Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 10 Aug 1944, p. 3

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r'lizw spwpf .<< <'.v - " , August 10. Fa^e Thre« IMS Released by Western Newspaper Union. » HOW AMERICA'S PROGRESS HAS CHANGED ECONOMY EVOLUTION, YES, AND AT K * REVOLUTIONARY PACE, accomf plished under the American system*. C All within the period of a lifetime we have seen startling advances in U our standard of living, in our work*- r-^and play hours, in the rates of payfor workers, in our quantity of pro-v duction and in the variety of our ^products. The town plutocrat of less than a lifetime ago, the man who lived in . the big house on the hill, owned a ; horse and buggy. If he were an ultra plutocrat, he employed a driver, who also looked after the stable and "• ' did the gardening. The income of '•that man of wealth was but little more than $2,000 a year. In 1870 you ; could go a long way on $2,000. In those years the average family toccme was under $400 a year. The, Vaectien Aran on the railroad worked ' .ten hours a day at a wage rate of . nine cents an hour. The railroad brakeman could make as much as $40 a month. Conductors and engineers, then as now, the best paid workers, could make, by working long hours, from $80 Jo $70 a month. Good pay for printers in those days was from 15 to 20 cents an hour, though an hourly rate was seldom heard of, and from $10 to $15 a week of from 80 to 72 hours. All othei "workers were paid on much the . same basis. In those days of but a few years •go, much of the grain was harvested with a scythe, with another man following to bind it into sheaves. - Ten acres of wheat was considered a fair sized field for any one farm on which a harvesting machine had not been installed. Today the mai who Hve| In the big house drives one or soyeral automobiles and employs a chauffeur. His income has doubled and trebled and more. Today the family whose income is less than $1,500 to $2,000 is considered as poverty stricken. The section man on the railroad receives from $3 to $4 for each day , of eight hours. The railroad brakeman draws a hundred or more dollars each month with many less working hours. Conductors and engineers receive as high as $250 a month and more. Printers in even the smaller cities receiving less than $4$ a I week for 49 hours of work art the exception. i With the introduction of machin- ! ery the number of workers in- I creased rather than decreased. | There are far more working print- ! ers now than before the introduc- j tion of typesetting machines. Several i times as many men were making j automobiles before the war as were ! employed building carriages and j wagons. The ten acres of wheat have j increased to 40, 50 and 100 and more. ! Yes, it has been evolution accom ! plished in an orderly way, without j making America over, at a revolu j tionary pace but not by revolution j Can our Washington theorists prom- j ise equal results under any form of v planned economy or state socialism ! during the period of another life- j tin.e? - i Washington Di9GStj GOP to Inject Vigor of / Youth in 1944 Campaign . ; • ^ Dewey Leader Indicates Republicans WHI Hit * *At Machine Politics and Left Wing Elements During Race, N* By BAUKHAG& I Analyst anW Commnntmtor. CONGRESS AND ^TATES Collectively oor 48 states constitute a great and powerful nation that can, and largely does, dominate the world. Separate them into 48 small nations and no one of them would be of any special consequence. Congress, members of the senate and house, are sent to Washington to legislate for 48 states, to represent a nation. Should congress consider the wishes or needs of individual states as paramount to interests of the nation we would soon pass as a dominant world power, and become but a group of wrangling small nations with advantage to none. SALARIES HIGH--BEFORE UNCLE SAM GETS HIS W. S. CARPENTER JR. is presi (dent of the Du Pont company. Dur i ing 1943 the products of that com i ipany sold to its customers for a j total of $585,481,521.00. It. is one of ; the really big American corpora " lions. To the president who directs its activities, the production and * sale of its products, the companv ! pays a salary, and no other com i • per.sation. of $150,000 a year. After I Mr. Carpenter had paid his Federal •; income tax he had left of his salary all of $36,495, out of which he still lhad to pay local and state taxes 1 Big salaries are big only before • the government takes its share. • * * • A GRANDDAUGHTER, BEFORE, SHE WAS 18 YEARS OF age. had a commercial pilot's license and was | flying commercial planes. Before' she was 19 she had a flier's commission in the army and as an army pilot was ferrying the big bombers from factories lo air posts, and the public of today applaud her and her sisters. When her grandmother at the age of 18 accepted a job in an office the people of her home town in Iowa were shocked. A girl's place was in the home. Women have traveled far in the past half century. WNU Service, Union Trust Bulldog, Washington, D. C. In a week or so the political campaigns will be warming up and already the main lines of atfack and coi&iter-attack have begun to form. The bombs will explode far from the banks of the Potomac--Republican headquarters and regional offices are already springing up and their activities are far removed from Washington's daily life. But nowhere is the intereatin politics and the garnering of irotes as great as in this voteless city. Before Candidate Dewey started westward with Pittsburgh and St. Lbuis station stops, Herbert Brownell, the new chairman pf national committee, visited Republican headquarters here on Connecticut avenue to get acquainted. He did and made a very good impression. As one reporter remarked, "What a change in the genus chairman." Brownell is quite a contrast to his predecessor, Harrison Spangler, and the accent is on youth. Brownell is 40, looks younger, although his dusty ^londe hair is sparse. He reminded me of a "fraternity brother (he happens to be one, I discovered) who was assistant professor of something --not too highbrow--the non-academic type. He is a Nebraskan and a Mayflower descendant who won a scholarship at his state university which took him to Yale where he edited the Yale Law Journal, no insignificant distinction. Bring* Dewey Clomt To General Public He made an excellent law connection in New York, was elected to the state legislature and developed a keen nose for politics which brought him to the position of counsel for the state Republican committee. He was one of the inner circle of the Dewey group and liked Dewey as those who are closest to him do and unlike those in the middle distances, who don't. A part of Brownell's job will be to bridge that gap. He or somebody else has already been giving lessons to the governor in the charm school as was evident at his first press conference in Chicago after his nominaton where he revealed his training- The cynical Albany press gang were a little taken aback by the governor's showing at that time. Dewey is naturally an introvert, with a tendency toward egocentricity. But he is one of the lucky ones who knows it and from school days he has struggled against the aloofness which often grows up around the man who,. is always the head of his class as Dewey &as. He is ready to help the Republicans put the accent on youth and underline it heavily. Brownell fits into that picture naturally and Dewey can be counted upon to match his own conduct with his years as far as vigor and energy go and he will probably be able to acquire the "hail-fellow" flavor for public relations. It is clear when you talk to Brownell that he is all for the "wim-andwigger" type of electioneering. The Democrats know what to expect. They started a defensive-offensive on the need of wisdom and experience in their convention speeches. They are going to try to prove that when the contestants weigh in, Democratic gray-matter will out-balance the red corpuscles and vitamins which their opponents display and of which they will boast. As we waited to interview Brownell on that muggy Washington afternoon, a figure emerged who may have been exhibit A of the Republicans' immortal pep. He was the man who nominated Taft for President so you can date him. He was former Sen. Jim Watson of Indiana (born 1863), not juvenile, but he hadn't lost his up-and-at-'em. "As Uncle Joe Cannon always used *&) advise me," Senator Jim allowed to all and sundry, " 'give 'em hell, boys!' " I asked Brownell later if the Republicans intended to campaign in "an unusual way," since the President had said he Wouldn't campaign in the usual way. Brownell smiled and replied with a sentence the burden of which was "energetic." However, ja pean to youth will not be the only song in the1 Dewey- Bricker repertoire. Mr. Bricker's lush but powdery thatch doesn't, go so well with that. "Control of the Democratic party," said Mr. Brownell, "rests wholly with two elements--the bosses of the corrupt big city machines and the radical left wingers who are closer to communism than any other political philosophy." Right there you have two key notes, the first of which the ex-prosecuting attorney can sound in all its variations and no doubt he will. The second will fit splendidly injp Mr. Bricker's style of oratory and KNOLLWOOD i »»»• By Yardstick A pall of sorrow fell over our community when we learned that Mr. and Mrs. Feiter received a telegram from the war department informing them of the death of their son Pfc. J Jack, in Italy, on July 16. Jack is j the second one of our boys to make ' the supreme sacrifice that this world : may be a better place for us all. j Your neighbors join us, Mr. and Mrs. I Feiter, in offering you our deepest 1 sympathy and hope that this will ' in a small measure ease the pain .and sorrow in your heart. j There was much rejoicing at the | home of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Pyritz | over the weekend. TTiey had as i truest Otto's sister, Mrs. Kulwitzki, j whom Otto had not seen nor heard | from in 18 years. The reunion was j arranged by Mr. Hoeft, Emma's J father, who accompanied Mr. and j Mrs. 'Richard Kulwitzki to the Py-1 ritz home. The surprising fact is j that the Pyritz's for a time 1 ivied; within two blocks of his sister's j home in Chicago and never chanced j to meet. Fate has indeed been kind I to you folks. The Sheriffs enjofod tho company : of their son, Robert, and his girl! friend, Connie, over the weekend, i Mr. and Mrs. Harry Reimer have finished remodeling their home. That! new shingle job looks grand, folks, j Mr. Ames has just closed a deal j on a new cottage on West Lane Drive, for his mother. We just know that' you will like it here, Mrs. Ames. j The Hallecker family have opened : j j their cottage and expect to be herej for the rest, of the summer. The Strucks have as guests will appeal to the audiences of the Middle West, which were so moved before Chicago that they almost would not let him take a second place on the ticket they wanted him so badly to top. Expect Dewey to Jtip Truman'a Connection* A Democrat who was a Wallace backer said to me just after the Truman bandwagon began to roll can't figure out what this is all about. They nominate a man who got his start from the Pendergast machine because Pendergast swore he could take an unknown and make him a senator and did. What will Mr. District Attorney do to him?" It is true Pendergast gave Truman his start, but whatever you may think of Mr. Pendergast's morals-- they did land him temporarily in jail--the one quality that everybody who knows Truman talks about and the thing the senator's record points to, is honesty. But what are facts in a political year anyhow? Brownell hinted that there would be plenty s-3'd about "Bosses of corrupt political machines." So that's the scent and a fairly noisome one. which you can expect the Republicans to follow lustily and in full cry. Brownell was asked if the influence of the CIO on the Democratic party would be exploited. Brownell merely said we could expect some thing on that subject, too. He would not say, however, whether he thought that nominating Truman instead of Wallace, for whom Sydney Hillman's CIO political committee was pulling so hard, strengthened the Democratic ticket. He was asked if he expected the support of John Lewis. He didn't answer that directly but he did say that he expected a large proportion of labor support and that party leaders in Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Ohio and Illinois (where Lewis' United Mine Workers are chiefly located) were strongly Republican and that editorial writers of the UMW periodicals and union leaders had noticed the trend and were following it. The "don't change horses" argument will be met with arguments offered at the Republican convention, that there will be no change in the American high command, no interference with military leaders or their strategy and then, of course, there is the pious hope, too, that should the war in Europe end before the ides of November, the stream will be reduced to such a trickle that nobody will worry about a little leap from one saddle to another saddle. * • V v' How War Mapq Are Made "A map is the foundation stone of any operation," says a long and precise document issued by the British Information service entitled, "Liberating a Continent--Index to Invasion." I have had a little'to do with the making of war maps myself and know that information that goes into such maps comes from many sources. Some of the data is as ancient as the hills that are depicted in the convolutions resulting from painstaking topographical surveys which show every three-foot rise. Some of the daf.i, on the other hand, is so fresh from the fighting front i quests orr Sunday Ward itself that the maps upon which it ; 0f I.ake Forest. Walter is superimposed and furnished to officers from the mobile lorry-borne photo-litho printing equipment in the fields are hardly dry. These field map-producing units can be set up and be ready to begin printing within 20 minutes. They can make reproductions of maps with recent corrections on them and produce them in color at the rate of 4,500 copies an hour. Mrs. Edward Richards and the two little! i Richards, Helene and Dennis. i Darler.e Coles spent 1/ast Thursday j ! with * her father in Ringrwood. It I ; was Pop's birthday. <• ' The Nixons enjoyed a quiet week- , end at home. Their son. Jack, vis-1 ' ited with them. • The Nixon family is sure well rep-« : resented in our armed forces. Their j • son, Pfc. Walter, is stationed at J i Camp Maxey, Texas, Pfc. Robert at i Camp Stewart in Georgia and Mrs. I ! Nixon's brother. Emmet" Camp, isr' i somewhere in England.: We were : ! sorry to learn that another brother. William, of the U. S. Coast Guard, | lost his life in' the Pacific theatre i recently. It was a warm August day in the! little town of Jackson, Minn., noli ! so many years ago that a very ner- 1 ; vous individual named Mike Peterka I 1 paced the floor outside of the delivery ' 7 room of a local hospital. Presently: ; the door opened and a- figure in ! white emerged carrying a tiny bun- : die in her arms. It was a joyous day .for the Peterkas. They named the 'tiny mite Ann. Last Saturday, just sixteen years later a large group of ' friends gathered at Horn's to cele- j brate this occasion. It all came as a ! big surprise to our Ann. Among the celebrants weie: Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Walton, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Cermak, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Derr, Jim Pupik, Mr. and Mrs. Barney Graff. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Harker. their lovely neice, Lois Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Edmonds, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy ! Kreiling, Otter Ebert, Mr. and Mrs. ! Lee Sawdo, Mr. Ronjstad, Mr. and ; Mrs. Fred Thomsen, Mr. and -Mrs. Peter Kaminsky, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O'Connor, Mr. and Mrs. Paul •J. Struck and Mrs. Ed. Richards. The dance music was furnished by Jerry Cermak and Peter Kaminsky, whose rendition of the Bohemian National Anthem, "The Beer Barrel Polka," was seph O'Corror, Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Struck and Mrs. Ed. Richards The dance music was furnished by Jerry supert>. The festivities were well (under way when our good friends and neighbor, Ed. Walton, surprised j the folks with the announcement that I it was his birthday also, which ad- ] ded impetus to the party. A grand j time was had by all. The Barkers and the Edmonds entertained their lovely neice, Lois (Schmidt. Mrs. Kreiling, and Mr. and j Mrs. LeRoy Kreiling over the week-1 j end. Ed tried hard to prove to us f that he was as good a fisherman as 'he is a story teller by displaying three good sized sardines which he said he caught early Sunday. We j were inclined to believe him, but j then we spied Ma Harker disposing : of the can that they came in. Sol try again, Ed. Mr. *nd Mrs. Ed. Derr had as Farns worth White and I Miss Edith Lee of Chicago. The I above were former business associates of their charming hostess. Ed and Peggy are formulating plans for their fall vacation in Ft. Myers. Florid-i, in the near future. We're' | going to miss you, folks; • The Warren Barbers bid goodbye i to their son. Pfc. Duane. and hi« I bride, Blanche, who enjoyed leave from the army air force at the Barber home. _ Grandpa and Grandma Woreman were out over the weekend at their cottage on Orchard Drive It will be of interest to Capt. Chas. Wortman of the army air force, stationed at Orlando, Florida, that Pop has ad- j ded a nursery to the Wortman home j here.. We are all wondering if that super-grand-child „ of theirs will be here to enjoy it soon. ' The Joseph O'Connor family spent I Sunday in Chicago with Mr O'Con-! nor's parents. We can't see how that rheumatic chug buggy of yours made it. Marie was nursing an aching arm from shoveling the bug dust into the boiler of the "Black Maria." We must say that it would run better if it had four wheels on it and air in the tires. The Sunday Passing Parade The genial Otter Ebert helping Pete Kaminsky with his dog house. Could it be that, the Galloping Casanova is going to incorporate with tempermental Pete ? Max Kolin practicing surgery in his Jfcack yard. Don't get excited, folks, it was only a rooster. .Harold Grotthuss enjoying the last day of his vacation on his lawn ad-, miring the new paint job on his house. Mrs. Harder, Mrs. Edmonds and Mrs. Kreiling eating off the mantle. The broken chain on their lawn swing was mute evidence, of what had taken pljace. LeRoy Kreihnf surveying the flat tire on his car. Jerryv Cermak filling his coal bin. We suggest you bring it home in larger quantities. Bob Rudin making eyes at somej sweet young thing across the way. | What this Vitamin "B" wont do to! a guy! , f Lee Sawdo secretly testing his j secret weapon behind closed doors inj his garage. He might have been' giving Lill a permanent. Wish we j knew! ° Ed. Do ran and the Mrs. planning! revenge for the story we gave you ! about them last week. Gr-r-r. Easy' on the nails. Ed., too much iron in \ your System isn't good for you. j ADIOS. I SPRING GROVE Owns Timberland j The largest single owner of American forest land is the federal gov- ' ernment. Of 462,000,000 acres of I commercial forest laud, 341,000,000 ! are owned by millions of private citizens, or groups of private citizens, and about 121,000,000 acres by ! federal, state, br local governments. ' (By Mrs. Charles Freund) » . Beverly Ann Adsit celebrated her birthday on Saturday of last week by inviting several of her little friends to her home for a party. The children enjoyed playing games throughout the afternoon and prizes were given. A delicious.lunch was served, which included a large birthday cake and ice cream. "Bewie, received many lovely gifts from her playmatesi Those, present were Pat and Leig Kj gan, Donnie and Bonnie . Fout, Ch-irlotte Freund, Sharon Freund, Terry and Tommy Britz, Phyliss May, Yvonne Straub, Heather Hill, Jennie Lennon, Carolyn Gillespie, Albert Thornton and Mrs. Charles Behrons. Mrs. Charles Freund entertained members of her club at Westlake's Tavern on Thursday of ljftU week. Cards were the afternoon's diversion and prizes were awarded to Mrs. Paul Lewis, Mrs. Arthur Klein, Mrs. Ray May and Mrs. Steve Schaefer. A supper was served following cards. The club will meet next at the home of Mrs. George W. May oa August 24u Pvt. Al; Schmeltzer left , for- California oh Wednesday, where he is now stationed. He had enjoyed a two-week furlough at his home here. Mrs. Roy Nelson and son, Bobby, are spending several weeks with relatives in Iowa. ' 1 Quite a few from here attended the charivari on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Waspi held at Joe Miller's Tavern Thursday night. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. William Shotliff, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund, Leander Lay, Ben Stevens, Jack Sanborn, Norman Britz, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Ehlert and Mrs. Paul Waspi. Visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Thompson are Mrs. Mary Ehlert of Beaver Dam, Wis., and Mrs. Louise Hoehne of Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund pnd family were visitors in the Charles Michels home in Mclleni'y Sunday night. Tommy Freund stayed to spend a few days' vacation with his cousins. A pleasant day was spent at the home of Mrs. Nick "Freund on Sunday when the May family held a reunion. A picnic dinner and supper was held on the lawn and the afternoon was spent visiting. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Tonyan andi; daughter of Lake Bluff, Mr. and Mrs. f John Marshall and family of Liber-" tyville, Mrs. Ray Toriy„an of North, 1 Chicago.Mrs. Lucille Michels, Mrs, : Jeanette Miller, Mark Sweet of Woodi stock, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hergotti;; son Gerald, Mr. and Mrs. Frank May# Eugene and Lorraine May, Stanley^" Freund, Mrs. Nick Freund, Mr. ancf Mrs. Fred Meyer. Mr. and Mrs. Anton Meyer and family, Mr. and Mrs. George A. May and family and Mr» Mrs. Elmer Smith, soh, Dewey., rs. John Marshall and children! Libertyville and Mrs. Ray Tonyant of North Chicago spent several days 1 the past week with Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Smith. Sunday visitors in the Frank Sand- * ers home were Mr. and Mrs. Harry j Gustafson, Mr. and Mrs. Russ Purcell and family and Mr. and Mrs. Alr ; vin Westmans of McHenry. Mrs. Frank May was hostess to the , members of her club at her home on; I Tuesday night. Two tables of five hundred were in play and the prizes ' went to Mrs. Frank Sanders, Mrs.,' ; EUa Siegler and Mrs. J. G. Wagner. < At the conclusion of cards refresh-} ments were served. . 5 j Mrs. Arthur Sebren left on Tues- • j day of last week to spend several I months in Phoenix, Arizona. ! Charles Behrens and Bevvies" j Adsit spent Friday in Chicago.1 j Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wagner, Miker, j Wagner and sons visited in the Henry •. Heinle home in Janesyille on Monday. I Mr. and Mrs. Anton Meyer, Mr. , and Mrs. Elmer Smith and Pvt. Eu~ j gene Meyer and friends enjoyed bowl- , ing at Twin Lakes Tuesday night. Cinchona Country Though Mexico as a whole is farther north of the equator than ia ; commonly regarded as suitable for cinchona plantations, it does possess several promising areas. ~ i r • Noxzle Disks Worn nozzle disks increase tho rate of spray discharge, and the pump may not be able to supply spray fast enough to maintain pre»- sure. As soon as the sharp inside . edge of the hole in the disk becomes rounded, the discharge increases and the angle of the spray cone becomes wider. This reduces effective drive of the spray material. Turn the disk over to use the sharp edge on the other side. The Timid Guanaco Guanaco fur comes from the animal of the same name. The guanaco is the larger of two wild representatives of the wool-bearing animals of the camel family found in South America. The other is the vicuna. The long soft fur of the animal is fawn colored on top and white underneath. t -- F R I T Z E L ' S -- RIVERSIDE HOTEL is now prepared to serve appetizing meals, whether it is a delicious luncheon or l full course dinner. (i C,VL VOUR CHICKS ij-'fWO/O/Yf ,0K DSIWKIHC WMtto c*o* A*o iN;rsTiNrs nr. am ia ssink Mi tMtarii (U* wfeMfc a Is miiH am. IN a. *an ia aaaei aaw i MT hhtt MU. M Mai* ACISfc nh tM. saa, am IN irrts. ikMalrn ha,ktlHMh wmmmmw llwi. TllMMI fa* W mamr mm. •Mb* baml OMrtaif 1 P3T Bolger's Drug Store Green Street i Business peoples can be accommodated here for lunch at the time of day preferred. Blake it a habit to eat at FRITZEL'S, the name that identifies good food. EVERY FRIDAY--All the Perch you caa $1.00 - SPECIAL EVERY SUNDAY - Home Cooked Chicken and Dumplings We also-cater to Parties and Banquets 'Vm -;n 'JM B R I E F S by Baukhagm Many state highways will be in need of repairs and rebuilding by the end of the war, according to an Office of War Inforrrlation report, based on data from the Public Roads administration and state and private agencies. At present, most impressive immediate program calls for improving 34,000 miles Of highways recommended by the National Interregional Highway committee. Farm bperating loans have been made to several hundred honorably discharged servicemen who had no other source of credit to finance food production. • • • Farms, ranches and other noninstitutional employers of seasonal workers may now apply for allotments of rationed foods to feed workers hired for fO days or less. Help Wanted Maintenance Man HUNTER BOAT CO. Cook Immediately Vegetables that have begun to thaw must be cooked at once and never be refrozen. Frozen vegetable cartons can be stored in the freezing unit of a mechanical refrigerator for several days, but you must be sure vegetables do not partially thaw. If this happens, the food should be cooked at once. WAR BONDS--will preserve and protect the American way. END DAMP STOP M010, MILDEW AND MUSTY ODORS Pmte-ct four raiuA" equipment. to>is. and turiiU.tm*8 from damage fcxeeaaive moisture In the air c%n rata many ftrtW-h* <n the houiie HUhi daoipn.'^in i..iir •iioy wltu DPI-At MAKE ROOMS D1Y, HEALTHFUL, PLEASAKT PUe* DPI-AIR in any rot>ai. If&K'Iti* .'if, AH-OH• ' Uif)S KXC'KjW»• MOlsriHh > UU M rHK AIR Frevnta 'limnff c.iiw"! by hiimklllr and con<1"na*t!»n DRI-AIH kill* mu»ty odon. stop* runt furrluin* ftan woodwork Irom w»rpUi« you ouuiy doU&ra. McHenry THE OLD JUDGE SAYS... John J. Vycital Hdwe. PHONE tt-1 <tloodinorniaf,Doc. Your food wife tellsrot you're working night and day now that» many of the younger doctorsare in the army. "That'sright, Judge, and I'm glad I'm still able to do it. Had a long letter from Harry... that bright young fellow I wasbreakin' in to take over my practice. He the boys f a i t ' the service are getting the beet medical cart of any armed force in our history. The$ really tbould with all those brilliant doctor* and plenty of tuppUee to work with." "Speaking of supplier Doc, not many • people realise that a large part of the alcohol required to make the medical supplies that are being used right this minute to alleviate pain, combat infection and save human lives, is produced by the beverage distilling industry. For nearly two years this entire industry has been working night and day producing nothing but alcohol for the government's program." : Nobody knows better than I, Judge, what an important contribution to oor war effort that has been." 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