Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Jan 1945, p. 2

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Pare Two. THE M'HENRY PLAUfDEALER W £ - ' ' r ^ ^ i ; Yit " T2 '^" £:f •"';5 > _ - . w r , , i ^ i . - - , p j » tt '^Jr-..*, '• • <;*•»?:„«; 13. ^.x^'^rtan > "" "' J" " ' * 1 ' - J ,-vr-, x . ^ } 5 .J".1 \ '.> «, * , , ' _ » 'f . „ ** * ^ u-**•" „t\ ~ ' - - * •*- ---i. •• * Thursday, Junnry 11, 1MB 1 thin. Well, let'B keep trying, well get that boat a-sailing yet. -LILY LAKE ••••M"}"*' 'H' 'I' '1' '1' '?• CBy Evelyn Lavin) *4 Hi Folks- Chicken , Thief 'Trapped At Lily Lake!--Reinhold Hintz crept stealthily across his back yard one day last week--gun in hand--ready to catch spends his Sunday afternoon^ "crocheting and stretching curtail*!** ? Would any of you be surprised to find a young Lily Lake modern carrying/ smelling salts ? "Dear Mr. Anthony," asks one of red-handed, the person* Who was ere- 1 'our worried young mothers, My son, who is five years old, insists on sleighriding in the summer and bi^ cycling- through the snow, in the win- Is there anything wrong?" b::i -•*1'; * **" * Rumors of the good skating on bating havoc in his chicketi yard Lily Lake haVe gotten around-so far Upon reaching fche yard, lo and bethat, last Sunday, the cdws on the^hold," the thief was-a nice fat opos- Wilfred Blake farm decided to- try ' sum. Those wishing to view the thief it. After the evening's milking, when ' will find him stuffed (not with chickthey were let out for water, they j en.) at the Big Hollow Inn. | Oops ..-.y. almost forgo^-- M188 broke loose, and started off down the; Mr. «d Mrs. Bueckheite expect to" ?u,h b,rth5ai/"n,V'»S road toward the lake. Luekili, the leaVe Friday to visit Mrs. Rmck-" £"• ,,10-- blr,t,day' An«el Alex' Wirfs happened along, spread heihi's son and daughter7in-law, M^ ^ss* the alarm, rounded up 4the cattle, and and Mrs. Silas Churchili, iri, Clevegot them back into the Jttijrn. Ijt land, Ohio. Mrs. Churchill has f been' isn't that anyorte objecfed to tlm cows bedridden for the past three years. having a good tinip skating. It's just sincerely hope the Rueckheim's that, we " natives don't want to shock \ will find her greatly* imptevedi Durthe pass^rsby, who "surely wouldn't rjng. her absence from the lake, Mrs. believe their eyes. „ Rueckheim will celebrate her 72nd Mr. and Mrs. Jo]hn Milinac were! birthday anniversary, Jan. IB. Vfe host and hostess to a group of their j wish-you a very happy pirthday and neighbors at a buffet supper, Sunday a pleasant journey. evening. The ' occasion was Mrs. . M»» and Mrs. George Then of Disabled Vets Hold Navy Jobs .Hundreds Wounded in Wair """ Are Now Serving in • ' \ Important Jobs. YOLO , (By Mrs. Lloyd Fisher), ; Philip Thennes underwent a major operation at the Belmont hospital in Chicago. Tuesday. We are very glad to report, th"at he is getting . ana Mrs. ueorge inen vi ajon nicely and is expected home Mihnacs birthday. Jan & Those at-; <Jl^fiew spent the weekend withJhe ; the lattef part of the week. tending were Mr. < and Mrs. Alfred j^sKiels here at Lily Lake. Saturday . , , . ' SeyflFerth, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Sv6- was "Grandpa" George Then's bjrth-i Mrs- Wl!h«f, and daughter, boda, Mr. and Mrs. Warner, Mr. and dav anniversary.J V Many happy -j^ ^arian' ^ ~®r^ a" "®rs* - e Mrs. Einspai; and Mr. and Mrs. Matt turas! • : ^ Brewer at Ivanhoe Sunday. , ; r F*eund. Strangely enough, most tof; Emil Weber was in Chicago " A number of young folks fcatherthe guests were celebrating anniver-; lagt weekend to attend (the wedding j ?d at L .«ie home of Mr.' and Mrs. saries of their own around th -same Qf WeberVdaughter. Next week ^oseP" Wagner Tuesday evening, in *i-ji-- •* - I'-honor of their -daughter, Catherine Marie's, birthday anniversary; Catherine Marie received many pretty and useful gifts. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and, daughter, Mary Lou, and Mrs. Albert dafe. Mrs. Syfferth celebrated her wj,en Mrs. Weber returns we hope birthday anniversary Jan. 5. Mr. tQ t all the particulars about the SeyflFerth will honor his Jan. 13. wedding for yOU. ^ Mrs. Svoboda will enjo'y hers on Jan. ; ... . .. {.. 10, and Mr. and Mrs. Warner'were We*e ternbTy sorry t0 ^ receiving congratulatiows on t^ieir our old neighbor, Mrs. Lillian ahthat n Nerfortieth wedding anniversary. An fer» 13 !n th® hosp1^ ^u°p V'elw iHafer were Libertyville callers Satevening of cards, bunco, and chatter ( °m «« urday. about their boys in the service," was ^omt,bUe.ikidded ^overturned as Mrs. pHiIip Thennes and son,1 enjoyed by all. The guests left s^e yas ^V i Tup Npi. Leonard, visited Philip Thennes at singing the praises of Mrs. Milinac's plant on ^ew YearsDay ^ the Belmont hospital in Chicago on fine cooking, especially her recipe for **rs m,ovf from ^ ^ t0 ^Wednesday. fruit punch. Happy birthday from , EJlyn' last summer- j I Mr. and Mrs. Frank Metacek and all of us to all of you, and may Mr. Mrs. Harry Gannon s aunt is viSi- ^ son of Barrington visited Mr. and and Mrs. Warner enjoy at least forty | iting her, helping to nurse her moth- |urs> Walter Vasey Monday. more happy years together. ' Con-' er, Mrs. Redding, who is still crit- Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Thennes, gratulationsl folks! ^ically ill from the fall she took last Misses Stella and Irene Thennes and There is an empty chair at the week. ( , j Robert Vogt, Jr., of McHewry visjted Bieseicher family table this week:* Walter and Hattie Einspar will be | Philip Thennes at the Belmont hos- The folks are tdl missing Mrs. Besei- spending; a considerable Rart of' this j pital in Chicago Sunday. cher's son, Seaman 2/c George week in Chicago. First, greeting Pvt. Clyde Dickson is enjoying a Roeske, whose 30-day leave came to their son, Willard, who is home on twenty-one-day furlough here with an end last Friday. Good luck, furlough. Then^helpijig to pack and relatives and ^friends. Clyde was George, come home soon, for good. , see his family off on their trip back ' stationed at the Aleutian Islands for . Victor Bassi and his son-in-law, with him to Corpus Christi, Texas, thirty-two months. Stanley Mann, came out this week- Saturday, the senior Mrs. Einspar ( Mrs. Clifford VeddeY-s .and daughend with a beautiful tand-made ice will be hostess to a few of the young * ter, Judy, are spending a few *eeks boat. As luck would have it, the Einspar's friends at a farewell party Jiefe with .her parents, Mr. and Mrs. snow was thick and the wind was for them in the city. j Frank King." ' ;**-' Last iSunday the Arthur Diedrichs enjoyed the day at Ivanhoe with^ Mrs^ Cattle LbniTlFVom'l&Ubs rw--dnch s family, the Shobers. The | le' Diedrichs were glad to see Are Over $50,000,000 < physically, can't endure the inces ir ^oVftrito \ T Tr^TrTOXT ' Diedrich's /iUVj JL kittle DiedricilS NEW YORK, i- Matthew«Wagnei'. Jr. lost a leg on the beach at Casablanca when a. mine exploded under a charging American tank, killing two of its occupants and wounding the others. Today that wounded soldier has a full-time jolj^s a property and supply <?lerk at the New York navy yard. / '• He is only one of more than 800 disabled veterans, of this war at work in the yard's warehouses and shops and on its fighting ships. Veterans of landings in Africa, Sicily and Italy, of campaigns on Guadalcanal, Bougainville and New Guinea, of the Arctic and the battle of the. Coral sea, their niimbet is increasing^ by eight a day. „ Manjf lack an arm, a leg or an eye, but they are doing a "splendid job," Rear Adm. Monroe Kelly, commandant of the yard, said, "both in helping the war effort and in helping themselves?' Wagner of Maspeth, N. Y., gets abouj the supply house nimbly .on crutches. As soon as his leg is ready tor an artificial limb, Wagner, who knows "how terrible war can be" says he will try .to get back into the army, ,1 v - " Enter Trade Schools. Three junior officers with civilian personnel experience, are working under the commandant with shop Supervisors in placing the disabled men in positions for which they are suited, the Third naval district said. Men without special training or those unable to return to the jobs for which they are fitted are sent to one of the yard's trade" schools to begin as help-trainees. "There are two primary considerations," Admiral Keliy said, "what is best for the mancrtimself and where can i\e best be employed in helping the war effort. Obviously a man with a back injury or a mining leg can't stand up at a lathe all day, sd we try to place him at a job where he can sit down. "A man with a medical history of battle fatigue or extreme shock, even though he may be all right Lives 18 Years " With a Lodged in Brain Victim' of ^Unloaded' (inn Now Paralyzed; Case Puzzles Poetcrss Many Type* of Flower*. Have Rapid Germination Suppose you demanded a combi-v nation of flowers which would germinate in five days (in-warm weather) and flower in 30 to 40. Here are some you might get: Zinnias, ageratum, alyssum, candytuft, centaureas, clarkia, cynoglossum,' annual sunflowers, morning glories, annunl pinks/ leptpsyne, inaria, marigolds, poppies. Such a list might be very much enlarged by including - varieties which will germinate"W a week or CLEVELAND. -- For 18 years Jor Celikovich has lived with "a bullet in his - brain ^ Npw the 29-year-old Clevelander ! days. But it would be interestlies in a hospital cat partially para- j F* fe what sort pf garden could lyzed and refusing to talk becau,. Mcrest b5 ^iTit h'is'lS'aT68 the paln,ul presSure 1,1 j fere'nf colors and ^pes Celikovich was the victim of a so \ T®ke zinnia for example-they called "unloaded" revolver. He was j could hardly be omitted from a garplaying in the rear of his west side | ThIre "^5 home with the two boys found old, rusted,.. „ _. ... . ^ a j revolver. The other youngster Ua' type and the giant flowered vathought the gun , was harmless-so | "eties. They give an abuncance of ^daSd,, thdelr^er a, J<>e', ^ V„S The bullet tore through Joe's I b?rd.w might be planted mostly tc -• l ui. Kmin !IUMUas> provided one used enough where it has been" ever since de- a«eratum', cineraria and cynoglos- u has been ever smce' ^ sum to introduce, the needed felue I Chinese Farm Output A survey of China's agricultural products shows that prior to the Sine-Japanese war in 1937, China Was the world's leading producer of the following crops: rice with an annual production of 105,DOO,bOO,QM pounds or 2,350,0*50,000 bushels, soybeans 220.000,000 bushels, sorg- ]4um 300,000,000 bushels, millet 300,- 000,000 bushels and sweet potatoes 700,0Q0,000 bushels. China was also the world's leading producer of Vegetable oils and tung oil. China ranked second in the world's output of wheat with 900,000,000 bushels annually, and third in cotton, with 4,550,000 bales. China was an important producer of corn, tobacco, fruitfL aiid vegetables, and cane sugar. , • ~" •'--; L.V- . Subscribe for The Plaindealer i-: r a'lS-VVar-old "friend when | «^er e^ t^f-'VmediaS^r "S i J^TOOII ItfC® Itedpe CfieCitt thp livn hnv< fntinrf an nM niRtprf i "QUbleS, the l.-v^riTiediate Or pum» Rheumatic Qsiddy DISPERSAL SALE their favorite Uncle Roy,| who was Further information on cattle grub home on a three-day pass from the <j»nage, from the National Livenavy in "Washington. stock Lous Prevention Board, sets Charles Leonard & Ed'Vogel i When the Clifford Hyatts attend-' the annual loss to the livestock in- Auctjoneers ed the Ice Review a few weeks ago. dustry at from $50,000,000. to $100,- State Bank of Richmond, Clerking1 Mrs- Ryatt became ill and they had 000 000. ^ •-* _ to 4^ave in <the middle of the per- Average devaluation on grubby " v . . formance. But what they saw of the cattle is from 25 cents to $1 per hun- Undersigned haying decided |show was so interesting that they dredweight, and averages from $50 spite two operations. Unconscious tS Days. He was unconscious for 23 days after the shooting and doctors said then that he wouldn't live--in fact,; they said he couldn't; it was impossible. But Joe did live and still is holding on to a thin thread of life. He has frequent relapses and numerous headaches. The two operations helped relieve partially the continuing . growing pressure on his brain. His left sid£ became paralyzed almost immediately, hut he still managed to get around* Neighbors describe him as "pleasant" and a "happy young man." Dr. Charlet T. Dolezal, superintendent of the Cleveland City Hospital, examinee) Joe recently when he collapsed into his present coma arid said that "any new Operation will in all probability make him worse." Parents Want Operation. Joe's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Celikovich, disagree. They think another operation will help their son-- "maybe cure him." But Dr. Dolezal said "further exploration in a brain, twice tampered with, will do more harm than good." • "Joe Celikovich," he asserted, "can live a long, long time with that bullet in his brain--or he could tones, ^ear-Sirhtedness •' If the eyes of a person wearing glasses appear small, he is nearsighted; if large, he is far-sighted. : If you luffer from rheumatic, artkj* th or neuriti«» pain. cry thit aiapk inexpensive bom* • recipe that tbouoods *re using. Get a , package of Ru-Ex .Compound, a 2 weeks' supply toiiay. Mis it with a quart of water, add tfcc juice of -4 litmoni. It's eaiy, .plcaoat and no trouble at all. You need only 1 ' tabUspoonfuls two times a day. Oftea ' Within . 4ff hours sometimes q*ct> ° night -- splendid result* are obtained. If thfe pains do not quickly lam •' ind if you do not feel better, Rii-Ei ' Will cost you nothing to try as 'it is ' aold by your druggist under) an -Hlute money-back guarantee. Rp-b Comjiound is for sale and recommended by THOMAS BOLGER, Druggist and Dri|g Stores Everywhere sant noise of the boiler shop, so he I di® suddenly tomorrow. It is diffim'ay go to the sail loft or one of the j Cl^ *° ascertain. We don t know more quiet shops until he is more whether his present coma is duetto fully recovered ' symPtoms resulting from pressure13 "In no instahce, however, do we 1 by the bulletl or from iniuries recoddle" the men. They emphatically don't want it, we have found." to quit farming will sell at public hope to see t},e whole thinp nex^: upward,>pep*eat4oad. Spending 3Vi .auction on the Chas. Krlse Farm gaturday, along with the Joseph cents for the proper insedtiHHp •located 3% miles northeast °* Yaegers and Mrs. Alice Smith. v board adds, may prevent Richmond, 2 miles northeast from Saturday, Jan. 13, on Alfred Sey-" "dock" of $3.50 per head 173 at- Miller's- Corners, 4- miles fferth-s 75^ birthday anniversary, excerpts follow: ,W!st of Wilmot, ,3 miles south. of-rTj|r an(j Mn< SeyflFerth plan to at- ' "Controlling cattle grubs and lice Twin Lakes, ^rTT^ttend the.'installation of .their oldest « one pf the livestock grower's THURSDAY, JANUARY 25, '45 ! daughter, Mrs. Mildred Bettray, as cheapest and quickest means of in- _ Commencing at 11 o'clock, sharp, the* vjce „rand in' the White City Re-, cr?asirfS needed supplies of meat, following described property, to-wit:.|^^bekah lodge Friday Mrs. Bettrav's r]llk and sound leather. In 1942, 60 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK , daughter, Orabelle, 'who lived for cat^e hide.s in * Consistine of quite , time with her Br»,<lparenta .U HEAD OF HOI.STEIN AND i here »» Lily Lake, "ill celebrate her ruined « s w« id h ^ GUERNSEY DAIRY COWS, several 21st birthday anniversary, and ™ sole& {or 2% million marching meri -close springers. u : J?"-1 th^^^erth g gran(feon.. for year_ Wp are ,ftow failing to 7 Head Heifers. These are bred Clarence Seyfferth, was ten years meet our leather requirements by ! and close sprtngers; 2 Head* Heifers, old. My,? what a lot of birthday an- about 34 per cent--approximately • 1 year old. v> niversaries we'r? ^celebrating .^ thi| tlw percentage of hides partly ru-' One 21 months old Holstein Bull. ,veeH- r ined by grubs. These cows are%T. B? and blood Gad AhoUts "Praetical, unifieci Operating plans tested. t Which neighboring 4 HEAD HORSES -- 1 Black Mare, 10 years, wt. 1500; 1 Sorrel Mare 10 years, wt. 1500; 2 Colts, 11 Roan Mare, wt. 1600; 1 Belgian Gelding. wt. 1300. " • PIGS -- 4 Brood Sows, bred to farrow about ^pril 1st, 24 feeditig ^ , , , , , T pigs, 1 boar ' T On account of shortage of labor, I . .J50 Leghorns, 1 yr. old and pul- wjLL st>11 at Public Auction on my Jets. , • , farm, one-half mil^ west of Volo, on - Hay, Grand and Machinery 'Route 126, on T 15 tons baled alfalfa and alsike hay 5^5 tons baled alfalfa 2nd crop hay; 500 bu. oats', 1600 bu. corn in commencing ut 12 o'clock, noon, the crib; 250,bales straw;* 1 stack straw; following described property, towit*: I- stack hay; 30 ft. of silage in* a"T^"±; .• : 13 ft. silo; Int. bailer, hew with pick- * ^ HEAD OF LIVEJSTOCSC up; McCormick silo filler, complete; i -- - Consisting of McCormick corn husker, 4-row; Case 1 gentleman are necessary to clean an area and to prevent its reinfestation." AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer TUESDAY, JAN. 16 - Lost ^Popularity The entire Med iter rafiean, the Red sea, the Black &ea, and all the great cities x>f these three sess had had Italian as their "liflgua franca" of culture aij<J- ofucommerce down, to Arthur C. Eberspeacher, 31, of Brooklyn, was ,a Wall street clerk before he joined the army. Today he's doing a. similarly classified grub f the yard's electrical shop - Other i Eberspeacher's hair turned white on Guadalcanal, where he was among the first army troops to, re- ; lieve the marines, and he was discharged for battle fatigue and re- | current malaria which still sends j him to a veterans' hospital pc- I casionatly. j ^ Takes Up Electricity. I Frank Robert Aiello, 26, of Brooklyn, joined the marines in 1936, right ( after his graduation by Stamford f(Conn.) high school. Wounded on Bougainville, he contracted malaria on Guadalcanal. "I don't know anything except how to be a marine," Aiello said. "Now that I'm disabled I can't follow my profession, so I'm learning another. I'm going to be a good electrician, because in addition to my wife, I've got a 'little marine' two years ol^." Carmine Pizzo, 24, of Brooklyn, is. j the principal support of a widowed j mother -and three sisters. A Salerno ] veteran, the only survivor of his j platoon, Pizzo says he can "get l?y ceived during the previous opera1- tions." - Dr. Dolezal added that the present collapse may not be-the result •of the bullet "but may be a mental condition entirely unrelated to the i original injufy." What is causing Joe's current relapse is not known.* Doctors disagree. Medical science has not yet | solved the intricacies and mysteries' of the human brain. But Joe, despite the bullet in his brain, is continuing his struggle to stay alhfe. ' For Auck and Passenger Oars - TIRES AX D TUBES We have a complete stock of both passenger arA track tires and tubes, all sizes. You can now have your tires retreaded without an QFA order. ~ Bring them in. " • a - TIRE AND TUBX VULCANIZING Trade in your old battery on a new FIRESTONE. We allow $2.00 for your old one. FIRESTONE SUPER ANTI FREEZE AND WINTER 'OILS. Walter J. Freund OFFICIAL TIRE INSPECTION STATION MAIN ST., WEST M'HENRY, PHONE 294 Dad Sets Trap to Help " - Take Son on Extortroi|; NEW YORK. -- A trap set by i Capt. Ahra Insley, tugboat captain, i at the instruction of -the FBI, re-„ ^suited in the arrest' qf his son, i George Matthew" Insley, 19, for at*. | tempted extortion. ! The boy was seized by FBI I agents in the postoffice at the Sea- 1 men's church institute as he picked ; up a letter from his father which | he thought contained money. The envelope was empty. h Young ; IftSley " was' Mid to haveFr sent a letter to his father which read: the mid«f* of 1800, according to r lIt VJ Carro* Sforza. What stupefied and ; nicely on this checking job because alarmed people in Italy was that | I can hold a pad of paper with immediately after the political unification which ought to have afforded additional' strength to Italian influence, the Italian language , began to lose ground in Turkey, Greece, Rumania, Egypt -- where French superseded it, despite France's defeat in 1870. "If you want to stay healthy send $100 to John Simon Petrie. We can easily kill ' both your sons.," Admitting authorship, Insley told what's left of my left arm, and these-I I16 ^c'u<^e<^ himself and his two fingers that are gone from my 1 ^r fr in ® threats in Order to right hand don't interfere with my divert suspicion. He was held in writing much." "These men who have made such sacrifices are interested in a chance to do a day's work on their .own, where they can continue to help out $1,000 bail for grand jury action. oriental railway lines that connected the'Levant with Vienna and Pari? and thereby msfde the ,water route via Bjrindisi and Naples a longer distance to travel; the Austrian empire's suddgn distrust of the threshing machine, 28-in.; Oliver 70 (24 HEAD HOLSTEIN DAIRY QOWS There were reasons for thiST fact, in this war," Admiral Kelly Said, i tractor 'on rubber, self-starter and ' , . , . \_ . 4 ' . .. . Sforza" said. The construction or "and that's what we see they get." s ar -Jijfhts; McCormick 15,-30 tr&ctbf T>n hea^l bcMng Registered J ure-br6d, nripntal. miiwnv linoa i I ni --eteel: 2 bottom tractor ptows."*!^^11*®4*^"^ Prad<>- herd has . in.; tractor cultivator; McCormick 7- het^n -TB and BAIViCiS Tested within ft. double, tahdem disc;. John Deere last yoar' .Th^e are.all good, young ^ift. disc, straight; 3-sec. steel drag CQWS W1-th DHIA i-ecoi^s up to 500 and drag cart; 8-ft. cultipacker;. 3- l^.s" . ... , . „ r-r-- ----„». sec. /spring tooth drag; 4j[cCormiek •ure -r , Holstein heafer, 2 year^r language of a great new independent __corn planter; McCormick 6orn bin- ( a] ('ue freshen; in- February. nation, whereas formerly Italian ;"der with loader attachment; McCor- 2 0rS-d.e Heifers, Holsteinsr 18 mos. had been the official language of the • .'iipick grain binder; -McCormick 8-ft. - q^ain (jtri'll; ^McCormick o-ft, mo«vi; 1 •-.Cjra iKcCor'mick ' side' delivery rake; 2- „ ' -hor'-o sulk-y plow; V walking plow;- 1 New Idea*" matiure spreadt-'r, good condition-.' 2." steel wagons and basket Kacks; 1 rub- % ber tiretj. trailed stock >ack~~l*xl2,- 1 ^ stock rack" for pickup truck; .1. corn sfulter; buzz saw with Oliver at^ ' tachments ..or 10x20 attachments; "1 , saw" blade, 30-in.; 2 cross cut saws; old. --'-v - ; , Austrian bureaucracy throughout 1 Grade Heifeis Holsteinr 12 monthsJ the Levant even in the documents of the imr°rial and royal embassy SIBEt--3 years at_Consta T lople; the^ Pacific invasion of the Levant by French." German Soldiers Seeking Dutch Citizenship Paperr LONDON,--The possibility that tht Germans are preparing to plant fifth-columnists in regions liberated by the Allies was seen when word was received that large numbers of German soldiers had been attempting to obtain documents of Nether- HOLSTEIN HERD old, REGISTERED -- With, higl Squadron of Blackbirds Dive-Bomb Scrappy Pup INDEPENDENCE, MO.-Skippy's ancestry is doubtful--but he's definitely not a bird dog. The smaH 'canine's owner, Dale Sullivan, had that.-proven to him recently. • ~ v, • Skippy fought a private war with a squadron of blackbirds rn his own back yard--and was Saved from ignominious surrender by a flash" shower. - " _ _ = The pup had b.een chasing a few. blackbirds when they called for r?* inforcemerits, and were quickly supported by numbers of feathered ft Res WEAK ? Jk record daips--Pabgt - Far m . Breed ing. Yearling JUNIOR HERD SIRE, IIolstein, registered, From 654 lbs. "butterfat' two-time milking dam. Two Pure-bred Bulls, 15 mds.pl(f, Registered--Ready . for service. rrip"-sa¥<. silo "cart; ~ho*g' cratelTfuTv • •0ne Pur«:bred "Bul1- 6- 0^d;* - r -fork ^ndT^bo ft. 1-ope; scal.es 500>lb.; Two Pure-bred DUROC BOARS--rcollege led A. R. Lauer. associ 7 Vf belts;. Universal milking machine' Marc,h farrowed. . professor of psychology, to -double unit ^including motor, DeLaval » ^ elude that unrestricted driver liseparator with electric motor; Cow- * totTS Alfalfa Hay;- 15 tons censes should be given only to those . bov tank heater; milkhouse heater i Clover Hay, baled; 20 {%. silage in having at least 20-40 vision in both Shellane gas; 12 milk cans, pails,' 14-ft- silo; 800 lbs. Clean Clover Seed, eyes, or 20-30 vision in one eye. Machinery ; VJJien vision reaches 20-80 or 20-100 Case pull-type Corn Picker, double it may be best to limit the applicant"" Catholic monastic orders, which had begun to flee f^om the lay atmosphere of the republic. . Drivers' Vision A series of studies on the relation jf seeing distances to car speeds which were* made, at Iowa State lands citizenship ^ Thc documents could also^ej^ dive^boi^be^Tnd fighters" "S by German soldiers seekmgtcrde-" oame ln forn^t.ons and they came sert. The Germans have been^pay. ; from all sideb and Skippy had ing exhorbitant prices for such pa- \ tUTned tail and was ifHTiSoSj rej pers, but the Netherland under ground newspaper Vrij Nederland J warned Netherlander not to help i them. „ ttr^ eat when ~BSe saved him. rain started and GOODYEAR MUEAGE RECAPPINC WITH Q R A D e - A S Y N T H E T I C RUBBER • Ym sir . . . when your old tiria gtl worn down, stop in at TIRE SERVICJE HEADQUARTERS. Well t«ll you when to recap ... and wall giy« you th* best job in town, using Goodyear factory methods, and Goodyear 'Synthetic rubber. We give you a tough, wear- -- reeiating tread, good for thousands oi extra miles and many more months-oi sale driving. See us. get longer liie from old tires. ^OMLY $ ntdtd •' . ^trainer and sterilizing tank; 1 set - -flew breeching harness; 1 set breeching harness; 1 feed grinder* 8-in.;"in *ood condition; 4-unil McD, 1 emery wheel with motor; 1 cider Mllkin* Machine, heavy duty pump ftress: ^incubators, 600 eggs each; carpenter bench; 1 brooder stove.; complete with pipe for 24 cows; Losee Electric Water Heater; Gasolene Water Heater; 2 Sterilizing Tanks; 12 Milk Cans; Hardwick Speed Bake Enameled Cook Stove, coal or wood; large pile cut firewood,' electric fence; electric clippers; fan- « ning mill ; 30-gal oil No. 20; 10 bags potatoes, g0od; all sundry tools and jsquioment sucli as forks,. , shovels^ s^lttnall tools too numerous to mention . • , tjsed in operating a farm. \ TERMS: All sums of $25.00 pnd ^ Lunch Wagon on Grounds under that amount cash, over that TERMS: All sums' of $25.(W,;a«dj am™nt a credit of six TOOnths at 6 -'..finder that amount cash, over tnat per cent will be extended on notes »- amount a credit of six months at 6 approved clerk. Anyone deper cent will be extended on notes j sirin* credit- k»nd*y ni.ake arrange* ' approved by the clerk. Anyone de- f n^en^iS before purchase is made. No siring credit, kindly make arrange- ' ProP®rty to be removed un^il settled ^ 1 • . : for. • ' to daylight driving or to speeds below 30 miles an hour. For eyes with visual acuity of less than 20-100, he recommends top speeds of under 25 miles an hour, saying that such recommended „ speeds will seem quite low, 'out they are calculated in accordance with the known facts of seeing and stopping distances. They' actually ^represent the safe speeds for the classes of drivers concerned; - ~ fltients before purchase is v made. No for. to be remnveii!until settied ANTON (TONYYJ) GGLXOOBB IS WILLIAM V.'IRTZ & §ONS West McHwiry 8t«t« Bank, Clerking Two Tooth Brushes An eminent oral hygienist says use two tootft brushea always. Use alternately, keeping the one not in use soaking in antiseptic, solution Otherwise a bacteria-laden brush will leave your teeth and gums witE mere germs than before. Bayers of Jeeps Get Latitude on Licenses fOPEKA, KANSAS. -- C. M. Voelker, superintendent of the Kansas vehicle department, jsjiys farmers who buy a versatile army jeep can; - Get a passenger car license if it's used primarily to haul people; A Get a truck license if there's trucking to be done, or Don't bother to get a license at •11 if the jeep is kept off the highways and used as farm machinery! > Need Potassium Field experiments show that soybeans can tolerate a fairly high degree of phosphorus deficiency but, suffer if supplies of available potassium are moderately low. Potassium can be applied by the use of manure, straw, muriate of potash or mixed fertilizers rich in potash. Fertilizers .containing potash may be broadcast or drilled, but close contact with the seed should be avoided because it may be injurious to germination, Appendicitis Deaths Halved in Last 4 Years NEW YORK. -- The death rate^ from appendicitis was cut in half in the last four years in addition to a 30 per cent drop in the decade between 1930 and 1940 among industrial policy holders, insurance company statisticians reported: y "The extraordinary change is largely due to the prevention of complications of the )disease, and more recently to the use of sulfa" drugs in the Surgical treatments,' Metropolitan Life insurance com pany statisticians said Diminishing Returns In economics, the law of diminish* fng Teturns is applied to * the observed fact that in any given staga *et the arts an'inJfc-ease of labor car. capital applied beyond a certain point of exploitation or improvement, as «in Cultivation ©of land, causes a less than proportiona te, increase in the production from the" unit to which the additional labor or capital is applied. The law was first staled solely In agriculture bui ii«s- * been restated in relation to industry. GET A GOOD START ALL WINTER GOOD/^EAR ALL-WEATHER BATTERY tOW COST HKMVAU* Power ... punch ... puQ ... in tUa Sturdy, h*ory-duty batteryl "Higher Capacity than moat new-car batter* 1M. Six** for «T«ry cat. "-*13.15 HPiJBNTY OF McHenry Tire Recappers 31^1 EXM STREET • M'HENEY, ILL. ^ FARM TRACTOR TIRE SERVICE Vulcanizing, Recapping and Accessories

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