Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Aug 1948, p. 7

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{tatted Stataa waa hit by tha aMiel >^HaatmiMn aesiae of major dirt h i is history in 1*47. During tl» first 11 aMntlH of the jrttt, tkm mn Itl .eataatxopbae nqnUai lUd Ooas ae- ^•ifltano*. In dta--tpi raWat operation* the Amirica lUd Croea toon than 10 million dollars and {an •id to KW,m pwong Few asetloas tti country ware spared In the dto- " Rasters which visited M states and Al- - aaka. Disaster relief la ona of the continuing aervioaa for which the org*- ia aoaktef TS mflMou doBars March. XAFF LINES a ]• Manufacturing Tfcp time of eight men for one year goes into the manufacture of on?; million feat of rough Duuglaa fir lumbar. Order ycur rubber stamps at The j Plaindealer. v A U C T I O N The undersigned will sell at Public Auction on the Feldkamp Farm, located 1 mile North of Genoa Qity on r County Trunk U, or 7 miles south off Lake . Geneva, Wisconsin on Highway! 12, then % njile East. Follow the arrows, on , WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1,1948 starting at It o'dod^ C. S. T. LUNCH WAGON OH GROUNDS. 57 HOLSTEIN COWS 30 aiilk cows, 18 fresh, 7 springer!! new milkers, seme with calf. 1 grade bull, 1 pure bred bull, 21 bred heiferto, 5 young heifers, 1 whit* face calf, 2 bulls, 5 months old. HOGS--6 bred Spotted Poland China sows, 1 Poland China boar, 8 Hampshire feeder pigs. H HAY, GRAIN, FEED--90 ton baled first crop clover, 350 bales 2nd crop alfalfa, 25 tons quantity chopped hay in barn, 100 acres standing hybrid corn, 3500 bushels grain, 500 bales straw. • MILK EQUIPMENT--1 3 single unit, j DeLaval Magnetic 40 milker, with | line and pump, 18 8-gal. milk cans,! 4 milk pails and 2 strainers, 1 wash] „ tank, 1 solution tank, 1 Dairy Maid i water heater, 2 milk stools, 2 milk: machine solution racks. j TRACTORS A EQUIPMENT--Mc-i Cormick-Deering tractor, Model H, with culitvator, starter A lights, Mc- Cormick-Deering tractor Model H, | with starter and lights;' McCormick- j Deering 22-36 on steel; New Holland baler 1948; New Holland field bale loader; 1947 Massey Harris clipper! combine, P. T. O.; Universal^ motor] M. T. D. portable, new; hay,' grain, j corn elevator on rubber; 10-ft. Vani Brunt grain drill with fertilizer andj grass seed attachment; John Deere, 290 corn planter with fertilizer,! tractor; McCormick Deering 7-ft. power mower; 3-14 McCormick Deering plow on rubber; 2-16 McCormick Deering plow on rubber; 2-14 McCormick Deering plow on steel, 8-ft. McCormick-Deering tandem disk, new; 7-ft. tandem disk, McCormick-Deer - ing; McCormick-Deering side delivery rake; McCormick Deering corn binder with loader and hitch; Gehl C-40 silo filler; Gehl hammer mill; McCormick- Deering manure spreader on rubber; Sleep Rehearsals WALKING DOWN the street one morning, a celebrated symphony conductor encountered a member of his orchestra. "My, my, but you look prosperous," he observed. "How do you manage it?" "Oh, I'm a busy man," replied the musician. "Besides playing in the orchestra, I play in a quartet, give lessons, and perform on the radio." "Really," rejoined the conductor. "When do you sleep?'* > "During the rehearsals," c&me the calm rejoinder. IF THERE'S anything 1 bate. Teaching Philosophy 1 BLACK FUTURE A traffic officer was jotting down a young traffic violator's name and address. "Why do you lick your pencil before writing dgwn the statistics?" asked' the driver. To which the nettled officer replied: "Only to make the case look blacker for you." AS YOU LIKE IT The music teacher asked a little girl of six: "Can you play an E major scale without any mistakes?" She could and did, Then he asked: "Now play me an E minor scale." The little girl hesitated, then asked: "With or without mistakes?" Fiction Ewagfc SaM Before leaving his office to go to lunch, a real eatate dealer, who was building a new house at the edge of a small New England town, dispatched to the site a painter who was to find out when the interior decorating otuld be started. When the real eatate dealer returned from lunch he found on a desk a* note which read: "On account of Joe and GOLF TROUBLE r m Ceby wagon with grain box; manure Fred was, your house is iMt plasloader; Case single row corn picker;, t«red yet „ . . Sam." 4-seclion wood drag; 4-section lever i * drag with folding draw bar, new; wood wheel wagon and rack; hand corn sheller; McCormick-Deering horse corn binder; grapple fork and hay rope; wheelbarrow; lawn mower; log chain; double barrel shot gun, 12 guage; 7 Jamesway swing stanchions and cups; slush scraper; Stewart cow clippers; } hog troughs; 2 hog feeders; snow fence; Hu*ge quantity baler twine; 1937 Diamond T 1H ton truck, all overhauled; 1935 Ford 1H ton truck; 1947 Chevrolet % pick-up truck. HOUSEHOLD -- Glow Maid cook stove„ wood and coal; Monarch electric stove; 3 kitchen tables; Electrolux vacuum sweeper; bird cages; 2 beds; end tables; odd dishes; chairs; 3 burner kerosene stove with oven. muttered Bud McDaniela, "it's swinging this pick." . "It's the smart guys that get real joy out o' life," said Tim Lafferty. "Dumb galoots like us sweat our j heads off for pennies and what we I call three squares." j Bud threw down his pick. "We're f thinking the same. Let's eat." I Climbing out of the ditch, they; opened their baskets and began, to! w o l f t h e i r s a n d w i c h e s . As Bud r e - i taxed on an apple, a torn portion I of a newspaper was blown against J him. j "What you reading?" asked his friend, picking his teeth and lying I o n h i s b a c k i n t h e s u n . • • • • * ! "Listen to this,"' said Bud. "Says here. 'Not satis-.: fied with a ,new plane, Clareifc* Dunne bought a motor boat and took long rides up the Hudson.' That guy ; sure is one o' those smart ones we! "were talking about." ' • "What's the headline?" asked j Tim. "That part's ton* away. 'But*) here's some more. 'Clarence be-: came known as Playboy Number i One along the Big Stem. There1 wasn't a night club he, didn't visit, j When he stepped out with the chor- j ines, he left a trail of dollars behind him.' Can you imagine a guy like that?" Bud looked up from the paper. "He knew how to enjoy j life. Catch him going miles near a pick." I "Wish I was in his boots. Any more?" ! "Yep. It saya here, 'Clarence j stopped only at the claasiest hotels i a ltd gave the bell-boys fifty dollars' apiece. He invited the prettiest girls to his parties and the champagne ran free as a waterfall. With 1 Clarence there wfeen't any limit. His I philosophy was to have a rip-roar- j ing time while he could. He bought diamonds and rubies for his favor-! ites. And he liked his food'." Bud ! looked up. "Get that, Tim? this guy | liked his eats." Tim sat up. "Go on, read more. !• I bet he ate like a king, eh?" "Bet he did. Well, it says here, j Clarence was a modern Jim Brady, i if there ever was one. He had the I best meals, salads and sauces in | the hotels. He ate three times as ] much as the average man. • "Boy, he sure did have the right j slant," said Tim. "Why, I'd call him the smartest man that ever | breathed." | "Only fools like us work like slaves and for what? Some beef! sandwiches and a hard bed to sleep in. And my wife, Ann. What does ; she get out of it? Why, Clarence Dunne had something to offer a girl." Bud turned the paper around. "Look, there's more on this side. Says. *Clarence Dunne laughed when j HJNGWOOD i i i i i i n i n i i i i i i i i i i i n i i (By Mrs. Georre Shenerd) The W. S. C. S. met with Mrs. T. Butler on Thursday with a potluck dinner served at noon. The usual business meeting was held. It was decided to have a cafeteria supper in Muzzy's hall Aug. 26. *0 II1II t Waukesha spent Sunday night With g-- her mother, Mrs. Marie Wegner. Mrs. Dawson, remained for M week's i visit. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Oldsop and family spent Sunday with her parents i Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Dimon, at B. j Ostend. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Larson and j daughter, Sandra, and Mr. and Mrs. j Allen Dimon. returned home from a triipp to Isabelle and Estelline, S. D., on Thursday evening,land also to the Black Hills rnni„,ini(„ . fc. ... . ... .J Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Baldwin of tvf u ^ ( Norwood Park spent Sunday afterthe Methodist church Sunday, Aug noon and evening%nth Mr. and Mrs. 29. Everyone is welcome. g g Whiting Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard . entertained the five hundred club at JOHN HOWARD VAN AMR INGE who occupies important niche in the history of Columbia university was a sworn enemy of coeducation , "You" cannot," he asserted on one occasion, "teach a boy mathematics if there's a girl in the room." "But, professor," someone objected. "you might.'" "Then," observed the worldlywise Van Am, *'he isn't worth teaching." their home Thursday evening Prizes So Strange! % were awarded to Mrs. B. T. Butler and VVeldon Andreas, high, and Mrs. E. E. Whiting and Louis Hawley, low. Mrs. Roland Jackson entertained at a birthday party for her mother, Mis. E. E. Whiting. Saturday evening guests'were; Mr and Mrs. Sibrei cream, a hair in the honey, and a Whiting and daughters, Mrs Joe hair in the applesauce.V guest at a hotel was complainto! to the proprietor: "Your lunch today was terrible. I nearly'lost my appetite." "So? What was the matter?" "Well, I found a hair in the ice MARRIAGE FEES "You did? M'tn. that'^s funny. 1 can understand how the hair got in the ice cream, It came from shaving the ice. And the hair in the honey probably came from the comb But what gets me is the hair in the applesauce. I bought the apples ifnyself and they. were Baldwins." " : Parents Can't Win ' "What are you doing out of bed, . Patty?" father called up the stair* j Pause--Then the small voice, "I To A good pflkw la rasantlal fer proper support of th* head so that the neck muscles may nat contortably. If a pillow is not uaed and tha bead is not supported comfortably, the spine can be thrown out at alignment. The quality of a pillow ***** be determined by its filling and by low characteristics: It must ha «gM fc| weight, resilient, buoyant »"d free from odor, dust and stiff feathers. There are three types of fillinga . used in good quality pillows: AQdown, a combination of down and waterfowl feathers, and all-waterfowl feathers. An all-down pillow la ' the most expensive, but is really too soft for comfort as it lacks the buoyancy supplied by waterfowl feathers. The mixture of down and waterfowl feathers is an ideal combination, and the least expensive of the three. Crushed, chopped Or artificial^ curved waterfowl feathers are generally less desirable because these processes destroy the natural resilience of the feathers. Goose and duck feathers are springy and resilient. They are full and fluffy, and their shafts are naturally curved and buoyant. Although goose feathers are considered better, because they are stronger and fluffier, a good quality duck feather often is bettagv than a low grade goose feather. - Son: "Papa, how much does it cost to get married?" Papa: "There's a two-dollar down payment and then you pay your entire salary every week for the rest of your life." ^ < End Table St all the students who sleep in class were laid end to end--they would be more comfortable. just got Dadd^" out to tuck myself in, Touch and Go "Did you get home all right after the party last night?" "Fine, thanks, except that as I waa turning into my street, some idiot stepped on my fingers." I J< C I WILBUR KUECKBR, Owner H. A. FREEMAN. Auctioneer EUGENE FREDRICK, Auctioneer. Farm Auction Service, Inc. . R. D. Keefet Clerk FRIENDLY FARM SERVICE WAY TERMS: We have made arrangements with Farm Auction Service to finance this sale. Their terms are cash for all sums under $10.00; over that amount one-fourth cash down and the balance in six monthly payments at three percent interest for six months. NO QUESTIONS ASKED --NO SIGNERS NEEDED. No property to be remoyed from farm until settled for, and all must be settled for, before buyer leaves farm en Jay of sale. lie had never played in a golf tournament before. He tried his best to appear unconcerned despite the large crowd. Stepping up to the ball, he swung and missed; tried it again, and missed. The third time it was the same story Looking up at the spectators, he amiled and commented. "Tough course, isn't it?" Frequent brushing of screens and sills helps flfw and saves window waahing, especially In summer. Subscribe for The' Plaindealer PIO.HEER f/y/jt/s/j YIELD JVIC M 2426 CMOTIMB Wnl 941 MUM William J. Parry Rmrte 1, Ringwood. Illinois L. N. Seylter COS Hale St. Marengo, Illinois John H. Meatier Route 2 VIHtSVHHl IlHMi* Tn f &i j T ,£i /-V . DOUBLE CHECK A cautious man wrote the following to a mail-order house: "Please forward to me one of those gasoline engines you describe on page 135 of your catalog. If the engine's any good. I'll send you a check for it." A few days later he received this answer from the mail-order house: "Please send check, and if it's any good, we'll send you the engine." King and sons and Mrs. Donald .Hal iirmann and sons. The Ringwood Happy Clover club is justlv proud of their demonstration team, Louise Hunt and Dorothy Smith. Their demonstration on a "Tossed Salad with French Dressing" was chosen to represent Mc- Henrv county at the State Fair last week. .Competing against expert lemonstrations from all over the ' ate this demonstration was choseftl "as one of the three outstanding,! kThose two Kingwowt girls have] nought great honors to McHenry county and their local community.. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Adams are1 the parents of a daughter, born i A u g . 1 7 a t t h e W o o d s t o c k h o s p i t a l , j Fred Wiedrich, Sr., underwent' surgery at the Woodstock hospital Wednesday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Loren McCannon of-- Chula Vista, Calif, visited relatives and friends here Wednesday. 1 Mrs. Gordon Fossum and children' aqd Mis. Kenneth Cristy visited; Gordon Fossum at Hines Hospital Thursday. | Mrs. Albert Fscher and children! of Chicago spent several days the! past week with her mother, Mrs.| Tillie Vallancourt. i Miss Floy Dentler of Davis Junction and Mrs. Bellamy of Rockford were recent callers at Mrs. Collins home. Mrs. Albert Oonk and daughter, jDianna, spent a few days- the past ! week with relatives at Holland, Mich. ! Paul Stephenson arrived here Frijday afternoon. His mother, Mrs. Louella Stephenson, is still confined to the Woodstock hospital With' a .broken hip. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich Sr. visited Fred Weidrich, Sr., at the Woodstock hospital Friday afternoon. | ' ~~ --. Mrs. Izard of Crystal Lake spent The undersigned having purchased a completely equipped Saturday afternoon in the Wm. Pagni i » „ • • .. L home. ifarm in Wisconsin will sell at public auction on the farm Wm. A. Collins and son, David, | known as the Flopd farm located % mile south of Woodstoek of Beloit and Mr. Brockett of Madi- j called on Mrs. Collins Fridayion IhMM Street load, on rotmiatloo «f mna.\tewu ., 8an Francisco's Chinatown to tin second largest Chinese community In the wsrld outside of China itself. Singapore rates first. But Old Frisco's Oriental settlement, founded by ambitious Chinese laborers during California's gold rush, provide homaa for over 20,000 Cidnm folk In aa many city blocks. Most of them are American born, so they are American citizens. Chinatown's main street la Grant avenue formerly known aa Gai (DuPont street to ua|. Saving Ooneentrataa •ach extra pound and a half et good hay or its equivalent that dairy men can get cows to eat will save a pound of concentrates. In Cam TMIb Hybrid aeed has Increased yields in the nation's com belt nearly SO per cent in recent years. SULLIVAN & RUSSELL, Auctioneers ~ {evening on their way to get Mrs. lime's Ua* ' tWm. Collins, who had been visiting . . J. . r her parents at Enfield, 111. They also A passenger on his^first airplane on Mrs. Collins Sunday even. on ^ejr way home to Beloit. Mrs. Lena Peet and daughter, flight was being comforted by s fellow traveler. "You have nothing to worp about," aaid his pal. If your Umbos come, you can't do anything about it." '.'That's O.K.," he answered, "bu j what bothers me ia suppose th« I pilot's time has come and mine1 hasn't! What happena then?" | Thursday, September 2 Commencing at"11 K)0 o'clock sharp the following described Time Is ValaaMe Alice attended the flower and fh"o bby .property, to-AY it; show st McHenry Fridav afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lenard and !Mrs. Lester Carr visited *Fred Wied-! I rich, Sr., at the Woodstock hospital I I Friday evening. | ' Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman spent] Wednesday at Burlington. | hisMmother.BSirt. Jennie Bacon. 8atu£|l'-tif these oowg have been fmh recently it nwnber d»y- . „ p. w. . . rw..« (,|o8e springers. At the present time this dairy is producing 18 snd Mrs* Ed ^tick o* vhiCAfo « «n j •• •. « . . , . . visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs.j«a«s of milk daily. Buyers are invited to inspect this herd Laurence, Sunday. before the day of sale. Mr. and Mrs. enry tnse_ ° ^ Holstein lieifers, 4 to 6 months old; 1 Holstein bull, 20 64 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK Consisting of* 40 Holstein Dairy Oowg m 1 Crystal Lake spent Sunday with Mrs. {Lena Peet and daughter, Alice, i Mr. and Mrs. Loren McCannon of Chula Vista, Calif., and Mrs. Thomas Phalin of McHenry were dinner fuests of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Phalin aturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of Spring Grove were Sundsy dinner ' quests of her mother, Mrs. Viola months old. Team-of Blue Roan Sorrel Riding Mare, 7 years old, gentle 15 Feeding Pigs, average weight about 75 lbs. each. Hay, Grain, Etc. and Well broke; "Only slavea.' reportera aaked him whether be liked to work. "Work," aaid Clarence with a knowing wink. "What do you take me for? I tried work once. 1 didn't take to it or maybe it didn't take to me".' " v "Bud, after hearing about Clarence I'll be hanged if I care to go back to that ditch with the others." The other men were rubbing their sleepy eyes and putting their lunch kits in order. Soon the afternoon shift would begin, four Hburs of sweating and (training. "Anything more about this Clarence guy?" inquired Tim hopefully "Just a few more words down here at the bottom." Bud conceatrated upon the bit of paper before the signal from the foreman would end their rest. "It says, 'Clarence remained quite calm and at ease as he was led away by the police'-- hey, what's this about the police?" Bud leaned clooer to the ground and Tim stooped forward, his aara rocked. "Go on, read, Bud." " To the cell which will be Clarence Dunne'a hoane far Hie nasi twenty yeara--the total aentence for the aeries of han^ robbdttcs'." Bud and Tim exchanged ailent glances. Then they, pfcktd up their tools and want to the ditch. (Copyright) kf WW ~Hit|| , ' A farmer boy waa sitting on the * were visitors at Lake Geneva Sunbank of a creek fishing when a city dsy 55 acres standing corn, 40 tons 1st cutting alfalfa hay, win Clayton Harrison spent the past;baled; 20 tons 1st cutting alfalfa hay, string baled; 9 tpog WC€^f• "1; 1at°WaubLils* Wis' ^ame*'ialfalfa 1947 crop, wire baled; 150 bales of straw; 2500 bu. ^Caroi^lfa^rison^and Feiol" Mantin j Clinton oats; 2 tons ear corn; 1 ton bran, 1 ton 16 percent dairy faed, 1 ton malt. visitor came up to him and remarked, "Your time must not be very valuable to you, young fellow I've blen watching you for three hours and you haven't had a single bite." "Well, strangtr," the boy rejoined, "my time may not be worth much to me but it's too valuable for me to waste three houn watching another guy fishing when he ain't catching." A Promlae Mr. and Mrs. Glen Jackson of Richmond were callers in the Beatty- Low home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heine of Chicago spent the weekend in the George Shepard home. On 8unday they and the Shepards attended a picnic party at Fontana and all en- Joyed a ride' around the lake. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Pagni and! erry Sunday Mr. arid Mrs. Eugene Oxtoby visited his parents at Spring Grove, Sunday. Machinery McD. Model H tractor on rubber with starter, lights and wheel weights, McD. Model H tractor cultivator McD. Model H tractor cab", Case VAC tractor with starter and light? on rubber, J. D. power corn binder with bundle loader and wagon I hitch, John Deere field chopper with motor, used very little^! Mr. and Mrs. Rayroond Pagni •ndlj0jlu f)eere JJo. -I tWO row pull tvpe corn picker. Terry McFarlane of Chicago spent 110 *i £11 '4l ia in the Wm. Pagni'home. Rosenthal 4-rolI corn busker, Papec silo filler with 40 ft. of pipe, McD. No. 52-R combine with motor and pickup attachment, Case pickup 4iay baler, A-l condition; John Deere 7-ft. . . . . . . . 4 , „ M " . M i t c h e l l K a n e a n d d a u g h t e r , 1 i ) O W ( , r mower, new guards; McD. 4-bar side rake, McD. 8 ft. Husband: "Aren't you ready yet? Nancy, spent a few days the past ' ' .7 XT ' . , ... ' ^ Q Wife: "I wish you'd quit that yap- week with her mother at Springfield.| held cultivator, (jehl No. 41-A hammer milif new; Mel). 8-ft ping. I told you two hours ago I would be ready in Just a few minutes." Identification " My girl," said Smith, "ia one of a pair of twins." "How do you tell them apart?" a friend asked. "Easy," said Smith. is taller." Mrs. Fred Weidrich, Jr., and tractor disc, nearly new; U. S. grain blower, new; Oliver visiter^'atMJanesville, SatuWay"6™ tractor corn planter with fertilizer attachment, Bradley 36 ft. Mrs. E. B. Whiting spent Monday sjngje chain Elevator. Kemeth^J?ckson,^at Graysiake'. " Mel). 7-ft. rotary hoe, McD. l'-bottom tractor plow on rubber, Mrs. Angela Pagni is visiting in; Mel), spieader 011 rubber, John Deere 4-section steel drag, thMn°maendf M"dXchkterL^aCrdCaand; Superior 8-ft. grain drill, corrugated roller, road drag, Bradley rjpood Medicine children and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich Jr.jobber tire wagon and rack, new; rubber tired wagon and Her brother and daughter, Mary Ann, and Miss' Mary Ann Bolger of McHenry attended the Milwaukee Fair Wednesday •"Hi; i do say." aaid the rweet old ladyuipon tasting her first glass •f beer, "it tastes exactly like the medicine my husband haa bean taking for the last 80 yeara." Marriage Ia An Oat Boggs: marry a man that you find him out." Mrs. Noggs: "That'a right. It waa not till I'd married Nogga that I found ha was out every night." Faneat FImo amokera started 575 ftaua that turned 15,477 acrea of Michigan foraat land last year. Second high en the list of foraat ftraa in last year were railroad locomotive*. Handicapped by poor coal because of troubles in the mining Industry, the railroads were blamed for 489 fires that burned >,517 Camp fires ranked third. . Subscribe for The Plsindeslar Toni Permanent Wave Kits. $1.2fi and $2.00. Wattles Drug Store. 85-tf Mrs. Ed Bauer and daughters,, Lu- Ann and Joan, and son, Marvin, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Joe E. Miller at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Wm Pagni spent Sunday evening with relativea at Lake Geneva. . ! Roland Bauer attended the fair at I Milwauke Sunday. I Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and It'a not till you!^11^ Railr°ad F,ir ln ibwi ki-- if^and Mrs. Wilbur Benoy and family of Elkhorn spent Sunday in the Paul Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley are enjoying a vacation at Chetek, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wtalkington and i srn. Jay, attended the Railroad Fair in Chicago Saturday. S. W. Smith A. W. Smith, Mrs Andrew Hawley and Mrs. B. T. Butler attended the Milwaukee Fair, Wednesday. Mrs. Phelps, Agnes Wegner, Mrs. Puckett and Mrs. Nancy Dunn, and daughter of Elgin and Mr. and Mrs. Linus Wegner and family__of Woodstock spent Sunday with Mrs. Marie Wegner. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wetter and son, Raymond of Chicaro spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. 'Louis Hawley. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dawson of Mark Twata was at tha height of his fame, he was approached one day by an Inventor who offered Twain an interest In his product for a mere *500. Becauee he had had bod hick in that type of tranaaction | before, Twain turned the offer down, fnan'a mhi« turned Wt' tO If Graham BdL rack, silage cart 011 rubber, feed cart, electric fly spray, New Idea corn sheller, 2 electric motors, 5 rolls bale ties, 300 ft. hay rope, new; 50 ft drive belt, 20 ft belt, grab fork, 43 steel fence posts. 10x10 brooder house, oil burning brooder, 25 gal. No. 20 oil, Surge 3-unit milker outfit complete with pipe line for 46 cows, 30 milk cans, £ wash tanks, electric water beater, electrie milk stirrer. s 1940 International %-ton pickup truck. 100 Rhode Island hens, 150 Rhode Island pullets, 20 Muscovy ducks. v . Some household furniture. '•'•••f~T Numerous other small articles. .- ^ Tliis being a large sale will start promptly out time. Usual Thorp Terms. « FLOYD FOAT m mSKBmSSm ®QLFIN-ANCE CORPORATION Clerking ^ W. T. Powers, Eepreaentatif* Pbone Woodstock 110 ,

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