Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Nov 1943, p. 6

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Plutocrat Hater, 1 j Hitler, Is Noticdl i ! As Being One Chief Draws Greatest Private Income of Any Man in World. Poles Execute! . Nazi Tyrants Condemned in Underground Courts and Slain ia Various Ways, i v LONDON.--Adolf Hitler, violent i critic of the "plutocrats," draws the j greatest private income in the, world, according to the Londor ; Times, . i Hitler is sole owner of Zentra. Verlag, the great German publish- j ing combine which has an annualj turnover of about $280,000,000, em- j ploys more than 100,000 workers anc < hows a net profit of between $23,- NEW YORK.--In April. Bruno Kurtr, Iho German chief of "social service" for Poland, bought a ntwspaper from a boy on a Warsaw street. He opened the paper and out fell a note. It said he. had been sentenced^ to death. It was signed, "The Directorate of Civilian Resist* ance." • . - He read the note. A "gtia fired. He dropped dead. The Gestapo combed the neigh-" 000,000 and $40,000,000. borhood., They found. o_nl y a blind / No balance sheets are ever pub-! man. a laundress and two quarrel- * • -liFhed; no auditor is ever allowed to ing women. ; examine the books. ' By terms of a . Obviously the blind man could not • /contract arranged between Hitler I have fired the gun. Besides., he had ; end the director of the whole struc no gun. He was released. fore, Hitler has complete and abso- But the man wasn't blind. v : 'lute control over the company's in- The Gestapo paid no attention to , •/.come. X'.? :p • What he does with' the money ,is . » , • b mystery, the Times declares. "It -comes to him, not as the fuehrer, Zi * .but as the head of a private con- Nurses Happy In Africa Army Thi. I. What We Wanted,' They Say, and Quickly Adapt Themselves. Kathleen Norris * - :J * J *' , The Wife of a aeiu. It is said in Germany that the ierchttsgaden house and estate are the laundress with her heaped basket. But the gun was in it. The "blind" man had tossed it there. No one had seen him because just as he threw the smoking gun, two fat Polish women began to quarrel on the street. They carried umbiei-. WITH THE FIFTH U. S. ARMY IN NORTH AFRICA --The hot African sun poured down on the canvas roof and walls of the olive-green tent; and on Lieut. Orpha Warner, who' was washing some filmy pink underthings in a pail of soapy water. Sha wiped the suds from bet hands and brushed the damp black curls from her forehead. A drop of perspiration trickled down one cheek and there was a smudge on her nose. She grinned. "It's not exactly like Wichita, Kan., is it?" she chuckled. There wasn't much around to remind anyone of Wichita except, perhaps, the young American faces and the clothesline. A few days ago this spot was just a. wheatfleld in French Morocco. Now there is a tent city housing the newest army evacuation hospital to move into North Africa-^a bustling, busy place of doctors, nurses and enlisted men from all parts,, of the< United States. • • • kept up out of whl^d ;their Glad to Get to Wolfe the whole paraphernalia lifts and brightly lit tunnels cannot account for more than a small fraction of the great sum." Started Control in 1921. The Times reports that Hitler's control began in 1921 when the Zentaral Verlag der NSDAP (National Socialist party) was registered as a company in the name of Hitler. "At first its development was slow, but after Hitler took power, it grew quickly by the simple process of confiscating almost all competitors. In 1939 it took over the Jewish concerns of Mosse and Ullstein, two of the largest publishing houses. "About the same time, it took over, again by confiscation, the famous Wulf News agency. Now known as the German News agency, this service has a complete more- poly in the German news field. Owns Advertising Agencies. "Zentral Verlag owns practically 6ii of the advertising agencies. All the party books and periodicals also have to be published through Zentral Verlag--which means that, il gets all the profits, not merely from compulsory sales of "Mein , Kampf," but from the innumerable and leftgthy books by Rosenberg. Goebbels and other Nazi leaders. "In addition, almost all technical and professional periodicals in Germany are printed through the same channel--Hitler's Zenlral Verlag: "Its greatest bush ess is in the publication of newspapers. It now cwns two-thirds of all German newspapers outright in, addition to drawing advertising revenue from II of the others." 'Help,' Written in Sand, Saves 2 Wrecked Crews MELBOURNE. -- Lieut. ' T.° H. Moorer, an American naval aviator, was credited today with the rescue of two crews, th^t of his own seaplane and another from a ship, because he directed tfie writing of an appeal for help in. the sand Of a northern Australian beach. Moorer and his men were shot - down during a fight with nine Japanese planes. He set his flaming craft down on the water near a surface vessel he had been circling m an effort to identify it. The ship picked up the seaplane's crew, but . a little later was set afire itself by the Japanese. Eventually the ' ; ship and plane e^ews succeeded in Tiny Hypodermic Syringe beaching the (ssel. , " Two days r; sed while the shipwrecked men searched vainly for lood. Moorer supervised the writing of a huge message on the flat beach, which was soon spotted by an Australian plane. It circled, disappeared, and then came back to drop supplies. The crews of both craft were finally picked up by an Australian navy •hip which broughtMhem to safety. Now Safe in London.' "The laundress" and the "newsboy" are now safe in Lorion. They are the wife and son of a well-known Warsaw merchant. The three others are safe in the Polish underground. And an amazing underground it seems to be. Etch town and village, now, is so well organized that the day the war ends the mayor, the police chief, the high school principal, the fire chhf--elected in the underground--will step right out of their current drub jobs and tak^; over administration. They'll be recognized by the Polish government chiefs who will fly in from London, because there is constant contact with London, and acts of the underground are o.k.'d right now, in London. k Thisnews comes to the Polish telegraph agency here, at Rockefel- } ler Center. It comes in tiny squares j of microfilm. They're printed and j "blown up," and the result is repro- • ductions of the underground n«ws-1 papers. Poland now has close tc 300 j underground newspapers, including | scores of comic sheets. j Nasi Cruelty Decreases. The papers curry surprising news items which are sorted and pieced together here by Roman Moczulski, and show a constant pattern of action. First there is an announcement that the courts have tried a man and condemned him to death. It may take a ay. It may take a month. But he dies. The announcements also state why he was sentenced, so it's beginning to be evident th3t the Polish underwork after weeks of traveling across the Atlantic by boat and North Africa in motor convoy. The receiving tent was filled with soldiers waiting diagnosis of their ills. The doctors checked their equipment and supplies while the nurses prepared j the wards and got their patients set- j tied into beds. i .Officers and nurses strode through j the streets, shuffling up little clouds j of dust with each step. They were j far from the quiet, white hospital j rooms with the familiar cloying B*U Syndicate--WNU r«atur««. 'VVT CHURCH SERVICER r St. Mary's Catholic Church Masses: * Sunday: 8:00 and 10 J0 . Holy D*ys: 6:00; 8:00; 10:0$ Week Days: 6:46 and 8:00. 1 First Friday: 6:80 and 8:00. **-/- Confessions: Siturdij!: 8:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday-- - After 8:00 Mass on Thursday; 8:00 p. ni. and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. 8. Nil, Pastor. St. Patrick's Cathotk Cfcarf#-;/ - Masses: Sunday: 8:00 and 10:00 \ . Weekday*; 7>80. ; First Fridays: 7:80. 1: On First Friday, Communion dis tribnted at 6:80, 7:00,and befort and during the 7:30 Mass. Confessions: Saturdays: 4:00 to 6:00 p. at. and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday . 4:00 80 6:00 p. hi. and 7KKl 6r 8:00 - Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourfra, pastor. DR. R. DeROME ; * --Dentist-- v-; ;•§!» Green Street Mblie 292-J. McHenry * Office Hoars: 10 a.m. to 5 pj*. daily except Wednesday. ..Tuesday and Friday nights to 8:30 p.a. Other hoars by appointment. • * a , -H ,-r- • - . • -j'- y.', $ Office Hours--Daily Except Than. 10 to 12, 1:30 to 4:30, Mon., We<L FrL Nights: 7 to 8. Other Hours by Appoutanent H. S. VAN DEttBTJRGH, DC., FhC Chiropractor 120 Green St. TVL & John's Catholic Church, Johnshjirg Masses:,-. Sunday: 8:00 and 10:00 Holy tfays: 7:00 and 9:00. . Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00, , Confessions: x ' Saturdays: 2:30 and 7iM Thursday before First Friiay: 2:St •nd 7:80. Riv. A. J. Neidert, palter. / TEL. WONDER LAKE 158 # 0 L. WATKINS | •• . Dentist " '* Office Hooii»" -i . '" Tuesday it Saturdays: % •.n. to 5 p.di," Ervnings and Sunday Mornings >•? by Appointasent! .... Lookout Point Wonder Lake, life € DR. H. 8, FIKE Yetertinurf«i Richmond Road Mmmm K McHENRY, ILL. B h+n I hmd pn&imonia last winter she ruined m« night and day, and the doctor said odors^of^anUseptics'^and anesVhetTcs I ^ Uv*i with%' But when wmu me to do ,omethin«M bKunit their jjonhbas were the same. d m t want to do, and says. Look out or youll catch tt, it moke* me see red. "•^e like it here," Orpha Warner raid sifhply. "This is what we all wanted--to get across and work with the army in the field. The experience has been wonderful and I never had such fun. Of course it all hasn't been peaches and cream, but none of us expected a soft job." _ "That's true," agreed Marjorie Royal of Bloomington, Neb., "and the farther forward we get the better we like it." Adapt Selves Quickly. Sally Norcutt of Wendell, N. C., sat on s box hugging her knees. She nodded her dark head. "You might not believe me," she said, "but we really enjoy living this way. We feel we are accomplishing something. This life isn't as hard as it appears to be here. Any of the girls at home would trade places with us." The American nurses seem able to adapt themselves quickly to this pioneer existence. They receive no special dispensation because of their sex, nor do they ask for any. Most of the nurses were together O' ground will not permit: Executions, I Cn)wder and formed close expropriation of property, mass deportation and mass labor recruit- ; ing. The Germans who are being j killed are the Germans, involved in i those activities. There seems to *>e, after several months of this action, • less news of the cruelties the IVes have decided to resist. The underground courts ; tare so well established that the Polish government, in England, has warned private citizens not to take things in their own hands. They are told to leave it to the courts which will hear the evidence and pass .'.enfence: as precisely as possible in the pre- September (1939) manner. ' friendships before entering the foreign service. They live five in a tent, and mosquito-netted cots occupy almost all the space. The ccnter tentpole resembles some strange tree sprouting garments of all kinds. "The hardest part of this work," By KATHLEEN NORRIS ~ N MY desk is one of the strangest letters I ever received. I don't know whether to laugh or to cry at its contents. It is from a man, Philip is his first name. He says he is a small male and has never been very strong, although perfectly well. His trouble is that his wife, a big woman, occasionally beats him. "Mattie is a farmer," Philip says. "She and three brothers have big wheat ranches, and she runs them and her relatives, too. One of her brothers whips his wife and children ; she went to a lawyer about it. He said that as long as the husband didn't cause any injury a man could whip hts wife. How that is I don't know. But what I do realize is that if Mattie gets mad at anything she watches her chance, grabs my collar, and whips me with a strap or a whip. Sometimes it makes me mad enough to kill her. "I came out here for my health," this pathetic letter continues, "and after we married I got a job in the village. I like it here and when she treats me decently I like Mat. But no man ought to stand for this sort of thing. When I had pneumonia Made From Salvaged Cans .Self Service 1» Now CHICAGO. -- Tin salvaged from / Rule in London Hotels discarded caps contributed by/ LONDON.-Imagine walking into housewives is being used to makev^ c£sk)"ential hotel in London and the new syrett', a miniature hy j being told that you couldn't have a room unless you made your own Girt Who Lost Leg Gets Her Bike, Rides It, Too CHANUTE, KANSAS. - Delores Brand's parents promised her a bicycle for Christmas a couple of years/ago. Soon after a bone tumor necessitated amputation of her right leg at the hip. The 12-year-old girl £ct • wheel chair instead. But Delores had other ideas. She used the wheel chair three days. Then she gritted her teeth and switched to crutches. By July of the following year she podermic syringe used to relieve the pain of Wounded fli'hters, William L. McFetridge, Chicago metropolitan I area salvage director, said. j A new development in military ! medicine, the syrette is made of pure tin <>nd look*; like a tiny tooth- ' paste tube. It contains one dose of a sedative which the wounded soldier or sailor can apply until medical units reach him. The syrette has a soft plastic tip. Lieutenant Warner said,^ "is doing ; jast winter she nursed me night and day, and the doctor said I couldn't have lived without her care. But when she wants to accomplish something I don't want to do, and says: 'Look out, now, or you'll catch it!' that makes me see red. Has any woman a right to spank a man?" Question of State's Law. -Philip, I can only say that I don't know. I am not familiar with your state's law on that point, I cannot •believe that a state could carry such a statute. Years ago, in England, a man might whip his wife with a stick "no thicker than his thumb." I believe this was repealed. I • never heard that this country had such a law. But I do know several cases of ! men beating their wives. Usually this state of affairs comes to light our laundry in a two-bit bucket and trying to keep your hair decent looking. You don't have time to worry about clothes." She looked down at her coveralls. "Still," she smiled, ruefully, "it would be wonderful to get into pretty clothes once in a while. I wonder how it will feel when we get home to get into a dinner dress again?" DOMESTIC DICTATORS It is possible for various type* of weak-minded husbands and wives to rule their households in the same fashion that dictators' rule nations--by brute force. A small man, who is weak physically, writes Kathleen Norris that his wife occasionally beats him despite the fact that once she saved his life. A young wife re• latcs the old story of how her husband beats her. These do• mestic dictators should be subjected to mental examinations, and sometimes just the suggestion of stich action tviU calm their brutal outbursts. Zion Evangelical LutSiersA Chatreh Divine Service -- Nine o'clock. Sundfty School -- Ten o'clock. Ittr. R. T. Eisfeldt, Pastor. Community Church Sunday School: 10:00 a. m. Worship Service: 11:00 a. m. Junior League: 6:80 p. m. Epworth League: 8:00 p.m. Rev. Mack Powell, pastor. McHENRY FLORAL .00. -- Phone 608-R-l -- One Mile South of McHenry on Route 31. Flowers for aU occasions! St. Peter's Catholic Church,' Spring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8:00 and 10:0$. Holy Days: 6:80 and Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: dKNi Confessions: Saturdays: 2:90 and 7:1S. Thursday before First Friday: 2:30 and 7.1o. ' Rev. John L. Dalei^en, Pastor. . Phone 43 J" ' . _ Vernon J. Knox ATTORNEY AT LAW -- OFFICE HOURS -- Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appdstatat McHenry ... . JIKaos V-^ Wonder Lake Ev. l.uth. Church (Missouri Synod) Sunday school--10:00 a. m. Divine services--3:00 p. m. violence. H. L. PFOTENHAUER, Pas*fc*i Woman Tells of Spankings. One letter I had recently came Grace Lutheran Chtreh from "Humiliated Wife. Her hus- Richmond band gives her old-fashioned spank- jSun<)|l 10:3() a m. ings saucmess | Adu,t y Serrice: 11:00 a. ni. John W. Gable, pastor. A. WORWICK PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture- - Commercial Photography • Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying - Framing Phone ZJS -- Riverside Drive McHENRY. ILL. for extravagance, sauciness and using the car without his permission. She is much younger than he. She is a humiliated wife, for he takes no pains to conceal from the neighbors that he punishes her in his way, and a lawyer they consulted, possibly one of his lodge friends, assured her that the husband was quite within his rights. Ringwood Church ' * Ringwood, 111. Sunday--Public worship, 9:30. Church School, 10:30. - Choir Rehearsals--Wednesday evening. Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, director. Of course, this young creature must know ihat si>e could claim a McHENRY LODGE A. F. & A. M. divorce and alimony in these cir- , McHenry Lodge Nc. 153 meets the cumstances. Even "incompatibility" ' Tuesdays of each month and "mental cruelty" score up their at the hall cn Court street. thousands of legal separations every , INSURAUCE '£55. EARL R. WALSH I Presenting i Reliable Companies When you need insurance of any Ua( | Phone 43 or llft-M Green A Elm McHenry bed, dusted round the room a bit or even helped out with the dishes. This happens now. It's all because of the servant shortage. Large por- through divorce courts^ One wife, tions of hotel service staffs now inowhvin« m.® "owded war-workers «• community, told me that in the early days of their marriage her have essential jobs--serving in the armed forces or in factories on the home front. Hotel owners are solving the problem by getting their patrons to pitch in and do some dt the work. Home Guard of Britain It Now a Real Army LONDON.--Britain's home guard is a lfcui army, cumpiete with first- ! class tegular army discipline and : legal procedure against disobedi- ' ence. At least Home Guardsman 1 Albert Dalland of Devenport is coni vinced of this. Before a military ... walking expertly wilh .rti- i SS'.ZS,/' KHcivi».l [ Umb--and demanding thai " „ ^ ? K f u.„ : out of tea one morning, he told the sergeant the part-time soldiers were being treated "like a bunch of Boy husband gave her old-fashioned spankings whenever she did anything he disapproved. She cured him through a court order and a psychoanalyst's opinion t^»t the man was not quite mentally sound. "He's been like a lamb ever since,'.' Penal Camps. Report Says i s^e sa'^- 'doesn't want to be ' sent to an institution. You'd be sur- 280 Hollanders Die in bike. Last Christmas, a year late, she received it. Today, a courageous, triumphant i cZlVS.1' girl of 12, she rides. Scouts. Judge Recalls a Thief Who Stole His iShoes NEW YORK. -- Magistrate Ambrose Haddock doesn't forget a face. When a prisoner appeared before i him on a voluntary charge of • vagrancy, Magistrate Haddock stud- j ied his face and turned his mind back to childhood days. "I sentence you to 30-days. 'Jigger' and you're lucky I don't give iu an additional sentence for stealing shoes 34 years ago." French Bootleggers Hide Food in Grand Piano BERN, SWITZERLAND.- French bootleggers are up to all sorts of tricks to deliver food purchased on the black market It is reported from Paris, for instance that in-! july"{* 1940 and May 1943 in a re_ quisitive policemen stopped the de- j cent report. LONDON. -- Dutch underground newspapers reaching here reported that 280 Dutch prisoners had died in German-operated penal camps in the last Ave months and said Netherlands judges threatened to stop sentencing criminals unless camp conditions improved. Aneta, Dutch news agency, said the judges had demanded that the Ommen camp be closed or transferred from German to Dutch Supervision. " 813,000 War Homes Have Been Built Since 1940 WASHINGTON.-John B. Blandford Jr., national housing administrator, said that 813,000 housing units for war workers were built between £ livery of a grand piano while they inspected its interior. They found two hams, 20 pounds of butter, eight pounds of coffee, many bars of chocolate, 10 dozen eggs and several pounds of tea. Arrests followed. At the end of April, he said, an additional 309,400 units were in varying states of construction. Of the units already completed, approximately 454,000 were privately financed. prised at the amount of wife-beating that goes on in this camp," the letter continues. "I advise all girls to do what I did. Lots of them jumped into quick marriages when the war began and aren't anything but spoiled kids -- husbands and wives alike. Give them a good scare about bringing in legal and medical advice, and they come to their ! senses." In Victorian times it was almost j the i ule that a father of a family should work off the discomfort of too much heavy food, little exercise, and undisputed domestic authority, in • thrashing the children. Mothers used | as a threat the familiar phrase, ."You wait until papa gets home!" j Boys cringed and whined and had : their dispositions soured for life, bej cause the father found a restful outlet in wielding a strap. Schoolmas- ! ters in England quite recently used : to cane boys--grown ones in their teens--thereby acknowledging that these youngsters were incapable of responding to reasonable or civilized ; influence and had to be cowed by year. But there may be good reason why she doesn't want a divorce, such as a religious law, death-bed promise, or just a 10-year-old girl's reluctance to confess failure, and give up the dream of being a loyal, respected wife. So my advice would be that she • get her husband to talk to a doctor. Sometimes chronic dyspepsia or stomach ulcers drive a man mad. Then see a psychopath or even an alienist. No sane man marries a , woman for whom he has so little affection or respect that he can make her life a burden. If he won't consent to either of these steps, and he probably will object, for it is probable such a man ; thinks himself infallible, then the wife must go away, leave him for the sake of children she may have if she stays in his home. Such na- ' tures as his won't change, and "Hu- j miliated Wife" may live to see in- ' nocent confident childrep similarly bullied and abused, and then she ! will be helpless. The effect of brutal ; cruelty on children is deep-reaching. I have known many men and women j who have never recovered from the J horrors of a brutalized childhood. Asylums are full of them, tirandmother Punished Children. One lovely woman that I knew wmld never leave her five beautiful children alone with her own mother: no, not for an instant. "She used to enjoy punishing us. too, when I was a child," the woman tokl me. "She is a wonderful, brilliant, popular figure in certain circles. But she worked off all her nervous energies on us as children. Sobbing, pleading, and crying constituted my childhood. When father sent my sister and I to boardingschool it was heaven, except for the thought of the other two little sisters who were being whipped at home. One of them is a nervous wreck to this day." So don't risk that, "Humiliated Wife." You haven't been able to save yourself from disillusionment, and heartbreak but you can save your children. Pisa's Attraction The Piazza del Duomo was Plsa*s | pre-war tourist attraction. It con- i sisted of three buildings comprising j a unit--the Cathedral, the Baptistry j and the Campanile. Th«r tower was | begun in 1174. When a h e i g h t of! only 40 feet was reached it was dis- j covered that, because of insecure foundations, the tower was sinking ; on one side. - Efforts to right the structure as the building continued, were unsuccessful. Subscribe for The Plaindealer* Telephone No. 300 Stoffel & Reihafeperger Insurance agents for all classes «f property in the best companies. WEST MeHENRY - - ILLINOIS Phone McHenry 677-R-l -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND & GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Fillirg . . Black Dirt . . Powei Leveling and Grading. J. E. NETT lohnsburg P. O.--McHenry Horses Wanted 1 b u Y Old and Disabled Horstsu Pay from $3 to $14 ARTHUR W. WERRBACK Phone 844 439 E. Calhoun St. : Woodstock, (IL A. P. Freund Co. Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Service. --Road Bnildhig-- Tel. im-M McHenry, WANTED TO BUY We pay $6 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt'9 Mink Ranch ' Johneburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburif 659-J-2 CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS. HORSES A CATTLE We pay phone charges. S. H. Freood & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Yoar Si^rvlce in Building Yoor Want*. Phone 56-W McHenr; Resembles Delaware Denmark is about half the size of Indiana, but in topography and land use resembles Delaware. It is ••ndy, seaside country with no mountains and few rivers. It lives by raising crops which can be exported easily and profitably. Before the war, Denmark was one large uce farm for England, motorrefrigerator boats carrying bacon, butter, eggs and hams to Har<: in 18 hours. ^ . Read the Want Ads Pat Collections Present collections of waste kitchen fats are about 85 million pounds annually. Motor Tritte Drops Motor vehicles counted on roads in the East in June, 1943, were 40 per cent of the 1941 average, and in , the West and Middle West, they were 57 per cent. WITH WAR BONDS ' Quality Compost For good quality compost, avoid using pine needles or very heavy weed stalks. Turn the pile two or three times in the year. It takes about i year to nrtake the best compost. Improves Grade Care in picking cotton so as to keep it dry and as free of trash as possible can materially improve the grade and the price. ' , • Smut Diseases Seed A few smutted kernels in a bag of%eed wheat are enough to inoculate many of the others. For this reason gro-.vers should treat their seed with organic-mercury dust if ! they find in it even a single kernel ; affected with smut. Throw Food Away Enough food has been wasted in American homes in a year to feed all the men now in military services of the U. S. and provide for Lend- Lease shipments of food. Children Like Simplicity Play materials for children can be simple and inexpensive. Many oI . the best are available at little or no cost -- dirt, water, grass, wood, ' stones, sand, pebbles, pine cones, I ' acorns and leaves. . Winterize Your Car Now! Wartime transportation is essential transportation. Don't risk your car's breaking down--keeping you from work or blocking the roads!' Rely on us to give your car a thorough pre-winter check-up--to. enable it to do it's part in winning the war. CENTRAL GARAGE FRED J. SMITH, Prop. Phone 200-J Towing Johnsburg

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