f . | :&-W5 W-V&* *~z , #i>>-y ' • , " yVMic ,™. on f - mSkm w_- . 4H nfl«i sooth of ^ , on the Vandeifcosr road, and 3 miles «ut ml north "fwaa Rt. No. ^ 47, turning at Both Obmr, on g Monday, Fek 17 At 12 KM o'clock sharp 4 '•:/* .. * As the personal pwpoty formerly advartiaed, will ba aold on the above !v date consisting of: . Hay, grain and a ^full Mae af Y farm machinery. . ^ ^r-. ' • ' ty Usual Bank Terms. MoMflly labrf union power in eea aew of the Omtkrn «f the United Statoa. "T* m exfceardiaafydegffoe." he said, «tte barium trend has oeaM of labor-manage- BernieO. Wtnk National Bank «f Wosiltock Clsrkiag *{b claa sad M of the eorvf Ifc lW closely followed the rise and iitt at man-hours lost in strikes. The •uhsUHIty of total production to ibihai In ssisnHtl industries .was Qlustratod by the fall ef indastrialia- <Bm| dating strikes In steel, coal and transportation. "It ia evident, therefore, that prospects On the labor-management front dominate to an unususl extent the general business outlook. "Soma *ay the rash of strikes simply recapitulates economic history in the period inunedlately after World WarL That period, like the present, was marked by rising Hving casts and onrest as the aftertrfath of war. * "Bat the diwuptioa of industry by strikes cannot be dismissed by drawing a pamllel with the past. Organised labor never had in 1919-20- the tremendous power it holds over industry and public welfare today.** Mali Rami Bigger Dark rooms make walla appear •nailer, but light walls seem to expand the optical six* of room*. RCA; ^ m" i" : OTROMBERG-CARLSON PHILCO RINGWOOD • ' ELECTRICAL & RADIO SHOP fhona Richmond 883 aousi wnmio Ringwood, 111. jBOHT&AOTIHG and Befciieeetien durioi fJks . Homes For Homes also available for civilians ^ v • < «• , i 4 s. -|* >.• 'A ,• . •? - r j*y>ttL *• tHAT.TMAR (Beautifiil QSfdelis) Ideated on# mUe from McHenry city JOHNSON * WILLIAMS, Home *nild«cs. ,, TELBPHONE 227-J wk 4-b >v*?! • . i • DRY ss^pve. t*.\+ IS BEST f-PsT • j , • -rt, ^ «* .* V -«•» ". " s-t ~ «, * * . » / f ' - • • - • • Jifir^LZA* Helen Weber, Mgr. CLEANERS loir cut at., mohxhev, ill. Phon* 10441 .. WOODSTOCK COMM. SALS8 CO., WO. DAY AUCTION Wednesday, February J9 * • • v-t#:30 f».m, , ^ ^ales barn located on Slaie Koute 17 WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS L OHMtLSB l.fOKAM), AncUwwwr , DABT 00W8 EITHER CLOSE OS rKESH WITH OAUP BY SIDE STOCK BULLS ,7 BEET CATTLE OALVEE HOOS f HOKSm ^ STEERS OfiiltiOH your itoek her» for top priew. CALL 572 or 489 AU. OQKBIQHORa PAID CASH DAT AFTER SALE .. ,i: w* ARE BONDED . ; **00 OAH BUY--TOU OAV SBLV WOODSTOCK COMM. SALES CO., INC By VnUUNlA VALI HALF an hour spent with Edward G. Robinson is so stimulating that for days other people took pretty drab. He's been having a %rief vacation in New York, after finishing "The Red House," while waitint for the script of his next picture to be prepared--as co-producer he hat a special interest in both of them. "Vacation" meaht seeing friends and relatives, looking at paintings, giving interviews, doing guest shots on the radio-- everything But resting. "I have to t»WABD O. ROBINSON come to New York about three times a year, to get re-charged," said he. Though his success on the stage waa unquestioned, he's not yearning to go back; to make better and better pictures will satisfy hirrv ' V .» Katharine Repbum, on fhl other hand, won't give up the theater. But whatever she does on the stage, she says, must be in the nature of a challenge, or something different from anything she's attempted hefore. After making "Undercurrent," with Robert Taylor, and five days later Starting "The Sea of Grass," with Spencer Tracy, she too headed for a vacation, in her Connecticut heme. BS>1--f torittai's theme song shauld be *1 Lave« Parade"; after shs rade aa a fleet In the !»«1 TbpMMSMSt ef Rases precession her pietsre appeared b> a local paper, Piruwat aadKkmed her, and she was all set in the movies. From nateer relea die waited ep la the lead apposite Ray Milland la "Til Wa Meet Agate"; she'll eMtar with Seatt ia •'rt. «y» TAUM ItasM ef later eat Taken Fna the File* af the Platadsalar ef Teara Age YEARS AG# W,: of c the mfUtm dollar merk lis been ~ at pubUe euoMsa.>In ill aalas during 1S« there ^Umbead snUforelotal of ifS,SBJB to make aa ever-all _ ef fMBt In ISM there werc HJNS head sold for aa average of pm and la IMS the S,1S0 tasad sold aeenged 9M8. Hie highest salea avenge Cor the brie* to date was made M 1810, when dip to the St.r Paul National In wfefeit 97 head sold tor an average of f&0?5, the general over-ell average tor that year was $371. Only 5.6 per cent of the 1S45 salea Showed averages ol less than H00 as compared with T per cent in 1944 end IS per {cent in 1013. The highest averaging aale of the jeer was the U. S. National Blue Ribbon in which 11 head sold for aa overage of $1,811. The two highest Individual animals were both atAd at the disper> sel of the Bancroft Acres herd. Montvic Bonheur Piet^e B was purchased for H1JN8 by Rays Ltd, Calgary, Alhnrta, Canada, and Raymoodale Ideal Successor was purchased for $18,088 by P. H. Merkley, Flint, Mich. Tweaty-eeven animals aold during the year far $M* •«r snore, ... Inlsudias Cvekas The cuckoo not only lays its eggs In ether birds' nests, but also carriea off one of the footer bird's eggs and devofura it. The young cuckoo hatchea before itu fosar brothers and than, works its way underneath _ the unhatched eggs, backs to the !^e finest »«« ever »««» >n this secedge of the nest and shoves the eggs over the rim one by one. The fos« ter birds then devote, their efforts to feeding the intruding cuckoo. W r V - . J * . - . - . " . ' - *- rnpmmm Hgfak board of trade Monday, the fries'feeing U cents. The tea harvest has again been raaomed at the Borden factory. Bernard Frisby, until rectfttly raaident of our town, is nowflocated i interaeT ia the hardware bosfaiess in Chicago.' H. Hirsch has moved his family to ion Wadi McHenry from Chicago. ] Ellen M. 1>r. C. H. Fegers of tiiis viwige, !has been appointed surgeon for the Northwestern railroad In this sec- I tion. j The McHenry Military band, have j decided to give a concert and variety entertainment, at Riverside hall, in J this village on Thursday and Friday evenings. J. N. Mead has sold his hardware | business on the West side to W. P. j Stevens, who has taken possession i Of the same. J McHenry sidewalks were very 1 musical on Monday morning', and I were set either on thol C Jlharp or 1B flat FIFTY YEARS AGO file McHenry Creamery company is the name of a new stock company that has lately been organised in this village and received a certificate from the secretary of 'state. The chicken pie social at the city hall on Thursday last, was a grand success, financially and otherwise. Died--At her residence north of this village, on Thursday morning last, Mrs. Elisabeth Blake, wife of Peter Blake, aged 76 years and two lays. Thhee Brand Ice company at Mc Collum lake is putting up soma of Peter _ __ poeition in Chicago to take up the J *"y , ition of bookkeeper at the local ^""ted by Rev Jus ten given milk factory J. C. Holly and N. 0. turned homa TWENTY-FIVE Florida laat Estonia? The retail store of the Northern Illinois Jdbbing company, which has been conducted in the Mrs. Christina Brefeld building on the West side Rayon they are washed for the first time. wpwm-m MEN'S SHOP Pnona 19 A*-?- man anvsc McHENR . IPRTY YEARS Butter advanced one cent on the -.-v* "DAN" DAHISL'S LAKE SHORE CLUB Ob Boalt ISO, Lily Lain, KoHewry «67-J-l OP1N ALL YSAS BOUND / tha Organ playing yonr faTBillM >Hi NOW! NO CABARET TAX MOM the M» on Saturday aison w»k nightf. BOB DO KAN, SEED CLEANING and TREATING >#i£ U',», We are now Installing ehsmioal tnaliRf and by February 15th will be in a positton to dft a class job to HtsrTry s«^ trusting all 1UI4 McHenry Mills, Inc. ffione 92-R West M Groucho Marx is afraid he may have a hit on his hands. He has a play, 'The Middle Ages," which he'd like to do on the New York stage. But experts have read it and think it will have a long run. If it does, and he appears in it, that will mean that he'll have to be away from Hollywood indefinitely. Re wrote it with Norman Krasna, ae he may just rest on his laurels as co-author. ' Mercedes McCam bridge shocked everybody at a rehearsal of "The Adventures of the Thin Man" by announcing that she's quitting radio, maybe forever. She's decided to settle in the West Indies with her nov-, elist husband, William Fifield, afid John, her five-year-old eon. It's geed news that Katina Paxmm Is to appser la anether pic- Jier after kgr maraiSse Is "Far Wham the Ml Mb" waa ese ef Body* weod's fhSai siistolis Shs recently isteieed to this caantry ta play the sale sf Isysusl Maasey's wife la RKO's sereea versioa ef "Mseralng tsmass Eleetva," by Eagens O'NsilL Dudley Nichols slgasd hsr. Csagratalattsas! Thelma Ritter had a line reason for omitting plsying "Bernice" on e recent "McQarry end His Mouse" broadcast. Last Thanksgiving she played a smsll role in "It's Only Humsn," starring Maureen O'Hara and Edmund Gwenn, when some acenes were shot in New York. When the film was developed in Hollywood her comedy scene was so funny that her role was enlarged, so die flew to the coast for new scenes. --*-- . • Two of the outstsnding radio pro. grams for children are guided by men who are childless. Robert Maxwell produces the trail-blazing "Su perman," and Jack Barry is the originator and moderator of the hilarioua "Juvenile Jury." Max well's married, Barry's a bachelor ODDS AND ENDS -- Rwmrt r*pori> ih»w Tbt Advtutmvs of OzzU mid Hmt ristf jrogrsm it fomrtb im litient pop* Itritf tfa Cmtih. .. . Tbt first tim* Bmri LmrmUrr ("Detert Fury") spoke stsgi timet wm while performing m "Stsrs mm Gripgi," the army show, m Itslj dttring tbt mt. .. . Not only will Rosalind Rmst »U Urn im her first lmd*p*md*mt Artist) prodmrtitim (bmdtd by Mist RmtstU, bm hrrlinrii mid DmdUy bticbols) hmt sbg'-j mho inwM tbf Owry, * comtody cslUd "Madly m LOP*." . . . IViUUm Hold** Hkot f do* tUt mmd bmv* m frUmd fu btmt ovor m turf field bebimd s j**p; cmm'> forbad* it unit* bt ' >. ? •' iM ^ . <*>WL * . S?'^ '• -i .r. "W' It1 was fun rediscovering some of the ridiculous beliefs held by the andents as revealed in their gardening and botanical books. Woodroos indeed were the properties of the herb. With this charm, the early botanist was equal to any emergency. A panacea for anything and everything was the herb. Tdbthache. The bald pate. Melancholia. Courage. Romance. Snoozing. Imbibing too freely. Too, the old boys had some odd notions concerning the proper growing of herbs. One throve best when stolen from a neighbor's garden--another, when sown with cursing and railing. This and other plant lore jrn -II jlj| THE $£•4 .1 ^f '" '• : ' \ • ' •; ^ \ 5€ * fl ifV ^ix '*: • ; '-•.* : 'ID . M vftf f* 'DearRmtb* Ramsa Eyebai The average human eyeball is one ji^ii to diameter, and about three indlfS Jtt ^rcumference, . . flple^ g*lint MMI • »' • • att dowa m mi kokk TW ariy U a khN af ucntag Uakw At kak tWji •canaatd. Ma ••aty. Rk pwived tl> rnaaii afco IM Sim m k*. 1 MtWaU "W tack «cki m Udlkr Aiy caaU capc «wk •*> R." 'liaM lij ' ••• O mf nm •• "» » aka m fmin/mfmt « 4<u AtiwKaObtlfaa^ i.ijp »«fa- a. Km* 4 •mis i rm af Mm EMJN HERB The eaUmmrt magic and ornaauntal kerb tardea hmuemtsed im THE MOD iGARDBN. Amd a Jew gemerml tkmdm^t m ket*- TWB Bfjuunut t bejmwdm d» "Akm* Ym md Vafi 1