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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Feb 1936, p. 7

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• * v>flU y %, ?. „v * Thtoiday^FebriULXy, 6,-1936 ,; f-rr * ***£$;f\ ; ^ f"Tk,%' -^z •>> v%*»" \> "*/ • '« s - •.• ». :x- • lt >'W . V • 7 3,5 • ^ >yT«i^';rr-T^Fwr'^'T^ 1 i i . ' in MeBDntT niODIllIK • •• «<•-*' " "'4 '- / • ,* • _ - u . , , , , , , - , „ . ... ,. ™ -«»«-» »»-•..**4 . . . ..-. . . .. •••• .. •.-. ,fc«s»--%. ... ; Mock Orange Discorery of Louisiana Settler* When i'reneh Bottlers landed in Louisiana In the Seventeenth century »nd explored the territory they discovered many plants and trees new to them, writes Llewellyn Williams, assistant curator of economic botany at Field Museum of Natural History, In * Chicago, In Field Museum News. West of the Mississippi, near a village of the OSagc Indians, they found sevpral simll thorny trees with globular golden-col Ored fruit, to which they gave the V name of Osape orange, or mock orange, although It has no botanical relationship to the citrus fruits. An exhibit of Osa^e orange, showlna * trunk, a wheel section, typical b<»ards. ' and other pertinent material has been added to the musennf. The compact ; elastic wood of this tree was prized by the Indians for making war clubs artd bows--hence the French name bols d'arc (how Wood), now corrupted to % bodark. •J Chroniclers relate that tlie price of |a bow was a horse and blanket. The is wood is known in various localities b^ f .other names, such as bodeck, yellow' wood, Osage apple tree,„or hedge tree. |Th e tree's natural * range lies across ? Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas. / The t wood Is exceptionally hard and heavy and has man; commercial use*. BY THE WAYSIDE -ANEW HEAVY WATER NOT MERELY TOY How Important Is the newly discovered heavy water likely to be In a practical way? * The science advisory board t>f the Na^nal Academy df Sciences and 'National Research Council makes the following pertinent comment Jp its report: "A 'scoop* for American science was the discovery of the heavy Isotope of hydrogen--hydrogen of twice the atomic weight of ordinary hydrogen. This opens up the possibility of forming an entire new group of hundreds of thousands of organic'chemicals, with properties differing somewhat from those which are now known. "This Is a most Interesting problem, whose techniqi/e Is pretty well mapped out, which is of enormous extent, and which is practically certain to yield chemical compounds with valuable new properties--particularly In. the field of drugs, medicines and dyes." Thus heavy watfr will not be a laboratory plaything, and we venture the prediction that it will reach every reader's life- in some practical way within five years.--Scientific American. Better monotony that family Jars. Fe# men who never tryto b* ricfc ever are. - Who catches the pride's bouquet will be next wed. It is astonishing how some neglected children thrive . Break precedents only when It Is absolutely necessary. - ^ Singing that puts the baby to sleep Is the most popular kind. Dancing is a pastime to be learned early in life or not at all. No matter- what you waij^'io>:?dtodf®.. the headlines won't let you. ; The words of crime and business and politics have no frontiers.; A man makes up his mind he doesn't want to get rich--HSO he doesn't." Coal and chickens can't • be stolen without making too much noise. , . - As the years; roll on a man stops acquiring know-ledge he can't usej' . People who make sheep of themselves will not look far for a tyrant It was a long time before men were made ashamed of themselves for killing birds. A frown Is said to have no cash value; bttt tt may keep pests tdi arm's length. --"t. , - You can't keep a good man down, but he may have to go to som<i other place to come up. All movements that "require" exhibitions of patriotism fall. Patriot-. Ism is spontaneous. A doctor's cheerful talk cures T6- per cent of what you've got and his prescription the rest. Some men are always looking up a word In the dictionary. They are the men Who are well informed. HOW: City Annoyed by Carta . . rThe" noiso problem n Sofia, which is en^n^lng public attention, is largely due to, the carts. . Sofia streets - arc paved with granite blocks and the carts used by the municipality, con tractors and peasants from nearby villages are loosely constructed vehicles with Iron-shod .wheels.' From morning till night there Is a high-pitched,- deafr enlng rattle and clatter, which only ceases In the winter when deep snow covers the streets ^nd sleighs replace the carts. Tram conductors and chauffeurs sound their hells or horns almost continuously and Sofia is declared to be, for three-quarters of the year, Europe's nolsest capital. 'Life Teams in Soil Life teems in the soil with inconceivable numbers and activity. Dr. Charles Thom of the United States Department of Agriculture, In a recent talk to world soil ..scientists at Oxford, England, said counts of soil bacteria have shown as many as forty six billions of active organisms In a gram of decomposing plant material. There are '28 grams in an ounce, 10 ounces in a pound. A gardener picks up a double handful of mellow com post and there may sift through his fingers, among other things, a living microscopic host represented by a fig ure that reaches halfway across the usual newspaper column--21,000,000,- 000,000. Air Icicles , Ice Is almost as dangerous to aircraft as fog. It. has forced planes to fly into the ground, and has driven them so low that they have struck oh stacies. Block *ice, forming round wires and all edges "designed to cut the wind, sometimes causes a fatal In crease In weight and head resistance, at well as distorting the flying sur faces which supply "life"* to the ma chine. The thickening of one bracing wire will decrease speed by 15 miles .p«r"hour.--Tit-Bits Magazine. . ' Jewish Dictionary Plaaind r1 declared to he the first dictionary of the Jewish language ever compiled a Work is being prepared for • publico • tioii by the Institute of Jewish Proletarian Culture of the White Russiai. Academy of Sciences, according to a report from Moscow. It will he Issued In three volumes and will contain 60, 060 words. Puustt Mait Um Bid* To reduce the high death rate from rheumatic troubles In the Province of Dragosli^v <*eorgovlch of Yugoslavia, public health Authorities have ordered all the peasants to buy beds. The peasants from time Immemorial have slept on the floors of their cottages. Gaddap, Horsief •'bodies--Do you believe tli%t horseshoes are an emblem of good luck? 'Noodles--Yes, If tney are on the winning horse.--Pathfinder Magazine1 At the Circus Keeper*--Hey, sonny, keep away from that elephant! Very Small Boy--Aw, I ain't hurtin him. " Display Novelty Clocks The most accurate clock In the world, which varies only a fraction of a second in a year, is displayed at the Science m'rrseum. South Kensington. It is called--the Shortt clock, after its In ventor, W. H. Shortt, who devised It in 1021. A single pendulum, swinging in a glass case. ' is the main motive force which operates a "slave" clo<k alongside it. : Among' the.-many. novel clocks In various parts of the country is an American made alarm clock which, after arousing .the sleeper, switches on the u*i<i and proceeds to prepare the coffee and toast for break fast.. Periiaps the Most p < tun'sqih1 clock Is at Interlaken. Switzerland The works are buried beneath' the ground ; tlie face and hands are entirely planted with flowers. Despite the fact that the clock has to he watered and weeded, It keeps excellent time.--Tlt- Bits Magazine. How to Prepare Linoleum to Patch Wornout Places Linoleum that Is not too old, 'although worn or damaged In spots, can he easily repaired by the home craftsman, asserts a writer In the Deffoii News. ' - . . First, the damaged portion is cut out. In doing this, slant tile knife so. that ail rut edges will extend downward and Inward, I. e„ so that the opening on the under side of the linoleum is smaller than tha^on top. If extra pieces are available, c-are fully cut a section to match the hole' in the floor covering, on the top side. The edges of the patch are', "then trimmed "vee" shaped to conforhi with the edges of the hole. If no extra pieces are available; cut .enough from ulidc r a cabinet, stove or hidden area for the patch. ; • . -Linoleum cement; or thick varnish, is now 'applied both to tbe edges of the liole and of the patch, and the patch is fitted into place. Place a •weight flatly over the patrli until the •cement dries. Crosses Channel in Motor Car The English channel, scene of many unusual passages, including ones by mermaids, mermen, water bicyclists and a German who tried to walk across ofk water skis, was-negotiated recently by another German In an amphibian automobile. The car was equipped with paddles on the rear wheels and crossed from Calais to Dover In eight hours and twenty mln utes, clambered onto dry land and proceeded on to I^ondon. The driver had motored from his home In Ger many to start the crossing. The ve hide has a land speed of about twenty mUes an hour and a water speed of re miles an hour. At sea the water level is even with the running board Monuttient' to Honor Maoris On the summit of One Tree hill overlooking Auckland, New Zealand will be erected an obelisk. 100 feet tall honoring the Maori rnce. habitants of the country. . Funds .for the memorial were bequeathed In the will of Sir John Logan Campbell, a pioneer settler who had watchei Auck land grow from anjininhahited spot to a large seaport. On all the hills n£a> ;fhe city are earthworks built by van; l$hed Maori tribes. V s: Illuminated Fisb La re A lure that contains a miniature electric light Is an Innovation for fish ernien. Unaffected by water, the II liimination is provided by current from a small^battery of the type used in fountain-pen flash lights. BatJery and lamp are fitted within the hollow wooden plug to which the hooks are attached. •'The new lure Is suitable for night trolling.--Popular Science Monthly. Women Replace Men Women have replaced men tele phone operators on the general switch board at police headquarters. New York city. Experts assert that womer operators are endowed with presence of mind and are capable of promptly transmitting messages on which hu man life and safety may hang. Unlqne Business Women who make the famous lels of the Hawaiian Islands, one of the most famous of American regional productions, have formed an association with 400 members. They mad^-a million of the flower wreaths last year. Sparta, Beaatiful City Once the most powerful city tat Greece, Sparta* probably now la the most beautiful. Fe# ruins of the aneient capital remain, but its-location on the broad plain of the Eurotas, under the foothills of Mount Taygetua. •till is supreme. Indian Dishes - Some of the dishes which tie whits man learned to make from the Indiana are clam chowdef, clam cakes, succotiph jM*d corn-meal podding. INDIANS MXDE PWABWAN, RED MAN'S STAPLE FOOD.-- From.the deep, cold waters of Lake Michigan comes the raw material for the pwa-bwan .which .Indians have been using for centuries as one of their favorite foods, says n writer in tlie Detroit News. The "raw" materials are white fish and trout, even suckers. White fish are preferable, for they have th<Kp*eatest oil content. It has always ^>een a scramble for the In dian'to obtain suflicient oil for h;s needs, far he has never used butter. Back "in the days when they could go out on Grand Traverse Ijay or Lake Michigan and bring in tf load of fish in a few hours, pwa bwan was plentiful in • every .'household. Today they find It more difficult to obtain-' fish,-;for commercial fisher men have reduced the supply, and Tew Indians have boats of their o w n . ; : ; i ' Pwa-Bwan might be -called trie-, casseed fish. For that is whaYtbe process .amounts, to, A fresh caught whltefish Js put In a. kettle, with a little water, and cock&d slowly until the fat Is •"tried" out. . When "It h«s reached the frying point, the fish is stirred constantly, to keep It from scorching, uniil the whole ninss. bones aud all, have been reduced to a thick, amber, paste. Seasoned wjth"salt, it la now readj for the table. Eaten with boiled potatoes, or spread on bread or bannocks. It is a substantial meal. Made in the saine way, with fat and lean meat, it is used for seasoning soups, either of pounded corn or of vege tables. . .'.iv' 1Ji •" " v, WHY Women Wear Engagement Ring on Fourth Finger The custom of wearing engagement and wedding rings on the fourth finger of the left hand originated in an ancient belief that a very delicate nerve runs directly from the finger to the heart. ^According to Aulus Gellius, this b§Jf0?®was mentioned in the Egyp-, tlan writings of Appianus, of Alexandria, in the Second century A. D. Dur ing the Middle Ages the connection was supposed to »J>e a blood vessel Instead of a nerve. Henry Swinburne, an English ec c^esiastical lawyer, who died In 1623, t a quaint observation on this subject in his "Treaiise of Spousals or Matrimonial Contracts'"The finger on Which this ring (weddjng ring) is to be worn is the fourth finder of the left hand,'next unto tlie little fitiger; because, by the received opinion of the learned and experienced in 'rip ping up and antomizing nien'a bodies, there is a vein of hlood which passeth fnun that fourth "finger unto the heart- called vena amoris, loi e'ai v^Iti." WHy Fish Float Easily •'*'-*'•'•'v. Without Apparent Effort Why fish float *0 easily without apf parent effort is accompVished^^ the means of an air bladder without which the body of a fish jwouid have the same spectflc gravity as that of man and it would sink to the bottom unless It put forth continual swimming effort. E. D. Reid, a Smithsonian biologist, brought back a specimen from the James river that lacks the customary floating apparatus. It spends most of its titne on the bottom of the river away from the swift current of the stream in which it lives. It la classlfted as a member of the sucker family and Is the fifth of its kind found, the first known specimen having been caught in 189G. NEW ADDITION FOR FOX LAKE SCHOOL Work has progressed favorably on the addition to the grade school at Fox Lake, which is being built as a PWA project, and will continue as long .as the weather will permit. The forms , for the walls are in ready for the pouring of cement and the work is being done 'by John T. Peterson, contractor. The Murray Electric company of Wauconda will install the wiring, and the millwork and steel work will be furnished by Rheinhouse Brothers Mfg. company ot Elgin, and Stephen Schaefer of Fox Lake will install the steam heating plant. \ The new addition will be made of red brick to correspond with the old part and Will consist of two rooms, each-one being 22 by 40 feet, in size, a gymnasium 40 by 64 feet, with a state 14 by 28 feet, a kitchen 10 by 12 feet and a pantry adjoining. / * The kitchen will be fully equipped with all facilities for cooking, and serving. 4 . The side walls will all be of plaster with ceilings of I6rinch wood panels with steel window and door framjes. The old building is about thirty years old. ; M. S. Tomaska, government engineer, who was on the sewage construction project at Mcflenrr. is^^ai^e o f t h e w o r k . ^ \' ' " ' i i - - • ' Invented the Ca--sra It ta believed that the camera was Invented by Giovanni Battista della Torta in the Sixteenth century, though the .principle was actujflly k»owa before. a The Nsima ^The name "Tan" is a .Scottish form of the Hebrew name John and means God's gracious gift. Gateway to Plains of Khyber pass, gateway to the plata§ of India from Afghanistan, la a aafb row defile winding between hick elMMl of shale and limestone, now nrsads# by road and rail. v? Use for Camphor in India Ninety per cfcnt of the camphor use# In India Is burned In tiny guantltNit as i religious offering. • Central Garage iiuBuy Phone 200-J , Fred J. Smith, Prop, j<dmsbni^ The winter weather is especially hard on any car or truck and closer inspection should be made. We are prepared to advise the needs and do expert repair work al fair prices. v" . ' Standard Service Station 24-Hour Towing Service FRED SMITH, Prop, ? *4 / How to Drill Holes in Cork • Solnetimes a clean hole must be •bored' through a rubber-.cork,'"or- the common cork, when making chemical and photographic equipment. The springy substance of both materials makes this difficult to .do if an at tempt is made in the usual way. Kub her corks can be bored with an ordi nary drill, Mf a little household am monla is firsf applied to the drill point. In the case of large rubber corks, the drill should be cleared from the work once or twice and additional ammonia applied to complete the hole. Common corks should be rolled under the shoe sole just before drilling to compress the substance and make the drill run stralghter. A better method for drill lng common corks Is to first boil tlieni In water for a few minutes. This-Insures that the holes will be of the do sired sire and that they will remain so. How Mongols Use Lassoo Ponies The Mongols use horses or ponie* extensively. The ponies In immediate use are kept tied up near the village. One especially fast and carefuHv, trained is always at hand to act as the lassoo pony. When an animal Is wanted from the herd, a'rjder mounted on his pony takes a rod with a noose at the end, picks o-it the-animal he noose over its head, tightens the noose and plays It as a fisherman, riding It round in circles until It gives In."The lassoo pony -mtvu/b£..^(ti£l£ptly keep a neck ahead of any poriy to be captured. How Parmesan Cheese Is Made . l'armesan-cheese is made from tMe curdi of skimmed rjillk, hardened"by a gentle heat. The rennet is-added at about 120 decrees, and one hotir afterward, the- curdling milk Is set on a slow fire Until heated to 1;">0 degrees; during which the curd separates in small lumps. A fiew pinches of saffron are then added. About„ a fortnight after making, the outer crust - Is cut off, the new surface is vartfiphed- with linseed oil. and ofle side is colored red. How Seaweed Forecasts Weather ; The seaweed contains much salt which is hygroscopic--that is to say, i! absorbs moisture. If the air is damp and rain Is about, the seaweed become.- moist or even wet. On the other-hand if the" air is dry, the seaweed Is dry and you can look forward to good weather for some time.to come.--An swers Magazine. How to Compare Pint, Pound To compare a pint and a pound can of the same kind of liquid, either measure the contents of the can labeled one pound In a pint measure, or weich the contents of the can labeled one pint. Why li781-87 Was Critical' Time The period 17K1-S7 ,ln our history was the period when the-states were united under the articles of confederation. During that time the states habitually violated the articles, and disobeyed the acts of! congress and fought among themselves. When cou gress imposed an Impost duty In 178'. to raise money/to pay the public debr. Rhode IsTnfed refused to consent, and since the consent of all the states was necessary, the project faile>l. The country had no credit with European countries. The states deluged, the country with paper money issued independently of congress. During tliis period the., future ur->thfi;..UuKe4 might be said to Iwwe been held In the balance. ' V - • T New Chevrolet Truck on Economy-Safety Run Why Cock Crows at Midnight. i Why' the cock crows at midnight'!*' a problem the Frcncli Ac.ulcitiy of Sci ence has been called H]>on to solve by M. l'ligotHdan, honorary director of the famous Paris observatory. M. iiigour <]an has reported that often, while making astronomical observations, he has hoard the o«ck crow exactly at mid: nUht. ?sow he wants to know why tt does so, and how the cock determines the time of the night French farmers say that when the cock crows at Midnight it means bad weather the following day. It thus appears that, in addition to telling time, the cock can forecast the feather. ; ;; Wtjr Mexican Beans Jump Mexican jumping bean Is the popular name given to the seed pods of the small t^hrub known as the swamp tree, which grows in Mexico and the southwestern part of the United States. The pods are also known as bronco beans. When the tree Is in bloom the gray tortricid moth lays Its eggs In the blossom's. After the eggs hatch the pod serves as a compartment for the larvae. The popular names of the bean come'from the fact that the pods containing larvae are seen to move from time to time, due-^ to. the motion* of the worms within. • Why Buttons Are on Coat Tails The use of buttons on the hack of men's coats goes back to tlie time when men rode horseback and also »at was »llt at the hack so that the tail could fall- conveniently on each side of the horse after the rider had mounted. The buttons Were wed to keep the skirts of the coat -together when the rider was not riding. The twin"topmost'buttons are believed to he a survival of the side slit. ' .-j-x Carrying a 10,000-lb. cement block from Los Angeles to New York, a 1 J^-ton Chevrolet truck--one of the uev 1936 models just introduced--demonstrated that safe driving means economy. Speed limits were observed in evuy community, with 35 m.p.h. the maximum on the open road. The 3511.4 miles were completed on two quarts o<f ofl •nd 308.6 gallons of gasoline, at a cost of 01.6 cents per mile, or one-third of a cent per ton mile. The entire run wss . (Completed without any mechanical failure, repairs, or even a scratched fender. The illustrations show the test truck ..•nd features of the new 1936 models. Coupe type cabs with solid steel roof, full-floating rear axle, and full-lenjtll Water jackets, are some of the improvements. In the lower right, Harry Hartz, who drove the cross-continent teat, ; is seen beside the 10,000-lb. block. The test wa* officially observed by the American Automobile Association. v-:" BARMS PLEASURE-AND PROFIT FOR EVERYONE OFFER No. 1-F6 THIS NEWSPAPER. Pathfinder (52 issues)..^ C>)untry Home 1 year 1 year 1 year Illustrated Mechanics 1 year MeCALL'S MAGAZINE 1 year ALL FIVE ONLY OFFER No. 5-F1 > < • $2.75 THIS KKW?PAPER.„_ Country Home Home iN-iend ', , Poultry Tribuae -- Illustrated Mechanics.. ALL FIVE ONLY ..1 year A year J year Why Wake Island Is Important Wake isla-nd is an islet of rock In thfe Pacific ocean, lying l,r>"i»» mlleS northeast of Cuatn and .'t.KKI miles east of Luzon, I'liilipp'nes. li belongs to* the I'nited States as a Pacific outpost of the Philippine archl|>elago. It Is about one square mile in area and its importance is due to the fact that it Is on the cable route between the United. States and the Philippines. PAfllflMXR "M ;s?pl! 1 year $2.30 MANT IIOWN) At. fcIV ItW N:.rvrsV> .Oumdk Why Tree BleefU Most in Morning The bureau of plant Industry says that rubber trees bleed more freely In the morning than at other times because the -bark pressure Is higher. This is due. to t tie fact that transpiration' Is cut down during the night. The tree will bleed to some extent at any time ' Portrait of Franklin on Stamps The five-cent United States stamp of 1847 bears a portrait of Franklin after a painting by Longacre. All other stamps bearing portraits of FrankUo are profiles from busts. >> Blue Ivory's Sonrce Bine Ivory comes from the tusks of mammoths found Imbedded 4n the soil of northern Siberia. The hue color is due to the metallic salts which have penetrated til em A Hie course of centerlea. - Why Pocketknife Is Called Penknife Before steel |«'n-nibs were invented, .people wrote with pointed quills. These had to he trimmed ev^ry so often. For tiils purpose they always carried a knife % • their pockets. Hence; they wer? "penknives" or "pocketknives." s M SELECT YOUR FAVORITES O N lV *3-- for any ^OF THESE MAGAZINES WITH THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 Year MUX THE 3 raaUCATMS KS8EB TWS (X) ! j McCaH's Marazine ------. -1 year [j Pathfinder (52 issues).. 1 year [: Boys' Life (Boy Scouts) ., , 1 year • Silver Screen . , .1 year • Current Thought 1 year • Outdoors -- ... • I year • Hunting & Fishing________ l year • American Boy , ' 1 year • Breeder's Gazette . 2 years I ) Etude Music Ma^axine. 6 mos. [ ! American Fruit Grower [""! Country Home ..." [ i Parents' Magaziti L J Flower Grower .. - ^ Geysers Cansed by Volcanism The geysers In Yellowstone National park were caused by volcanism. There has been no active volcanic action of the explosive type In this reg||p the Great Ice age. Shelley's Ghost A monument In Viareggio, Italy, re-. calls the fact that the body of the poet Shelley was washed up there in 1822, ^ after his drowning at sea. His ghost' has often been reported walking along the beaches. [ ] American Poultry Journal . L J Junior Home for Mothers^. • Market Growers' Journal _ [1 American Cookery U Christian Herald . years „3 years 6' mos. _ 6 mos. ..4 years _.l year _.l year „6( mos. _ 6 mos. • Evervday Science & Mechanics-- 1 year • National Sportsman. .--1 year • Dog World • ' * mos. • Hunter-Trader-Trapper * mos. L 1 Poultry Tribune * years • Popular Science Monthly 6 mos. 3 ?HFtsE MAGAZINES$1)50 AND ' four f mmmmm THIS NEWSPAPER, 1 year) Only fm Your Choice of TWO (2) OF THESE MAGAZINES and ONE (1) OF THESE MA6A2ICS ' • Coantry HOCM . . . , . 1 year • fathfinder • ^2 issw|r . . 1 ytar • McCafl's Mafaaae. 1 tw Blostrated MicWn . . .1 ytar • Silver Screes . . . . . .1 yrar u Christian Herald . ... I nwstlts • Horn Friead . . , . . . 1 ytar • Current Thought ..... 1 ytar - Popular Science MontWy . S Moatits C Breeder s Gazette . . . .2 years - Parents' Magazine . . 6 Mrtks - ' Boys' Life (Boy Scouts) . .1 year - American fruit Grow» . . 2 years National Spoftsman . , . . I year American Boy . . . , , t ytar r Outdoors . . . . . . *-.-J ytar : Junior Home far MotiWS , .1 year " Hunter Trader Trapper. 6 amtfts r .Everyday Science iMectaaies 1 year Etude Mbs.'c Mjga: -e. . 6 awatls r Hunting S FisNic .... 1 year 1 Flower Grower . ... I Mntts 1 Dog World ..... fi Moths : Awerican Cookery. . . 8 Matte Mail Your Order Today ! ------ Enclos*d find f • Anericaa Poaltry JavBal. ~ Midwest FniibMH . , . , - Hotne Cirde. . *•. . . • Paoltiy TritaM . » . . . • Cloverfeaf Reviaw. . , , Mother's-Hoaw Ufa . ; . C Poultry Keapir. .... GENTLEMEN newspaper and ths magazimi NAME m (X). STREET or R. F. TOWN-- STATE. THIS OFFER IS GUARANTEED. PRESENT SUBSCIPTIONS WHU. U EXTtNOCO. I the Mchenry plaindealer

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