.30 30*4.50 - : 8.26 8.35 28*4.76/^-/, 9.40 7.5S 29*4.75 , 9.70 7.65 30x4.75 7.95 29x5.00 7.98 30x5.00 10 8.15 31x5.00 , 8.45 32x5.00 8.95 28x5.25 „ 8.98 30x5.2ft , ia9B 9.40 31x5.25 11.60 9.75 28x5.50' 12.35 9.95 30x5.50 1 12.55 10.20 3ft*fi 0ft . 12.60 1120 31x6 00 L,- 12.80 1150 32rfi 00 j , * 12.9ft 1190 33xfi 00 13.19 12.25 34*6.00 1SM>5 31*6 50 : 14.50 •r •• '> •>•> 32x6.50 14.6$ 32*6.75 17.4ff ^ 33*6.75 17.95 . Walter J. Freund VeicanMng ' ' MMC| PhoM *94 ' An Wtifc CuiuM Wm Mdtarfi UL : • h, > ® % u m , : * --. • .. . M . ' "A eel i mt ii iBuMiii"* --

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy