mw5. EigM *"• ? . % s^ax fi- : ?"••. •• THS KtHUniY ."LAHTDBALXa Society 'Notes |* Bunco Party I lily Lake P.T.A. Mn Svaboda will be hostess to the j Mae Budil entertained twenty-one sflrfternoon bunco club of Ltty Lake on friends and members of the Lily Lake Thursday, May 28 at 1:30. j P.T.A. at her home Thursday, May 7. • * • j Cards were played, with prizes being Five Hundred Club awarded Hattie Einspar, Betty Boyku, Mrs. Ford Jackson entertained Mrs. Svaboda, Molly Budil, LeOrra Members of her Five Hundred club at Seyfferth, Marge Kiehl and Mary her home on Main street last Mon- , Klaboujfh. day evening. Prize -winners were ! . Those in attendance who enjoyed lira. Jos. Schaefer, Mrs. Jake Miler, the cards and a delicious luncheofi Hr8. Joe' Huemann and Mit. John P. Schaefer. it <•# Three ^eart Old were Mesdatnes Boyko, Vallone, Skelly, Weber, McDonald, Swanson, Svaboda, Fast Neilson, Einspar, Kiehl, i nrev lvsrs vn Cvuoirubuini Soceyyuffceir th, Weg««er,( Mvacauroshii), 1 Little Sa^ra Walsh, daughter Of Wood, Wrublewski, Molly Budil, Schi- Ifr. and Nft. Quentin Walsh, cetc- avone and Klabough. fctvted her third birthday at her home I The P.T.A. will give a school picnic iirt Center street, Monday afternoon, for the children and pat-eats on May n» 11. Fourteen friends were pres- 21. It will be IwAd at Ltlyiloor Cown- * ant to enjoy the occasion with her ana t try club. t i| delicious lunch, consisting of the ! «.fc4 * : j£u*tomnry birthday fare, wa# served Kmety-One Tears' "Old «t the close of the party. Probably the oldest McHenry resident, Mrs. Jennie Bsssett observed . 500 CLUB ' 1 h--e r ninety-first birthday last Sunday, Mrs. Leo Young was hostess to Mother's Day, at her home. Besides ;V •teoibers -of her Five Hundred club at her ho emon Main street. Besides •When they met last Thursday after- being one of the;oldest ladies in the * Moon at her home. Prize winners were city, she is also one of the best lovea Mrs. Ben Justen, Mrs. Clarence Young a°d is known to almost every one as and Mrs. John Freund. The next "Grandma Bassett." With the excep (Meeting of the club will be with Mrs. tion of difficulty in hewing and see Arthur Stilling on May 21. : ing, her general health is very good * * * land she enjoyed her birthday with < First Communioft . J friends and relatives. She received Mr. and Mrs. Jos. J. Miftfc!* and son several gifts and many cards fro in Gerald, and daughter, Terry, and Mr. her grandchildren and friends. Mrs. Albert Purvey spent Sun- 1 "Grandma Bassett" was born in " ^ day in the Dr. J. Purvey home in 1851 in Highgate, Vermont, but has jjfr Crystal Lake and attended the First lived most of her life in McHenry and ~ Communion services at St. Thomas i McHenry county. She has four grandchurch. Miss Patti • Purvey was a ' children and four great grandchildren. »ember of the class which received j fts. First Communion.^ Surprise* on Birthday ] A. surprise birthday party was i'*. "W.SwC.8. J given in honor of the mother of Betty - ytetWM* meeting of tWfrWiSlC.S." Boyko, Mrs. Anna Rowinski, at the •rill be held in the Methodist church j R. C. Sewinj? Circle on Monday, May fpU at 1:30 oi^May 21. It will be a j 11. Mrs. Rowinski has been visiting dfessert luncheon. Hostesses will be : in Wisconsin for the past year and Mrs. Harold Dickow, Mrs. Zino Baker, has just returned. She has two sons Mrs. Elmer B&um and Mrs. Keck. Mr*, who enlisted in the service. Robert Schaefer will have charge of The honored guest was presented the devotions, and two young ladies, with many beautifril gifts during the afternoon and a lovely lunch was served at a table decprated in ivory and gold. • " Members attending were Mrs. Mae Budil, Mrs. Louise Skelly, Mrs. Lottie Bransford, Mrs. Louise Nielson, Mrs. Vivian Veneer, Mrs. Jenny Vallone, Mrs. Eramra Fast, Mrs. Louise Gannon, Mrs. Sarah Kagan, Mrs. Freda Zwillinger, Mrs. Betty Boyko, Mrs. Anna Rowinski tand Mrt: Helen RowinsJci. -• j ] ,500,000 Held In Nazi Camps French War Prisoners Wor!: In German Factories!* And in Fields, Students at Northwestern university, •pil be featured on the program. • • • t Yeutg Ad* It Meeting Young Adult Couples Fellowj §>P >d its 'first meeting Sunday eventing, May 10, at the Community Methodist church. The evening was spent in playing games. Following this recreation a delicious lunch was served. The Rev. Dalrymple of the Congregational church in Crystal Lake then gave a very interesting discussion of various activities which might be carxsd on by such an organization. After laying plans for future monthly meetings the group adjourned. The eveling ems thoroughly enjoyed by *11. • •• • ' Anrsnces Engage»eat Mrs. Julia Heppner, 1809 Central street, Evanston, announces the en Mother's .Cleh, - Tin monthly meeting of the Meier's club was held ft the Legion hall l*st Friday afternon, Following the business meeting the ladies enjoyed an interesting prq^ram which featured a talk by Mrs*Merle English of Woodstock, appropriate for Mother's -------> -- • amuuuiitca uie en- day. As at previous times, her talk gSgement of her daughter, Dorothy»n°t fail to please the large crowd Louise, to Robert J. Friaby. Jr., son |in attendance. The Ryihm band, com- **" "~J **-- * "* ' * " posed of youngsters from kindergarten and first grade, led by Leoj-a Nelaf Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Friaby of McHenry. JHiss Heppner, a graduate of Evan. lh»n TownsMp'high school, is employed by the Terminal National Bank of Chicago. Mr. Frisby, a .graduate of local Mgti school, is a partner iti a plumbing firm in this city. Mo date Hi been set for the wedding.: Honor Bride-To-Bf !The Misses Shirley and Esther Cslby £fitert(ain£d members of the Epworth League of McHenry ai)4 Miss Wlian Hall of this city and »Ai88 Lor,, wwme Sattem of Wood^'^k at a mis- <c«larieous shower this week in honor «f Miss Matp'jerite Osbom of Rich- ^nend, wb»» win become the bride of Colby May 23. t, bride-to-be was the recipient - if many lovely and useful gifts. After ^pleasant evening a toasty lunch was ^Vved by the hostesses. son displayed their, n^usical talent with several selections 'And the Weber twins, Jean and Joan, sang a few numbers. - - r • j • An appetizing lunch was served following the meeting by the committee which was composed of Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger, chairman, Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mrs. Thomas lialin, Mrs. Clarence Martin and Mrs. A. 1. Froehlich. The next meeting will be held June 12 at- the hosto C, W. Klont*. " T? m***. Crisp White j? i Mather's Day Baiiqnet , *mie than fifty members of the C. fi. of A. and their guests enjoyed a chicken. dinner and Bocia lhour at Eva's restauiant Monday evening at their annual Mother's Day banquet. For musical entertainment during the dinner, Mrs. Pearl Pietsch of McCullom Lake sang "A Perfect Day," by Carrie Jacob Bond and "Dear Mom." i&Ki.S* Following the banquet cards were played, with prizes being merited by Marie Yegge in contract bridge, Riut Martin and Mrs. B. Stilling in Ruction Bridge; Lena Bohr and Celia Winkel ip pinochle; Lena Guercio in five huned and Mary Fleming in bunetfc • * * Entertain On Program ~ fjocal entertainers on the W.L.S. tiateur program sponsored by the meriean Legion of Woodstock on lie evenings of May 7, 8 and 9 were liss Wanda Jepson and Bobby and hirley Christenssn of Johnsburg. • After a year and a half absence from the stage, impersonating tnt lovable character "Lula Belle," Miss Jepson was again permitted to assunu this honor under the capable direction of Miss Maud Willis, director from W.L.S. in Chicago. Bobby Christrmsen, as a Junior towboy, bravely faced his audience in Singing cowboy songs His wee sister, captured her listeners singpatriotic s»pg "God Bless 'n<*\ - •' C. D. «f A. Election The C. D .of A. held their election ^Qtf 'officerB last Thursday evening in • we K. of C. hall. Those who will serve fjor the ensuing year are as follows: Elizabeth TTiompson, Grand Regent; Anna Sutton, vice Grand Regent; Mrs. Dick Fleming, lecturer; Mary Kinney, prophetess; May Martin, historian; Laura Weber, financial secretary; gorothy Adams, monitor; Elizabeth Jfshoe^er, treasurer ; Aniafi Thennes, ^ntinel, and trustees, Mary Freund wid Eleanor Nye. Hie next social meeting of the C. D. of A. wil be held on May 21. Installation of the newly elected officers will be held at the first business meet, ing in J«ne, which will occur on the fourth. ; 'x , j^ ; • . . ^ • • • . This dress oi rayon crepe cones in smart spring shades--navy, Kelly green, or the very new violet color. The fr<jh, crisp, sheep white ruffles are tisj to mklie and mor£ economical that way, fur you'll want several sets. The face-framing hat is worn back of the pompadonr. OPEN HOUSE AT HARRISON SCHOOL NEW YORK.--More than a mil lion and a haV Frcnch prisoners cyr war, informed French circles report, still wait impatiently for release from behind barbed wire bar-i liers in camps scctte.-ed from the Rhineland to central Pt land. Most of them are working in Ger man factories--both civilian and military--or in the fields from which the Reich supplies its armies with food. Some of them, they say themselves in letters to the folks at home, are earning more money than they formerly did in civil life in France. Nearly all of them, judging from a cross section of their letters, are living only for one day--the day when they can go home to their country and their families. Many of them have not seen their wives or children since early in 1940, when French army leaves were cancelled or postponed prior to the German attack which resulted in France's defeat. Sources close to Georges Scapini, French ambassador to Berlin, charged with negotiating for prison ers' welfare, have estimated the total number of released prisoners at "not more than 100,000." However, one of Scapini's assistants, in private conversation recent ly, said this figure "could be cut in half without materially upsetting the truth of what'J already happened.,s Get Severe Setbacks. Scapini's organization, it has become known in political circles, suffered a severe setback in its negotiations with the Germans after Admiral Ftancois Darlans conference with Adolf Hitler at Berchtesgaden the middle of last May. Darlan came back to Paris and Vichy, these sources assert, and "talked too much." He said then that the Germans had agreed to negotiate the release of about 200,000 French prisoners. As it later turned out--and is still true today--what German officials gave Darlan to understand was that they would consider favorably conversations pointing toward negotiations to release that number of men. The difference is subtle--but when Darlan made a public statement, the French took it for granted that soon 200,000 of their men were coming home. An immense number of letters flowed into Scapini's office asking for information about what classes might be included in the new contingent, what procedure would Be followed, and how certain specific prisoners could obtain their release papers. * Special Classes Release*. Up to the present time, Vichy reports, the only actual classes which have returned home are the veterans of the World war and those men who have families of four or more children or who have had near relatives, such as a father or a brother, killed in action. Some individual prisoners also have" gained their freedom because of wounds or illness. Scapini, a World war veteran with an almost 100 per cent disability rating, works tirelessly for what he calls "My Youngsters." Scapini, totally blind, crippled and in need of constant attendance, also has a nervous disorder which pre-, vents him from sleeping. Scapini's mail reads like spinsters' letters to an "Advice to the Lovelorn" columnist. A mother wants Jean, head of a fatherless family, released so he can go back to his job in the town bakery, but cannot supply proof that there still is a job for him if he returns. The wife of a high French officerwrites in to seek the release of a nephew, whose wife is going to have a baby and adds: "It has been the custom in our family for several hundred years that the father must be present when any child is born." Snnsh'ne Declared to Be Needed for Measles KANSAS CITY, MO.--The idea of keeping Junior in the dark when he has the measles is just an "oldfashioned bugaboo," according to Miss Eleanor W. Mumford, a nurse associated with the National Society for the Prevention of Blindness. Miss Mumford conducted a clinic for school and public health depart ment nurses here. "Sunshine is essential to health," Miss Mumford said, "and children who are recovering from the^mea sles need the benefit of the stqi much as anyone else." However, she warned that eyes of children recovering from the measles are generally weak and it is frequently advisable for them to wear dark glasses. ^ California Doctors to n**** Study the ComriTSn Cold SAN FRANCISCO--A comprehensive effort to determine what causes the common cold has been started by the University of California medical school; Ten research doctors will collaborate two years on the problem in the hope of finding a solution. Whether the weather has anything to do with causing colds will be one of the first problems tackled by the medical school. - ... _ "jt • 1 Thursday, May 14,1942 f LEAVES" from OPPORTUNIST The manager was a tyrant and before he had been at the mill a fortnight, he was pretty generally detested and Wasn't long in finding out. Wishing to know the reason why he was disliked, he called an old weaver to one side and said: "William, how is it that the old hands here don't seem to like me? At the last place I was they presented me with a silver tea pot when I was leaving." ' "Only a silver tea pot!" said the weaver. "By gum, if you will only leave here, I'll bet you will get 4 gold^kettle." "I am constantly having my jewels reset." "Yes; they art always the glass of fashion." Too Bad *'I hope that's a nice book #«r you to read, darling," said the conscientious mother to her very young daughter. "Oh, yea, mummy, it's a lovely book, but I don't think you would like it. It's so sad at the end." "How is that dear?" "Well, she dies and he has to go back to his wife." Hot and CM Air 'It was so cold where we were," said the Arctic explorer, "that the candle froze and we couldn't blow it out." "Thatfs nothing," said his rival. "Where we were the words came out of our mouths in pieces of ice, and we had to fry them to hear what we were ti&ung about." oSjrr • She--What bravtf act didl you ever perform that you can aidt my hand in marriage? He--I am trying one right now. She--And what is that? He--Trying to save you~r<rom tiecoming an old maid. Aren't Words Wonderfitt Jasper--Pa, what do they mean by "diplomacy"? Pa--Well, if you, fell a girl that her face would stop a clock, beware! But if you tell her that time stands still while you gaze into her eyes, that's diplomacy. .. On Saturday, May 16, 1942, the new Harrison School, District No. 36, McHenry county, will hold open house for all teachers, board members and others who are interested in seeing a truly modern school. The building will be open from two to five in the afternoon and all desiring to attend are most cordially invited! Harrison School is located about three-quarters of a mile east of Wonder Lake and about one. oule--Smith'5 COn*W Gentlemen Only "Will the gentlemen please move up forward a little?" called out the polite conductor of the trolley car. "I won't," growled Mr. Grouch, who hung to a strap near the door. "Oh, 1 didn't ask you," said the conductor. He'll Never Forget Her "Cheer up! You'll soon forget all about that girl and be happy again." "Oh, no I won't. I've bought too many things for her on the installment plan." ABSENTMIND "I- say, neighbor, did I bring back that lawn mower yQu lent me?" • "No, you did not" "That's too bad. I just came over to borrow it again*' v S ^ 8chool Dasy Teacher--How is It that you haven't made mosa progress? At your age I was clear through this course. Boy--Perhaps you had a better teacher than I did. Maple Syrup ea Steak Jonathan Burton, American meat merchant, 1799-1868, was so fond of maple syrup on steak that he tried to popularize the idea throughout the country. W 1 •' i>f "It- -i • Peeper Turned" Into Stag According to mythology, a famous hunter, Actaeon, surprised Diana while she was bathing She turned him into a stag and he was rhn-- d tnd killed by his own dogs. Paintbox or Kitchen Jasper went into a shop and asked for a pound of ochre. . "Dp you mean red ochre?" asked the snopkeeper. w "No," ochre." re Change of Mind After 80,000 copies of a splendiferous book on the activities of the U. S. navy had been printed, Washington bigwigs decided its title, "On the March" was a bit too aggressive and so 80,000 completely new covers had to be printed for the volume, this time bearing the innocuuous title of "On Guard." Size of Greenland Greenland is less than one-fourtii the size of the United States. » S.rvlr,) 5L°y_HARRIET MAY WILSON New Ways With Nuts As all housekeepers know, nuts show a decided tendency to become rancid, and this rancidity may develop not only in shelled nuts, but even in those still protected by their shells, if they have been kept for some time. In order to prevent sveh spoilage, and also in' order to have the nuts always ready for use at a moment's notice, it is quite practicable to sterilize them and store in vacuumpacked containers. For such a process, select fresh, firm nut kernels, newly shelled, and free from any bits of shell. Sterilize pint or half pint jars, and allow them to dry. Then fill the jars with the shelled nuts, and partly seal them. Place the jars in a hot-water bath deep enough to pome up about two inches on the jars and boil for a half hour. Then complete the sealing of the jars, cool them, and store in a cool, dark place. MAKING NUT BUTTERS The ingredients for making a half* pound of such butter are: 1 tablespoon of bland table oil, one-half teaspoon of salt, and 2 cups of blanched and roasted nuts. Grind the nuts in the food-chopper, using the finest grinding plate; repeat at least once, and, if necessary, twice, tightening the grinder each time until it is hard to turn. Add the oil and salt, mix thoroughly and pack in cans with lids that can be closed tightly. Note: The nuts may be blanched and,pasted for this purpose as follows: F^r t the almonds, pour boiling water^ over them and simmer at boiling temperature for about three minutes. Pour off the water and the skins will slip off readily. Peanuts require no blanching. To roast the nuts, for a half pound of nuts, shelled and blanched, put a quart of fresh cooking oil into a kettle suited to deep-fat frying. Heat the fat to 300 degrees F., or until a cube of bread dropped into it will brown in about five or six minutes. Put the nut kernels into a sieve that is deep enough so they can not float out over its top and lower them into the hot fat. Leave them there until they are a light brown, which will require six or seven minutes. Remove and pat gently with absorbent paper until they <u% freed from fat. NUT LOAVES In making a nut loaf remember to have, among the vegetables commonly used in the mixture, either celery, green peppers, or carrots, in order to secure a crisp texture. For croquettes, it is necessary to have a soft mixture. To Secure such consistency, use mashed potatoes, bean pulp or a cooked cereal. Almost everyone knowfe that chestnuts may be used to advantage in dressings for fowls, but many cooks do not know that various other nuts may be so Used. A very good stuffing for fowl, or for pork chopa, is made as follows: In 2 tablespoons of melted butter or other fat, cook, for a few minutes, 2 tablespoons of finely chopped onion, 1 tablespoon of chopped green pepper and 1 cup of cut celery. Add 2 cups of cooked brown rice or wild rice, Vt teaspoon of salt and V» teaspoon of pepper. Stir the whole until it is well mixed and hot, then add a half cup of chopped hazelnuts and the stuffing is ready to use. This quantity is sufficient for a half dozen pork chops. Concerning the food value of nuts/ it should be noted that, whereas many people suppose them to be rich enough in protein to serve as a meat substitute, this notion is erroneous. The chief food value of nuts lies in their fat content which ranges from 35 per cent for coconuts to 70 per cent for pecans. Peanuts and cashews average about 40 per cent fat and English walnut3, hickory nuts and filberts about 60 per cent. The protein content of nuts is much less, ranging from 5 to 25 per cent; carbohydrate value is less than 25 per cent except in the chestnut which is very starchy. But nuts have other food values, not so well known. Most of them are rich in phosphorus; the almond, pecan, hickory nut, walnut and hazelnut are good sources of iron; the pecan is a good source of vitamin A, said to be so valuable for those afflicted with night blindness; peanuts, pecans, chestnuts, almonds, English walnuts, filberts and Brazil nuts all yield a considerable quantity of vitamin B. For lurthcr information ami ouut/ roc tho uto ol buci. ton4 thto oomts to tho iutomdont of Documents. WMthingtoa asking tor Miscelltntoun Publication• Mo. of tho Department ot Atiicu/turo, Lawyer Preside.its Twenty-two of the United States,' Presidents have been lawyers. ^ Cdtaning Fruits Fruits and tomatoes are easy to can because they can be processed in a boiling water bath, in the oven, or in a steamer. Rust Stains Remove rust stains from front porch furniture with steel wool ami then go over with kerosene on a cloth. Never attempt to paint over rust stains; they will burst through the paint and look worse than before. Cigarette to Butt Millions of cigarettes are Smoked each day. They are lighted, smoked and the t>utt discarded. Now .just when does a cigarette become a butt? Do sex differences in smoking habits manifest themselves in the lengths of cigarette stubs? A recent survey was conducted on this and some interesting data resulted. Men throw away cigarette butts that average one and three-sixteenths of an inch. A few of the women's stubs were found to he as long as two and a quarter inches while others were as short as fiveeighths of an inch. The currently popular longer sized cigarettes pro* duced shorter than average butts for both men and women. Kecapitulating results in terms of cigarettes per package produced a startling revelation. A man throws away eight out of every 20 cigarettes he purchases. A woman throws away 10 out of every 20. Prevents Tarnishing For years after he left the V. 8. navy in 1919, Chemist William Peacock of Philadelphia worked unsuccessfully on a process to prevent tarnishing of silverware. He became the only mirror consultant in the U, S. 10 years ago, when Hires Turner called him into see what was wrong with its silvering solution. Amazed was William Peacock at pitcher-pouring. So he went to work on a new process, managed to support his Peacock laboratories meanwhile by supplying advice, standardized silvering solution, special rubber gloves and other mirrormaking accessories to the trade. Two years ago he found the answer, a speedier solution (his trade secret) to replace Epsom salts as a reducing agent. With the new solution he could silver a mirror ia 37 seconds, instead of over half an hour. Better still, the solution could be blown on by an air gun. With his process, mirror-makers could throw away their pitchers and work oa a high-speed assembly line. METHODIST CHURCH NOTES Coning Events to Have in Mintf* The members of the official boar will meet Friday evening, May 15, 8 o'clock at the parsonage. AH me... bers are urged to be present. Thi will be the last board meeting of th<, Conference year and there are a num ber of items of business to be ac upon. The Sunday school will meet ar 10:00. There is a place for everj^ child and youth. Together they will learn to live. The minister has chosen to speak oi| the subject "Hands That S?rve," at the Morning Worship service, Sun# day, May 17. In trying times we ca<^ find great strength in united fellow^ ship. There is a place for every in«: dividual in the activity of the church^ The last Quarterly Conference of the Church year will be held at 4:0d p. m., Sunday, May 17. Dr. Fowler^ the District Superintendent, will be in charge of the business meeting. Intermediate League >will rJieet at 6:30 p. m. A special program is being; planned. Hi-League will meet at 8:00 p. m. They will have an '.'Old Clothes Party." Let's have a hundred per cent attendance. Hormones Successful In ; High Proportion of Cases The average individual feels, as Ponce de Leon doubtless felt, considerable reluctance to enter that period in life when athletics, eating, and romance lack the zest they once had. It is natural and normal; to feel that way. But the scientist must look beyond personal reactions, to the social consequences of: the great increase in the army of the old--the more so since science is largely responsible for the survival of so many people into old age. Actual beginnings have been made, through applications of certain types of hormones or gland extracts. Since high level of accomplishment, in both physical and men- * tal work, is usually found in men and women in early sexual maturity, physicians turned first to the sex hormones. The treatment has been successful in a high proportion of cases. Middle-aged men and women have regained, at least temporarily, powers of decision and execution that had begun to slip away. In some instances, they even astonished themselves (and their neighbors) by becoming parents well after the "normal" age for that sort of thing! if* HASN'T DEC1D1 Saving Lives * Chemistry and medical scienca arm saving lives of many pe^aoas who have developed certain blood infections which were considered fatal only a few years ago. A dangerous type of blood poisoning is known as septicemia, in which the Mood stream becomes infected as a result of an infection of tha skin, of the throat, ears, or other parts of the body. The infection may be due to a variety of germs. While septicemia may develop from various kinds of germs, die germs most often responsible are the .staphylococcus and hemolytic, or blood-destroying streptococcus. Drs. W. E. Herrell and A. E. Brown of the Mayo clinic have made a study to determine the benefits they got in the treatment of septicemia from the use of the sulfamide drugs, such as sulfanilamide and sulfapyriddine. These are drugs which have just recently been dis- ' covered and which have been found, so effective in combatting staphylococcus and streptococcus infections. TIGHTWAD CUM lot i . arc.. MAKING SAUERKRAUT Use four-gallon to six-gallon stone jars. Selcct sound cabbagc-s and. after removing outer leaves quarter the heads, slice off the cQre, ai]d shred. One pound of salt for each 40 pounds of cabbage makes the proper strength of bfthe. Pack the cabD&ge and salt, well-mixed, in the jars, cover witti a clean cloth and a ylate, weighting the plate so that th§ brine will come up over the cabbage. At 86 degrees Fahrenheit, fermentation should be completed in 10 days. Egyptian Conjftarors Egyptian conjurors, it is said, know how to render the Egyptian cobra ri^id and immovable by pressing the nape of its neck with the forefinger, thus throwing it into a state of catalepsy. Three Times More The 3,056,000 miles of highway In the United States are nearly three times the total road mileage of Great Britain, France, Spain, Italy and Germany. "Billy, I'll. give you a nickel to keep out of the living room tonight." "Sure you can spare it? Sis says you're one of dem cheap guys what ain't got a cent to his name." "Is it true that you ar* Miss Willing?" "Well--er--I haven't given my answer yet." Fastest Growing Ae Boy Scout organization ia-'the fasteij* growing boys' group ia AmeMS. Gift of the Week! f Give him a smart Gaberdine Sport Shirt with long sleeves. McGEFS "The Store for Men Green St. -- * McHenry LET US CLEAN YOUR FURNACE We are now prepared to clean your furnace and prepare your heaticg plant for fall, with our We will gladly give you an estimate on your job. Do you realize how much that soot in your heating plant is costing you if it is not removed? Bead what the U, S. Dept. of Commerce figure* ar4 9.8 per cent--1-32 inch 26.2 per cent--1-16 inch *15.2 per cent-- 1-8. inch 62.0 per cent--3-16 inch $ .98 2.62 .. 4.52 6.20 One-fifth inch eoot shuts out as much heat as one inch of asbestos. g«*ouuutg*ttiroiicba.M«U»v«»d surface. .. ' Get in touch with us loday and prepare for next fall's heat problems. WM. H. ALTHOFF HARDWARE Phone 284 Main Stregt