• * : '3^ J,•' •Vt ',V M, ••• •'•'••Xh: THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER **ublished every Thursday at Mefceory, 111., by Charles F. Renich. H. MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8, 1879. One Year ...$2.50 ersonm I and children, James Edward and ! Mary Marcia, and Mr. and Mrs. Thor ' Nelson of Chicago were weekend guests in the Harold Owen home. { Mr. and Mrs. William Vales and Mrs. Peter R. Frafndof Crystal! da^Jter, Louise, of Lincoln, Nebraa- Lake visited in the Joseph J. Miller| *a< Mr- a"d M™. Frank Kempfer, home on Tuesday. 1 Sr- and the Frank Kempfers Jr., Lieut, and Mrs. Richard Eastman "efe Sunday guests in the Albert and daughter of Hondo, Texas, are Vales home. The gathering served visiting her family, the Thomas A. as a, ^^ell for the William Vales Bolgers, this week. family who have left to make their T * , » , .. ™ . ' permanent home m the west, and for ul. ? ^lc^°' Frank Kempfer, Jr., who returned Yl ^ v,3,tln* her erB^dfather, j to duties in Washinfrt0n. John Anderson. Mr. • and Mrs. J-a ck- A-ltman and V,*®" Margmret Larkln and Miss family of Highland Park visited rela- Mabel Knox were, Chi^go callers on tives here on Sunday. Saturday. i Robert Altman and sons of Downxr . °r^e . . son and Mrs. Mag-, ers Grove visited his mother, Mrs. nus Nelson visited Mrs. Eugene i Alice Altman, this week. Oxtoby m Spring Grove one day last Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Burns of Oak week. i parjj were weekend guests in the -- -- -- -- -- j M r . a n d M r s . F r a n k K e m p f e r , J r . , G e o r g e J o h n s o n h o m e . per wi. I and son, Albert, visited relatives in Miss Clara Stoffel spent Wednes- _ • Chicago last Friday. 1 day in Chicago. i^o cAiir Hnr!^h!,Kn «r»l- . Sunday guests in the A. Henn home, Miss Barbara Carey, who is at- P°R SALE were Camela Ingracia, Marie Anton-j tending St. Mary's of the Woods'collent condition. Write Box B, carenett Grego, Jean Seipe and Kathleen j iege in Terra Haute, Ind., spent the FOR SALE PEARS FOR SALE - Call McHenry 143-W. Henn, all of Rosary college, River | weekend at her home here. FOR SALE -- 300 laying hens, $1.50; forest. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. J. Miller and each. T. Thonneson. Phone 37. 221 Miss Beatrice Williams of St Ann's j daughter, Terry, visited in the Wil- ----; --' • " ' . : ------ i hospital spent the Weekend at h^r liam Morgan home in Elkhorn, Wis., FOR SALE -- Three ladies' all wool "home here. v I last Sunday. guits, size 15, ladies' shoes, one large'; Miss BernicSe Freund of St. Ann's Mr. and Mrs. William Spencer and site man's suit, all'wool, and other [hospital, Chicago, spent the weekend> Mrs. Thomas TJialin spent the weekend visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stenger at Kalamazoo, Mich. household articles; M.. C- Carson j with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter (Kailer Residence), North Riverside A. Freund. Drive, Shalimar. *22-21 Miss June Erickson and Miss 6eat- ---------- ZT , ... ! rice Hummingbird, of Colorado FOR SALE - Two-story brick build-, Sprinfrs< Cd10m and Jack Swatek and ing corner Pearl and Gretri Sts., j George yales of ChicafJ0 were McHenry. Inquire Mrs. M. L. Worts jtors Jn the Alb€rt Valeg home on 105 N. Green St. 18-tf Monday. FOR SALE--Year-'round comfort and 1 Miss Betty Blake and Miss Elaine j economy with fire-proof Johns-Man- j H®i",®r are vacationing this week Home storage potatoes at harville Rock Wool Home Insulation *f0Tn McHenry Ice | veg£ time is being urged this year, "Blownin" walls and ceilings. Call! Cream company and the West Mc- j to the iarge national crop and LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. Henry State bank.^ They are spend- the iimjted commercial storage space HOME STORAGE OF POTATOES AT TIME OF HARVEST URGED 36tf. ing a few days of their vacation in j jn country. It has been pointed Chicago. | ouj. that housewives can save them- Q17ALITY FARMS Miss Holda Schwerman of Liberty- J selves money by purchasing pota- We have recently sold a number ville has been spending a few days! toes by the sack. pf farms te Illinois farmers because vacation visiting in the home of; Federal crop estimates point to a they like oar PRODUCTIVE SOIL, her brother, Paul Schwerman. j crop of 378 million bushels, not so OUT LONG GROWING REASONS Mr. and Mrs. Edward Michels of i larjje as in 1943. Drouth conditions (equal to Central Illinois aeewding Aurora spent Sunday visiting his I have resulted in short crops in the to U. S. Dept. of Agr.K our GOOD j mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Michels. j north central and midwest states. BUILDINGS, our' REASONABLE! Mr». Thomas Kane, Mrs. Lee Lar- j Many carloads from big producing PRICES (you aren't competing with j son and Mrs. George Scheubert spent! areas, like Maine and Idaho, are fit}* folks who want something in j a feW days visiting in Chicago the! thefCfftre expected in this afS5. Commuting distance of Chi€S£°)» our past week. j Commercial storage space is at a GOOD MARKETS (Chicago militj Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Watkins of premium because of government demarket and Milwaukee stock yards), j Chicago v.sr? Sunday visitors in the mands. Last year many carloads of and <yir FRIEKDLY FELLOW Thomas Kane home. -potatoes were lost because of lack of FARMERS AS NEIGHBORS. [ Mrs. Math Laures has been visiting , proper storage facilities. Write us for lists or^come up to see; the Laures JreSOrt at Long Lake, j Storage of potatoes in the home reus. We specialize in quality farms I \vjs, ! quires a cool, dark and fairly moist whose owners really want to sell. MORRISEY & GILBERT, ELKHORN, WISCONSIN 22 WANTED WANTED TO RENT -- 100 to 160 lou^h visitini? his parents, the Sjtan- Mr. arid Claude Harris of De-; room with ample ventilation. They troit, Mich., spent a few days the keep best at about 60 degrees tempast week visiting in the John Vyci- \ perature. The bags should be kept tal home. i off a concrete floor by boards or Stanley Franks of Western Mili- straw for safe storage. tary academy spent a weekend furacre dairy farm; good buildings. John C. E. Petersen, Lake VU1&, 111. Phone Grayslake 6217. 22-2 " LOST ~~ ley Franks, Sr., at Pistakee "Bay, Weekend guests in the E. E. Denman home were Alta Mae Denman,; Miss Jean Battershell, Miss Louella McCall, Mrs. Hoenshell and daughter, Arlene, of LaSalle, 111. JX)ST -- Bicycle at High School. ! Mrs. P. Linick and daughter, Shery, call McHenry 267. Reward. ' 22 of Chicago, has been visiting her -- _ . -- . . . . . . ' • 1 p a r e n t s ^ , t h e ' S t a n l e y F r a n k s , , a t HELP WANTED Pistakee Bay. Miss Patricia Henn spent Saturday in Chicago. Sunday guests in the Martin Conway home were Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Smith and son, Dennis, of Rock- HELP WANTED -- Six women to ^on and, Mrs- Celia Kn<>x of Crystal dress poultry at Chain O'Lakes Game' e' Fields (formerly Pistaqua Hills Coun-, , Mf. and Mrs. Charles Cermak and try Club). Part time or five days ^ami'y Antioch ^ited her paper week. Good wages; pleasant sur-1 rent®' Mr. and Mrs^ E. E, Denman, roundings. Transportation furnished. on Sunday. •phone Pistakee 166. k WANTED -- Cook; good wages. Phone Wbodstock 312 or write ?ox "A." care of Plaindealer, McHenry. 22*tf •A Time to Fight' The congregation of the Lutheran church in Woodstock, Vaknaw that Pastor John Peter Muhlenberg was preaching his last sermon on a Sunday in January, 1776, but did not know why. Toward the end he uttered the words '"»*.• re is a time for preaching and praying, but also a time for Rattle, and such a time has now arrived." After giving his benediction he threw aside his clerical gown, stood before his congregation in the uniform of a colonel of the Continental army, read his commission, then told the drummers in the yard to "strike up!" Before nightfall 300 recruits had joined Muhlenberg in the Eighth Virginia regiment. INTERESTING NEARBY NEWS The condition of Miss Darlene Berry, seriously injured in a threecar accident a mile and one-half east of Harvard early Sunday morning, Oct. 8, is described as fair following a leg amputation at St. Anthony's hospital in Rockford Tuesday. Miss Berry, 16 year old Harvard Community high school sophomore, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin P. Berry of near Alden. A fifty pound nugget of nearly pure copper was found in the crusheT at t^e Wisconsin Lime and Cement company plant east of Crystal Lake recently. It was found in a stratum about forty feet below the surface and five feet albove water level. It is thought the nugget was moved by glacier action from deposits much further north, perhaps as far as the copper range in Michigan. Earle M. Curtiss of the high school chemistry department reports that a former student brought in a small chunk of glacier copper several years ago, the piece having been found between Crystal Lake and Cary. The Barrington public school is looking for former teachers who can be certified as siibetitutes for the elementary grades, particularly third gTade and above. A limited substitute teachers' certificate for the elementary field will be issued to teachers possessing either of the following qualifications: a two-year normal school diploma; or a three-year normal school diploma. George J. Sobon, 17, of Mundelein, and Herbert J. Bartlett, 17, and John B. Meyer, 18, both of Diamond Lake, were taken into custody by Lake county police Monday of last week on charges of setting fire to a number of corn phocks on the William A twill farm near Diamond Lake. They were booked for a hearing on November 17 before Justice of the Peace Harry Hoyt at Waukegan and released on bonds of $200 each. A damage of $100 to the corn shocks, was reported, "The speeding, reckless driving and parking ordinances are ibeing en-, forced in West Dundee," states Marshall Boncosky. Several youths have been taken in and given a lecture and three have been brought before Judge Beck and fined. TURRET-GUNNER KILLED LAWSON OSTRAND^R A turret-gunner on a Liberator, Lawson was reported last week to have been killed in action over England. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ostrander, received the tragic news in their Woodstock home. The 20-year-old youth had been home in July of this year and had left immediately for oversells. His father is well known in this community, being associated wity tha N«tia&al Farm Loan, j .. WANTED -- FIVE AUTOMOBILE day MECHANICS AND TWO BODY AND FENDER MEN. HARRY H. •22 Mr. and Mrs. Clem Freund of Chicago visited relatives here Oft Sun. Charles 0. Helander, 38, son of Mr. and Mrs. Karl Helander of Waukegan, a civil engineer captured by the Japs at Wake Island and interned in a Shanghai War Prisoners' camp in 1941, died November 13,1942, according to word received Saturday from the n^vy department. The long delayed word of his death was the first his parents had heard of him for albout two years. Helander went overseas in October, 1940, as a civil engineer to build air bases on Wake Island. He was ^employed for the Rinse Clothea Well Rinsing is equally as important as washing in a laundering job that gives best results, says Miss Florence King, home economist, University of Illinois college of agriculture. In order to remove dirty and soapy wash water, use hot, soft or softened, water for the first rinse. The second rinse may be cooler and it's not important' that soft water be used, but soft or softened water always removes soap more quickly than hard water. The third and last rinse should be cold and hard water may be used. Homemakers who wish to speed up washing and rinsing small articles su;h as handkerchiefs and collars may put them in bags. A sugar or flour sack of light material or a bag made from a worn sheet or new cheesecloth can be used. Small pieces in a bag will be easier to handle in the washing and rinsing tub and will go easily through the wringer. When rinsing, don't overcrowd the tub or the bag used for small pieces. Leave enough room so that the clean rinse water gets to all the articles. If your water supply is limited, freshen used rinse water by skimming it when the top has become white with soap and lint. Mrs. Kathryn Molidor was a guest' Need Rubber Stamps? in the Robert Vogt home on Sunday, j The Plaindealer. Order at' PHONE NO. 32 WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS SATURDAY ONLY--OCT. 21 "CRIME SCHOOL* '« with HUAJPHREY BOGART aarf TEE ; DEAD END KIDS V , ,.'.L plus The 3 Mesquiteers in "VALLEY OF HUNTED MEN" SUN - MON--OCT. 22-23 M-G-M's Mammoth Musical Spectacle, "BATHING BEAUTY in Breath-Taking Color Starring "Red" Skelton, ESter Williams, Harry James and his Band, Xavier Cugat and his Band, Basil Rathbone, Ethel Smith.. TUESDAY ONLY OCT. 24 « Return Request 'Showing' , "UNDER TWO FLAGS" with RONALD COLMAN CLAUDETTE COLBERT ROSALIND RUSSELL Wed - Thur - Fri--Oct. 25-26-27 "AND THE ANGELS SING" Starring DOROTHY LAMOUB ; FRED MACMURRAY BETTY HlfTTON It's a Super-Duper Show. Colony McHenry, Illinois W#f»> > : FRIDAY--SATURDAY PRISCILLA LANE . WAYNE MORRIS 1. "Brother Rat" GEORGE BYRON - RUTH TERRY 2. "JAMBOREE" SUN -- MON. Oct. 22-23 FRED MACMURRAY !;./r J DOROTHY LAMOUR > M the Angels Sing" Plus World News-Cartoon and Sports 7-TUESDAY (ONE DAY) WILLIAM BOYD . 1. "Riders of •;%.;«the Deadline" 3§E E. BROWN 2. "POLO JOE »»» WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY MARJORIE REYNOLDS DENNIS O'KEEFE 'Up In Mabel's Room' Q OAKDALE FARM BROWN SWISS DISPERSAL 12 NOON, FRIDAY, OCT. 27 At Farm 2 miles North of Crystal Lake, IU. 43 REGISTERED BROWN SWISS 40 Females -- 3 Bulls T. B. and Bang's Tested. Catalogs Available At Sale V, B. VYII, Sale Mgr., Waukesha, Wis. <# Ind>& Makes Army Clothing India produces 8,000,000 pieces ol army clothing each month. On December 3, 1941, he wrote to his parents stating that his group' of rtien had been warned that trar was evident, tout were assured of evacuation before fighting began. When Wake Island fell, however, on December 21, 1941,! TH elander was overseas duty by the Morrison-Knud- i taken prisoner and sent to Shangson Company, Inc., of Boise, Idaho, i hai, China. Mrs. Anita Beckenbaugh was a , iruest in the Robert Beckenbaugh KNAACK, BUICK DEALER. Phone j home in Crystal Lake last weekend. ARLINGTON HEIGHTS 21. 19-tf Mrs. Carl Hiatt of Waukegan spent the weekend visiting friends and relatives. Mrs. J. S. Renne and son of Omaha, Minerals Important in Balanced Poultry Diet Itinerate are of vital importance in th% poultry diet because 3 to 4 per cent of the live weight o! the MSi fowl and iO per cent of the weight of the whole egg is madfe Up of minerals, says Prof. Roy S. Dear- jljljl styne, head Of the poultry depart- ?s»j ment at State eollfcgfe. [fll| He points out that calcium and :%h Tomka's Barbecue £38 N. Riverside Drive-Phone 422"M'HENRY HELP WANTED -- Girl for fountain and general store work. Bolger's Drug Store, McHenry. 13-tf WANTED--Draft exempt man for ; visiting relatives here. Mrs. Renne,, war work. Apply Miller Products, i the former Carolyn Tonyan, is re-j shells and clotting of the blood. |n| I ^ i o i ^ \ M i M XT nl# A * 1 A Ik i. C AJI fiik tMk «#% A A #4 A ^ ^/\w 4 W A A! i F'w'% \ £) • ill al; When for our services arises, your call assures prompt attention. Funeral Directors Phone McHenry 103-R Residence, McHenry 112-W Green Street, corner 51m -- McHenry -- - --'• --"••••v UVII VA VilimtM) pVilllilS WU» H'HV --- -^j Nebraska, is spending a few weeks I phosphate a** Weeded for bone build- | nji -- L--- " 1 ing, and additional calcium for egg iliM MISCELLANEOUS 39-tf i siding in Nebraska while her hus 1 I band, Capt. Renne, is serving in i France. .-- Miss Genevieve Knox and Marty CESSPOOLS AND SEPTIC TANKS i Knox were Sunday guests in the CLEANED -- Wells & Nelson, 138 Edward Knox home in Chicago. East Crystal Lake Ave., Crystal! Mrs,. Michael Thill and daughter, Lake, 111. Phone Crystal Lake | Janice Kay, returned home from the 909-R or Cary 4763. *21-4 Woodstock hospital last weekend. Jane and Mitzi Durland spent the weekend visiting in the Walter Warner home in Elgin. Mrs. Richard Hester and infant son returned home the last of the week from the Woodstock hospital. Sunday guests in the Jacob Diedrich home were Mr. and Mrs. David Dorn, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Bielmann. FOR ANY TYPE OF HOME INSULATION, ASBESTOS SIDING OR A NEW ROOF, see Bob Frisby, People's Insulation Co., 104 S. Riverside Drive, McHenry, 111., Phone McHenry 211-J. Woodstok, 210 E. Jackson St. Phone Woodstock 817. 20-tf DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE WAK Five dollars is the least we Sodium is needed for the elimina- j||U tion of the excess potassium con- j£§j| tained in most poultry feeds. Chlor- llllll ine is a constituent of hydrochloric acid secreted by the bird and necessary for the preparation of proteins for digestion. Iodine is necessary for proper thyroid functioning. Sulphur is found in relatively high amounts in the feathers and eggs. Manganese is present in the blood and tissue, and is necessary to prevent slfpped tendons, according to Dearstyne. Iron and copper are important constituents of the blood and enter into the eggs. Fowl Tuberculosis Fowl tuberculosis can and is be-^ ing transmitted to hogs at a high" Mrs. William Wilson, Mrs. Sam pay for dead horses and cows in good • Harbst, Mrs. Joseph Harbst, Mr. and fonditihTi. Wheeling Rendering Co. Mrs. William Harbst and daughter,, Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the i Emily, Mrs. Jacob Regner and Miss i rate but all scientific evidence charges. No help needed to load. 14-tf Lucille Regner, all of Chicago. ' shows that it cannot be passed on to j. Sunday guests in the Robert Vogt bumans. GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us 1 home were Mrs. Tillie Frisbie and' Tuberculosis in poultry is respondispose of your garbage each week, j Dr. and Mrs. Earl Frisbie of Park sible for sizable losses in chickens or oftener if desired. Reasonable Ridge, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Cook and i an<* causes about 90 per cent of the son, Gilly, of Des Plaines, Mr?. Har-1 sa^e d[seasf in swine, old Blomstrom, Bartmra and Tommy, " rates. Regular year round route, for mer'.y George Meyers'. Ben.J. Smith. Phone 365. tf An annual waste Of 14,000,000,000 Mr. and Mrs. Verne Roberts and son' i P°unds o{ P°rk and pork products Bob, and Ruth Vogt of Waukegan! J ^ Seaman. 2-c Clifford Jones of Glenhas been condemned as unfit due to tuberculosis, 90 per cent the direct pJoVrtF i yU7\.™d Vo£ | ">' poultry carriers. Damage rates ? They will °M ""james'E. Thompson you. Ask us for insurance rates. I The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8. ;• 27-tf I Rayon Advance j The outstanding feature in the I fiber situation is the spectacular ad- ' vance of ° rayon. This fiber first emerged as a commercial product in 1911. For a long time it remained in the experimental stage and was not generally accepted by the public because of its defects. But by means of constant and thorough research it has undergone a remarkable improvement and has enjoyed a phenomenal advance. By 1927, it had outdistanced silk on a poundage basis, and since that time has gained rapidly on wool until rayon now ranks second to cotton. Rayon'g proportion of the fiber business has increased from less than 1 per cent in the early 1920's to 10 per evil in IMS Subscribe for The Plaindealer I I I s 1 1 lilil I I YOU WILL MATCF. A STRIKE EVERY TIME. IF YOU TOP OFF YOUR BOWLING WITH A VISIT TO TOMKA98 BAR-B-Q GOOD FOOD IS RIG# T DOWN 0,UR ALLEY Bawling (HI fcCORE) SOUTHERN HICKORY BARBECUED GOLDEN BROWN RIBi neyep miss - (HI SCORE) REAL ITALIAN SPAGHETTI The S&ucd Is Delicious And Port \ Generous THICK JUICY STEAKS GOOD CLOTHES DESERVE GOOD CARE 103 Elm Street Phone McHenry 104-M Subscribe for The Plaindetaler FRIED CHICKS# MBlH • * FISH AND FRENCH FRIED SHRIMP ON FRIDAYS OUR TASTY BAR B-Q SANDWICHES VACUUM COFFEE Is Always DELICIOUSLY FRESH BOTTLED BEER SOFT DRINKS Served With Frencji Fries DELICIOUS HAM SARDINE Swiss and American Cheese 1 SANDWICHES STOP WONDERING WHERE TO EAT DURING THE LATE HOURS & REMEMBER WE ARE OPEN DAILY FROM 4 p; M UNTIL MILKINfc TIME EXCEPT MONDAYS AND THURSDAYS--CLOSED ALL DAY i I iw YOU DON'T HAVE TO DRESS UP TO DINE AT TOMKA'S ALL OUR CUSTOMERS HAVE GOOD TASTE Daatfirget DON'T FORGET--We give a 25 per cent reduction from our regular posted ceiling prices to all uniformed memb^f <af j©fr armed forces I I i i 1 i I i ij LET US SOLVE YOUR GROUP AND PARTY PROBLEMS WE SPECIALIZE IN ORDERS TO TAKE OUT -