Thurs J? ". |f..X7tlL5."', ' O • *liJ ;* - K, 4 * <•' " ' ' ,"~- y, November 7, *?•. M>\"f'"- McHENRY FLORAL 00. :»J'| * t«S.-fVv •. 'v^'2,'vi !-<"£P, hone 608-R-*•t•.'•-- •" >"XS '. (Mi ifilfl 8tmthor McHenry on Route 3L Flowers for all occasions! Wmwi« 48 max TTOBNEY AT LAW Pries Bid* Cf OFFICE HOURS^ ; Tuesdays sad Fridays * i^»er Day* by Appointment. . • c :,vr/V' PHONE 15 X-Ray R. J. I. SAYIJ5R S?ENT1ST • Otiee Hoars 9-12 sad l-§ \ ," '• Rentage by Appobrtsnt : ^ Thursdays • 9 to IS -Main Street , $•»»» W. McHeary A.P.FreundCo, Contractor I, Hydraulic and Grant Service --Road Building-- id. 904-H McBtanrj, m Horses Want«d I B U Y Qld and Disabled Horses. Pay from $5 to $14. -- ARTHUR W. WERRBACK Phone 439 ,439 E. Calhoun St. Woodstock. 111. auto INSURANCE 'tSt EARL Rw WALSH Prwatiag vlt«li»ble Companies ffken yon need insurance ef any Hat Phone 43 or 61-M Pries Bldg. McHann CASH FOR DEAD HORSES and CATTLE Horses, $3.00; Cows, $4.00; Dead Hog* and Sheep removed freef MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. Tel. Woodstock 1624-M-l Or Dundee 10--Reverse Charges Telephone No. 800 Stoftel A Reihansperg* Jasaraaee agents far all class-- «f property in the bast companies. tm MeHKNRT KLUMOM S. H. Freood & Son CONTRACTORS Am BUILDERS Phone 56-W |f cHenry Our Experience if at Tonr Service in Building Your Wants Charlie's Repair Shop Northeast corner of State Bridga mm Charles Street Truck Lettering Furniture Upholstering and Repairing CHARLES RIETESSL DR. JOHN DUCEY • Veterinarian £ ;.;yuyy •$',76*^ ^,;|Treatfng • ORSES, OATTLE,DOGS, CATS, ETC. Telephone Richmond 16 ^ Richmond, HI* PhoMiat May ' i;-yw . . DR. L. B. MURPHY, Office Hoars -- • m. wu to t p.m. Green Street -- McHeary, HL ?;<• -- NOTICE -- SPECIAL STOCKHOLD KKS' MEETING! holfft faf i*k y " <>,< T'-- *$%*•«, jr, ««,- « r.4 >r t ' Page Sev CHURCH SERVICES Keeping Up LILY LAKE w, Mrs of the PEOPLES STATE BANK OF McHENRY, McHenry, Illinois, will be held November 2$, 1940, at the hour of 9:00 A.M., at American Legion Hall, McHenry, Illinois, for the purpose of determining the Bank's affairs, resigning its Charter or certificate of incorporation, and closing up its business in accordance with the provisions of Section 15 of "An Act to revise the law with relation to banks and banking" approved June 23, 1919, in. force December 1st, 1920 as subsequently amended, and to transact such other business as m«iy properly come before the-meeting. WM. SPENCER, F. A. BOHLANDER, " V*,* SIMON STOFFEL, FREDERICK BELLfS^ Directors. (Pub. October 24-91 - November 7) cience er k , ,-;.Wm. M. Carroll, Attorney > Woodstock. Illihois ^ : NOTICE OF CLAIM DATB Estate of JOHN E. SLOAN Deceased Notice is hereby given to all persons that Monday, December 2, 1040, is the claim date in the estate of JOHN E. SLOAN Deceased, pending in the County Court e Science Service.--WNU Service. Long Storage Might Destroy Important Parts of Foodstuffs By Dr. FRANK THONE Washington.--Foods kept for yedrs in a "super-normal" granary, if such & policy'should be established, would be subject to more £han the ordinary expected risks of moth and rust, mice and moldiness, Dr. Frank M. Schertz, plant physiologist, points out. The things we used to think of as prime importance in foodstuffs, carbohydrates, fats, and proteins, might be preserved with a minimum of loss, and yet the materials might lose so much of their vitamins and other perishable constituents that the stored masses might in emergency prove a delusion and a snare, (Central Standard Time) j St. Mary's Catholic Chareh|. tf &88CS * jjg Sundays: 7:00; 8:30; 10;$Qi» Weekdays: 6:46; 8:00. iV; f- First Friday: 6:80; 8:06. ; Confessions: • ••(*- Saturdays: 3:00 p.m. and 7:00 p.m ' Thursday before First FritUfy. After Mass on Thursday, 3:00 p. at and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. S. Nix, pastor. St. Patrick's Catholic Charck Masses: Sundays: 8:00; 10:00. Weekdays: 7:80. * . , I SFirst Fridays: 7:80. On First Friday, Communion di« tributed at 6:30, 7:00 and before and during the 7:30 Mass. Confessions: ' 'Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00 p.m, and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Thursday before First Friday . 4:00| to 6:00 p.m. and 7:00 t/ 3:00 p,m. " Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, paftsf. Tf of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said filling our stomachs and yet starvestate on or before said date without ing us to death. issuance of summons. ANNA E. SLOAN, Executrix. (Pub. October SI - November 7 -14) SHERIFF'S SALE BY VIRTUE OF an Alias Execution issued out of the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of McHenry County and State of Illinois, and to me directed, whereby I am commanded to make the amount of a certain judgment recently obtained against Eugene A. Sullivan, Leona M. Sullivan and John Fitzgerald in favor of Home State Bank of Crystal Lake, out of the lands, tenements, goods and chattels of the said Eugene A. Sullivan, I have levied on the following property, to- Vrit: Lot Three (3) of Idyl Dell 3ubdivision. Section One (1), in the Township of Nunda, County of McHenry and State of Illinois. THEREFOR, according to said command, 1 shall expose for sale, at Public Auction, all the right, title and interest of the above named Eugene A. Sullivan in and to the above described property, on Friday the 22n# day of November 1940, at 10:00 o'clock A. M. at the front door of the Courthouse, in the City of Woodstock, h( said County. Dated at Woodstock, Illinois, this 28th day of October 1940. LESTER EDINGER, Sheriff of McHenry County, Illinois. (Pub. October 31 - November 7 -14) AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer Having sold my farm, I will sell all my personal property #t Public Auction on the place located on Route U. o. 12 and 59, 2% miles north of Volo, 2Vt miles south of Fox Lake, 5 miles west of Round Lake, 5 miles east of McHenry, and 90 rods east of route 12 in the field, on-- TUESDAY, NOVEMBKn 12 Commencing at 12 o'clock sharp, the following described property to- 23 CHOICE CATTLE 19 milk cows, 6 fresh, 7 close springers balance milking good; heifer, 2 yrs. old; 2 heifers, 8 mos. old; registered Holstein bull, one yr. old. 5 Good Horses Bay mare, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1400 lbs., Well broke; bay gelding, 11 yrs. old, wt. 1400; gray team, wt. 3200; Percheron mare, 2 yrs. old, wt. 14Q0. 17 Shoats. 100 Leghorn Hens. Hay, Grain and Feed 30 tons of alfalfa hay; stack of soy bean hay; 8 tons mixed hay; stack of straw; 7 acres Wisconsin hybrid corn in shock--236 shocks; 325 shocks of mixed corn in shock; 260 bushels of old corn in crib; 1,300 bushels of good oats; silage. Farm Machinery and Tools Nearly new model CC Case tractor; new 14-inch two bottom Case tractor plow; Case quack digger; Nearly new McCormick-Deering corn binder; McCormick grain binder; good McCormick-Deering mower, nearly new; McCormick-Deering side delivery rake, nearly new; Osburnlsfde delivery rake; hay rake; McCormick- Deering hay loader; McCormick-Deering seeder; two 3-rsection drags; Oliver horse disc (7-ft.); Bradley cohi planter with check row attachment and 80 rods of check wire; Janesville gang plow; 8 inch garden plow; *26- inch sulky plow; walking plow; 2 McCormick-Deering cultivators; Flying Dutchman cultivator; walking cultivator. New McCormick-Deering manure spreader, steel roller bearing wagon sad hay rack; hay rack and wagon; manure box and wagon; light farm wagon; top buggy; bobsled; good fanning mill; corn shelter; 1,000-lb. scale; horse and cow clippers; hay carrier, forks, pulley and rope; 3 h. p. gasoline engine; 1% h. p. gasoline engine; % h. p. motor with pump jack; pump, jack; milk cans, tanks, pails and strainer; caldron kettle; S stock tanks. Good grindstone; feed mill; brand new 8-inch. 100-ft. rubber belt; 40-ft. rubber belt; canvasses, 2 sets breeching harnesses; 50 grain bags; tanks and barrels; tank heater; 50-ft. of picket fence; milk cart; 53 steel fence posts; 79 oak fence posts; wood pile, cut and split; extension ladder--38- ft.^ forks, shovels and many other articles too numerous to mention. , . v < Household Furnitmie Toms All sums of $25.00 and under, cask.' Over that amount, good bankable nots at 7 per cent interest. No poods to be removed until settled for. WILLIAM KIRKMAN West McHenry State Rank, Clerkin|f The idea of s "super-normal" granary was suggested originally by Prof. R. B. Harvey of the University of Minnesota. Professor Harvey thinks that far wiser than the present national policy of burying a vast gold reserve in the Kentucky hills would be the accumulation of hoards of food and feedstuffs, textile materials, and other farm and forest products. Professor Harvey goes Secretary Wallace's evernormal granary scheme one better, in that he would have it operated in terms of decades rather than mere years. Carotene a Good Example. The hazards of long-time storage of foods ate exemplified by Dr. Schertz in a single case, that of carotene, a plant pigment which is also an important vitamin. In fresh" green leaf material carotene is present in ratios of only one part to from 6,000 to 20,000 of the total bulk. Yet without this tiny pinch of carotene we perish. And carotene can not be stored successfully, in the dried state at least, even at low temperatures. Half of it is lost in as little as a month under ordinary storage conditions. Under specially controlled conditions the loss can be minimized; but Dr. Schertz has grave doubts of the practicability of maintaining the necessary supply of this and other vitamins in storage lasting many years. He advocates thorough-going research as a necessary preliminary to any such comprehensive and costly scheme as a "super-normal" granary. St. John's Catholic Church, Ji Masses: Sundays: 8:00; 10:00. Holy Days: 7:00 and Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. .' ; Confessions: ; Saturdays: 2:80 and 7:30. Thursday before First Friday: 1:80 and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Mazurek and Miss Ann Kelly of Chicago visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Sani jsone Sunday. Mrs. Claude McDermott was a Chicago visitor Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dosch were Woodstock visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Venablc; and daughter, Marilyn, and baby son, Lester Leslie, of Chicago spent Sunday at liily Lake. Mrs. Nora McCalla of Chicago visitRd at the home of her daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Klabough Sunday. Frank Rutha of Cicero spent a-few days at the hpme of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dosch. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Blum of Chicago spent the weekend at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. George Sielisch and Mr. %ind Mrs. Robert Sielisch of Chicago spent Sunday at Lily Lake. David McCalla of Mount Vernon, Ohio, is visiting at the home of his sister, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Klabough for a few days. Community Chwfch Sunday School: 10 a. mi Epworth League: 7:30 p.m. Latkeran Evangelical Ckarck Sunday Service, 8:00 a. m. Sunday School, 9:15 a. m. • Rev. Herman P. Meyer, pastor. Bt Peter's Catholic Church, Spring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8.00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: o:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:18. Thursday before First Friday: and 7:15. Rev., John L. Daleiden, Paster. Phone McHenry 677-R-l -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND AND GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Filling Black Dirt and Stone - Power Shovel Service Power leveling and grading Cement mixers for rent . J. E. NETT loknUmrg P. O. McHeary, HL MR. FARMER! If yoa have the ausfertaas to lose any livestock, call the PALATINE RENDERING COMPANY sad yoa will receive the highest prices. Old, dead and disabled horses, cattle, hogs, sheep removed promptly. Day or night service. Ptoone Palatine 95 and Reverse Eyes Examined Dr. Paul A. Schwabe Phone: McHeary 12S-J Woodstock 874 A. E. Nye BMg. West McHenry OPTOMETRIST THURSDAY MORNINGS BY APPOINTMENT ftNLT \4; ! •"*!»> •- 'vM V l*. A. WORWIOK ; /niOTOGRAPHBS Portraltare - OMamereiai Photography - Photo-Flaisftlaf fetalargtog . Cspytag - Framfag - Pheae 175 -- Riverside Drita McHENRY, ILL. lifter Repair Department Is at your service for any troubles you may have with your car or truck. It is one of the best equipped garages in Northern Illinois. Drive in and let us check the car and give you an estimate on the necessary work. Have your truck tested at this garage, which is an official testing station, and receive your state sticker. We have a well equipped repair shop to care of your correction to comply with the law. CENTRAL GARAGE FRED J. SMITH, Prop! Phone 20(W Towing Johnsburg vr'lr*j S P E E D Y 2:30 Volo Community Bible Ch»dl Sunday School, 10:30 a.m. Preaching service, 8 p. m. Rev. W. P. Rueckheim, pastor. All are invited. > Music Aristocratic Id France music is regarded as an aristocratic art. | VVB-L, weu, MR. PECKDC *XJ HAVE A Nice VACATION IM NbORt*EDCAS?R?0M R0SSMAN MOTOR SALES DtO 1/-TH6 CAP VMS SWiuJ EASY PTCXM6-VERV FAST AND ECONOMICAL TO RuN " Wtf WIPE DID AU. THE OOV1M6 J CPE AT-THEM ALL YOU -€R we5 EXCEPT r HAD TO HOLD THE $TEEMN6 VM8BL. * 'Mi ^38 J \ . ; - 8^' rW NASH - LaFAYETTE - PACKARD See the 1941 • NASH AMRASSADOR 6 today at the AUTHORIZED . SERVICE". ROSSMHN MOTOR SRLES RIVERSIDE DRIVE and PEARL STREET - PHONE 13 '•Ji Ancient Factory Town Is ? Unearthed in Honduras ^Washington.--Ruins of an ancient American trade town, wh&re Indi ans turned out cheap pottery bowls for traveling salesmen to handle, have been unearthed in the tropics in northeast Honduras by a Smith sonian-Harvard university joint expedition. The town unearthed sheds light on industrial life of aboriginal America. Evidence that mass production was tried in those days is found in quantities of broken pottery, some decorated in the "factory" method of stamping the design. Indian business men of the town lived well, judging by two house floors unearthed by the expedition. The plastered floors were stained red. Fragments of plaster, apparently from walls, show re-decoration in successive layers of red, yellow, red, blue-gray, and red. The town is identified as Naco, visited by Spanish explorers in 1526. Spaniards found it a flourishing place of 2,000 houses and about 10,- 000 natives, with .Aztec traders from Mexico bargaining for goods in the shady city square. Ten years later, Naco was reduced to pitiable handful of 45 Indians, the rest having been killed, enslaved, or driven into the hills. , ; , , Better light means better si Crests Balanced Bealif ' * for Flying Reptiles New York.--Flying reptiles of the earth's geologic Middle ages, though they were never direct kin of birds, nevertheless evolved in certain respects remarkably like birds. Dr. Carroll Lane Fenton points out in a newly published book, "Life Long Ago." Like the most ancient birds, the first flying repUlcS had long jaws with rows of sharp teeth. Later modish had lewer teeth, and the last flying reptiles of all had storklike beaks with no more teeth than the proverbial hen. The loag beaks were kept in balance by long crests sticking backward from the reptile flyers' a&ulls. The flying reptiles were apparently feeders on fish to a very large extent, perhaps exclusively, says Dr. Fenton. They skimmed low over the surface of the water and scooped up fish and other forms of marine life that ventured too clo»e to the, surface, s . T ; > v <*>'x '-JNEW 1941 LAMPS Wm ' .r-; m •Appmtd h lU*mia*ti*g E»pmmi*g SmUf • Better light lamps for 1941 are smarter--more beautiful--more economical than ever before! What's more, these lamps provide an abundance of soft, /evenly-diffused light to make seeing easier . . . eyes more comfortable. Try Better Light Lamps for a night or two in your own home. See for yourself how they relieve eyestrain-- how they add new charm--new character to your rooms. For a free home trial, pboiilr^ or aopio at LIS. Swiif Am Lamp 5-way lighting. Silver and gold, bronze or ivory and gold finished bases. Pleated shades or tan. - &V 13»5 Reflector or Bridge* lamp to match-* Only . . $12.95i Oihar Paalars Are Also Offering Fina Vcdua^Jtt 1941 Lonpi W Your Public Service Store r LPED r t C T i fW-'S ^ T'% «• S* -^ "'W aif* L L S. Al-PwfiSi Rtflactor Fletr 6-way lighting. Silver and gold or bronze finhed bases. Pirated shades in eggshell or Bridge rcaeaor to match . . $12.9) li&SWrlap Bronze finished base. Glass diffusing bowl. Patterned tan parchmcntized •hade - only Convenient Terms #S down-4f s Wnth, including small carrying charge, fcr a«^ $12.95 or $13.93 lamp ... the study lamp can be yours for oaly 30c down and 30c a month, including small carrying charge. 101 Williams St., Crystal Lake . V • v ;