Thursday, July 30,1942 > f THE McHENRY PmJNDEALER •< > r Jluhm, Glt&mbeM, war! CONGRESSIONAL VIEWS LEON HENDERSONS In these days the mail of most congressmen carries--more than the, ordinary amount of criticisms of Leon Henderson and the Office of Price Administration. This-is but natural. Price fixing affects every individual personally and in a different way. The official who i« charged with-tfie,responsivWlity of fixing prices and establishing ceilings has the toughest assignment in the federal service. That the criticisms leveled at the Administrator thus far have not doubled or quadrupled is irtde 'd a tribute to the ability of that official. Your representa- ARMY AND NAVY BADLY IN NEED > OF TYPEWRITERS Sam wants to buy your Woodstock typewrite,"--said LeRoy Jones, purchasing agent for the Woodstock Typewriter Co., recently. Jones explained the army and navy need at least 500,0(50 typewriters of late construction. which will serve as a direct contribution to the war effort. The need Sf machines is declared in a communication from Donald^M. Nelson, chairman of j^he War Production board. The letter states "A typewriter is an essential piece~of equipment on every, bomber. In the navy every battleship "normally carries 59, every aircraft carrier, 55; every" 9uiser, 3Q; every destroyer, 7," "If you have a Woodstock type- 'U V'.'1 1PAYROLL TAXES : SHOULD BE CUT By George Pedk -v . '-v1. It is evident that unemployment reached its 1942 peak in March. The combined state . unemployment insurance systems paid out benefits of fo ty-one million dollars in January. Th rose to forty^t.hree millions in March and fell off to slightly under thirty two million dollars in May, -- During the first five months of 1942. the States paid out only a total of 192 million dollars in benefits while they collected "549 million dollars of payroll taxes, with the result that net state unemployment insurance funds deposited with the United States T r e a s u r y h a y * g r o W n t o - t h r e e billion dollars. :';'V\ At the present tfm'e"rf'p'aytax collections are running more than three times the'benefits paid out. This is bound to become even more disproportionate as payrolls become higher <and the number of unemployed stilf further decreases. / ,„ Surely there should be/c^^ in tfe J)# fact, 1 have personally found many that were amply justified; but I have always found Mr. Henderson and, his office ready to rectify errors and right tive has faith it. the honesty, sincer- j wr,ter- ser.al above 400.000 series, the ity and sense of fairness thus far ex4procurement •<tivi8.»on". Treasury dehibited. by Mr. Henderson. Mistakes ! Pa«*meht, ot the U. S. government and errors of judgment? .Qf course j ^ants to buy it, and they have authorlie has made th'fem and will continue ! ^ed the Woodstock Typewriter C o, to so to'db.;But who doesn't? , Then^range for its ^ivha^ j? too, he has sometimes been blunt and u v * V f. -wr-r tartacfcful. But I wonder who wouldn't*. company, on*^ b* dite. three per cent assessment now Being be if placed in bis unenviable pt>siti<Mtr machines: nfianufactu^ed, before 'Janu- j leyie^ by the States for unemployment rdo not deny that manv of the griev- ary. 1, -1935,^follows: • - - •• insurance/'lTlik would *eem to; he nuances registered with ' Congressmen 1 Serial between 400.001 to"4S5,OM -- , PJ*CP at least where government can and Senators are well'founded. In ill-inch model. $20.00; 1-2-inch model, ! ***«. the burden on business -- one, ' ' " " " ' $22.50; 14-inch: model; $£5.00; 18-inchprnnt wher- taxes actually .can be cut model, $30.00; 22-inch model, $35.00. knd raised as i* the vogue today Seriacl hetwe-n 435,001 to 470.000 -- 11-inch 'model, $22.50; l'2-im'h model, injustices when brought to his or their j $25.00; 14-inch model, $27.50; 18*inch 1 do not know his politics , model, $32.50; -22-inch model, $37.50. and care less. But on the other hand,' Serial between 470,001 to 500,000 -- , I know many persons who if appoint- 11-inch model, $25.00; 12-inch model, - time as this reserve has been cat at ed to his position would not do nearly $27.50; 14-inch model, $30.00 18-inch !eas1; 'n half. • It cannot be denied that after , the war is ended and production for war stops, there will be a big increase in unemployment requiring greatly augmented disbursements of unemployment l>enefits. Th refore, there should be a sizeable reserve of funds on hand to meet the situation. However, it borders on absurdity, to be piling up such a tremendous fund A reserve of three billion dollars is unnecessary. Perhaps the best plan would be for the government to suspend the payroll taxes entirely for a period of several months until such so well and at the present time at model, $35.00 ; 22-inch model, $40.00 least, I know of none who would do , Serial between 500,001 to 570.000 -- better. | 11-inch model, $30.00; 12-inch model, FEDERAL EMPLOYMENT: Fed- $32.50; 14-inch model, $35.00; 18-inch eral employment for May 1942 model, $40.00; 22-inch model. |45.00- reached a total of approximately 2, 090,500 in the execytiye branch. This of course is exclusive of the armed forces. Of thess about 256,000 are in the District of Columbia and 1,834,- 100 outside. This represents a total increase of about 784,200 over May 1941. The present government executive payroll is' now about 332 dollars a month as against 198 millions a month in May 1941. GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES: Already during the first seven days of typewriter property of U. S. Governthe present fiscal year (ending June men^. severe Penalties for unlawful SO, 1943). the federal government ha, = usf; your presence. The typ<^r,-- Serigl between 570.001 up -- 11-inch riiodel, $40.00; 12-inch model, $42.50; 14-inch model, $45.00; 18-inch model, $50.00; 22-inch model, $55.00. "If yott have a Woodstock type-,, - ^ IT , writer in the above serial range you!lor a fut"ure emergency when Uncle want to sell to "help our country win i Sa™ u needs every dollar he can tax and borrow for the present one. It does seem to be ridiculous to keep this unnecessary burdeh on industry ana business at a time when they are harassed and harried by so many tial taxes and expense. 549. When papers are siened purchasing your machine, Mr. Kiltz will affix a transfer on the front frame of the almost 1,060 millions of dollars will then be turned over ter ood- - against 427 millions for the same : f*** company toY conditioning and period in 1941. The amount spent for ^en re-shipped upon receipt of wnr nlisnp in this neriod is ,structlons from the government to an army camp for its use. :tivities aldne in this period is about 873 millions as against 219 millions in thn same period in 1941. NATIONAL D^BT INCREASE: The national debt passed the 80 billion mark on July 15. The Daily Treasury statement of that date showed the ; *can L",ll£eri. ™°l u,u suust r'^ debt to be $80,505,618,486 as against ! dr,ve ass,st the government $55,591,998,306 on the corresponding date a year ago. AUTOMOBILE GRAVE Y A R D S yielded more than 383,283 tons of scrap metal in May, this being 10 per cent more than in April and 100 per cent more than the monthly rate in 1941. "You will immediately receive a check from the Woodstock Typewriter Co. for the net amount allowed for your typewriter. Every local American citizen should subscribe to this in winning 'thiS war. r - VICTORY BUY UNITED STATES AND STAMPS BONDS Faith md Pflfrlms In scanning the pages of American history there stand out individuals and groups as having exemplified a full faith in the protection and guidance of divine Providence. This, coupled with unconquerable courage and unswerving fortitude, made possible the establishing of the early settlements of the country. None will deny that prominent among these groups were the Pilgrims, who came to the New world to escape conditions which constricted their chosen way of worship and to establish a community wherein worship could be'^fearried on in accordance with the dictates of conscience, without persecution and without domination. In the experience of these hardy pioneers there inhered a fullness, ef faith, a spiritual quality which has too often been lost sight of in the more than three centuries which have passed since their advent upon New England's forbidding shores. It was this quality of intrepid faith in' Providence to guide and protect the faithful, to shield and care for those obedient to the divine Will, which inspired the great adventure. Unusual Squadron Thirty-five pilots of Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc., form the entire personnel of the 76th bombardment squadron, United States army corps reserve. This is the only squadron in the country composed of officers from a single airline. tyjUot 1)044. &U4f 1VUU WAR BONDS A scout car is a low-slung motor car armored with heavy steel plate, used to transport trcK>ps from one point to another. It is of low silhouette and gives protection against machine gun and other ground fire. A scout car oasts $5,000. You and your neighbors joining together can buy one of these vehicles for the Ordnance Department of our army with your purchase of War Bonds. We need hundreds of them and need them quickly. Put at least ten percent of your wages or income into War Bonds every pay day and help your fellow Americans top the Wax* Bond quota in your COUnty. ,(J, S. Treasury Department War in Pacific" Hits Pantries U. S. Housewives Deprived Spices Imported F Dutch East Indies. As pant: y tap* os WASHINGTON. shelves become depleted of ^sta; long supplied by^ the Netherlands East Indies, these busy_ islands loom more important to the America: housewife. . "Over pirates-infested seas, t earliest gatleons sailed from the 'Spice Islands,' their holds filled with the riches of the Indies," re calls a report from the National Geographic society "More, fabulous were the tales'of these romantic adventures. i "Centuries before refrigeration, when spices became prized as food preservatives. an<l taste disguisers, the spice trad* fcmlt".castles for. Europe's merchaj.r princes: It :n- Splre#-Columbus to span th£ ^tl&ntfc. ;.v-y . Spice Bill. ""Uncle Sam's yearly spice hill from the Netherlands Indies .mdun'fV ed to some $4,000,000 befoire the war Black pepper alone totaled 15,000,000 pounds in 1940, and 65,000,000 pounds the year before, to which should be added 5,000,000 pounds of white pepper. This is 96 per cent of Uniteel States consumption. "Thirteen million pounds of coffee, 31,000,000 pounds of tea, over 300,- 000,000 pounds of tapioca, 3,500,000 pounds of nutmeg and 700,000 pounds of cloves, also were shipped to the United States in the same year. - "Soap, margarine and lard substitutes on the pantry shelves-contained much of the year's receipt of $3,650,000 worth of palm oil from the Netherlands Indies. - • "The islands produced 90 per cent of the world supply of quinine and ^bout 99 per cent of United S^tes^' requirements. Periled bjr Tin Shortage. "The housewife's growing dependence upon cans for the preservation of food will be affected by the shortage of tin. Tin had^come from the islands recently in increasing quantities -- $13,000,000 worth m 194o, which was 20 per cent of Uncle Sam's import of the metal. r"The 1940 item of $112,000,000 for rubber was the largest of Uncle Sam's purchases from the Netherlands Indies, which normally prbf duced 40 per cent of the world supjSy, and nearly 30 per cent of United States' requirements. "Paraffin and paraffin wax to the Value of $3,000,000 are the only petroleum products imported in great quantities, though the islands rank fifth in world production of* petroleum. American interests control over 25 per cent of production there. "The richest, most populous and perhaps best known of the islands is Java, a name synonymous with coffee, though a leaf disease in the past century ruined the original variety from Arabia." Say Steel Shavings Put In German Food by Dutch NEW YORK.--The British radio reported that news of a new kind of sabotage against the German armies is contained in a Nazi document which was found by the Russians #ien they captured the headr quarters of the 34th German sapper battalion. According to the broadcast steel shavings had been found in tinned meat of Dutch origin which had been supplied to a German army unit. All army supply corps were warned to watch out for this form of sabotage. . ^ q<;T\NC3 McHENRr, WHERE FP^NJCI^ <9COTT HEY WROTE* ^PANGLBD &AKINER AppeaseJJuifnies and Save the Fruit Trees LANSING, MICH.--Rabbit attack „again$t fruit and shade tree bark during the winter can be stopped by "appeasing" the bunnies, the Michigan department of conservation reports. The department urges -farmers 1o construct shelters of brush and twigs, which not only protect small game but satisfy the food needs of the rabbits^ The brush heaps, the department says, are also useful in preventing erosion if left in gullies. erfeci Cliwe for a Meal--Apricot Jteity Roll 'J - ' (See Recipes Below) J MMootthheerr--DDaauugg hter Luncheon Once a year it is becoming for Daughter to don the cook's cap and uniform and come out with a whole meal cooked to please Mother. And the day Mother appreciates, it most is on her day of the year- Mother's day! So, today, I've planned a menu which even the youngest cooks can make", into a glorified meal to which they can invite their mothers. Now, young cooks, on your toes -if you would gather^fjraTefe at Mothfcf's day luncheon-time! Bring out the measuring cups and ingredients, first. ^Then read the recipes over, several times and visualize each step before you start. Ready? Good. Your first course--served in small "glass cups with a sprig of mint, if yefu can get it--^ill stimulate1 the appetites and brighten the table: •Fruit Cup. (Serves 8) • . 1 jMTH*f«s, peeled 1 grapefruit, peeled < 1 pint strawberries, hulled S'liananas Section oranges and grapefruit. Peeell 1t1h e bananas and dice. Mix with fruit sections. Sprinkle lemon juice over -the fruit, sweeten to taste. Let stand and chill. When .ready to serve, place in fruit cups. Eggs are plentiful now because the government asked farmers to have their hens work overtime to increase egg production that they might be sent abroad and have enough for home use. So, bring out the eggs and their surplus of nutrition to menus by choosing on^ qf these two recijpes for your main luncheon dish. Eggs are noted for the facility with which thev can be cooked, and there is but one major rule to follow in cooking them: use as little heat as possible to get a tender product. ' -- « •Eggs a la King. « (Serves 6-8) * 4 tablespoon^ butter"*" 4 tablespoons of floifr 2 cups hot milk 1 teaspoon salt Pepper h tablespoon chopped onion 1 tablespoon chopped green pepper Mother-Daughter banquet - !: ^ "Fruit Cup «• •Eggs a La King Asparagus ^Grange Frosted Berry Sated X Biscuits and --- : •Jelly Roll , •Recipe Given *4 tablespoon chopned pimiento 6 hard cooked eggs Vi cup sliced, cooked mushrooms ' Melt the butter, add the flour and stir until smooth. Combine with hot milk. Xet cook eight minutes over hot water (in a double boiler) Lynn Says: Crew Saves Their Ship After Being Torpedoed LONDON.--The British admiralty disclosed that the crew of the 6,500- j ton British, tanker Tahchee had i brought their precious $1,000,000 cargo of oil safely into port after the ship was torpedoed in the Atlantic. The $rew abandoned ship after the torpedoing, but, when the Tahchee remained afloat, reboarSed her. They put out the fire, repaired the engines, and, with the help of the Canadian corvette Orillia, brtHlgflff the Tahchee home. AMERICAN FLAG that inspired our NATIONAL ANTHEM WA4 -MADE IN A BALTIMORE f3 BECAUSE IT WA^ TOO LARGE FDR ORDINARY WORWRCOM? Ledger Syndtcait U. S. Army Is Healthiest r* In History pf Country . WASHINGTON.--Upon the eve of battle, the United States possessed the healthiest army in its history and a mfcdical organization technically prepared and determined to maintain' it so. -The annual report of the surgeon general states that the over-all death rate, exclusive of battle casualties, for the year ended June 30, 1941was". 2.8--this lowest in its ius-^ tory.;' H£ ORIGINAL i<? NOW PR£SERVED - ^Carpet Laying Methods Lower-priced, lower-grade broadloom carpeting can often be an economy; but it should never be laid wal to wall, or cut to fit around hearth, odd corners or stairways. Less eJcperisive weaves wiU be bound to buckle and stretch, which is not so noticeable when it is simply a rug with flooi^borders but very noticeable^ vnh^n it is fitted to the walla or around odd corners. 0 The Score Card: The nation's sugar bowl is due to be somewhat smaller than last year's because we will have to get along with a third less sugar than we had before. This, means we will be using several substitutes. You smart homemakers will learn how to use maple sugar* where you like maple flavoring. One and one-third cups of maple sugar may be substituted for one cup cf granulated sugar. ./ Httfiey, oldest sweetening, has versatile uses. Use it on your breakfast fruits, cereals, sauce for :ce cream, in cakes, quickbreads, cookies, even in sugars, j^jnr-s and jellies. Since honey has a distinctive flavor, use half honey and half sugar in recipes or th* consistency and color of the p»oduct you make may be changed considerably. Coi;n syrup nyay be substituted c jp for cup for granulated sugar, b it when using it, cut the liquid ir the recipe down by one-third. Mo'asses makes your gingerbreads, . baked beans, brown iread, cakes and even cookies. Besides these substitutes you'll oave dried fruits which are high ;n sugar content. When stewing fruits, add sugar toward the endof the cooking period: it will take less to sweeten the fruit. Make desserts with frtyt.juices, both canned and fresh, and you will finb it bridges the sugar ration well. Above all, do not waste su&ar. You can probably get along with less in the morning coffee and tea^. Try it. with egg beater. Add onion, greenl pepper, pimiento, sliced eggs and mushrooms. Let cook five minutes. ScK,ve hot on buttered toast. . Eggs a la Rockefeller. (Makes 1 serving) 1 slice bread „ J thick slice tomato ' 1 soft cooked egg 2 tablespoons cheese sanes Parsley Toast the bread slightly and spread thinly with butter. Place the slice of tomato on the bread,- then on the tomato, put the soft boiled- egg/VOver this pour the cheese sauce and~~garnish with parslpy- o Cheese sauce: Add ^ cup finely grated or finely cut cheese to 1 cup hot white sauce, and stir until chejese is dissolved. •Qrange Frosted Berry Salad. (Serves 6) 1 tablespoon gelatin • 2 tablespoons cold wiiHF' M cup orange juice, heated : % t-up orange juice, unheattil H cup sugar 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 cup orange pieces K cup berries or seedless grapes H cup sliced peaches ' • Orange sections Frosted berries Soften the gelatin in the water 5 minutfs. Dissolve in the heated orange juice. Cool and add the un heated orange juice. When slightl> thickened add the orange pieces, grapes, and sliced peaches. Pour into individual molds. Chill unti' firm. Unmold and garnish with or ange sections and clusters of frostea b^iTies. (To frgs^ berries, dip ir slightly kjeaten egg wViUe and roT. in granulated sugar. Spread on per to dry.) Serve salad with lemor flavored mayonnaise. As you go into your sugar-ration ing period, are you keeping you> eyes peeled for recipes that take n easy on the sugar without sacrific ing any of their appetite appeal? For that very reasDiu^u'll like this one of jelly roll beeJafe it uses nat urally sweetened apricots for the filling and eliminates the powdered sugar sprinkled over the top. •Jelly Boll. (Makes 10 12 slices)*: 3 eggs . Vi teaspoon salt 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 1 «up sugar j 1 cup sifted ca 1 teaspoon bakin» pbwder / tablespoons flour W tablespoons butter "Like rubber, copper or aluminum--telephone service is essential to r. Help save itt Make only the gent Long Distance calls. .. . Make them in the less crowded hours -- noon to 2 P. M.--5 to 7 P. M.--or -after 9 at night. . . . And boas brief as you can. Save a call--and speed a cause! WAR CALLS COME FIRST! ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BUT U. S. W 4 * BOMOt A M D S T A M P S J CummingK and Wvman, Chicago, lllt and Vernon J. Knox. Crystal Lake, Attorneys t STATE OF ILLINOIS. COUNTY OF McHENRY. SS. IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF Mo HENRY COUNTY. BELL SAVINGS AND " LOAN ASSOCIATION, * % a Corporation, * Plaintilf. vs. VERNON L. BERRY, rj':' .. -• * ': ' PATRICIA KUB, SHIRLEY KUB, and UNKNOWN OWN- » ERS, De^r.datita. Gen. No. 29593. COMPLAINT IN CHANCtttr PUBLIC NOTICE is hereby given that in pursuance of a Decree made J and entered by the Circuit Court of MeHenry County, Illinois, on the 17th i day of JJuurlty- A. D. 1942, I, Vincent S. Add salT a'nd'^'anilla* to'eggs, beat i ^umle f y' Mafter,jn C^"cer>\of Uiuntil light and fluffy. Add sugar ir Ct>"r ' W l°i n .a^' ^ 2-tablespoon portions/beating aftei | ".^1S0 each addition. Add sifted flour anc baking powder. Fold in carefullj and quickly. Stir in water and butter, heated together until butter is melted. P6ur into a jelly roll pan. about 16 by 11 by 1 inch that ha hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the East front door ofthe Court House in the city of Woodstock, McHenrj- County, Illinois, and offer for sale and Sell at public auc tion to the highest and best bidder, the Hungry, $o Doubt Sortie salmon swim mote than 1,000-mites up rivers on their way to spawn. They do not feed after leaving, tiie ocean. Order your Rubber Stamps at Th« Plaindealer. Good, for Something, After AD The soupfin shark's liver is one of the most prolific sources of vitamin A, the oil content running from 25 to TO per cent. The weight of the live* itself averages 10 per cent of the weight of the whole fUll. i been greased and lined with p^per. | ^°H°*ing ^described real estate, or so then greased again. Bake in a mod !muc^ thereof as may be nectssary Cj erately hot (375-degree) ov,en about |s.*"sfy sai^ decree in full, to-wit:- Lot Number four (4) of Hucks Riverside Subdivision according t j the, plat thereof, recorded in the Recorder's Office in MeHenry - County, Illinois, in B^ok 4 of Plats, on page 116 and being a subdivison of a part of Lot Nunir ' ber 32 of Emerald Park, aecorling to the plat thereof .recorded in said Recorder's Office Tin Book 1 of Plats, on pag^ 46; s.ud subdivision being located in. and being a part .ot" the East fraction of. the North West quarter on East side of Fc>x River, of Section one (I), Township fortyfour (44) North. Range Eight (8), Ea^t-of the Third Principal Meridian, in the Tow-sh.p of » Nunda, MeHenry County, lif nois. improved with a t'raate rvaideoee. located on' the East side of the Fox 18 minutes or untii-nicely risen and delicately brown over the surface Loosen edges and turn onto a piece of waxed paper or a towel sprinkled with powdered sugar. Remove pan and peel off waxed- psper. Spread with dried fruit--cook your favorite dried fruit (apricot, prunes or peaches are good) in a minimum of water, then put through a sieve, cool and spread:« Roll lengthwise, cool on a cake rack. ^ If you would like expert advice on your , cooking and household problems, write ! to Lynn Chambers, Western XeUrspaper j i'nion, 210 South DespLiines St., 'Chjca#o, l 111. flease enclose a stamped, dressed envelope for your reply. (Released by Western Newspaper t'niOOL) ) Unbroken Army Males The word "shavetail" is soldiers v. , slang for a recently appointed sec- Rivet.feet. North ond lieutenant -- humorously so Street, . called with allusion, to the' young, unbroken army*mules. > t Are yon entitled to wear a "target" lapel button? Yon are if you are investing at least ten percent of your Income in War Bonds every pay day. It's your badge of patriotiste. ' -'-'-Tenas-af SaI»v-~ Cash in hand; on day of sale, at which time a' certificate of purch&i<» will be issued to the purchaser purchasers at said sater J Dated this 21st day ot July A. D, JSNCENT S. LUHLEYV : ' Master in Chaneery. (Fub, July to - » v AttcuaC