Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Sep 1940, p. 4

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si- m ty y&rV-' *K.,- • THE VHENRY PLAINOEALEB Published every Thursday at Mebwiry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. Mm H. MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8, 1879. One Year Six Months .....$2.00 $100 j NEW eMDIRf McHENRY, ILLINOIS FRIDAY -- SATURDAY John. Wayne - Claire Trevor "DARK COMMAND" Cartoon - News and Novelty Reel SUNDA Y -- MONDAY September 29-30 Starting with this date, theatre wfll operate on Standard time. Brenda Jovce - John I'ayne •MARYLAND" In Technicolor ----• Special -- March of Time, "Gateways to Panama" - Cartoon and News - iv-v< - $ (i) TUESDAY One An try Rancho Grande" IVnniiuc - Jean Cagney (1) "Golden Gloves" -- TW anal Tuesday Night Attraction! W®XKJ)AT -- THURSDAY Lau IVw - John SMt<w (1) "We Who Are Young" Ota V - Chester Morris (1) "Wagons Westward" Week Days -- Program Starts at T A f J* p. •. Doors open at 6:30. <c7*dat Jb HoMays 2:45 Continuous iMOUi. JfTt WOODSTOCK MILLER Theatre -- Woodstock Air-Conditioned FRIDAY -- September 27 'OPENED BY MISTAKE" with Charles RugglSs SATURDAY -- September 28 -Continuous from 2:80 -- 2 Hit Features - 2 "STAGECOACH" -- with -- Jaim Wayne - Claire Trew - P L U 8 - "IBAILOR'S LADY*\ with Nancy Kelly SATURDAY -- September 28 Special Midnite Show!' -- p r e s e n t i n g "REEFER MADNESS" The scourge of the Devil plus a special Attraction "How To Take a Bath" • Positively Adults Only -- SUNDAY -- September 29 'Continuous From 2M ~r ON OUR STAGS -- , 7 Big Acts - 7 of Preview W'A UDITILLI On the Screen ------ SUNDAY -- MONDAY "MY LOVE CAME BACK" -- with -- OKvia DeHavillaad - Jeffrey Lynn TUESDAY -- October 1 lie - Bargain Night - lie "FOUR FEATHERS" in Glorious Technicolor! WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY O c t o b e r 2 - 3 "TILL WE MEET AGAIN' -- featuring -- Merle Oberon - George Brent The Beautiful IIIOVAI! Ill CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. McHenry Co's. Leading Thcatre frUIDAY -- SATURDAY September 27-28 Anii Sheridan - George Raft -- in -- "THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT" Humphrey Bogart - Ida Lnpino Also -- "Our Gang Comedy" SUNDAY -- MONDAY September 29 - 3d Sun. Cont. from 2:45 p.m. 25c to 6 p. m.; 30c after. Children, 10c. Laugh your blues away with OLIVIA DE HAV1LLAND JEFFRY LYNN " -- in -- "MY LOVE CAME BACK" -- with -- Jane Wyman - Eddie Albert The gayest, freshest film comedy ^ of the year! Also -- Latest March of Time TUESDAY 10c -- Special -- 15® Robert Montgomery in 'THE EARL OF CHICAGO* -- with -- Edward Arnold - Reginald Owen Also Novelty -- "All Girl Revue' WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Jon Hall - Frances Farmer and ™~2lctor in SOUTH OP PAGO PAGO' latest News and Cartoon Speedometer Doesn't Show Speed Do speedometers jam in a wrecked car and thus show the speed at which the car was traveling at the time of the crash? The answer is no. And you have for authority the word of spark plug engineers who manufacture speedometers as well as spark plugs. Engineers say: "In our opinion the speedometer which is found jammed would very seldom indicate the speed at which the car was traveling at the time of impact. To most readily understand this you will find that by taking a speedometer head in your hand and quickly turning your wrist the speed dial can be thrown over to register as much as 100 miles an hour. FOR SALE FOR SALE--Murphy's Guaranteed Fly Spray, 5 gal. for $4.00. Farmers • Mill, McHenry. Phone 29. 12-tf FOR SALE--Six-room cottage on Waukegan street, McHenry. Reasonable price. Inquire of Walter J. Frennd. West McHenry Tire Shop. 16-tf Learns to Fly in Day Twenty-six-year-old Saxon C<de of Ottawa learned to fly between dawn fend dusk. After a trip with a friend he joined the Ottawa Flying club and reported to the instructor, William Nixon, at seven o'clock in the morning. In 15 minutes they were in the air in a dual-controlled monoplane and, after 5% hours' instruction, with time off for lunch and tea, Cole flew solo. It was then 9 p. m. He flew around for 15 minutes and made a creditable lading. ; . • ' ' ""i "' | | j Preserve Totem Poles * Preservation of the famed collection of totem poles at the Indian village of Klukwan from deterioration by the elements is proposed by Alaska's new governor, Dr. Ernest Gruening. He visited the noted tourist attraction recently and said he believed construction of a fireproof, concrete structure would be a good investment and would not be opposed by the villagers. Co-operation Relief workers at Columbia, S. Gt* found touching co-operation between a blind man and his invalid sister, who were attempting to earn a living by taking'in sewing. The sister sewed on a machine which her brother pedaled because bar paralytic legs were helpless. NOW IS THE TIME--to insure your fur coat through one of our "All Risk" policies. EARL R. WALSH, Phone 48. 17-8 FOR SALE--Cole's Rot Blast stove; good condition, $10. Mrs. J. Diet*, McCollum Lake. *19 FOR SALE--Full equipment for market and grocery. Bargain. J. B. Kelter, Main and 4th Street, Phone 138-M. 18-tf FOR SALE--Gilt due to farrow; purebred Hampshire boar, a good one. Roy Cope, 3% miles southwest of West McHenry, *19 Quail 'Hits' Bottle Quail, ordinarily alarmed by the approach of a human being, have been "hitting the back doors" of Herrin, 111., for drinks of water during the dry season. Residents have provided water in pans in their back yards and the birds have become regular visitors. .(^ Iron Cross An Iroffc Cross has been sent W' the London Red Cross for any value it may have. The cross, evidently issued during the World war to a Prussian officer, was sent in anonymously to the lord mayor's fund for the Red Crfcas. It ivill be acrid as a curio. The First 100 Years More than 100 years of combined service at their lighthouse home 3% miles off Cleveland, Ohio, harbor in Lake Erie is the record trf the Holzworth brothers, Art, Harry and Edward. They are now back on land for their annual• wf inter *,-*f•o cation. $11,069 Fur Pelt The highest price ever paid for a single pelt in the history of the fur industry was recorded at a fur auction in New York. I. J. Fox, retail furrier, gave $11,000 for one Norwegian- bred platinatae^ii mutation of the silver fox. \ FOR SALE--Two coal heaters, cabinet style. J. C. Thies & Co., Phone 153, 19-tf FOR SALE--Ititchen Cabinet and Gas Stove at the Degen residence. Tel. 611-W-l. 19 FOR SALE--Choice canning tomatoes, 75c per bu. C. B. Howe, 3 miles west of McHenry, on Route 20. Phone 610-J-l. We deliver! *19 FOR SALE--1940 17 *h, p. Evinrude Sportfour and boat, used about 15 hours. Box 442, McHenry, 111. 19 FOR SALE--Dining room set composed of six chairs, table, buffet; piano and stool. Phone McHenry 86-J. 19 FOR SALE--1932 4-dr. Hudson Sedan in good condition, 6 good tires, heater and seat covers. Car good for many thousand miles. $75.00 or best offer. Phone Wonder Lake 203. C. P. Christiansen. *19 FOR RENT FOR RENT--Five-room cottage on Fox river. Furnace heat. Chas. Lasch. Phone McHenry 9. 19-2 FOR RENT--240-acre farm, cash or shares. Tenant must have equipment. Chicago inspected. Prefer man interested in Pure-bred Holsteins. J. J. Nolan, Harvard, 111. Tel. Hebron 966. *19 HELP WANTED--On the A. J. Krecker farm, one mile south of McHenry on Route 31. *19-2 WANTED--Experienced gipl for general housework to work in Chicago. Must like children. No large washinjfs. Dr. C. Ciufla. Shalimar subdivision, McHenery. Phone 643-M-2. *19 WANTED--Local middle-aged couple to care for river property and live on premises. State qualifications. Address Box "LC," Plaindealer. 19-2 Pellagra *> • Pellagxto, a disease ^apparently caused by poor -diets lacking milk, eggs, liver, grMns and fruit juices, afflicts about V4Q0,OOQ Americans. Picotinic acid has been successfully used to cure it*""'" 3iTil I'T " 4 *'• Anto g||pp4 Reaord The wdita's speed record for automobiles was nlhdfc by John R. Cobb of England on August 23, 1939, at the Bonneville salt flats (Utah) when hedrove,,his jcv. 3».7. mile^ ^ ' v •" MkNgan'sJLeag 6b*stline Michigap, although an inland state, has the longest coastline of any state in the tJnion, more than 3,000 miles. The Atlantic coastline is 1,773 nautical miles. FARMERS, ATTENTION! --Wanted to buy about 500 bu. of wheat. Farmers Mill, Phone 29, McHenry. 19 Represented Mark Twain Bainbridge Colby, former secretary of state, as a lawyer, represented Mark Twain in settlement of the affairs of the humorist's publishers. CARPENTER WANTED--Good mechanic, to furnish labor only for erecting of summer cottage in McHenry county on contract basis. Address: R. Pieper, 6550 Woodlawn avenue, Chicago, HI. WANTED AT ONCE RELIABLE DEALER To operate Knox Sinclair Station, intersection of Routes 31 and 20, McHenry. Sinclair Refining Co. Apply to Mrs. John R. Knox, Riverside Drive • McHenry. Tel. 17. *19 LOST LOST--Man's diamond ring, Monday, Either on McHenry golf course or in town. Plume McHenry 602-R-l. R«. ward. jg 's Real Name The real name of Stalin, Russian dictator, was Joseph Vissarionovich DzugashyilL Nicolai T^ry" gave him the naiiie Stalin, meaning "steel man." LOST--Black leather bag at Greyhound Bus Depot. A. F. Morse on bag. Return to The Plaindealer office. Reward. »19 Light Guide' The cits' pi Lucerne in Switzerland is said to have derive^ its name from a light (LucernaX set up to guide travelers. Safety Campaign Oklahoma City paints large white crosses on the pavement at spots where traffic fatalities have occurred. Martha Washington Martha Washington was small plump, with dark hair and hazel eyes. Washington Heavy George Washington weighed 210 pounds when he was 40 years old. He stood 6 feet 2 inches. First In White John Adams was the first President to live In the White House. MISCELLANEOUS BUCHERT AND FREUNIi REPAIR SHOP--Jtohn & Front Sts., on 111. 31. Silo filler, corn husking knives sharpened; electric welding. Repairs made on all farm implements and cars. *19 NOT RESPONSIBLE--for the com* fort of our customers who do not wear Jockey Underwear. Try it. Gives masculine support and ends squirming. Made only by Coopers. 50c up. McGEE'S Green St., McHenry. '19 NEW MODELS ARE COMING OUT Don't forget that tliis office can finance your new car for 5 per cent per year--and handle your insurance with a substantial savings to you. EARL R. WALSH, Phone 43. 17.3 FARMERS ATTENTION --Exchange your wheat for Quaker Flour at the Farmers Mill. Phone 29. McHenry. 12-tf With the coming of the twins the entire household arrangements were sadly disorganized. Master Bobby and Miss Dorothy were relegated to the background, where they moped aad sulked. Bobby, more militant than his sister, was scouting through the hall one morning when he discovered the twins being prepared for their bath. Having in mind the fate of several litters of kittens within his knowledge, he rushed to the head of the stairs, and, beckoning to his sister, cried, in a hoarse whisper: "Dottie, come on up, . quick! They're goin' to drown one of 'em." !.* 1 inn *v W , 'OBLIGING v "MabeUe expects a ring from you soon." "Expects a ring, eh? I'll give her an alarm clock--it's time fef her. to wake up." Wrong Again . Her father accidentally met her young man in the street. * "I say, young fellow," he said, "you have been calling 'on my, daughter for well nigh a month. What are your intentions?" The suitor gulped nervously. "Well, sir," he replied, regaining his confidence, "I hope to become an addition to your family." Father was well prepared. "Oh, no!" he said, with a vigorous shake of his head. , "You'll have to subtract, not add, young ijian." Paraphrased! Teacher turned away from the blackboard, where she had been writing. . "Read out\hat sentence, Willie," she said. * " 'He was bent on seeing his old school,' " read Willie. "Now, children," continued teacher, "I want you all to paraphrase that sentence." Chewing his pen, Willie regarded the blackboard. Then his face lit up. Busily he wrote, "The sight of the old school doubled him up." ' Oh, Blessed Reticeneet Charles II of England once asked Stillingfleet, the famous clergyman, why he read his sermons from manuscript. "Why do you read your speeches from the throne?" countered the minister. "Because," replied the king, "1 have asked the people so often for money I am ashamed to look them in the face." Overlooked Drummer--I don't feel a bit like playing today. I ate a dozen oysters last night. First Sax--Weren't they fresh?. Drummer--I guess so. First Sax--Well, what did they look like when you opened them? Drummer--Do you have to open then^? Impatient The doctor walked brightfy into his waiting-room. "Who's been waiting longest?" he asked cheerfully. "I have," said the tailor, as he presented his bill. DOUBLE TROUBLE "Do you think it is possible for a man to love two girls at tfce.sglgte time?" "Not if they know about Ift." Suspense / "I'd like to propose--" "This is so sudden!" "--that we go to the movies---" "Oh, I love the movies!" "---later on in the week." Stool Pigeons " Pigeons in the United States were once so numerous that they were a menace to crops, and a constant source of annoyance to farmers. One method of getting rid of them was to catch a pigeon and fasten it to a call stool in the center of a field. When tHe other pigeons flocked around the decoy, it was easy enough to trap them. From this practice we get our expression, "Stool Pigeon," ipeaning an informer on criminals. DEAD OR ALIVE ANIMALS $1.00 to $15.00 Caeh ^ v Cows - Horses - Hogs . ' "No help needed for loading! Prompt and Sanitary Service Day and Night, Sundays and Holidays Phone Wheeling 102--Reverse Charges FLOOR SANDING--Old floors like new; refinish with Dura Seal; a life, time floor finish; free estimate. Henning Newman, 932 Marvel Avenue, Woodstock. Phone 451-M. *45-26 GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route* formerly Georg* Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. jFjbsne Mt «r «81-M-L t-tf Double Advantage - "T5oh*t you think that twins have an advantage over the average person?" "Why?" "Well, they can at least see themselves as others see them." Shortcut Wife--Oh, George! Bridget went to light the hot water heater and it blew her out of the window! Hubby--Well, it was her night out in any case. . > Guess Again . Policeman--Where are you going? Unsteady Pedestrian (at 3 a. m.)-- Don't tell me. Let me guess. Full Time Job Helen--When is Christy thin|Wng el getting married? - -' Vv Mary--When isn't she? CARD OF THANKS We wish, in this small manner^ to repay a portion of a deep debt of gratitude which we owe our many relatives and friends in and near McHenry wha so willingly offered their sympathy and assistance following the loss of our beloved brother, William Baer. " ; 19 ' The Baer Family of Chicago. Pin Machini The first pin-making machine was Wasps Blamed for Bald Mountains in Carolina The map of North Carolina is dotted with so-called bald mountains ranging from 2,600 to 6,000 feet in height. Many theories, have been advanced to explain the lack of trees on the tops of some of these mountains. The one most generally accepted is that the soil on the mountain tops is lacking in some of the elem'ents necessary to the growth of timber. Another notion has been that, in the past, the Indians used to clear or burn off these prominences on which nature eventually gave up trying to grow anything except grass ot scrubby bushes. Recently, however, Dr. W. A. Gates of the Louisiana State university came out wi^h a brand-new explanation of North Carolina's bald mountains. Dr. Gates says that wasps are to blame and that the insects do much the same thing to the mountain'tops as Delilah did to Samson. Not long ago the doctor had a chance to study two North Carolina mountains--Wine Sap Bald and Wayah Bald--while they were in the process of "getting a shave." Around, the edge of the area that was being denuded the scientist discovered a countless army of wasps. This particular wasp lays its eggs only at certain altitudes and mainly on the twigs of oak trees. The bugs, popularly known as the twig gall wasps, can make short work of a grove of oak trees covering hundreds of acres. Fortunately for the wasps, the citizens of North Carolina are not entirely displeased with the "shaves" that they give certain mountain tops. When the timber is gone the areas give the effect of being lawns high above the surrounding valleys, and many of these lawns are bright with a variety of wild flowers. A "bald mountain" also provides fine points of vantage i&s. "jfg'.'W the surrounding country;, : ' Missouri Hills Yield Culture 500 Years Old Excavators have discovered the remains of a civilization more than 500 years old, according to Robert McCormick Adams, director of a crew of excavators working here. Adams saHd the most important finds to date are several pottery item^, chipped stone instruments, bone ornaments and the remnants of three thatched-roof houses. 1 "The ledge evidently was an often-used stopping place for nomadic hunting parties for thousands of years," Adams said. "We have found traces of a pre-pottery people under 10-ton boulders. How long the boulders have lam there we can only guess." Adams said the village site centers around a man-made mound, now almost destroyed by cultivation of crops. The three houses found so far, he said, are different. The first was about 25 feet square, with a fireplace in the middle. The roof was supported by wood posts four inches square, set in a ditch. A storage bin, containing parched corn, was fdund near the fireplace, indicating an agricultural people. s«Rivals Meek ' Twenty-two years ag<5, Prfoate A. H. Morrison of the Twenty-sixth battalion, Canadian Expeditionary force, and Private Henrik Biermann, 157th regiment of the German army, plugged away at each other in Passchendaele ridge in Belgium. At the closing exercises in the tiny country school at Glen Falls, three miles from this city, Trustee- Secretafry A. H. Morrison presented little golden-haired Olga Biermann with first prize for general proficiency in Grade I, while her father, Henrik< Biermann, looked proudly on. Biermann is one of the colony of Danes who have cleared land in the Glen Falls district. Morrison is a well known musician in Saint John, organist, pianist and musical director of the Rotary club. He's 'Cured' Nww A skillful gypsy maiden extracted a wallet from the hip pocket of L. C. Gibson, Seattle, stole a $10 bill and replaced the billfold while she mumbled a blessing over the victim, he told police. Gibson reported the woman approached him and placed her fingers on his eyes. "That will give you fceeo eyesight." She touched his ears. "You will have good hearing." Then she placed her hands on his hips to prevent rheumatism and, incidentally, to steal his $10. Sometime after the gypsy disappeared in a large Gi&fien learned of the theft. Squirrel Sets House Afire Squirrels, searching for a warm place to build a nest, made it hot for Charles S. Little, in whose farmhouse they built it. The squirrels brought hay and straw and made nests around the chimney between the ceiling and the second floor. But spontaneous combustion of the materials started a fire. Firemen extinguished the blaze. Within a few hours, however, the fire burst out again and did $500 damage to the kitchen, living room and two bedrooms. ' This time firemen ripped away partitions and found the cause of the blaze. Coldest Temperature The coldest temperature that can be reached is absolute zero, or 459.6 below zero Fahrenheit and 273.15 below zero Centigrade. At this point, theoretically, gases solidify and molecular motion ceases. In 1921, at the University of Leyden, the Netherlands, Kammerling Onnes obtained a temperature only 0.8 degrees Centigrade above absolute zero. At the same university in 1935, Dr. Wander de Haas obtained a temperature only five one-thousandths of a degree above absolute Mr. and Mrs. Donkel celebrated their thirtieth anniversary "at their summer home here last Saturday evening, September 21. Four generations were present, Mrs. Marounde, Mrs. Donkel, Mrs. Anderson and her son, Billie. Mrs. Marounde is Mrs. Donkel's mother. Mrs. Anderson is her daughter and Billie is her grandson. The host and hostess received two lovely gifts from their neighbors and Math received one from the men. A very delightful evening was spent singing and dancing, and a buffet lunch was served at 12 o'clock, midnight. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Wagonseller, Mr. and Mrs. Nielsen, Mr. and Mrs. Mathers. Mr. and Mrs. Lenard, Mr. and Mrs. McKim, Geo. Vreau, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Feiereisel. Mr. and Mrs. Tierney, Mr. and Mrs. Matherer, Mrs. Schlitt, Sr., and Mrs. Kurth and several friends and relatives from Chicago. Dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joselph Schaefer Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Madsen and daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Holmes and William Frett. Mrs. George Schuebert of McCollum Lake apant Thursday in Chicago. Mrs. John Fardell of Chicago spent the weekend here. Mr. and Mrs. John Adams and daughter, Judy, of Chicago spent the weekend here. Miss Arlene Madsen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Madsen of McCollum Lake became the pretty bride of Mr. Jeff Holmes of Chicago Saturday. Mrs. John A. Winkrants spent Tuesday in Chicago. Mrs. Joseph Schaefer and daughter, Eleanor, spent Tuesday afternoon at £ ' ^ Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Art Thompson andi^J daughters, Elaine and Arlene, ofVJi$ Berwyn spent the weekend at McCol-;^' ,j| lum Lake. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Riter and son, < % - Bobby, of Chicago spent Sunday with } ^ Mr. Riter's mother at McCollum Lake. '$',-0 Frank Ritzer and Bert Maclntyre of Chicago spent the weekend here en-? tertaining friends. s.+,; Others spending the weekend here^'^ were Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bald and%#| daughters, Lorraine and Joan, Mr. and Mrs. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. Matherer, Mr. and Mrs. Tierney, Mr. andMg^ Mrs. Mathers, Mr. and Mrs. Nielsen, Mr. and Mrs. Wagonseller, G. Vreau,-Vs $ Mr. and Mrs. Marweg, Mr. and Mrs. • ": Pitzaferro, Mrs. Goldy and Mr. and Mrs. 8charf. : 0* Read the Want Ala Clothes LOOK BETTER MEN FEEL BETTER AMAZING tni'M • portal1 b€» «u!Tpym j Ho JUp. 5N*o BJ®an*.* cNero t aBnum!« e. mil «jt* "n*, •*In""* V-ar•a,* » « » « J ha* fly- *-- -- .aoMipaawu, mm-- VOWM'Sr ilobo«k btoe ptHrwMm tattm with The BracerTCte Tht Bnccr today Bolger's Drug Store Phone 40 Green Street Beginning Monday, September 30/ Milk will be delivered later in the day. ,'*iaii.iijiii(iiiiiiiiiumi ' ' 'i I' I i Order Extra Milk or Cream Sunday if » it ig Needed for Monday's Breakfast 1 1 l"') » • " 'll 11 1 '!)' - 1 " U" RIVERSIDE DAIRY HAVE YOU TRIED THIS ONE? A Cactus Cooler, Made With Round Up .. r . AT AMY Or THX8I TAV»tN§ SIP SNACK IN* Herman &. Krentier Distributor of PragfBeer Otate Route 20. PALACE RECREATION McHenry, Illinois ROSES TA and Gas St&ti Rente 20 VH* iatiott ' Northland Greyhound Line BUS STATION fountain and Bar ' McHenry, Ul SAM'S TAVERN Chicken and Steaks ) Orchestra every Saturday Route 176 on Fox River McHenry, 111. ' Ml" NELL'S BALLROOM Dancing Every Saturday 3 miles north of McHenry TOWN CLUB in the famous . Meg enry Town House h BETTY'S PLACE Luscious Southern Fried Chicken Highway 20 -- Lily Lake COLONIAL im -- Route 31 -- „. • Fried Chicken omr > Specialty - JOE'S HOLLOW INN Hot Sandwiches and Dinners Jos. Baumb, Prop. -- Route 176 ~ COTTAGE INN \ Mary and Vincent On Route 20 -- Lily Lake ROY'S VOGUE TAVERN Sea Food our Specialty Drinks made to your liking! Rte. 20 - Roy Hobbs, Prop. 3 miles east of McHenry JOHNSBURG TAVERN Specializing in Chicken and Steak Dinners J. B. Hettermann, Mgr. THE PIT Tasty Sandwiches Good Drinks One-quarter mile east of McHenry on Route 20 ' THE SNACKERY Try our Delicious Beef ft Pork Bar-B-O's 2% miles east of McHenry Rte* 20 s-- Lily Lake --skt . • •

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