-,\ r<»--* r*,i ;v : , *'4 C-> ,v •» •<K '. THE McHENBY PLAINDEALER Wf^Wm J. -HI »y^i j |!JJ«u.jijj|{|pi|iiijiiihii iifii ip ** 7* ' ^ ^ * R ' > v . * • •\- ;v~V - t1 ~ \ PLAINDEALER | Published every Thursday at M6* jbenry, 111., by Charles F. Rmich. [A. H. MOSSIER Editor and Manager [ Entered as second-class matter at tiie postoffice at McHenry, Hl^ under the act of May 8, 1879. FOR SALE One Year ... Six Month# FOR SALE--Stork iine Bujrpy. Play- ....••if^ M' pen, High Chair and other furniture. ersondls i $100 Mrs. A. Meyer, Stenger subdivision. 1 Phone 223-R. ' *n 5$, Fair Sex Excel In Factory Jobs l)eft Fingers Are Superior in Handling Small Parts v! In War Work. jp?" BUFFALO, N. Y--The women i % ho are being employed in ever- |Increasing numbers by Buffalo war 'factories in many instances are suj^ erior to the men they replace as .electrical workers, mechanical jassemblers, inspectors and welders, jfHfrsonnel managers agree, .Mrs. W. F,! Burke and guest, Mrs. E. H„ Merrick of Milwaukee visited Mrs. William ffonslett at St. Joseph's hospital; Elgin, Monday. Mr? and Mrs. Jack Stadtfeld and Stanley Stadtfeld and friend of Round Lake were callers in the Peter Diedrich home Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Peters of "Milwaukee visited in the home of their daughter, Mrs. George Phalin, and IFOR SALE--Cottage at McHenry; jgrounds? 100 by 100. For information *inqyk*k>f Mrs. Patchen, owner. Phone WinnMka 2134. 3-tf jfamily Sunday. •> 1 ' '1 • f Mr. and 'Mrs. .Donald Hayes and FOR SALE--An eight<-room modern daughter of Chicago were Sunday vishome and garage on Richmond Road, (itorg in the home of Mn} E,len Whjt. near St, Mary's church. A bargain! Call Mrs. John R. Knox.; Tel. 17. 10-tf FOR SALE--Year-'rour.d comfort and economy with fire-proof Johns-Manvilie Type A Home Insulation "Blownin" your walls altid ceilings. Call LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. 20-tf HELP WANTED WANTE3>--Girl for general - housework; cooking and ipwaotfal • laundry. The superior ability of women' a*| C all Pistakee '28:. ^Inspectors has been proved at Fed- ( 11 jjers Manufacturing company, IT»C., , Where 140 examine the links manui^ fcetured by the company to fasten {"Machine-gun bullets to strips, Ed- . aiund R. Walker, general manager, -^asserted. "When we started this work we 1 r '.fan three shifts--two day tricks with T Women workers and a night one with •nen, since women were forbidden / fey the state law to work nights," declared. "After a few months We discovered that the men could | »ot adapt themselves to the work, at which they were much less ef- % 8cient than the women, and we ; abolished the night shift, lengthenbig the line during the daytime, so that we needed to hire only girls." Deft Fingers Needed. Each inspector examines thou- . iands of links a day, the executive asserted. Sensitivity of fingers and HELP WANTED--Girl for waitress work, need not be experienced. Also woman for, work in restaurant. Part time. Karls Cafe, McHenry. Phone 26* • l.-tf WANTED--Cook and one who can also wait on ta'ble. Inquire at Town Club. 11 HELP WANTED--Girl for waitress work; also woman for cook. -. The Bridge, McHenry. Tel. 399. 11 WANTED WANTED--Good Ear Corn. McHenry Flour. Mills. West McHenry,'111. 11 WANTED TO BUY--200 bushels of White Oats. Address: Eugene A. de St. Aubin & Bro., Addison, 111. 11 WANTED TO BUY -- Upright Pia^o attention to detail are important, as i in good condition. Phune 634-M-l.J _gne defective link can cause a ma- 11 «hine gun to jam. Ninety per cent of the girls .employed at Fedders have not worked in a factory before, but have been iafifice workers, nurses, teachers or department store clerks. • At the Buffalo plant of the Bell ^Aircraft corporation, which has employed 39 women since December |3, dress sizes range from 12 to 42-- a range which might be foiyid •on «ny group of department sto^e 'Clerks, typists or housewives. Bell, Aircraft is the first large local com-* ijpany to order uniforms for its women workers, who will wear powder blue tailored jackets and slacks, tiavy blue snoods and sweaters, low heels and no jewelry. Hair nets, low heels and removal of jewelry are requested in factories to pre- j Vent accidents. "Because women's hands are more flexible and they can work more rapidly at small tasks than men, we have found them even better at some of the work than the 'men whom they are replacing," Mrs. Irene W. Paul, women's supervisor, said. Girls Found More Adept. • At the Colonial Radio corporation 7 :plant, where women have been employed for some time in radio as- ;; . isembly, more than 50 per cent of the . employees doing defense work are -women and more will be hired if the •iactory loses large numbers of its • t men to the army and navy, Charles •V'; J. Kolb, manager of industrial relaxations, said. "Small assembly such as we do here requires nimbleness of fingers and is too monotonous for men," . Miss Joan Gillan, president of Local 'S01 Auxiliary, United Electrical and 'Radio Workers, asserted. "The girls are quicker and more adept than men at spot welding, coil winding and soldering." Trico Products corporation, formerly a manufacturer of windshield .wipers, is turning to defense work - and employing more than 50 per cent women, Mrs. Lena H. Cooling, personnel director, said. "This isn't a new policy, for we have always employed more women •. than men," she added. "The tiny parts used in windshield-wiper assembling necessitated nimble »nd sensitive fingers." LOST LOST -- Billfold containing several valuable papers and some currency, on Sunday, Jan. 26, on Riverside Drive, McHenry. Reward rif returned intact. Walter S. Aufrecht, 1921 South GroveJ Ave., Berwyn, 111. IT ANIMALS WANTED DEAD OR ALIVE ANIMALS $1.00 to $15.00 Cash Cows - Horses - Hogs No help needed for loading! | >ng. i Mrs. Genevieve Guthrie of Waukegan called at the Peter Diedrich home one day last week. Mary Dolores Young of Waukegaaa is visiting her grandmother, Mrs. J. Walsh, this week. Mr. and* Mrs. Howard Phalin of WiJmette and the latter's sister, Mrs. Geo. MtCue of Evanston, Wyo., visited in the John Phalin home last Sunday. Arthur Boger and son, David, of Chicago were Sunday visitors in the home cf Mrs. Kathryn Boger. David remained for & longer visit with his grandmother. Miss Ethel -*^CHIeaKeo caller Tuesday. :v ":i'. -fV Mayor and Mrs. R. I. Overton visits ed their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. R. Ben "Jones in St. Louis, Mo. Mrs. Jones returned home with them Sunday to spend several weeks. Mrs. Eleanor Foley and daughter, Julia, and son, Martin, left Tuesday morning for Cleveland, Ohio, where they will spend several weeks. Warren Smith of California and Gerald Smith of Libertyville visited in the Peter Diedrich home one day recently. Frances Michels of Chicago visited in McHenry last week and attended the funeral of Joseph J. Michels.' The i Misses Mary Ann Costello and Mary Margaret Westerman returned to their homes in Elgin Sunday after spending a vacation with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Walsh <• Mrs. Margaret Rasmussen and uncle, Andrew Kerns, of Chicago were McHenry visitors Saturday. Shirley Walsh and Diane Stanley of Fox Lake are spending a week visiting the former's aunt and unble, Mr. and Mrs. Alfons Adams. Mrs. Caroline Schiessle, was a Chicago caller this week. William Sutton, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Sutton, who" was inducted into service several weeks ago, is now stationed at Camp Swift, Texas. Mrs. Harry Anderson and daughter, Carol, of Chicago are visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. John Phalin, Mary and Helen Knox, who are enand daughter and Cletus Alth^ff oi Chicago spent- the weekend in the Louis Althoff home. Paul Kamholtz of Chicago is spending his vacation r visiting his parents: in McHenry. Harry Schmidt was a Chicago visitor over the weekend; * « Miss Louise Walsh was a weekend guest of relatives in Grayslake. Mrs. Catherine Maher and son, John, and John C. Knox of Chicago were visitors in ,the home of Kathryn and Thomas McLaughlin last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Quinlan of Chicago called on friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Buch have been enjoying a trip through Wisconsin. ^ Mr. and Mrs. George May ajid | daughter, Shirley, of Chicago were j recent visitors in the Scheid - Kennebeck home. i The Math Freund family and the . former's father, Nick Freund, have been enjoying a trip through Wiscon- j -sin and Iowa. t . | Miss Jacqueline Stickels of Grayslake and Mi6s Arlene Goss of Chicago are spending the week , with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Ahrens., Mr, and Mrs. William Osborne and Mr. and Mrs. Williafti Mahh of Elgin were Sunday visitors of Kate S|(d Tom McLaughlin. i v.":. 'J-1-" Policemen'Ham'Operators Providence, R. I., has <*made its "ham" radio operators full«tf}edged but unpaid members of the police department in setting up ail emergency communications system f6r air raid work. - The amateur operators have been sworn into the Providence police mobile radio patrol, making them eligible to operate the police radio equipollent as well as their own during an air raid, should telephone communications be bombed out or otherwise damaged.' The city "emergency" network is composed of eight short wave sta- I tions each of which will have a "walkie-talkie" trar smitter and re- ! ceiver set that can be packed on the j back of a station stall member. Such a staff member on air raid patrol could report from any damage scene I to the district station, which would I relay the message to the report center for counter-action by the various ' protective services. I Doctors Report Success < In 'Cleansing* Blodi ; A new blood treatment to stop asthma and boils was reported to the Pan-American Homeopalthic Medical congress. Dr. Raymond E. Seidel of Philadelphia declared in a report that it is possible to treat such diseases by drawing blood from a patient submitting it to ultra-violet light irradiation for as little as ten seconds and putting it back into the veins in a continuous process. Studies at the Hahnemann hospital in Philadelphia indicate the light treatment causes toxins and viruses in the blood to becoroe harmless, Dr. Seidel asserted, and kills or stops the growth, of bacteria, thus stopping such diseases as asthma, boils and similar skin ailments. The treatment of blood flowing through an artificial vein is similar to the irradiation of the air in an operating room with ultra-violet light to kill disease germs. With this method even a few stray germs on a surgeon's gloves or his instruments are destroyed within a few seconds to assure a completely sterile operating .field and avoid post-opera- Jive infections. The blood irradiation method has resulted in a great reduction of skin damage, Dr. Seidel declared. The blood thus is able to carry more oxygen to body cells to promote healing. Circulation also is improved by expansion of small blood vessels. Prompt and Sanitary Serriee Day and Night. Sundays and Holidays i joying vacations this week, are visit- Phone Wheeling 102--Reverse Chargfci DEAD STOCK WANTED We pay cash with silver dollars that clink. 5 to 25 for dead or alive horses and cows. Highest prices paid for hogs, sheep, calves. Prompt day or night service, including holidays. Farmers Rerdering Service. Crystal Lake 8003Y-1. We pay phone charges. 5-26 MISCELLANEOUS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR DEBTS contracted by anyone but myself. G. F. Peterson. WHEEL BALANCING, WHEEL ALIGNMENT--For maximum tire wear, smoother riding and safe driving have your car checked by our New- Balanee Master and Manbee alignment gauges. KNOX MOBILXiAS STATION, 100 Grant St., Crystal Lake, 111. Phone 77, > . 2-tf COMPLETE FLOOR SERVICE -- Floor sanding and reftnishing with Dura Seal. Also asphalt tile for bathrooms, kitchens, business places; and beautiful Marlite in assorted colors for kitchens and bathroom walls; also commercial buildftigs. Ijenning Newman, 932 Marvel Ave., Woodstock, I1L Phone 131. .. 42-tf GARBAGE COLLBCTING -- Let us dispose «f your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. . Seasonable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 365 or 631-M-l. 11-tf Famous Dewey Flagship Is Sent to Scrap Heap HONOLULU.--The old U. S. S. Baltimore, former flagship and a famous member of Admiral Dewey's squadron in the war against Spain, made her last voyage to aid the new war against Japan. The famous old fighting ship was towed from Pearl Harbor to the dock here of the Hawaiian Machinery Salvage corporation, which bought her for scrap when bids were opened in Washington December 16. The navy retained first option on any of her salvaged gear which may be sold. CHIROPODIST -- Dr. R. Kahn will be at Gladstone's Department Store, McHenry. next Wednesday afternoon and evening^ Phone 182 lor appointment. •11 COMING EVENTS You Furnish Bride and They Will Do the Rest UjiALLST^AD, PA. --When Justice of the Peace William Clayton Carl marries a couple, he provides the trimmings in the form of ice cream, cake and flowers. The newly weds love it. Carl originated the custom when he first took office. Since then he has performed 1,000 ceremonies. Mrs., Carl gathers the flowers from the gardens surrounding their home. Old War Boots Given | Up in U. S. Defense Pool P^TTSFIELD, MASS.--Shoemaker John CagtelJo believes 4te was well Within his rights in giving" the aluminum-for-defense drive a" pair of alumihum soled shoes. _ Above Castello's bench is a sign rteading "Not Responsible for Goods Left Over 30 Days." When a committee member visited his ghop, Castello handed out the boots l#ft by a member of the German army for repairs 22 years ago. July 31 . Christian Mothers -- Regular . Meeting. . Red Cross -- High School -^-llffottthly Meeting. ] AugWSt 1 vjfc.-:. St. John's Church -- Johntiburg -- Dinner and Carnival!*- * 4 • Aagbst .4 ; '*%• • Fox Rfver Valley C&mfi', Ri-N. A. -- Regular Meeting. •" >' . Johnsburg Community CIiA^ ' , August 8 • H* ' • ( Five Hundred Clifl* -- Mrs. Rttee Miller. '* vv•" East River Roa# ESmxhle Ctufc -- Mrs. Geoi-ge Glos. . . v \ Afternoon Bunco Clqtpi-- Kinspar ~ ugust f" Lily LakeJPf-T. A- --, Schoolhottse -- 80p.m/ r/ August 8r9 St. Mary's Church r- Cionef ^lmd Carnival. • * August 13 St. Clara's Court -- Regular Meeting -^ St. Mary - St, Patrick H,aU. Augdst 16 Sunday Nighters -- Community Methodist Church, ' \ August 20" JXiV •• Red Cross -- County Meetin^r** High School. ^ Jlfad the Want Ads! ing at Madison and the Dells, Wiscon- Mrs. Albert Vales, daughters, Marie and Dolores, spent Saturday in Chicago where they visited Albert Vales, Jr., prior to his leaving for selective service. He is stationed at Fort Sheridan at the present time. Mr. and Mrs. George Sterling and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Biggy of Chicago called on friends here Sunday. Mrs. Jack Leslie, who has been visiting friends here for several days, left Tuesday for her home in Los Angels. Last Sunday she visited Barrington friends, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Lester Adams. Private William Hay, who i$ stationed in Tampa, Fla., is enjoying a furlough at his home here. M rs. John Bolger and children attended the wedding of a friend at Pecatonica last Saturday. Dolores Vales is spending this week visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Vales in Chicago. Lieut. I. H. McPherson and wife and daughter of Long Beach, Calif., spent a day last week visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fleischfresser at Lily Lake. Mrs. Fred Cooley and sister, Mrs. H. L. Love of Richmond, are spending a few weeks at Paw Paw Lake in Michigan. Mrs. Annabel Aicher and brother, Leo Heimer, are enjoying a cruise on the Great Lakes. Mr. and Mrs. Matn Laures and daughter, Mary Jane, who is. on vacation from her duties at St. Joseph hospital in Elgin, and their son. Jack, are visiting reftort at Fav Lake, Wis. Mrs. Edith Hayes and son, Dick, ot Chicago spent several days last week visiting her mother, Mrs. Ellen Whiting. Miss Pauline Pufahl of . Lake Geneva and Miss Helen Welch of Woodstock visited relatives in_ MlHdnry last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Hagedorn and children, Patsy, Dickie and Jimmjk of Chicago are spending several weeks vacation at the Hagedorn cottage at | McCullom Lake. Cynthia Woll of Wilmette has been visiting her cousin, Gerry Carey. John Glosson of Camp Custer, Mich., has been visiting his parents before being transferred* to a camp in Texas. Mr. and Mrs.'Kenneth Marshall and' children of Crystal Lake visited Mrs. Agnes Marshall last weekend. Mr. and Mrs. James Watterton of Chicago, former McHenry residents, visited Miss Christine Adams last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beckenbaugh wiui you Ah+W&A WAR BONDS Cause of Pern's Infertileaess ; The seacoast of Peru is a desert of rock and sand, because no rain clouds liom the Atlantic can cross the high Andean summits, while the cold paters of the Humboldt current sweeping up from the Antarctic make the winter climate foggy and dismal-- and winter in this latitude means the time from June to August. Yet Peru lies entirely within the tropics, and wherever there is water along the otherwise barren coast, the soil yields rich returns. Each river valley, every irrigated section, is green with fields of cotton, sugar-cane, corn, vineyards and fruits. ^ DEBUNKER By John Harvey Furbay, Ph.D. THERE'S NO Hitler found out that his high powered mechanized and motorized army bogged down in the snow and mud of the Russian Winter. Although our Army is largely mechanized the cavalry horse is still a highly essential factor in this mounted division and in the Field Artillery. The Army also maintains remount farms where many cavalry] horses are bred and raised. psychologist H. H. Newman of the University of Chicago* has made extensive studies of the*, popular notion that twins think alike and react emotionally in the same way. Other psychologists have also stud' ied this. They agree that there is nothing to the idea; that identical twins reared apart show no more similarity of thinking or acting than other people If they are reared together they may have grown tq think in much the same way, but this was because they were together so much, and not betause they were twins. If reared apart they show wide differences in all mental and emotional traits. (Ledcer Syndicate--WNU Service.) Ifeese select horses cost from $10Q to $165 and our crack cavalrymen are expert riders and carry on the traditions which have followed the cavalry from the earliest days of the Army. Purchase of War Savings Bonds will insure good mounts for the Cavalry. You and your neighbors buying War Bonds and Stamps regularly every pay day can help buy these horses for the U. S. Cavalry. Invest at least 10 percent . jwyi iacoiiii in "'si Bss4s. .>• .U.S. Trnumry Dolly Madison, Hostess. Ijiolly. Madison acted in this ca£; pacity. As 'a young widow Dolly Payne Todd married Congressman James Madison who became secretary of state in 1801. This made his wife an important social figure and since President Thomas Jefferson was a widower he frequently asked Mrs. Madison to preside as hostess ~at the White House during his two terms. In 1809 her husband became President and served two terms. Gold Star Mothers -The Pilgrimage act of May 18, 1930, provided for an appropriation of $5,500,000 to cover the cost of the pilgrimage to Europe of the Gold Star Mothers. Nineteen parties of mothers were sent across by the government. Sales Tax • • South Carolina had a sales tax in operation 111 years ago. Eskimos Have Almost Perfect Teeth; Chew Food The modern Eskimos are giving scientists a clue as to what biological conditions are. The Eskimos have a frightfully unbalanced diet, live in unhygienic conditions, and apparently do not give their jaws or teeth much attention. But t$ey have almost perfect teeth. Scarcely one Eskimo out of a hundred has a decayed tooth, while four out of five civilized white men have several decayed teeth. The secret seems to be in the Way the Eskimos chew. They have to chew or starve to death. The walrus and other meats on which they live are about as tough as elephant hide. An'Eskimo is busy all day long chewing his food to soften it enough to be swallowed. Sometimes they put the children to work on this softening process, having the youngsters chew the food until it is soft enough for the older persons to swallow without work. This man-sized chewing assignment results, in- the development of powerful jaw muscles, a healthy jaw bone, and good teeth. The average Eskimo, for instance, has a force of over 300 pounds in his bite. In contrast, the typical American can bite with a maximum strength of Only around 125 pounds. These are not guesses, bat scientific figures obtained by the use of a gnathodynanometer which register*, the strength of a bite. Obviously an Eskimo would be a tough adversary in a biting match, but the important thing is how this continual workout of heavy chewing improves jaw and teeth. The teeth benefit since they are squeezed up and down a fraction of an inch in their cushions on each bite. This gives a sort of a suction action, like a plunger in an electric washing machine, which souses the root up and down in the vital juices and improves the nutrition of -ibe tooth itself. Thursday, July 30,1942 j AN ORDINANCE/ Corpuscles, Not Plasma, • / • Determine Type of Blood Blood plasma is simply JjJood,with the corpuscles removed. The present technique, which reduces it to powder form for convenience and preservation, is less than a year old. A .unit contains enough plasma for a transfusion, with the required accessories--including distilled water (with which the plasma is mixed), rubber tubing and needles. The Red Cross takes b}ood from volunteer donors and has handled 11,000 in the New York district alone. Blood taken from donors is refrigerated and sent tb a laboratory, where it is tested for contamination or disease. Then the corpuscles are removed by centrifugal action. That leaves a clear, straw-colored liquid which "matches" all types orblood --because the corpuscles, not the plasma, determine the type. The human'body can make up a corpuscle- deficiency far moi% quickly than it can supply plasma. The liquid plasma is quick-frozen and dehydrated in a vacuum. The resulting powder is ready for use at any time by mixing with sterile water and it will keep for at least five years. Sealed in flasks, it readily may be packed without wasting spac* and shipped anywhere. « AN ORDINANCE MAKING THB ANNUAL APPROPRIATION FOB THE McHENRY TOWNSHIP FIRB PROTECTION DISTRICT. IN THE COUNTY OF McHENRY AND STATE OF ILLINOIS, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR BEGINNING MAY 1, 1942,^ AND ENDING APRIL 3U. 1943. BE IT ORDAINED by the Pie# dent and the Board of Trusteed of tfe* McHenry Township Fire Protectisa District: • i SECTION 1; That the following" sums, or so much thereof as shall be authorized by law, are hereby appropriated to defray all necessary proper expenses of the McHenry Township Fire Protection , District of the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning May 1, 1942, and ending April 3Q. 1943. 1. Administration Expenae .. , Fund---- or printing, postage,. •_ . and miscellaneous office T T : Supplies .................I..........if 21 Fire Equipment Replaipe- ; ment Fund 1,500.(00 3. „ Salai y Fund-- 1/. :$l Salaries of Trustees >'b. Attorney's L L y . - • f e e s 2 5 O J 0 0 - Fire chief and firemen l,500.<|tt 4. Fire Protection Fund--- , For the purchase of,fire " • protection equipment l,&OOlMK For Repairs .»..v...... 7G0&6 For Gasoline and Oil ....... 300.00 Ta* Anticipation Warrant and Interest -" 84&M For Miscellaneous, conti^-'r'"7vrr3 gent .and general ex- J.; penses, unforeeseSn gnd"""'".""-:- not included in any abovg . . •* items 500j09 4tV.OO -V:; ^ • Dig for Their Sapper Because of the heavy winter in Siberia reii«leer are digging away •now to a depth of two feet in search of moss for food. • ' / $7,640.09 SECTION 2. That the unexpended balance of any item or items of any appropriation made by this Ordinance, may be guaranteed in making up any deficiency in any item or items undor the same general appropriation and for the same general purpose or in s^ likj» appropriation made by this (fc1" dinance. SECTION 3. This Ordinance shall take effect and be in full force front and after its passage and publication as provided by law. ANTON M. SCHMITT, President of the McHenry Township Fire Protection '2 District. s~ • Attest: . JOSEPH M. REGNER, Secretary. Approved: ' VERNON J. KNOX, Attorney. Passed: July 21, 1942. Approved: July 21, 1942. Published: July 30, l?# ; r V Vernon J. Knox, Attorney NOTICE OF CLAIM DATE Bstate of Ettie K. Cooney, Deceased. Notice is herey given to all persons that September 7th, 1942, is the claim date in the estate of ETTIE K. COONEY, Deceased, pending in the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. MARTIN COONEY, Administrator. (Pub. July 30 - August 6- 18) ways to with your Gas Range! Don't waste fuel. After a liquid hu started to boil, you can save by turning the sts down to "simmer he»t" without lowering the temperature of the liquid. Plan economical "oven meals" Mt leasi twice a week. Cook an entire dinner in the oven -- you'll find menus in many cookiog columas and cook booki. DIVORCE SUIT Alice Klapper of Fox River Grove filed suit for divorce against Raymond R. Klapper in the circuit court last week. They married August 28, 1931. Excessive use of intoxicating liquor is charged in the complaint. Rubber Stamps at The Plaindealer . PURCHASE PROPEI^f. i Dr.* ai«r Mrs. L, B. Murphy have purchased the late Anna Karls property on Park street aod -$re moving into the housa this week. - ; I Acceptably ,1 Directors Hie McHenry 103-R Residence, McHenry 112-W Green Street, comer ^ McHenry lANY people these days ace seeking new methods of saving money.The most satisfactory savings plan, they find, is the one.tliat systematically cuts down txpmsts without cutting down Irttmefits. •- Here are six proved ways of cutting down cooking expense on your gas J&nge -- while the nutritive value of Jour meals is actually improved. For instance, "waterless cooking", made possible by the correct use of your gas cange, keeps the vitamins and minerals you pay ft* m tbt fud, where they belong. Tear this out of your paper--post if • near your gas range--and you'll soon note the effect of the savings, both in money and in nutritious melds! . FQRyKrroitf • NiTtn STATE!, _ WAK SAVINGS BONOS Don't let burner* get clogged up. If something boili over, be sute to clean the burner ]before using it again - driwrwu«, itjmay Dot operate efficiently--^-/ Onie a week, serve s iheaper cut of meat, roasted at low retfnper- .arure to save fuel and prcvetIC 'shrinkage* Cook vegetables in • minimum amount of water. * I se ughi < i *t tfi! r«rs * 'th straight sides. This conserves heat, saves gas. Provides" waterless cooking",which retains natural vitamins in food. Use your gas range for canning and preserving during seasons whea certain foods are cheap . . . ot foe saving foods right from your gatdea. GASA"u ELECTKIC COMPANY. iiri'-.-i.«* "-V