Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Nov 1947, p. 3

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m ' & :-.:4?tSi" ^e-vrivi lege of Mi •eeeaes »<#* 1 ft U *** IteColtonUkc Oa Parade sMess I MI>I >i#< 1111 Hi»f« (Br Tardstfck) Folks! - ' on Nor. M, Vr&, when, at tk request of Congress, 0eorge JTashington, the first piseidimt of j ear country, first proclaimed Hwb- j giving day. A day set aside to give j twj true American an opportunity to *li«nk God for tbe blessings he so i g--uiously twUnwd oo - them i in those trying days. flom©rttv -once again it will be Thanksgivday, the 158th fines that procla- " l Let as once again giro j to the Almighty for peace on 1 Mith, for opportunities offered us• to provide for our loved ones. I*t* • M grateful for the good things . we have enjoyed throughout the past • year and, as we bow our heads in ntnyer at our Thanksgiving dinner W us not be unmindful of the count- ; lees millions of starving humanity; •howed t% best *ft*t in studies tad condufct at imip daring the first ssTOter . Presentations will be made Thit I&*&£?;• "iK j*d/'s name is Mrs. Shirley Jensen and we assure yea that her job of gathering the necessary data will be made a lot easier through your cooperation. and lira. Joe Kvettler aa aenaatttat mresiiodvenntus.. rFwor.. yj ears Joe (who, ye\- fers to be called Mifl» on 8oMn) his fountain p« should run dry White writing post cards to his friends in Cmsfego? We remember-wen that weekend last winter when, we demonstrated to Joe that it would take him jiwt five minutes to skate across the lake to get a refill, tke fact that Mr. and Mrs. Joe Krettler entered their names on the records as voters in our county convinced us that they are here to stay. While tfcie country is all agog over the identity of Mrs. Hush, we will give you the name of the little lady who will give you a ring on the phone soon after Dec. 1 an<f ask for your co-opeTation in the judging for the mras of the many autographed trophies the BCrewty Dosen hi»s secured and will freaept to the boys and girls of McCullom Lake, who HAVE YOUR ©•SSPOOLS CATCH BASINS gfTTiG TANKS CISTERNS Cleaned EDDIE'S SANITARY SERVICE EDDIE HUFF, Pro* TELEPHONE McHENRY ! That drake the Leo Smiths have been keeping as a pet for the past few months has taken unto himself a mate. It was Leo's good fortune at a feather party last Saturday "Jfht that ended the enter's days of single blessedness. On arriving home wih his prize it took Leo just ten minutes to fnske the proper introduction and since then his pet has been quacking to the tune of tne current popular polka, "She's too fat for me. The Smiths intend to make the old bird happy again by r®du«nK bis new bride to a skeleton on Thanksgiving day. One month har elapsed since Mr. and Mrs. Ray Etten were married. To be exact it was on Oct. 25 when his new bride carried Ray across the ; threshold of their little cottage on Lake Shore Drive. Since the ceremonial afforded his perfect Pauline so much pleasure on that day he vowed that she could enjoy a repeat performance on every Oat 25 from row on. . For your spoclol Christmas Who heeds your Christmas list? Someone very special, of course! Can you think of scything Ukc more then e portrait of that spoiciftl person? Ai.sraha.Mifteaunemarateuf/eH/ So right new, before the nidi, make an appointment to hAt s poiUalt made for the Brmi names an your Christmas list! Well capture your personality in your portrait and "the gift that eaiy you can give" will be a very special gift, indeed. Call McHenry 275, and make your appointment new. Mrs. Adam Brand returned home last Saturday after enjoying a week's visit with her children in Chicago and Oak Park. Don't *et excited, girls, that bulky document the stalwart Otter Ebert has been carrying around in his back pocket is not a marriage license. Just a time table for the Northwestern. November was a busy month for that long-legged bird around the Steinbach home as you can judge from .our Coagratalatiena To John Steinbach, SfP>on his 57th birthday, Nov. 27th. John Steinbach, Jr., on his 25th birthday anniversary, Nov. 11th. Gerome Steinbach on hie 21st, Nov. 28th. Tommy Steinbach on his 10th birthday anniversary Nov. 6th. Nnta and Bolts It's s modest man who stays out of the kitcKfen on Thanksgiving day while the turkey is getting dressed. Just 24 more shopping days until Christmas. unt ADIQS. TTfr. Sot-art b» Jim Downs VEAH-- x AN 4>M BRBUA ft NAVE YOU GOT ANYTHING PUT AWAY FOR A RAJNY DAY/ { WORWICK'S STUDICT " 117 RIVERSIDE DRIVE McHENRY For plenty of room--top performance-- modern-designed lines, choose the new Nash from DOWNS NASH SALES--Come in for a look at the new models on display--You'll say you never saw such a car. DOWNS NASH SALES & SERVICE 405 SLM ST. PHONG 4*4 MCHENRY, ILLINOIS BETWEEN CLASSES (by Jacque Hopkins) Last year, the language students at school subscribed to an organisation which provided us with names of students in foreign lands. I received the address of a young girl in Hungary named Judit, or Jutka, as her friends call her, Thorma. This week I am devoting my column to excerpts from her letters to me. 1 am sure that, sad though they may be, you will find in them that which expresses the sadness and sorrow of the thousands for whom help from America is a hope and a dream. "Dear Jacque, I am glad that you had a very happy Christmas. We also had a Christmas tree, but with candle lights on it. I got for Christmas a pair of stockings. I was very pleased because we hadn't sueh things for a long time. I hope that you enjoyed New Year's Eve. I like to dance very much, but I do not go anywhere yet, because I have no such clothes in which I may go to dance. Now we do not go to school because we have no coal, and in the cold schoolroom we cannot sit. Did you read Margaret Mitchell's novel, "Gone With the Wind?" Please read the part in which the writer tells us about the siege. This was our life. If you are curious, then read this part when Scarlett returned to the old farm. This is our life now. I don't know when it will be better. But not this is the trouble. We had such a terrible hard winter; it was so cold, that the Danube has frozen and now flood threatens us. I am very frightened. Jacque! Will you pray for me! Hungary is now very poor'. After the terrible war we have nothing. The food here is very bad. Dried beans and peas we have every day. Meat we see only on great holidays. Sugsr and sweets are also rare. Coffee, tea, cHocotate and such things we only see in our dreams. Our school was also bombed during the war. One or two bombs fell upon it. My mother's hair is quite white because she has very much troubles." Of course, not all her letters are sad because Jutka seems to have a keen sense of humor and an indomitable spirit. In one letter I excused myself for not writing by saying that I had "spring fever" and I then explained what it is. She answered: "My poor Jacque! Is this 'spring fever' very contagioas? I think the cause is a pretty young girl. I think in America the 'spring fever' is over and my Jacque will be diligent again." , I hope that Judit's letters have helped you to realise the poverty and desolation which is left in Europe as a result of the horrible; recent war. " P I P F I I P -- V R T T * J r t EXCHANGE GIFTS * A package of tulip bulbe from Holland is the latest exchange of rifts between Lt. .Wallace ZaUer of Burlington, Wis. and a Dutch soldier. - The two men became acquainted! when they were both prisoners in ; a camp at Singapore during tne war. j A short time ago, a letter arrived in Burlington from Holland, asking the CfetifcwaK American- lieutenent to send some needed articles to the Dutch friend.; Railroads mumna P1® .*?* !TM J!?"1 «nd last week a ly 101? million persons with box of tulip btalbs arrived here, the car meals and coach lunches Wt friend's thanks to Lt. Zabler for the v«ar «mcn«a mm AMknMa I Bead the Want Ada Need Rubber Stampe? Order ift' The Plaindealer., m MB BMBV I Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry E'and R ELECTRIC CO. REFRIGERATION, ELECTRICAL ft MAINTENANCE Route 31 -11/2 wiles sooth of McHenry* JiL McHENRY 617-R-2 ---- ££ « 1 Purchase of Soybeans More than 500 million pounds of soybean flour was purchased by UNRRA from United States farmers. A U C T I O N 2H miles southwlbt of Lake Villa, 2 miles west of Hwy. 21, 1H miles east of Hwy. 59, 6 miles northwest of Grayslake, 3 mi. northeast of Ingleside, on SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 29 at 11 o'clock K A M LUNCH WAGON CATTLE--17 choice Holstein, Swiss and Guernsey cows, consisting of 2 S with calf « side, 8 springers, 3 55 recently fresh, balance milking good. S3 In this dairy herd there P.re 5 first 23 calf heifers, balance second and third 3 calf heifers with yearly average herd 3S test of 4 per cent. 14 good Holstein, S3 Swiss and Guernsey heiiers (14 to 16 55 months old) and one is bred, balance as are open; 1 Holsteia bull, 16 months S old. T. B. iri Bar^s tested. 2 PIGS--3 Hampshire boars (eligible for registration) .'verage weight 150 lbs.; 30 Hampshire and Chester SB White shoats, average weight 110 SB lbs.; 5 feeder pigs,- average weight 25 to treat my oei^hbofff fight. trade. And Ilook upon vou as good frimiis as wdl sg-- cuscomers. That's wtijr I II never Met you down' widl anything less duui the best in products and service. "Those who have made a habit of buying SKJELl products here know what I mean. You'll Hod only petroleum products of unsurpassed quality--and everf one carries an unqualified MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE of satisfaction. "bout this real guarantee next rime you stop here. And I'm inviting ^you to come back regularly ... because that's the way I can keep on giving you better tod better service." SKEllY TAGOIENE MOTOt Oil, LONG-UK GREASES AND 0TNER SKELLY GUARANTEED PRODUCTS f REUNtf OIL COt : PHONE 202 KcHKNRY, ILL. ' ..THE SIGN OP gmmiimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiniiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiHHiHiumiinaB TORE SPONSORED -I: MAN LOOKING FOR TR0URLE With the central office teatmnn on the job, trouble jonr tele* phone line doean't get a chance to last very long. At hie special switchboard, cnOed n teat dealt, the teataum keeps an eye on every customer's line. Using precision devices, he can spot a flaw or weakness on your Hf and often f" have it corrected before you're aware «f it. Thia checking and repairing is what telephone men call "preventive maintenance.** Looking for trqpble before it happens has paid off. In 1926 a telephone was reported "in trouble" once every five months, on the average. Mow the average is ojyly once every two year*. With experts and inatrumesrta like these, JUiaois Bell is keeping your telephone .erviee depemddble a»d tryingalway. to make it more valnable to vsa. HI CiMPANT 45 lbs. POULTRY, RABBITS AND RAM-- 200 choice mixed pullets (Leghorn, Plymouth Rock and R. R.); 200 good mixed yearling hens (Leghorns, Plymouth Rock and R. R.); 1 Pekin duck; 3 Mallard ducks; 6 heavy rab-; bits; Registered Hampshire ram. ! MACHINERY--F-F. tractor on rub-! ber (with starter, lights and 6 speed trans); F. F. 2-bottom 14 inch tractor plow; F. F. 2-row cultivator; F. F. rear end scoop; F. F. anrle doosn; F. F. 4-row weeder; F. P. speeder box; F. F. tire chains. Above machinery is new or like new. McD. F-20 tractor (rubber in front) and 2-row hillside cultivator (good condition); New Slqrline field chopper (with mounted Wis. motor); New Skyline blower; new Wards hammer mill; J. D. 2-bottom 14^|nch irictor plow; 7 ft. 'tractor discSJl-section drag-; Case corn planter (fertilizer attachment); J. D. manure spreader; McD. sulky cultivator; McD. 6 ft. grain binder; McD. oil bath mower; J. D. corn binder; Int. hay loader; 6 ft. broadcast seeder; wagon and rack; w§gon and box; buzz saw. FEFD--1600 bushel Vieland oats; 500 bushel corn; 250 bales 2nd cutting alfalfa; 80 ton alfalfa and timothy hay; 20 ton timothy hay; 15 ft. good silage. MILKING EQUIPMENT -- Farm Master milking machine, complete with motor, pump, stall cocks and double unit stainless steel pail; soL rack; sterilizing tank; electric cream separator; ohurn; . pails; stirrer; stools; etc. MISCELLANEOUS -- New Stewart electric clippers; disc hillers for tractor cultivator; Hi-Speed tractor corn shields; new 50 it. Hi-Speed belt; grapple fork; 75 ft. tow cable; 2 electric fence controllers 3 kerosene heated chicken waterers; oil burning tank heater; breeching harness and collars; 4 garden cultivators; 2 wire stretchers; woven wire stretcher; bath tub; 2 wheelbarrows; kerosene brooder stove; barrels of fly spray; barrels; new electric brooder; hog feeder^ hog waterer. BUILDINGS--2 portable farrowing houses (on Skids). FURNITURE--Some household furniture. OTTO WALDVOGBL, Owner Chandler and. Elf era, Auctioneers Public Auction Service Co., Clark. FREE OFFER! MOTHERS -- Think of it! YOH reoeive a beolutely A t»«atifuf 6x7 portntt your child. v Age Limit - we month to. 6 jean Other Ages and Grays at YNT Rcqacst NO COST . :. NO OBLIGATIONS to purchase extra photographs unless desired! BE SURE TO TELL^ A FRIEND THE GAMBLE STORE has made arrangements with the ORLANDO WHITE STUDIO, Milwaukee and their specially trained child photographer to be at their store on firiilajr Saturday November 28 November If ' - Several Proofs to Select from No Appointment Necessary, Just Cone la REM EM BER -- I T ' S A LL FREE! Compliments Of On Main Street • Telephone No. 491 GEO. OOLLETTE, Owner S TWO DATS Itw Friendy Store AUTHORIZED DEALER Friday 4 Saturday West McHenry, DL NOT. ffl ft » mm

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