Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 Aug 1943, p. 4

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} W" S ^ ^ 1 It *H ^ V--7' •?' 4;*" THE McHENtt Thursday, August 5, 1943 ' 'v*». \fact Four THE M'HENBY PLAINDEALER - I^biisi <-i I'Vt-ry Thursday at Mt- Benry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. •_JL ». MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at Ike postoffice at McHc-nry, 111., under tie acf of May 8, 1879. FOR SALE ersonais ©ne Year Six Months .. ....$2.00 ....$1.00 NATIONAL €DITORIAL_ ASSOCIATION Mr, and Mrs. Noble Finnell and FOR SALE--Two pieces property on ; family of Deerfield were Sunday yis- Pistakee Lake, one 210 feet, the other I itors in the Henry Weber home. they were guests at a chicken dinner in the Schaffer home. Mrs. Math Laures and son, Jack, are spending the summer with Mr, Laures at .their resort at Long Lake, Mrs. CYlia Winkel returned home Wis. e - ^ from the Woodstock hospital last Sat- I Mr. ant^ Mrs. Peter Reimann and urday. * ' ant* Mrs. Fred Reimann and son, Melvin, of Milwaukee, Wis., visited relatives here Sunday. The Misses Clara Stoffel and Ruth 128 feet. May be purchased together : Mr. and Mrs. Joe Varhanik of Fox j Reihansperger and Mrs. Gerald Carey or separately. Address Box "A," care i River Grove called in the Linus New- Plaindealer. *12 j man home Tuesday. 1 i Mrs. Glenn Benson is absent from FOR SALEr--Kitchen range, medium j her duties at the West McHenry size. $24; gas range, smooth top, $27, State bank for a few weeks while visexcel, cond.; 8#-gal. galv. pressure or i iting her husband in Walla Walla, hot water tank and fittings, $22. Box j Wash. • _ . ! * ^3, West McHenry, 111. . *12 Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman and Governors Arc Family Mea Most of the governors have fami : lies ranging up to six children; the 'uenrv" Tel 614-R-l • average is three, with boys predom- i "Ji inating. Two governors are bach* 'alD|rs. /•' ' FOR SALE--Sweet corn. Peter A. ,Freund Rt. 2, on€ mile east of Mc- 12 .FOR SALE Mrs. Simons were visitors in the C. L. Newman home at Slocum's Lake Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter M. Smith, John Rheinboldt and Miss Jeaneatte Furniture; including, Degen accompanied Corp. Vernon are leaving Saturday for a two weeks trip to Estes Park. Colo. Mrs. Annabel Aicher left Tuesday of this week with Dot Merrell of Woodstock for a several weeks trip to Wilmington, Delegare, and other places in the East. Joan Reihansperger spent Wednesday evening visiting Miss Shifley Born in Oak Park. / ; : Popular Bedspread One of the most popular types of bedspreads made today is a descendbookcase, wood bedroom set, gas \ Rheinboldt to Chicago Monday, where j ®n* of o handcraft of Revolutionl McHenry, IIHnois V e» FRIDA Y^SATURDAY Ethel Waters Rochester CABIN IN THE SKY Pluc--News, Cartoon and Novelty SUNDAY-MONDAY. Aug. 8.9 Henry Fonda Maureen O'Hara Thomas Mitchell IMMORTAL SERGEANT Plus Cartoon and News TUESDAY Fill B«>vd Andy Clyde (1) HOPPY SERVES A WRIT Harriet Hilliard Tom Conway (2) FALCON STRIKES BACK WEDNESDAY'-TH U RSDAY William Holden Susan Hayward Robert Bench ley 'YOUNG AND WILLING' stove and other small articles, at Mary -F. Knox residence, Green St. Inquire by calling 601-R^l. *12 FOR SA LE^-Heating stove, hot blast, $10. Address L.Haack, Marine Route 1, McHenry., *12 he left for Indiantown Gap, Pa., after i ai7 housewives Who used wagon spending the weekend here. I '0r embroidery hoops. Mrs. A. Mann and daughter, Laur* i ^?*se Be needle-tuft spreads •till made down in Georgia--the wagon wheel still serves as the best hoop--much of the work is Still done by hand, though the punch work needle is electric driven.: etta, of Chicago spent several -days, last week in the Fred Schoewer home. Frank Holley " of Lake Geneva, a Plaindealer employee about fifty years {FOR SALE^Whitefaced and Short- |W, vgted in -the Linus Newman ! horn heifers, while they last at the J ho™e Wednesday. .. j farm on Route 20, two miles west of w.Ffk hitman, Jr of Pontmc, v. I Belvrdere, Friday, Saturday and Sun, | ^IC1" sfent the weekend in the James; throughout the country agree that kay. Several hundred 400 to 700-lb. | f^r. home,;' M^.i^tmaii, (who had, fat people are good citizens. Stealing of Illegal Object Puzzles Jury TWIN FALLS, IDAHO.--A district jury debated this question for 19 hours: Is a person guilty of stealing if he takes something illegal to own? The defendant was accused of stealing a slot machine. His counsel said he should be freed because such devices are illegal. Retrial was postponed. Airman Tells of |. 17 Days in Crasdb Trying Days in Greenland ) For Victims of Wreck. NEWS ABOUT OUR SERVICEMEN Fat People Good Citizens Police and judicial authorities cne James throughoul -- . . . ™ , v . y . . p i w h o h a d , f a t p e o p l e Whitefaced and Shorthorn heifers, TB | ^en spending | Perhaps the explanation of why-4 and Bang tested. One or more at 12c! Pare"^' returned home with her hus-, plump people refuse^to be tempted ! a pbund, suitable for any purpose. My I band Sunday evening. - I from the straight, if not exactly narfirst and best big buy of the season. H. L. DUNNING. Miss Maude Granger returned to j row path lies in their contentment 12_31 her work-in Chicago Monday after'with their lot. "We glory in our ! enjoying a two weeks vacation, dur-! fat," roundly declares Dr. Christo- REGISTERED HOLSTEIN B U L l. 1 ing which time she visited friends and Pher Howard, a stout defender of ~ relatives m Elgin and Hebron. { s^out, our laughter, our good N. C. Klien and Mrs. Miarparet' temper, our sociability, our appre- May of Waukegan were visitors in s Cla lon ^ the Fred Sc„ho ewer home Sunday. iff?* ,*f "°uW rfh«,d'e » Mr. and Mrs. JTo sephiV Pn>i at.e ki of« Lt a.- possession of our faculties in our jmiddle age thfin totter about ^ Grange were gTiests in the Martin j SCrawny-legged misery for a few extra years, lean and lonely lepers, ! FOR SALE--Yearling bull; highest : records of his six nearest tested dams ! average: Fa.t, 349 days, 788.96; milk, ! 21,702.10. Bangs tested. James D. ! Curran, West-McHenry. Phone 622- W-l.' 10-tf Heckmann home Saturday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schaefer spent Tuesday and Wednesday in the Anton FOR SAJLE -- Double lot with two houses on same, which warrants an income. Across from McHenry park, ou-, • a i- * u-n one block from river. Reasonable. ; fhaefer home in -Arlington Heights, Address."G," care Plaindealer. • 4-tf '^ere. they helped Anton Schaefer ; 1 celebrate his seventy-second birthday : FOR SALE-r-Year-'round comfort and Tuesday evening. Last Friday Mr. suspicious and suspected.* 'I Am a Rush Job!' "Ye®, I admit it, I'm half-baked. I never take time to prepare myself, still I pervade all human endeavor, i The Beautiful larovAi* mm CRYSTAL LAKE. ILL. McHenry Co'i. Leading Theatre economy with fire-proof Johns-Man- and Mrs Schaefer were callersjn the! j override aU obstacleS) usually at ville Type A Home Insulation Blown- Arnold Krause home in Des Plaines.! a great expense. Accuracy and in" your walls aiid ceilings. Call There, for the first time, they saw j quality mean nothing to me. I de- LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. 20-tf the Krause triplets, Tom, Dick and! mand excessive energy and concen- VfYR PFKT Hart-y, on their first birthday anniv- j tration, although I usually have very * U*v XtJlin4- ersary. Mrs. Krause was the former j little of the latter. My path is strewn iss Pauline Schaefer, herself a twin,! with the wreckage of overtime, fa- * 7" year roun -who formerly lived in this community.! tigue, mistakes, disappointment, accottage. Oil heater. InsUnt heater., Mrg Kathryn Boger ig spending the I cidents. I never made selling plans Ton informatlon in<lu,re McHenry ; week hef daughter> Mrs Harold | ^ advance. You will always find 220-R. j Frett, in Chicago.' rnv register nnrf FOR RENT--Furnished lake cottage, | Weekend guests in the John Phalin COOLED PRI. and SAT., Aug. 6-7 WM. Holdrn Snsan Hayward in •YOLWG AND WILLING" Phis Lupe Val«, Eddie Albert, in 'LADIES' DA Y" SUN., MON„ TUBS. Sunday--cont, from 2:45 p. m. Jean Arthur. Joel McCrea in "THE MORE THE MERRIER" Oiily picture with i "Dingle" WBD. and THUR&, Aug. 11-12 Alan L«dd Helen Walker in -LUCKY JORDAN" That WED.-THURS. Event 3 rooms; two large sunporches, one home were Mr. and Mrs. James Mablock to lake. Inquire at Nielsen's, in honey and children of Chicago and wv of Vogue Tavem. Lily Lake. 12 .Mrs. Howard Phalin of Wilmette. • •' ""j.v'u • Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Chamberlain vis- : WANTED ited their daughter and family, Mr. land Mrs. Thos. McCabe, in Iowa last WANTED TO BUY--Two to three! week ton of ear corn. Frank N. Pitzen,j Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sayler, daugh Johnsburg. Phone 672-W-l. '12! my hand in the cash register, and i alas: I seldom ring the bell. I rush ! on ruthlessly because I did not plan : yesterday. You will find me every- ! where in every department. I am ! the inspiration of that famous «aying, 'Haste Makes Was^g/ "_ ' Tester, PA.--a tale of 17 fear-, fill, harrowing days in the icy waters' , off Greenland, almost paralleling as a test of endurance the experience of Eddie Rickenbacker and his crew, [ was told here by Sergt. William W. I Myers, 21, of Pocomoke City, Md., I one of seven airmen aboard a Flying Fortress which crashed searching for a lost plane last November. Myers, radioman on the bomber, ! said he was thrown unconscious 20 feet from the plane with a broken finger and lacerated wrist when the big ship, flying under a low ceiling, | hit an ice cap and 'Split in two. The i other crew members escaped with"! minor injuries. ! With fast dwindling food supplies : and temperatures 10 degrees below i zero, the men huddled together under a blanket made of fleece-lining ; from their flying suits. Working feverishly to repair the badly dam- , aged radio equipment, Myers on the ' seventh day managed to send out ' an SOS which was picked up by j an amateur radio operator in the United States. , j Army authorities were notified and on the ninth day an army plane sighted the men and dropped food , and bedding. There was no place to J land. j An officer from a coast guard sta- j tion on the Arctic circle, approximately 115 miles from the wrecked ship, reached by motor sled a point' within 100 yards of the trapped fliers ' when suddenly he disappeared in a : crevasse and was never found. j Four of the crew, including Myers, j returned to safety by a coast guard i plane from the same station on the , Arctic circle. The plane was .making its third trip to the isolated area j for the remaining three men but j never reached its destination. The pilot and radioman perished when !. they cracked up "somewhere in j Greenland." ! Aviation Cadet Eufeafe J. Justen, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Justen, has completed his training at the basic flying school at Conrtland, A1 a., and has been transferred to the advanced flying school at Craig Field, Salem, Ala., for the final tpo. vfc>d of-pilot training. After completing his advanced training, Cadet Justen will receive his wings and will be either appointed a flight officer or a second lieutenant, and assigned, to active duty. pointed an aviation d^det October 27^5' -1942. • • '*" : ~ In the first group of soldiers assigned to the University of Illinois for the army specialized training program are Earl L. Smith, Walter H. Nickels, and George M. Freund. Instructional activities of the ASTP at Illinois began July 12. The men are under military discipline at all times. They are quartered irl some two dozen fraternity houses which ha>ae, been, taken, fiver for this -pM? pose: ~ ; Lieut. L. L. Theler, of the IT. g. " ndv^an Elgin physician, who entere«|: servic& ^ixteen months ago, has been sent to the marine base at San Diego, Calif. Previously he had been serving in Chicago except for a short assignment in St. Louis. LieuV Thelen spent his early life in McHenry, where he graduated from the Community high school. He practiced medicine in Elgin for eighC.*-' yeaiis before entering Service. Hi*-- "wife and son, Mark, will continue to . make their home at 823 Cedar avenue. Elgin. ' Pvt. Leo Meyers, son of Mrs. Anna Meyers, of this city, who has been ill for several months in an army hospital, received his medical discharge ' from the army a¥id~ returned homo: last week. The present address of LeRoy MeU sek is Walla Walla, Wash, " V'"'-i Upon his return to active duty fol- ^ lowing a recent furlough,, Vernoii,>;! Kennebeck has been traqaferred frowii:-;^ Farragut, Idaho; to Treasure Island^., * San Francisco. " Corp. Vernqn Reinboldt of Indian-^t; town Gaft, Pa., spent the weekend, with his parents heztf. - ,j ' • . Sgt. Chester Howard, son of the Raymond Howards of this city, who has been in service at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo., for two years, is now attending the government watch school in Elgin. Another son, Raymond, is with the coast guard at San Diego, Calif. Old friends will ; : iiile^^' • W. learnt that Capt. Harry T. Gallaher.V who was born and reared in McHen, ; ry, is now serving at Randolph Field, Texas. IHis wife and daughter, i Blythe, are making their home with him at San Antonio. The Gallahers formerly lived in New York for many years. Sgt. James Doherty, of Topeka, Kas., is enjoying a ten-day furlough with his parents, the William Dohertys. ,'«• '• Fldyd Fijeund is now serving at Miami, Fla. f - : : Harold Taxman arrived home from Columbia University last week* where he recently graduated as an ensign. He makes a fine looking navy man in his new uniform and to our knowledge he is the first McHenry man to hold the rank of ensign. Fol. lowing a two Veeks furlough he will return to active duty probably in the South. !lTMvTSs^Wm,nlta*,skwit M~ ,?'°od,toc„k' "ere vUit<)rs <* ce!*tives : He-ry. Te., 622-B-2: • ; Alldrtw Worwick HELP WANTED ' spent Sunday and Monday visiting WANTED-Woman or girl for res- Roy Go€bf1 at ^^donia Wis I taurant work. Tel. 377. 12-tf | ^r- and Mrsl James W®tterton of ; - 1 Chicago were Sunday callers m the ' WANTED--To do stack and barn bal-i home of Miss Christine Adams. j ing. Joseph Draper. Tel. McHenry j Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heuser of Chi- ' 613-J-2. '*-12 j cago spent the weekend with is moth- • • 1 •• j er, Mrs. Helen Heuser. He entered WANTED--Painter's helper. Hunter 8ervice this week. Those Loud Voices There is always some fine piece of ter, Viola, and Mr. and Mrs. Ted jBew' paper, such as the re- Neilsen and daughter, Donna, of j P01^ that an amplifier has been in- Boat Co. 12 i HELP WANTED--Man or woman j with some schooling or experience in | mechanical drawing to make plant | | drawings. High school pupils avail- i . . ! able for part time work will be con-!^'^ a *»ys trip to Mr. and Mrs. Bud *Rapp and daughter, Carol, of Arlington Heights were weekend visitors in the home of Mrs. Zena Bacon. Martin Cooney returned Sunday I sidered. Ringwood Chemical Corpor- | a tion, Ringwood, Illinois. Telephone 1 Richmond 662. 12 ALWAYS AIR COOLED MILLER \\ notisU» i, SATURDAY ONLY. Aug. 7 Roy Rogers in "Km& OF THE COWBOYS" Plus 'YOUNG. AND WILLING' with Wm. and Susan Hayward BIG MIDNITE SHOW SATURDAY NITE, A\ig. 7 AT 12 P. M. on our Screen "QUIET PLEASE ' MURDER" Piua: "JIVIN' JAM SES SION" Cleveland, Ohio, where he visited his brother, Lee Cooney. Mrs. Eleanor Foley has completed her summer course at Sterling, 111., and returned last weekend to remain for the rest of the summer. Edmund Wirfs and Kenneth Oliver of Rockford spent the weekend in the George Wirfs home. WANTED--Man for general work. M1"8- Hazel Lang and daughters, Experience 'not necessary. Kramer; Nancy and Mary Ann, of Connors- Boat Co., Fox Lake, 111. Tel. McHen- [ville, Indiana are visiting in tlj^home ry 90-J. ii_tf j of Mrs. Zena Bacon. Miss Louise Stoffel yrM a Chicago WANTED--Waitresses--3--Steady or summer work. Top wages and good tips. Hill's Cafe, Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. 10-3 WANTED--Maintenance man. j caller Friday. Hunter Boat Comj[>an}\ 50-tf ANIMALS WANTED vented which will throw the President's voice * mile--a great scientific extension of the power of veto. These are days of the great voices. We hear priests, senators and baseball results; we walk through 42nd street and hear the jumbo cries of the auctioneers in the auction parlors-- heroic tones inciting us to buy third-rate knicknacks. It i* interesting to speculate about the future of the voices, whether people won't tire o| them, perhaps, or yell them- •elves out. We half suspect that in the years ahead of us there will b« a waning of the great voices, a return to the little ones; a revival of the mystical life, an ear again cocked to the inner voice, the still •mall voice, the voice of God, the voice of the turtle.--The New Yorkp er. . Singing in the Shower Discloses Man's Identity MIAMI BEACH, FLA.--Private Giovanni Benedetto, 19, Metropolitan Opera singer stationed here, was found out by a weakness for singing in the shower. He successfully kept his identity a secret until a private passing the shower heard a song from within. He inquired who Was singing and was told: "Oh, that's Benedetto in there. Nicp voice." The name was recognized and the young soldier was persv^aded to $ing for the boys. * Joe and Jim, the Walsh twins, arrived in town Monday of this week and are enjoying a furlough from their duties at Hunter Field, Savannah, Ga, •• Herb Reihansperger and Stanley Geier, both stationed at Great Lakes, spent the weekend at their homes here.-:-., Lieut. George Johnson, of Lubbock, Texas, surprised his folks by paying them a visit last weekend. With about seventeen others he flew in to Glenview last Saturday afternoon and started the return trijf Sunday. The Erber boys have had location changes as follows: Erven to Wendover Field, Utah; Wilbert to Gulfport Field, Miss.; and George to San Francisco. j Coals M^lt Before Burning All coals melt and then form into coke before they bum. Some, however, do this to a greater extent than others and they are called "coking" coals, and the others are called "free-burning" coals, although the process in both cases is actually the* same and there is no distinct dividing line between the two. type# ef coal, -i' Mnskrat Good Fating A two or three-pound "marsh rabbit" makes excellent eating and has long been a standard item on the meat markets of city as well as country towns, it is pointed out. Muskrats, as they are usually known to men and boys who trap them for their fur pelts in the marshes aad swamps, can serve a dual purpose: for fur coats and for food. Cutting , away the glands that give them their name, in dressing the meat at the time the pelts are removed, makes muskrat meat an excellent food. In Maryland, where large numbers am trapped in the Chesapeake marshes, ; they are popularly sold on the I ter markets. Some are sold in N« i York city and other towns as welL English Monarch* Assassinated Assassination of monarchs has been rare in England compared with other kingdoms. William Rufus, while hunting in the New Forest, was shot by Walter Tirel. An attempt was made on Edward I with a poisoned dagger. Eleanor, his queen, sucked the poison from the wound and saved his life. On her death he erected many memorial crosses in various places. Edward V was assassinated by. Miles Forest and John Dighton at the order of the king's uncle, the duke of Glou- Anglers Send Tackle to Soldiers in Aleutians SAN FRANCISCO.--It all started in the Aleutians where soihe of the soldiers desired to supplement their menu from their front-yard ocean teeming with fish, but not a fish hook could be found. Governor Gruening of Alaska mentioned this in a radio broadcast and it was heeded by the San Francisco League for Service Men. In response to an appeal in the bay area $5,000 worth of fishing tackle has been donated and forwarded, but the demand still exceeds the supply. > Hamilton Parr of Western Springs, formerly of this city, was a weekend visitor here. Mrs. R. C. Larsen of Chicago and j cester. The death of Richard I may j DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE s son, Richard, of the signal corps, sta-1 have been caused by assassination, j WAR -- Five dollars is the least we | tioned at Camp Crowder Mo and Mr 5* fel1 while besieging Challau, in i pay for dead horses and cows in good J and Mrs. ^ Poila of v'illa park caU. condrtion. Wheeling Rendering Co. ed in the Limis Newman home Thurs- Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the Icharges. No help needed to load. 14rif MISCELLANEOUS day. France, but there is difference of opinion as to whether the arrow came from the walls of the besieged castle or from an ambushed assassin. A few other attempts have SUN., MOV. Aug. 8-9 It's 1943's New Kind of Movie! "MORE THE MERRIER" Starring Jean Arthur Joel McCrea Charles Coburn Maurice Foley is spending a few weeks with his grandmother, Mrs. i been"made on sovereigns, but came I i Mary Foley, in Cleveland, Ohio. ! to naught. ! KENTILE--?>Jo priority on tile floors. { Miss Genevieve Knox, who is em-j j Ideal for schools, churches, stores, j ployed by the Red Cross in Chicago, | " . ^ ; • j hospitals, basements, kitchens, etc. spent the weekend at her home here.; New York Indians Raise Variety of colors. Also FLOOR j • Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Slafter and] w , All Tk«; P « | SANDING and refinishing with j Mr. and Mrs. James Cox and son, I most All 1 neir rrovisions DURA SEAL, Henning Newman, 932 ' Ward, of Waukegan were Sunday [ Indians of the Six Nations Fedi Marvel Ave., Woodstock, 111. Phone , afternoon callers in the Linus New- J *ra^on. still farming small parts of j 131. 39-tf man home. their original lands in New York ' Mrs. William Scheid and Mr. and i 8tate' set a «°°d wartime example Mrs. George May of Chicago were visitors in the home of John Scheid and daughter, Rena, Monday. Miss Helen Bernier of Chicago { corn, to save them from starvation, 27_tf j sPen* weekend with her sister, j are still growing corn and beans and -- 1 Mrs. Jack Geary, near Island Lake. | squash as they did centuries ago, GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us'Mr. and Mrs. John Goggin, Martin along with potatoes, small grains, dispose of your garbage each week, | Murray and sons and Frank . Murray j and their flocks of chickens and pigs ,or oftener if desired. Reasonable I and son of Chicago were also recent1 for meat. rates. Regular year round route, for-j guests in the Geary home. I As most of the Indian land is merly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smitk J Kenneth Murray, chief petty officer! owne<i hV the tribe, not by the fam- Gift From Hom« Makes ' Sergeant's Face Red «ILLVILLE, MASS. -- Imagine Sergt. W. P. Witnik's surprise when he opened a package from the Millvillg Home Service club and found among other things that lipstick had been included in the gifts sent to him "somewhere in Alaska." In a letter to Millville the sergeant j wrote the situation was made more | embarrassing because 25 of his bud- 1 dies were spectators at the package ! opening. j "It will take a long time to Uye it I down," writes Witnik. t Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Schaefer of 302 Court street received word Monday that their son, Robert, had been transfered from Truax Field, Madison, Wis., to Miami, Fla., where he is starting his basic training as an aviation cadet. He is living in the Charles hotel. Aviation Cadet Walter EmH Felts, son of Mrs. Ida Feltz, this city, has completed the second phase of his flight training at the army air forces basic flying school, Gunter Army Air Field, Montgomery, Ala., it has been announced. Prior to his arrival here, Re had received his primary training at Douglas, Georgia, where he obtained sixty hours in the air in primary training planes. Hte was ap- Balance Protein Failure to keep the protein content of the grain mixture fed to dairy cows in balance with the roughage in the ration causes greater loss la milk production than any other thing. There are but two simple facts 4sbear in mind. A low protein roughage requires a high protein grain mixture, and a high protein rough* age requires a low protein grain mixture. Protein is the only element which stimulates milk, but it is imperative to keep the correct balance between the grain and the roughageto assure maximum production. Toe little protein quickly lowers the yieM and a too large percentage has a similar reaction, with the farther hazard of possible harm te the coara. Read the Want Ads! HAVE YOU HEARD about the new ! reduced Auto Liability and Property | Damage rates ? They will surprise you. Ask us for insurance rates. •The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8. for their rural neighbors by growing nearly all the food they use at home. Families of the red-skinned tribes that first taught white men to grow Army Cadet's Neighbors Harvest His Corn Crop ; CRETE, NEB.--Donald Rezabeck, off to war as a cadet in the army bombardier school at Midland, Texas, doesn't have to worry about his com crop back home. Neighbors chipped in and husked 26 acres of com which Rezabeck had left un* husked when he left for the army. . WOODSTOCK ILL. WOODSTOCK, ILL. COMING! THURSDAY, AUGUST 12 Midnite Show Only. Doors open at 11:30 p.m. TUESDAY ONLY, Aug. 10 Bargain Nite, 25c (Tax inc.) 170 ReaM»n.s Why You Should Be Here 170 On the Screen "TRUCK BUSTERS" Richard Travis Faye Kmmerson WftUL)-, T-HUKii., *KJ„ Aug. 11-12-13 THAT LADD'S ON THE LOOSE AGAIN! "LUCKY JORDAN" - Alan Ladd Helen Walker . Alse • Color Cartoon . Late News Phone 366. IIC6T t tf 1 in the navyj stationed"at" Camp PearW j!y' few Indians have been able to Williamsburg, Va.,'who has been^n-1 buy ™chinery *or large-scale farm joying a furlough, visited relatives] JJ'^h^N^YorlTst AUCTION--Sunday, Aug. 15. Selling complete household furnishings, i n cluding furniture, refriigerator, blan-j ^ere Saturday. He was accompanied j kets and also complete barber shop' hi® wife from Waucondau equipment. For complete list watch"1\R- E. Sutton of Ch icago! Visited next issue of Plaindealer." Adam j relatives here last Sunday. Bildner, Johnsburg. 12! FORGET YOUR WORRIES--Come t« K. of C. Carnival in Harvard on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, August 19, 20, 21. A good place to meet.yout friend^ . . r 12-2 FREE--If excess acid causes you pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indigestion, Heartburn, Belching, floating, Nausea, Gas Pains, free sample, Udga, at Bolger's Drug Storei *12-16 Mrs. Lillian Bolger and children are spending several weeks in Rockford where Mrs Bolger is assisting in the care of her father, who is critically ill in a hospital there Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schaefer attended graduation exercises at St. Therese's Hospital School of Nursing in Waukegan Sunday. Their niece,' F. P. Bussell State college of agriculture, Ithaca, N. Y. To get their other necessities, the Indians now living on reservations have long worked on railroads, in sawmills, and in other ,work near their homes. Today many Indians work in war industries during the day, ,and carry on their subsistence farming evenings and week-ends.-1 Seize English Grammars In 'Invasion' Countried LONDON.--The Germans are confiscating all English grammars iA France, Belgium, Norway and Holland, the Daily Sketch said. The dermans had learned that many natives were studying English in anticipation of helping the Allies in an invasion. Whisky Production ... . , Enough whisky was produced and Miss Loretta Schaffer, daughter of j ]ast year in tjje United States to the M. G. Schaffers of Crystal Lake, provide nearl^ every person with was a member of the class. Later I one gallon. Controlled Germany Sweden's warrior king Gustaphus Adelphus for a time controlled aO of uermany. His successors held northeast Qermany, Finland and the part of Russia wherv Leningrad now stands until 1709. In that year the Swedes were defeated by the Rua* sians at Poltava, in the Ukraine, scene of recent fighting between German and Russian armies. A Viking graveyard, just north of Karl*» krona, recalls a still earlier period of the Northman's strength. GLOBAL ATLAS of the World at War ^ Here'a a realistic picture of die world, a "plaae s-eye view** that makes it easier to under* stand (be scope of this world* wide war, with new-style maps by Matthews-Northrup. • 4-color Global Maps, sbowiaa ait dinucti • Chroooloslcal Maps of the bmU (root* • $0 full-page fall-colof i • Anw sad NIT? Insignia e Type* of Modem Haa* e 4«p«*es, li'x 14* *ar , ' / 35c ^ McHENRY PLAINDEALER

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