Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jun 1937, p. 3

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Order *•». f--d •vr/thing you grow...with VIGORO f THE COMPLETE. " tALANCED PLANT FOOD Vigoro For Sale By -AH Garden Stapply Dealer* R O. ANDREW CO., Distributor. . J. VYCITAL HDWEL, MeHcwy. A. W. SMITH, tUngweed. FREE KITCHtnKODK Dtmonstrat ion Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lenzen called on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rossdeutcher in Chicago Tuesday evening. Little Jack Steinsdorfer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Steinsdorfer, is a patient at the Woodstock hospital at this writing. Mrs. Herman Molidor of Libertyville spent Saturday afternoon with her aunt, Mrs. Grace Kirwan. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dowell and daughter, Ada, were Waukegan shoppers Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., of Wauconda spent Wednesday evening here with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Mr. and Mrs. John Rossdeutcher and son, Jackie, of Chicago spent Monday here with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lenzen. * Mrs. A. ftarlee of Libertyville spent Monday here with her sister, Mrs. Raymond Steinsdorfer. Miss Lottie Crochett of North Chicago is now employed at the home of Mrs. Grace Kirwan. , Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hansen and family of near Madison, Wis., are spending the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Casper. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Brewer, and family'of near Round Lake spent Tuesday evening here with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Henkel. Mrs. Harry Maypole 8f Fox Lake called on friends here Wednesday. MrS. Harry Hironimus spent Saturday with her mother, Mrs. B. Horton at Grayslake. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Deindlein of Wauconda spent Tuesday evening here with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fulton. Miss Frances Davis and Martin Baur of Wauconda spent Monday evening* with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Henkel. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rushing of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Rushing and son, Lee, of Southern Illinois, visited G. A. Vasey Saturday. Mrs. Charles Miller, Mrs. Roy Pass field, Mrs. Joseph Passfield and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher were McHenry callers Monday. The Volo School, under the leadership of Miss La Verne Stone, closed Tuesday with a picnic at Cook's Park. The Volo 4-H Club met Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs Lloyd Russell. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser and son spent Monday evening with the latter's mother, Mrs. Catherine Wagtier at Slocum's Lake. The Volo Cemetery . Society will meet at the home of Miss Vinnie Bacon this Thursday. Mrs. Joseph Lenzen and Mrs. John Rossdeutcher gave a personal shower in honor of Mrs. Paul O'Leary at the Volo Recreation Hall Monday afternoon. The afternoon was spent in playing auction five hundred and bunco. Mrs. O'Leary received many pretty and useful gifts. A very de licious lunch was served. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser and son visited Mr. and Mrs. G. Vasey in Waukegan Saturday evening. Many Cash Found in Forests Farm Woodlot Will Produce Many Trees, f&shes, Berries of Value. Br •R•toabre.r tM fia. ssaPrahrumaeentttae rS, taBtier tConorlilaeng e.F or- WNU Service. "God in the hills," a favorite line in by-gone melodramas, might well apply to today's farm woodlot. Besides saw timber and cord wood, the farm woodlot offers many other 'S&sn crops to the enterprising owner. mwgeywtovWtMr attmdmagtlMeMHDg imkwhinwiwaiw lag a special dwim •(ration of the wmld-! famous KITCHENKOOK-- thartowdMt Its KITCHENKOOK lights and operates t&eagae stove; has A. very lataat built-in convenience feature#, yet m by tar ^ moat economical stove there ia to operate. Whenyon j- your --remember that your kitchen store ^Upre yo« time, wodt and anoney. 5 Phone 98-M Oreen Street WHAT DOES %%SOPER-DUTy" MIAN? YOUtL KNOW WHEN YOU SEE HOW MARVELOUSlf THE NEW FRIGIDAIRE PERFORMS ALL 5 BASIC SERVICES FOR HOME REFRIGERATION,- AND PROVES IT' (Jcryvui Itl. \ "SUPER-DUTY". FRIGIDAIRE. WITH THE.METER-MISER At fa*. Jacob Justen Pbone 108-R : Sons £ (Jreen Street Mfangers ^e getting annual from Christm ft? treii. They also sell "press brush," or tip ends of spruce and balsam which are clipped off and baled for manufacturers of Christmas greens and decorations. Some men have sold fern-picking rights on their land, the buyers using them as decorations. There is always a market tor tree seeds. Acorns,, walnuts, butternuts, black walnuts, and cones from spruce, pine, or balsam may be gathered and sold in the fall. Bean poles and pea brush are always in demand, and poles and stakes for proping up heavy branches of apple trees often find a sale. Much of this material can be gathered, while making thinnings in the woodlot. Fence posts and rails are always useful on the farm, and taking them from the woodlot means quite a savjing over a period of time. Novelties made from gray or white birch, twig baskets filled with white pine sprays and cones, red berries, and dried grasses also add to the income. Decorative buttons made from walnuts or butternuts can generally be sold to novelty shops. Maple syrup and sap need only be mentioned. Everyone knows the value of a good sugar bush. Cattle bedding made from trash wood by cones treated chemically to produce colored flames in the ^replace, and white birch for fancy fireplace wood are some of the other forest byproducts. A little scouting around for a market will often lead to new uses for old forest products, and every new outlet means more money fr6m the farm woodlot. Spruce and Fir Among * ~ Best Windbreak Trees Norway spruce and Douglas fir are the most satisfactory trees to use as windbreak plantings, according to J. E. Davis, extension forester, College of Agriculture, University of Illinois. A good windbreak is easy to have, its success depending upon location, soil preparation, choice of trees, spacing, protection and care. A windbreak will be effective on the leeward for a distance eight times its height. Since the trees average 40 feet in height, it is best not to have the buildings nearer than 50 feet nor farther than 320 feet from the trees. If closer than 50 feet, snow drifts may form on buildings, and dead-air pockets may cause excessive heat in summer. . The windbreak affords best protection if built in the form of an Inverted "L" on the west and north of the farmstead. Plowed preferably in the fall, the land may be fitted in the spring. At least 4-year old transplanted trees are recommended and even larger trees will assure more success. Silage for Young Cattle Silage in large amounts can be used to feed thin common-to-medium yearlings or older cattle which are to be marketed this spring, according to E. T: Robbins, live stock extension specialist, College of Agriculture, University of Illinois. Silage with or without dry roughage is combined with three or four pounds of cottonseed meal or soybean oil meal for each head each •ay by some experienced finishers of butcher cattle. Corn is added during about the last two months, and the cattle are sold when about two-thirds fat. , Agricultural Notes Records show that the corn borer eft moving farther southward. • • • i California's 1936 potato crop*esr eeeded last year's by 500,000 bushels. * • • Once a part of a huge swamp region, Putnam county, Ohio, is now 'an important agricultural area. • • * More than '900 varieties of cabbage are now grown in the United States. e • • The proportion of grain-fed catUe in the 1937 slaughter supply probably will be smaller than for 1936. ~ 0 0 0 One broken tile may ma^e a whole line of drainage worthless. • • • Former 4-H club members comprise 34 per cent of home economics students and 39 per cent of all agricultural students in courses at Ohio State university. • • • Too many high producing cows have "off years"; it pays in added amounts of milk and fat produced ^during a lifetime if special elfort is made to have such cows dry at least eight weeks before calving. SLOCUM'S LAKE QUALITY OF EGGS " NOT ALWAYS SAME Saint Bernard's Head The head of the Saint Bernard is broad and a furrow runs f^om the stop at the eyes, down to the tip of a broad nose. This wrinkle J* a characteristic of the kindly facial expression and the eyes literally form a "V-shaped" indentation. and Winter Supply Is Found Much Better. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping spent ^ Saturday at Oak Park. Misses Olive and 'Ufarion Dowell were callers at Waukegan Saturday. Merle Dowell, Melvin Kniggie and Earle Schaefer of Wauconda spent Wednesday evening at Riverview Park in Chicago. Mrs. Wm. Fosa and Mrs. Wm. Berg CONGRESSIONAL VIEWS By Congressman Channcey W/ Reed .1 . Public Defender:.. Hearings have started before Subcommittee Number 2 of the House Judiciary Committee on a bill \fMth'lKas been introduced to establish a public defender for indigent persons accused of crime in the District of Columbia Courts. The Supplied by the New York State CoBtn mi" Agriculture.--WNU Service. ' . Do newly-laid eggs from the same hen or from different hens vary in and does this quality vary yoar? Thes$ under too University of tt The University of the South, Se- Wanee, Tenn., was established at 4 tnaeting of educators atop Locdfe tut mountain on July 4, 1875. \ p8&ltfy _ solve the past year. During a ten-day period in the middle of each month, for one year, all of the eggs from a flock of 70 single-comb white Leghorns were examined and the egg qualities recorded. The measures of quality used were firm albumen, the proportion of outer thin albumen and the yolk as to height, width, and color. No seasonal change in yolk color was apparent; but the yolk color may be affected by feed. The individual records of the eggs of representative birds showed that after April there is a lowering of yolk quality in eggs from both pullets and hens. Also there was a marked increase in the amount of outer thin, water-white, albumen which continued until July when it began to decrease. This character varied less than the others. The change in the firm albumen was similar to the changes in outer thin albumen and yolk. The scientists say that eggs show a decided change in quality beginning in March or April, and this change toward lower quality continues into the summer. The poultrymen say these results agree with common knowledge, especially of cold storage dealers, who pay a premium for spring eggs, or "April eggs," as they are known to stand up better in storage.. and daughter, Louise, of Davis Lake|measure would authorize an approwere callers at McHenry last Wednes-!pnatlon «f '20'0P0 a ye*r for such an day. j agency, the public defender receiving Mr. and Mrs. George Cook of Chi-|a salary of 'J-500 «nd an assistant cago spent Sunday at the home of | recm'mg' » salary of $4,000. One of Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett. th® objec^lons h&s been voiced Mrs. Helen Bernier of Chicago spent j a&»inst the bill is that many defend- Memorial Day and Monday with her;ants who Would be cM*able of paying sister; Mrs. Jack Geary. attorney wouM piead poverty so Mrs. Jack Geary and children at-!^t y ^ *** ,egtl *** tended the picnic at the Griswold Lake school last Thursday. Slocum Lake School closed Friday with an enjoyable picnic at Villa Park. vices. Good Neighbor: The President recently transmitted to the Senate the Buenos Aires Treaties, together with A large gathering of parents and chil-ja message recommending approval of dren from the district enjoyed th#flne the pact, pledging twenty-one Amerdinner at noon. ican Republics to c®-operate in the Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren spent 'maintenance of peace in the western Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. j hemisphere. It will be remembered Swo^ week Raymond Lusk at Maple Park. Mrs. I that this country initiated the confer-1 w»ge. An Lusk and daughter returned 'home' ®nce and thte President attended it last|ma^e change the bill in such a roan-'• with them for a weeks'visit jyear. In his message the President, lner the new Labor Board will Mr. and Mrs. Albert Murray and after citing the fact that the United j "f4 • Possess such wide authority as the * _..j * „ , .. igtateg had initiated the meeting, said itself would give it in granting ; exemptions and approving . varying . standards of geographical wage and " hour differentials. It is expected that considerable opposition will be found ori the part of representatives of southern states as these states in particular are very desirous of retaining the privileges of longer working week and lower hourly wage. Small Laying Flocks May Be Fed by Hopper Farm flock owners who find it inconvenient to feed laying h e n s at regular hours each day should find the results of an experiment on hopper feeding conducted by the Michigan State college of interest and value, says J. C. Taylor, associate extension poultryman at the New Jersey college of agriculture, Rutgers university. Two pens of Leghorns and two pens of Rhode Island Reds were fed corn and oats and a laying mash containing 20 per cent crude protein in hoppers during the experiment, Taylor reports. The feed was available to the birds at all times. In addition, approximately two pounds of wheat were fed daily in the litter to keep the litter from j>acking. Satisfactory egg production was obtained by the hopper feeding of corn and oats and 20 per cent protein mash and no difference in mortality was found when compared with flocks fed according to the usual method. ; The use of artificial lights increases the success of the hopper feeding. This method may solve the feeding problems of the general farmer who cannot practice the recommended regularity of feeding laying birds. * < Balanced Egg Mash Ration Soybean oil meal, costing approx+ imately one-third less than meat scrap, may successfully replace part of the meat scrap in a balanced egg mash ration, says H. H. Alp, extension poultryman, college of agriculture, University of Illinois. A possible protein combination to be used with 400 pounds o( mash might be made up of meat scrap 50 pounds, soybean oil meal 50 pounds, steamed bone meal 10^ pounds, ground limestone 5 pounds, -and salt 5 pounds. For Poultrymen Scales on the legs of poultry are caused by a mite which burrows under tha scales and eats: into tit# flesh. ' *" • - • • Buffing the dirt off slightly-soiled eggs leaves them in much better condition than washing. • • • Fowl-pox has been reported from nearly all the countries. The disease not only attacks chickens but may also attack pigeons, turkeys, geese, and quail. • • • An egg is a highly perishable product and should be handled accordingly -- it must be protected; from high temperatures if the quality is to be maintained* • • • Oftentimes birds once vaccinate remain permanently immune. Sometimes they do not. No general rule can be formulated. • • • • A temperature of 50 to 60 degrees Fahrenheit is best for hens in batteries. Some provision for heating! is necessary, though seldom used. The La Fleche hen lays a whiteshelled egg. The color of the beak is black; the ear lobes are white;; the shanks and toes are black or slate color. * « children of Chicago were Sunday call ers at the home of Henry Geary. [that, "It would therefore seem to me Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer were • particularly fitting that the United callers at Waukegan last Wednesday, i States J>e among the first American Mr. and Mrs. S. Lagerlund and son,! governments in the ratification of the Robert, of Elmwood Park Were jailers. instruments that the conference adopt- Sunday at the home of Mr. andvMrs. fed, thereby giving a further indication John Blomgren. j of the sincerity of the good neighbor Oscar Carlin of Crystal Lake called policy." The treaties and conventions on Harry Matthews Monday. Mr. I submitted to the Senate for considera- Carlin was in the different training I tion were the following: 1. Conven-' camps with Mr. Matthews in the i tion for the maintenance, preservation South, during the World War, and had and re-establishment of peace. 2. Adnot seen him since they were both' ditional protocol relative to non-interdischarged in 1919. • Ivention. 3. Treaty on the prevention Mrs. Wilbur Cook spent last Tues- of controversies:"' 4. Inter-American day at the home of Miss Orissa Brown' treaty on good offices and mediation, at Wauconda. a i 5. Convention to co-ordinate, extend Mrs. Ella Parks of Park Ridge spert'and assure the fulfillment of existing Suwiay at the home of Mr. and Mrs. j treaties between the American States. W. |E. Brooks. 16. Convention on the pan-American Mr. and Mrs. Louis Schrambri of ^highway. 7. Convention for the pro.- West Chicago and a group of friend3 motion of inter-American cultural refrom West Chicago and Chicago were lations. 8. Convention concerning arcallers Monday at the home of Willard tistic exhibitions. DarreH. J A New Office For Lewis: John L. Mr. "and Mrs. Ray Cook of Zion Lewis, CIO chieftain will soon have were guests Saturday at t\e home of lone of the most beautiful offices in Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Cook. the nation's capital. The United Mine Misses Marion Dowell and Estella Workers of America, of which Lewis Dowell and Robert Matthews of Slo-!is head, have taken over the beauticum Lake School recently received a! ful University Club building at 15th grammar grade Certificate of Profi- J and I Streets NW to be used as a naciency in Penmanship, issued by the jtional headquarters of the organiza- Zaner-Bloser Co. Mrs. Elmer Esping was a business caller at McHenry Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks returned home Friday, after spending the week at the home of. Mr. and Mrs. A. I* Barr at Romulus, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer were callers at Trevor, Wis., last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wewetzer of Barrington spent last Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer. iRussell Nordmeyer of Waukegan and Miss Ethel Hapke of Lake Forest spent Sunday and Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer. CoaAjIt tion. The Mine Workers contemplate spending about $136,000' for the construction of an annex to the building and the making of repairs. Lewis' office will be one of the largest in the capital. It will be part of the lounge of the old ('club, having an 18-foot ceiling and will be 28 feet in length by 22 feet in width and hpve beautifully panelled walls.' The Labor Bill: Although the recently introduced Black-Connery Labor Bill has been before Congress a little over 48 hours, considerable trouble for the measure appears to, be rolling up. The broad powers which the bill would grant to the proposed new , Labor Board relative to dicta uftg h?urs awl wages for industry apparently will be the issue • of controversy. A substantial grou^o is advocating a 40 cent per hour minimum wage and a 40 hour maximum - work week, but there are others who are demanding * 30 hour maximum and a higher minimum effort will probably be i , - * < ytg| ^ -£ v* ^ * ,. *$>3 ' Si > -i . V * *<>» * v •'if .i ' *-• 'jr .... • * HOUSE GALL OPTICAL SERVICE III YOUR OWN HONE NO EXTRA CHARGE 58. SO GLASSES COMPLETE AS LOW AS For appointment, Phone Chicago, Franklin 8510 -- McHenry 60-W or Write to -- Dr. M. M. Kagan OPTOMETRIC EYE SPECIALIST 108 N. State Street, Chicago Wm . • - 3 Glasses FHMi NOTICE During the summer months my optical officii in the A. E. Nye building will be closed. > • Dr. Paul A. Schwabe OPTOMETRIST 674--Woodstock (for appointment) Monday Wednesday Saturday ^ .4 **• HERIS AN O/l mi/NS YOffftOW TOt/SF "* f H - *^jj| % • •••-' V 'fKj ^ yV. ,, />»' 5 ^ A ' i ! This book ts ramdy for you now--free mt a11 Stmnd mfd Oil Deal mr». Get your copy before the aupply is emhausted 10 'W -J-' e/U/t lift lap: A i HIS book is built of facta vital to know, and essential to use, if you want to enjoy the economy of more-miles-per-gallon. And it's oomplete--everything you need to know to really SAVE AS YOU DRIVE, is in it! It's unusual. It's the only book of its kind ever published. It reveals facts tested and proved by thousands of motorists in Standard Oil's great Road Test last summer. It quotes them. It makes it interesting and easy for you THIS NEW BOOK GIVES STARTLING MONEY-SAVING FACTS REVEALED IN WORLD'S GREATEST ROAD TEST M FR££' <7 to apply the same methods they used to score savings as high as 1 gallon in every 10! Commanding finest technicallmowledge, and armed with proof from millions of'miles of public test car driving, the Standard Oil Company is doing everything in its power fo help you hmlpyourtmH tomoromiiosper i*Jk>n this summer. ° ® TEE STANDARD OIL mint maxtrsttEi SIA1A1I fry;' irittoSSg

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