Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Dec 1942, p. 6

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S'sfK Void TW15NTY years ago •J • ,* i»- , '4;r -Xt ; r: ~ 'f ros IKBSMY PLAINDEAUR •>>' SIXTY YEARS AGO . R. Wait®, who has been bufW!nr * house for A. Hankins in Indiana,^ finished "his job and came home last week. i , H. H, Nichols will give a nice pail with every quart or pint of bulk oysters you buy of him. A social event of more than ordinary interest occurred at McHenry, Dec. 13, in the marriage of John Der* mont, of Richmond, and Miss Sarah Parkfer, daughter of Winslow Parker, formerly of McHenry. 'First Planters' Landed In Virginia April 26, 1607 The "First Planters" of "the Southern Colony of Virginia" landed at Cape Henry on April 26, 1607. Crowded aboard three small shire-- the Sarah Constant (100 tons), the Goodspeed (40 tons), and the Discovery (20 tons) -- the colonists sailed from London on December 19, 1606. Sir Christopher Newport, master of the Sarah Constant, "a mariner well practiced frit the western was commander Th# first lero weather Arrived tfffi Arst of the week and since that time £•/ ' H has kept many of us busy shovel- ^ _ ing coal. r . John R. Knox, the local agent, has been exhibiting one of' the new four- J door Ford sedans during the past week. The machine is easily the /classiest ever'turnd, out by the Ford part Am erica/ ^ptotor company. .... • ; vjn chief of the fleet. «?.• : Walter J- Freund, ttondu^ts a | Qn April 20, the fleet having been •uicanizing shop in tne Laures block rjding ouf a storm for the last week, ^ on Mam street, left last nignt for captajn Newport took soundings, hut Cincinnati, Ohio, and expects to be in Vain, writes Joseph Reed in the away from his pl&cd of business .on.*; j Richmond - Times-Dispatch. They HI after the New Yjear. ^ \ j were again taken each day until • ^ - The new oil filling ' station being April 26, when at four o'clock in the ?•'; «rected west of the railroad tracks morning land was sighted. t On-Waukegan street'by M. L. Worts, ^ k now all enclosed. It will probably jv be some time' before.i$e be readyifor occupancy. W: •THIRTY YEARS AGO Concerning the landing, Capt. George Percy writes: "The sameday we entered into the Bay of Chesupioc (Chesapeake) directly without any let or hindrance. There we landed and discovered a little way, but we could find nothing worth the speaking of, but large meadows and goodly tall tree* with such fresh {Rationing of Gasoline \ Affects Tourist Trade Touring in the gasoline-rationed East this summer will have to be : limited to the distance which motorists can travel with the gasoline obtained with their "A" ration cards, the Office of Price Administration has warned. This applies to automobile owners who live outside the 17 eastern states where rationing has been put into effect, as well as to those who reside inside the rationed area. In order to save as much of the East's limited petroleum supply as ^possible for essential use, the card rationing plan must drastically rescript the travel of .the pleasure, or non-essential, driver, OPA officials {tainted out. Tourists from outside the ' 17 i rationed states will be subject tq the same regulations when they enter the rationed area. Signs along the highways at all entry points will direct visitors to apply at the nearest rationing board for a ration card. Service station attendants will be able to give information regarding the location of these boards. The board will be authorized to issue such visitor an "A" ration card promptly, except in the case of ; those entering the area on business. Such excepucns will be eligible for ; cards that will provide for their needs. But the vacationist, as Well as all other pleasure drivers^ will be able to obtain no more rations than do the same class of drivers ! in the rationed area. ; ,, - ppsf^sf| Jail 50,000 Jews fn Old Fortress •'We* Miss Lydia Tietz is the recipient of beautiful set of furs sent to her as Christmas present from her brother waters running through the woods who is doing service in the navy and at' the present time stationed at New Orleans, La. Operations on the Barbian Bros, new building, which,has been in the as I was almost ravished at the first sight of." With Captain Percy, who made that visit ashore on the first -day, were some 32 other colonists. "At course of construction during the past night," according to Captain Percy, few months, ceased • last week and work on same will not be resumed until ea:ly next spring./ ' The Schoenhoefen Brewing company placed a new light delivery Wagon into service here on Monday of last week. J. J .Buch has rented the new cot-' ta.ee that has just been completed by IjT. A. Huemann on Court street and will move his familv therein just as ^oon as the Schoenhoefen Brewing O&rrtpany takes possession of the Buch Rummer resort. J FORTY YEARS AGO I ; ' __ ' r The three large oak trees which r>d on the corner lot just north of J. Walsh's warehouse have been femoved and converted into stove i food. I •- M. J. Walsh has put in two of the ! flfcO oandlepower pressure lamps at ! lis store which illuminates the place •Hlliantly. « Popular prices at the New Year .ball to be given by th£ M. W. A. Bag- «Nre and horses cared for free. ' Mr. and Mrs. Max Klein are occupying the rooms On the second story e£ John Heimer's building on Elm Street. "when we were going aboard, there came the savages (five in number) creeping upon all fo^rs, from the hills (sand dunes), like bours with their bows in their mouths, hurt Capt. Gabriel Archer in both his hands and a sailor in two places of his body very dangerous. FIFTY YEARS AGO tr " * * A. L. Howe has his hay press in j J? panning order, and is busy every day ] .lis the week. • » ' * V 1E. Lamphere & Son have opened • •• new meat market in the Nichols block, and are prepared to furnish j • jrou meats of all kinds, fresh or salt. ...lliey have a neat and tasty shop. . A beautiful Christmks tree with ap- . „ jjropriate exercises and Santa Claus, ! Will be at the Universalis church Saturday evening. f Hie weather, has been cold for the P*st week and the roads are greatly •„ improved. < Benzopurpurine Found 'Fugitive' by Chemist# '-^9iiinzopurpurine\a multi-syllable threat at double talk, has been revealed as the reason behind the impermanent blush discovered in some of the red cotton garments folks are wearing these days. According to American"'Institute of Laundering research experts, it's a dyestuff in the "fugitive" class. That means, it is subject to fading and bleeding. And, it's allergic to a few of the things you yourself probably like--such as grapefruit and lemon juices. Good, honest perspiration affects it, also. Should you be wondering whether you're sporting a benzopurpurinedyed creation, just get careless some morning with your grapefruit and catapult a few drops on your nifty red cotton flannel shirt. If the point of contact turns blu£--eureka! Benzopurpurine has come down to breakfast with you. The color change is caused by the fact that benzopurpurine Is blue when on the "sour" side and red when alkaline. Your shirt win regain its ruddiness if sufficient alkalinity is introduced in the launder* ing process. Makers of Furniture Produce War Goods Airplane trainers and gliders instead of wooden office desks; ammunition boxes instead of metal letter-trays and waste baskets; and airplane fuel lines instead of chrome plated chair legs--this is the story of the conversion program for the furniture industry, the country's second largest producer of consumers' durable goods. The industry in normal times produces metal and wooden furniture for the home and the office valued at about $1,000,000,000 annually, second in dollar value to consumers' goods only to the automobile- industry. Today, makers of furniture all over the country are rapidly changing over their tools and facilities not only to the production of wooden airplanes and gliders, but to a wide variety of other war items. Prime contracts and subcontracts held by the industry exceed $500,000,000. Appreciable increases in ' the rate of production of war goods are expected to be evident by the end of 1942. The rate of war production by the middle of next year is expected to be equal to the recent annual production of civilian items. War equipment soon to be produced in quantity by metal fiuni- ! ture companies includes ammuni- ! tion boxes, tail and wing assemblies j for airplanes, rear fln struts, and ! seating equipment for planes, tanks i and ships. The industry, of course, ! will continue to make types of metal furniture needed by the armed services here and abroad. Sick Are Dfing Like Flies in Underground Dungeons. LONDON.--Fifty thousand Jews from Germany and Czechoslovakia have been thrown into the Austro- Hungarian fortress at Terezin and several thousand who are ill or charged with "criminal" acts are in underground dungeons where they are "dying like fliefe," a Czech gov* ernment spokesman said. I Everyone sleeps on damp floors and each is given only enough food to keep alive. "All hope for them has been abandoned," the spokesman said, adding that Jewish leaders in the Czech protectorate had received demands from the Nazis to prepare 15,000 other Jews for deportation. The Spokesman said the Germans had launched a campaign to exterminate Jews f^om the protectorate arid that of 40,000 Jews formerly in Prague only 15,000 now remain.' The JeWs at Terezin are said to include 7,000 young men and women who are forced to work on farms or build barracks. Outside fortress walls thousands of other Jews live in concentration camps where conditions are said to be "horrible." A European observer said the Germans planned to exterminate the Jews, not - only in Europe but throughout the world. "Extermination is the word," he said, "with a little torture thrown in to gratify the higher nature of the metaphysical and mystical Germans." He declared the Nazis had executed 2,000,000 Jews in the past three years and that hundreds of thousands of others had been deported from Germany, Poland, Czechoslovakia and other European countries. CASUAL?* " * \v: »> ' J* wl-in?. «iir M*K»mber24, 1942 •N.V Too Much Salute, Not f Enough Shoot, Say Indians FORT DEVENS, MASS.-Indian soldiers stationed at this fort, itching to go on the modern warpath against the Axis, have one goodnatured complaint -- "too much salute, not enough shoot!" That was the war cry- among more than 1,000 tribesmen from Oklahoma, New Mexico and other states as Massachusetts observed "Indian day" in recognition of the aid the Redmen gave to the white pioneers of the Bay colony. Since Massachusetts now has only a comparatively few of her own to honor, the presence of the Devens warriors gives the state its greatest population of Indians since the days of the Puritans. Sea Gull Crirket Rafern 178 Eggs Per Bird Fourteen Ohio poultrymen co-operating' in the profitable egg program obtained an average annual production of 178 eggs per bird. The hens required an average of 127 pounds of feed for the year. Building Paper for Lining Walter L. Bluck, Clinton county agricultural agent, reports local farmers are lining corn cribs with roofing or building paper to provide storage for grain and soybeans. Ear corn will tie put in cribs made of fence or other material^ Raid Schedule During the year which followed the fall of France, the RAF made more than 1,500 rai^s over Germany and German occupied Europe, dropping 20,000 tons of bombs in one period of six months from April to October, 1941. Now Have Taste for Fish SALT LAKE CITY.--The city's sea gulls are on probation for failing to uphold the dignity of their ancestors. The birds have stripped aD the goldfish from the pool around Sea Gull monument, dedicated to gulls which saved early Utah pioneers' Crops from a cricket invasion in 1847. Official* said the pool would be restocked to give the gulls another chance to uphold the usefulness of their ancestors. Until recently Jbe birds dM Mt bother the fish. I : ."I PRIVATE WAR M British to Penalise ? Those Who Destroy Rags LONDON.--Severe penalties for those who destroy rags, rope or string Were ordered today by the British government, ranging up to> $2,000 fine or two< years* imprisonment. •*The ministry of supply said hundreds of thousands off tons of rags Were needed as raw material to make equipment tor the armed forces. All rags, rope- and string *nust be kept separately and not only must not be destroyed, but must not be thrown into gjaorbage cam <<r refuse bins. A girl rushed tip to #tl1fi(l'arest policeman. "Please," she sobbed, "will you come and lock a nasty man up?" "What's he been doing?" asked the policeman, kindly. "Oh, he's broken my hoop with his nasty bicycle." "Has he?" said the constable. "Well, where is he?" "Oh, you'll easily catch him," explained Winnie, triumphantly. "They just carried him into that hospital." Don't Believe It A spectre is a man who cheers a football team. Meteors tell you how much gls you are using. A hill is a piece of land with its back up. At a wedding, spaghetti is thrown about. . A riian who lives to be a'hundred is called a centipede. A cataract is a thing for throwing Attitude of the roiumiiMj Before any attempt is made to establish a small hospital or a medical center, it is important to educate the local public to the need for such an institution and to enlist their support and co-operation. How the building is to be financed and who will pay its operating costs are * ripp questions which should be faced be- Airrn fore any attempt is made to build. • u An intelligent and public-spirited committee should be chosen whose duty it will be to get definite answers to the following questions: (1) Does the community favor a medical center project? (2) Can a suitable site be agreed upon and secured? (3) What will it cost, or is there a citizen who will donate the site? (4) Is the county, or other local unit willingana able financially--to levy a sufficient tax to. build and maintain the center? (5) Is there a person or group of persons available who can be trusted to administer the center properly? If such questions can be answered satisfactorily, and if the community is whole-heartedly behind the project, then it will be safe to proceed with the establishment •f an adequate medical center. Fifty MQQisa Since 1778 th* American forests have produced 2,200 billion, board feet of lumber--enough to build SO million homes, 12 million farms, two million schools and libraries, 600,000 churches and 400,000 factories. ins, & - ' ' •£ 'P' ^ FARM ue* INSURANCE I EARL R. WALSH • S Presenting Reliable Companies Wea yoa need insarance of _ . Phone 43 or 118-M Green & Elm McHemfi : SF-' • r, Portable Little Mary Ellen was suffering from toothache and her fathier, hoping to cheer her up, asked:/ "What would you like me td give you for your birthday next week?" "You might give me some teeth like mamma's so I can take them out when they ache,", answered the child. ~ , . "fe your son happily married Jim?" "He sho' is, Boss. He's done got a wife daftikin handle all de l^utuify he kin git her." \ Another Pun -^What-wss-tho Tnatter with that quartet singer?" "He met with a baseball accident" "Baseball accident?" **3T«o; he died on the basai** Privacy She's stopping at the Mountain* House, But great seclusion seeks; She shrajv dresses in the dark. Because the mountain peaks. CnnvenMt feudt/' one parson advised another who was not feeling so fit. "Toqi can't eat too much fruit." "Actam did/' wths the laoooic re- Fi--HLfal "Db yoo intend to stay away long on your vacation?"' "I dbn't know just how long. 1 shall stay 50 bucks- at the seashore andi 30* bucks at tlire mountains." XW. BOM -- - it*'- OS 4W1LI THI NDER THIS FLAG, THOMAS W.DOBB LED THE PEOPLE'S ARMY OF R.I. IN THE DO/7/9 UJAR(mT) AFTER DORB<? DEMANDS FOB FAIR TAXATION WERE MET, HE CONTINUED TO FI<XHT,AND W? OWN <50LDIER9 SPIKED THEIR CANNON TO PREVENT FURTHER BLOODSHED/ BLACK SCARFS WERE ADDED TO SAILOR'S UNIFORMS IN MOURNING- FOR LORD NELSON . -- AND THEY ARE "5TILL WORNSyndicate Close Post Office Where Mark Twain Got His Mail FLORIDA, MO.--Florida's post office, where Mark Twain and Ulysses S. Grant once received their mail, has been closed. The office was established in 1832, on the present sites of the Mark Twain State park. Revenues have dwindled steadily in recent years in this town of 204 population. Soldier Swims in Pants To Keep His Pay Safe CAMP DAVIS, N. C.--And why. his companions askedt, should Pvt Joe Mendel go swimming in the sur^ with his trousers or? "Heck,". Joe replied, "Today was payday--and I wasn't leaving my money on any beach." Cant Hear IS* Wilte--Oh, what are the wild waves saying? The Radio Fam--Dunno. They're running too. wild fcnr me to get it ov«B this worn-out radio, ' . Critics "Did you manage to raise anything; worth eating this year?" "1 think so, the cutworms and cateirpi$tars all thought well of it." "Say, debt?" motor-boat. Oa tke Snrf4ce pop, What's a floating #• PUBLICITY Row Do Ton Say It?/ i ? l)o .you say "Ahnt Nellie," "Awtot Nellie," or "Ant Nellie"? It doesn't matter particularly, according to Prof. Joseph Fi O'Brien 0? Pennsylvania State college, so long as your pronunciation is acceptable to educated people in the section where you live. ^ "Too many teachers have become nearsighted in the matter of pronunciation," Professor O'Brien said. "If two or three pronunciations are permissible for a particular word, children should be allowed to use whichever is most natural to them> "Where dictionaries give a choice, there is often a very close margin in their selection of the one which comes .first," Professor O'Brien declared. "It is foolish to insist that children in the Middle West use a broad 'a' in such words as 'bath,' 'can't,' 'laugh,', and 'dance' when such usage is common only in New England and among certain portions of the population of New York city." Undue stress on pronunciation may lead to ridiculous results, he added. Using "nate-yure" for "nature" and "fort-ytme" for "fortune," for example, is clumsy and is seldom heard outside a classroom. Phone McHenry G77-R-1 -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SATO & GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and L<rt Filling . . . Black Dirt ft Stone Power Shovel Service . . Power Leveling and Grading . . . Cement Mixers for Rent. ^ J. E. NETT Johnaburg P. 0 --WcHenry l - TEL. WONDER LAKE 158 l- DK. 0. L. WATKIHS ' : Dentist , , • Office Hours - Tueeday & Saturdays: » a.m. f»£ F Evenings and Sunday Mornings V* by Appointment! if:".., f«- v : » r r • .' *• „ <•* • \ T, 'V- • *' - 18 •*% . r%s* Lookout Point Wonder Lake, l]k': Telephone Mo. 800 • .t ' Stoffel ft Eeihansperger Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. 'WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS =• / . S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS _ Am BUILDERS Our Experience is at Your Service. : t in Building Yoijr Wants. Phone 56-W McHenry ?• v Salt and Healtb Salt is an essential and prominent constituent of the blood and of other fluids of the human body. It iperforms important ftmctions in the body and from it hydrochloric acid of the gastric juice is formed. It also is chiefly responsible for the normal solvent power and osmotic i pressure of the blood and other body ; fluids. The administration of sodium 1 ""chlofiae"" "(salt7 in some form been shown to be beneficial to workmen who are exposed to condition* of unusually high temperature anxf humidity. A small amount of exteai salt being harmless to the majority of individuals if taken with sufficient fluid, it has beconn e a common prac^ tice in industrial plants to urge the taking of a small excess of salt during hot weather. The loss of salt through perspiration is a contributing factor to heat exhaustion. Coast to Coast fifteen thousand different Kinds of paper are manufactured in the United States and the amount of Wood used for newsprint alone would form a pile reaching from coast to coast if it were stacked four *iet wide by four feet high. A. P. Freund Cel. % Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic v and Crane Service. .ip --Road Building-* . -f Tel 204-M n«H«nr>, r ** - f\-k : Phone 43 ^T~WENI6IR^KNOX I ATTORNEY AT LAlfv- -- OFFJCE BOUKS : Tuesdays ani Fridays Otker Days by Appoint Mat Hklmry '"'A'-f w farms Using Lumbar It is estimated that the 6 to 6V4 million farms of the country used about billion board feet in 1940, or about 900 feet per farm. WANTED TO BUY " We pay $3 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt's Mink Ranch Johnsburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 659-J-2 CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES & CATTLE We pay phone charges. CharffesRepair Shop $Bg)01 Itietfalg ©rank Lettering - ; FtiEniiJni» Upholstering audi Squaring R1ETESEL A. WORWICK PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture - Commercial Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying • Framing , Phsne 275 -- Rirersidt Drift McHENRY, ILL. PHONE 1$ X-ltay Serrfao BR. X. E. SAYLEft OPFlce' Honrs 9-12 and Ml Brenings by Appointmept THwdh«» -IttlS Green andi ffln Streets, Mdhfj : ' , - Hbrse Wanted B R U T Old! and' KsakM Horses. -- PSy fntm $5 ta $14 ---- MTBKt W. WERRBACK Phone- Mlft 439 E. Calkom St. 1IL MkrHBOTtY FLORAL CO. -- Pbone 608-R-l J • Out MQe South of. McHffary on Route 31. Flowers foj all .occasions! Thanksgiving Tables Expected to Groan BOSTON.--Festive Thanksgiving day tables were indicated by the New England Crop Reporting service, The service estimated that there will be 33,786,000 turkeys raised in the United States this year, 1 per cent more than last year, and predicted a 756,000-b^rrel ciauberry crop. * "Does Jones try to look on the bright side of things?" "I should say so. He's never co.. tent unless he is staring the spotlight fight in the face." It's the Humidity "tt may be so, but i don'l how it can ever be." ^ ^ ; "What is it?" - . "My nephew sa^s that tTSe reason we feel so exhausted these hot days is because of the humor in the atmosphero." ~ McHENRY TOWN CLUff ftiverside Drive and Pearl Strati . t Mixed Drinks of AH Kinds Beaten and Beheadedr St. Valentine, a Roman priest martyr, first beaten with clubs and j then beheaded, was born February ; 14, 270. Authorities agree that there ' is no connection between his life, or his fate, and the annual celebration of what is known tup St. Valentine's day. Most Important ; "'Is the postscript always the in portant part of a woman's letter? "It is when it's from your wift That's where she always mention.- how much money she wants." '"H Range Lands Carry Big Load Range lands in 17 western state* support 45 per cent of all the cattle, 38 4>er cent of all the beef cattle, and more than 70 per cent of all the sheep raised in the United States. Giant Steel Plant Next to cotton, iron and stool rank highest amongst India's industries. The Tata Steel and Iron Works, a wholly Indian enterprise financed by Indian capital, is the largest single steel plant in the British Commonwealth of Nations, including the United Kingdom. 10,000 Miles of Ralls Steel rails sufficient to build 10,000 miles of tracks are normally used for roplacen**fcs osefa year & railroads. '."V"-". 6UR SPECIAL BARBECUED BIBS Phone 12 McHenry r1 Good Brakes Save Tour Tires "KEEP 'EH ROLLING" If you are having brake trouble, bring your car or truck to our trained mechanics for expert Brake Service. Remember, good brakes give your tires the charge to give you the maximum service at minimum cost. Come in today for a checkup on our State Approved Safety Lane* These services will lengthen the life of your car. Motor Timing Lubrication Tire Repairing Willard Fast Battery Charging CENTRAL GARAGE f RED J. SMITH, Prop, Phone 200-J Towing Jotmstarg i

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