' 1 - ' , - ^ f •s. f. , •* '»«"" 'O • • ' *1 . :-r\..*~ V - ' '. 'j^|-' •*'•*' ;.!*-»>«»t?'* * 4 'J; , JTowambar U, 1912 ,v' ./«' '**: oW' ^V* "T.-~ ;-j} v*J:".,:."/.", "',<",?m •oBxirr rLAnroiAL®*' V-4-.sK*^ 3 f,i' '* r %%*• sp^-- r^-UrJ*' ^/..U '-s / Sr-^f- ~* 'V*- ^ t'?•»/,>v £/ •'• <*'* <« * /j*i^>'S•N.•."-t-.0T s'j '-"^ ' 3"*. *„'• -' s'V.'-. irv*;"'X;^ • >'•. . •' * #• • ' . . >.' v* ,• iV-'--"" *• * t . • • ..- '&?s*n ;#? i by EARL R. WALSH ing and tire conservation have made a change this year. In view of the fact that Woodstock] will have to travel to McHenry vis bus, the lightweight game will stari at 6:46. This will have the big teams swinging into action about 7:46. --you will have to start oat earlier for these games. McHenry will play a return gam# on Jan. 12. Our boys will travel to Fox Lake tomorrow (Friday) night for their first test under Are. :"h That Woodstock game should sttif up enough interest to pack the gym. We have no idea of the relative: strength of the teams this year, but a McHenry-Woodstock game can mean only one thing--a hard battle^ : Right up at the head of the class goes Pete Koob for one of his best bowling performances. The Schaefer alleys report that Pete rolled a 265 game and a 676 series this week. Pete isn't very far from the 600 mark at any time. Bainf one of the most popular bowlers in' these parts, his fellow bowkrs are always pulling for him to come through with a masterpiece such as this one. - Just in ease you hate been depending dn aching corns or your rheumatism to tell you what's cookin' in the weather man's department, we give you the following prediction which Was sent in by Fred Beller. It seems that our contributor has a book many hundreds of years old that forecasts these things with uncanny accuracy. We'll be watching this one: fThe winter of 1942-43 will be a steady cold and very windy one causing many bad fixes. The spring will be fine. The summer very unsettled, followed by a very dry fall. AH seed crops will be poor compared to the year just passed, but there will be plenty of fruit." V* --II-- - 1 Glad to hear from LeRoy Hetternann, as follows: Nov. 11, 1942. EARL R. WALSH, «8* 2 Hear"**-. McHenry Illinois. ' -; Dear Earl:--; . c '••'r'C'.: At dawn thismoraing, T started on a new career. It certainly is going to be full of new experiences. Our days are busy ones, believe me. We need to roll out at 6:30 in the morning and of course the first thing is to make our beds. The planes we fly need to be checked by 7:00. I went up for forty minutes this afternoon and believe me it's wonderful. Of course, it does tickle a bit when you lose altitude: Tonight we have i to go with 'em for as tasty a l«ast classes until 10:00 and after that we as you will ever run into. " . undoubtedly will be ready to sleep. --1|-- ' v An army lieutenant is going to give j In one spot in the house, they in* Us the rules and regulations of life ; stalled a glass door. What did Aider* in service. There is r total of twenty man Buss do but walk smack into it. You doat suppose that big elephant that went rampaging through Indiana was the G. O. P. standard bearer «© the loose, do you? A Chicago newspaper came out the other day with headlines telling ua. that our White Sox have only one outfielder. Loyal as we are to the Sox, we suspected the same thing last •summer. On Tuesday night Mayor Pverton royally entertained members of the city council, city employees and employees of his firm. » --Ik- Now, there was a party! Aftet showing the boys through his beauti* ful new <home, the mayor led hi# guests to clubby quarters in the basement. * -IIWe didnt' have to bring our ownducks-- he had 'em! And everything fellows here, ten army and ten navy So many people asked me to write to them, but at present it appears as though I'll be kept busy and. no weekends off. I'll appreciate your sending the "Plaindealer," and it will be readeach and every word. Yours truly, CADET LEROY WILLIAM HETTERMANN, #•*- -v - --.•«* Kenosha Airport, " T * * Kenosha, Wisconsin. Our contributors have suddenly come to life! Here's one who says, "It pays to advertise": 1 '•/ *A man that has a thing to sell i^;;^; .And goes and hollers down a well, ' 'J "Will never make as many dollars |As he who climbs a tree and "r!# hollers." ' • t/r v-il- Now, here's something for you basketball fans to think about and remember. Pur high school basketball team will play the Woodstock Community High team here Decynber 4 in the first home game of the season. A natural rivalry was built up over a long period of years, but conditions prevented scheduling games between the two teams in recent seasons. -IIWoodstock joined a conference with larger schools and had their schedule filled in recent seasons. Gas ration- Well, no damage was done to either the door or the alderman, so the party went on. It showed that Mrs. Overton shines her mirrors--and also shows that some of these country boys don't get out much. -IIJoe North, city auditor, drove out Tin COUNTY CHAMPS OF IQIA p;v:T * ^ I ' *=- * wf1 > Two tefcpta heat prostrat' production woflcepi this. The "beat tfasf faca$** vitamin C Which phj found effective in proteciing against heat cramps and exhaustion even in places where fefAperataft tops 100 degrees and humidity is oppressively high. Steel mills, .shipyards, ship's engine rooms should benefit especially. Vitamin C is drained from the body in perspiration just as salt is, the latter in tablet form for some time familiar to offices and factories.. . Standing: Henry Miller, Frankie Justen, Ed Boyle, "Babe" Hunter, Alfred Richardson. Francis Bonslett. Seated: Lester Bacon, Coach Dorr, Ed Bonslett. Many of you basketball fans will remember the above pictured group of basketball stars who won the McHenry County basketball championship and acclaim way back when. In The Plaindealer writeup of that time, the names of Jones and Voelts were mentioned for their part in a 21 to 20 victory over Crystal Lake in the BOWLING NEWi-- PALACE Old Timers-- Les Adams anchored his team with a 213 game in a 543 series in beating Rogers' team 2368 to 2339. Rogers was way up there with 217-573. Hold the phone! Let's look this over: George Johnson, 224-657. That's Match-- --•-- Jack Wrublewski's 568 series was tops lor Meister Brau in a match with Sherburne's of Woodstock, last Sunday. K. Johnson was over 200 in each game as he totalled 634 and led Sherburnes to two out of three from the locals. The winners had 2744 pins to 2646 for the losers. Ix>tsa pins! Match- Joe Regner^waa top man with 668 pins as Les Adams. Bob Conway, E. Peisert and Art Krause ran up 2676 pins to beat Grayslake. county finals. •*,tv? That year the boys lost only two games out of 19, with "Ritchie" being the only holdover from the previous sason. One game was lost to Grayslake and another to Byron in the Rockford tournament. Thursday Commercial-- Anchor man Smith's 552 led «* the Old Bridge boys got up on their toes and took three straight from McHenry Laundry. Renner's 528 led the Laundry. Bennett was high man for Kleinhans (489) as they took two from Pragers. Kreutser's 504 put enough' kick in Prager to win one and come within a breath of a tie in another-- missing by one pin. from Chicago for the party and added j'wJ,at gave the Smiths a 2424 to 2374 a lot of fun to the party with his ; I^!n ® Freunds. Capt. Freund stories. (He can also eat dufck with . Carlson pitched a 218 game, to recover frow a bad stact, and hit 518. c. o. F.-- ^ Quite a battle between anchor men as "tUncle Ed" rolled 540 and "Speed" Stilling crowded just two pins behind. Check Weingart rolled a 514 series for the Smith's cause to help put over a victory. Geirge Justen's 503 -serie* led^the Winkel team over Tojjyan's. Mixed • Nick Freuncl started right off with 221 in a 575 series to show the way. Hup Smith's 542 was next in line, for a friendly little game.. When we , Julia Kralowitt led the ladies with pulled out there were so many of! 445 pins. Nice, friendly little league those little colored discs in front of the mayor's chair that he looked like Mr. Chips himself. the best of 'em.) HI- ' You should l^ave seen the mayor taking the biscuits out of the oven! Strictly a he-man party. Not a woman in the house, but plenty of evidence of that feminine touch i& preparing the feast. . Yep. Everything was planned right. £ven to a dozen or so Republicans giving the works to one lonely Democrat. (Just to, keep &ie records Straight--they got it back). Another thing. ^The host had the chips ready and sat in with, the boys It was a fine party. Now Vernon Knox practically insists that the boys go down to his new home in Crystal Lake for a party. Aw, now -- he shouldnt' do that! % White Gardes In Moonlight *, White flowers havfc so many use* ||l the garden. For aesthetic purposes, they serve H peacemakers hat w sen osiers that might otherwise clash. And for gardeners who get most 18-19 TEAR OLD MEN, ENLIST AND CHOOSE BRANCH OF SERVICE in which the boys and girls spend a pleasureable time each Sunday night. 7 O^Clock Ladies-- Rose Freund saw to it that Skellys won two games by bowling a 409 series. Betty Buss rolled a 178 game in 434 and Lu Smith came up with 42S, but Althoffs lost two to Mi Place. 9 O'clock-- RoVena Marshall rolled 502 and was strongly supported by Min Green's 448 and Mildred Kinsala's 170-421 in taking three from Marion's. Marion hit 443 and L. Thennes rolled a 430 series. Agnes Freund's 207-480 sparked the Harvesters in sweeping the series with Barbian's. Lucille Steffes (171- 415) and Julia Kralowitz (176-406) were a btg help, Monday Commercial-- A couple of boys named Strong and Fredrickson, from up Wonder Lake way, were just a little chesty Monday night after their Pabst team knocked over Meister Brau in three straight. Their anchor man, Peisert, was knocking 'em for a loop with 214-593 while their lead-off man, H. Weber, came through with 203-518. What about the Wonder Lake boys? Well, they weren't bad! Pete Koob mifsed 600 by a single pin. Tough, but some fellows dont get many more pins in two nights. , SWIM Court Sayi That Glacier Is Hermann's After years of hearing the evidence, the Swiss courts have finally held that the great Rhone glacier, one of the shrines of the world, is the private property of Dr. Hermann Seller, hotel-keeper at Zermatt. The nature of the title goes far back into Swiss history. In the beginning of the Nineteenth century, Goethe was attracted to the glacier and his glowing accounts of it began to draw climbers and naturalists. Gradually the peasantry, that had regarded the perpetual river of ice as a menace, began to realize that the Rhone was a blessing in dia» guise. In 1830 they erected a small inn near its base, and cut several beautiful grottoes into the ice. The revenues received therefrom were divided among members of an Alpine syndicate according to their pasture rights. The inn was purchased by Alexander Seller in 1857, and developed into a fine hotel. Being anxious to assure a supply of milk, cheese and butter for his guests, while keeping competitors away, Seiler began to buy out the pasture rights of syndicate members, and the practi.de was continued by his son, Joqef. 1900 the Seilers were sole owners of 215 pasture rights. * Herb Simon and "Torch" Krause combined with 518 and 511 as McHenry Beer proved too strong for Althoff's boys. Glende came up with a 170 game in the third game to lead Althoff's in one victory. After warming up with a 142 game, Joe Regner chalked up two games of 216 each, running his total to 574 as his team took three straight from McGee's. Art Tonyan and Bill Rochelle were also in the 500 class. Capt. "Fitz" came roaring through with a 537 series and Jr. Frisby clipped off 562 pins, but in spite of this the Blakes won two games. CHy*l#.;:';. Les Bawm was off gfcrfde in hta first game (128), but came through with Men o{ 1$ and 19, you now have ail outstanding opportunity under new Of their enjoyment from their* a™y re*ulationf; Y?u cari now grounds in the evening hours, white * °nce P*k ^ any OTe of tt?e lowers are very desirable. Viewed th'rteen branches of army service m by moonlight a green and white gar-' ""j1 you wo"W like to serve. After den is indescribably beautiful. Ex- you have "ached twenty, you will no •mine hy moonlight or artificial j *OIifer, ^ave s*c^ a choice. lighting a portion of your own or a I You re «etting th« break because friend's garden that is dominated by !men of a*e are vitally needed white flowers and see how much now in America's fighting army. more effective the ecene is than You've *ot what it takes--mental where colors are used in the garden keenness and enthusiasm adaptability J a 508 series to lead Alexanders to scheme. If* in addition, your flow- 1 tough bodily strength daring and , two wins over the Dairymen. Green's era are fragrant, your pleasure ill jlove of adventure that go into the 525 led the milkmen. Grimmelli was doubled. making of good soldiers. ^ 'another slow starter, getting only Another advantage of white flow- In any branch of the service y°u 1119, then finishing up with 501. «rs is that in many instances they you have excellent training j Paul Gerasch rolled 149 in the third have been found to have much high- an" magnificent modern equipment, to give the Walsh Tigers a 2-pin win er visibility to those with failing Guns, planes, cars, trucks, tanks all and make it two out of three from sight. If you have an elderly per- are the finest used by any army m the Pragers. "Uncle Ed" wasn't up soh in your household whose sight the world. ... , . j to his average, but led with 527. Here is impaired because of age, or if a Ydull have good Mod, good uni- are some worthy scores: Hup Smith, member of your family has poor forms and good pay. You 11 enjoy the 542; jack Thies, 203-514; Ed Tonyan, Vision because of other causes, plant;fine physical condition and the com- Budler, 243-636. a small green and white garden es- radeship of army life. And all the* pecially for his enjoyment. Here, ! time you'll be learning one of the many trades and skills that will equip you for greater earning capacity and future success. , , . 455 series as Bernice's Oasis won two Following are the branches from from Bagt,8 Vr in a cloge matcK> which you may make your choice. ^ v&ri ir]s WOn the 8econd Armored force, cavalry, chemical war- b that narrowegt of margin8_ fare service, coast artillery, corps of | ® . * * r.__• lew nave Been engineers corns of military police, I " p Conway posted a 165 in tuaktenn «ou.•t ooff tthhaatt ccoouunnttrryv aanndd ffuurr- 1^« FJ !?i\ • » • j- 1 j that game and totalled 424 pins, art „ infantry medical de-1 M/Budi,.8 169_456 led McHenry. partment, ordnance depa men , quar- Lumber in two games over McHenry tennaster corps and signal corps ^ Vi 5^^ anchored the Pvt. Jack Wilson of the Rodrford ^ 415 ; , office will be m the postoffice building ; ; in Woodstock between 10:00 a. m. and: - % ' 2:00 p. m., on November 17; and 2#^**** u , and on December 1 for the benefit of ! Jhey can t do that. Nadine Schaefer ; any young men who wish to enlist. ™lls a 201-526 series for Selling's - 156 and gets beat in two games. And j * *. _ Margaret Stilling rolled a 416 series.! Aj°cai Snoot 100 Blame it onto Dorothy Schaefer's J too, fragrance is an added virtue. Storks Mast Stay at Home? The shoe-billed stork or whalehead is considered an ornithological rarity. Coming from a restricted range in Africa, few have ever been ther exportation is now prohibited. Their enormous beaks are very powerful and the hook at the tip is capable of tearing great gashes. Few birds are more deliberate in action and they are perfect examples of slow motion. At the Chicago Zoological park, which probably has the largest number in captivity, visitors often ask if they are stuffed. * SCHAEFERS' McArthur Girls -- * ' ' M. Wilbrandt came through with a Michigan Plans for Hanting Areas Wartime transportation difficulties and lack of time available for visiting distant, hunting grounds have raised new problems for the sportsmen employed in war industries. Recognizing this, the Michigan department ' f conservation is mapping and cla; iifying wastelands to three counties near Detroit with a view to developing good hunting areas near home. Such development work will be financed by Pittman- Robertson funds--raised by the federal excise tax on sporting arms and ammunition--after approval by both atate and federal agencies. Clood burst A cloudburst is a sudden, torrential rainfall lasting a short time and . covering a small area. The term is a popular rather than a scientific one, but some meteorologists apply it to a rainfall of about five inches in 15 minutes. Clouds are composed of tiny drops of water and are not a formation which properly can be described as bursting. A rainfall referred to as a cloudburst may result from the impact of heavy showers against mountain masses or from the weakening ^pf upward currents holding a large kmount of moisture in suspension. * Great Trade Reuto Since the days when trains of pack mules carried Peruvian silver from Panama City to Porto Bella, the IsUimus of Panama has be^n 6ne of the world's great trade routes. After the discovery of gold in California many adventurers sailed from New York to Panama and made their way across the isthmus. instead of going by the overland route in the United States, or sailing around Cape Horn. The Panama railroad, first coast to coast line in America, waa built soon after 1850 to carry these travelers quickly through the dense jungles to the Pacific coast, where they took ship up the West coast, to the gold fields of California. " Tropical Paradise tatms line the gleaming Mil beach at Nassau, and when the northern lands arc shivering in the grip of snow and sleet, the Bahamas are like a veritable tropical paradise. At Nassau, the capital, the water is warm and unbelievably blue, so that the sand looks whiter and the palm trees greener by contrast. The beaches are ideal, sheltered as they are by the jutting coral reefs that surround the island. Read the Want Ads! Boots far .Britain has sent 3,000,000 pairs of hoots to Russia. Mrs. Churchill's Aid to Russia fund has raised over $7,000,000, by means of which the British Red Cross has already sent 500,000 blankets, 250,000 woolen gar* ments and large quantities of medical supplies. British cotton and woolen mills have been, working overtime to produce the clothing needed. PAINT h Dependable Pratt A Lnwbwt P<M and Vamish are a sate investment Cheap finishes are costly at any price. You set your money's worth when you buy P A L Paint and Varnish because they spread farther, look better end leal longer. Come ia lor color card. Buy War Stamp* and Bonds > NICKELS' Hardware Phone 2 :--: West McHenry pvVvV Fencing Streams Saves Wildlife Farmers who fence streams running through their pastures can help improve game and fish conditions by fencing the banks, the Missouri conservation commission announces. This permits the growth of food and cover for wildlife, keeps water clear Pheasants In South Dakota j 489 and b. Weber's 413. _____ Oh--those Schaefer girls! Here's A picture which appeared in the Marilyn with a 406 that led Marion's Crystal Lake Herald last week was Beauty Shop in two games over enough to make local marksmen en- Schaefer's Market. Helen Immekus vious for it was one of four hunters, in the "400" class with one pin 100 pheasants and twelve ducks, over. Vi Schaefer rolled 444 for the most of which (hunters excluded) losers. Now, here's another good score and cool and otherwise improves will be placed in cold storage for fu- tbat doesn't belong to a Schaefer: cMoAnnd^iitiiioAnnes ff/o\Pr fiAshek. ITn n addition, i2ta j ture consump±t i• on. Tpmh. e 1h unters were i JJJ "... stabilizes stream banks. Small sec- Joe Adams, Johnsburg, Joe Weber, McHenry, and Christ Pfeiffer an 1 Oscar Strom of Crystal Lake, wfc > recently returned from Iroquois and tions can, of course, be left open as livestock watering holes. Ptoindealer. Order your Rubber Stampe at The DeSmet, So. Dak, where •ere Match-- v-'-i ' Joe Jackson came up with 219-586 and Dick Conway chalked up 520 as the Pin Boys rolled a total . «£ fl§16 pins in swamping Fox Lake.' PIG ROAST - --^SATURDAY, NOV. 21 FARM HOUSE TAVERN •;'> One mile south of McHenry on Route 31 • Meat . Secretary Agriculture Wickard points out that current shortages of meat are due to unusually large demands for meat supplies for lendlease, our armed Jorces, and increased domestic buying power coming during a period of seasonally light marketing of meat animals. He says that marked improvement may be expected about the last of September when this year's large crop of spring pigs and the range cattle start moving to market. Expect soon to buy your lard, baking powder, and various cooking oils in paper-board cans lined with cello, phane. Resembling the fawitiaf cy~ lindrical ice cream container, the cardboard cans have metal wdi on|y, saving 60 to 80 per cent of tin plate. Another new package destined for your kitchen is the "bagin- boac," a leak-proof cellophane bag formed inside a carton and tightly .•» " .J," » The lnnii1HTnfilE||M of the RAF has been hamme?ing*at all key points in Axis-controlled Europe, with serious effects cm Axis production. Apart from the colossal raids on Cologne and on Essen (the home of the Krupp works), the RAF has bombed Berlin, Milan, the Skoda works in Czechoslovakia, the Renault plant near Paris, Hamburg, Rostock, and Lubeck, Augsburg, and hundreds of other vital production centers and transportation points. Order your Christmas Cards frem The Plaindealer. >»wt W| hav*n'? sa many this year, but what we have are. very good, to be sure of getting yours.. F. Ri FURLOTT 1 mile easf of Spring Grove Tel. Richmond 9110 janonwT-w..... MM ITE HUD XT MM m MEM RYE a m m • ' m m M* "CrS" WMUmEATirr.;..£rs- CMCCEISKAT. .zr* SOY KM BIEM DORIRSr.. ES..._ BFRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES ORANGES Sir" . . . . ~*5« APPLtS 5 J7C DRY 6WIONSfas, . . . 3^ I©8 GRAPEFRUIT RUTAPAGAS jH& ... .. SWEET POTATOES ssr S-Mfc. HAUL 111 FlMr " 11JH IT* „ MAX at. Cam Maeah ! oussas MM. Bakfag Pewter BARMS POWNI CIIimiI ARM A NAMMKII Bakiag Wi™ OOMI ASAIN -f ~ CAKB KOVR nwr«4^7la*t3*SI-46 BUTTER national...ia. 52c . --r- 50^ HAXBL -Sfffc • aMOKTKNIWa SALT ^ 5« SPRY ; . ^ 69* flour xtzr- MAMMLB SUSrSAMOSTtB ^ 111 JuiwFHlL. l--Hatlaw. H vjufcU eNCmfciLeuppi i--imi H« Oatatal. It* DRSMEOJtRY_ Italvw 21t WAUSTSNali OM FRUIT EM FRUIT CAKE... ZZZST' 28t PECAN _ n: Hmtvmm tu wAuunr 'EZIU ALMOW •A Wntiowl . _ sROun SAW_ £? ii« Hctioital _ ^ 89c SEASONING it',.* . »...., .4. . DUZ Stm . . i ,* *'¥' * IVORY FLAKES . . GOLD DIIST . . . . • s r i 7 « ' - . Y , : 3 J : 1