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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Mar 1944, p. 4

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wti^m V . • * s ^ M""i .' *. .•/>-•. i v •-,, *, p«e« Foui *LAfltoSi|US Thursday, March 23, THE M'HENRY PLAINOEALER Published every Thursday at M«- flktnry, IB., by Charles F. Renich. | A. H. MOSHER Editor and Manarcrj Entered as second-class matter at; tbe postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of If *y 8, 1879. I ersotiti! s fOR SALE (hie "lear ........... ...f2.60 NATIONAL'€DITORIAL_ ASSOCIATION ANNUAL TOWN MEETING from Camp Claiborne, La., where she had been spending some time with her husband. FOR SALEt--Oil burner, Reasonable, i „ Mrs* Covalt and daughter, Call 214-R. *44! Shirley, returned Sunday from Flor- | ida, where they had been spending a daughter, Elaine, of Rockford former local resident, visited • friends here Sunday. The Odillon Long family of Skokie visited friends in McHenry Monday Mrs. Nick Miller returned last week : afternoon. Funeral Services Monday . For George W. Lemmers FOR SALE)--Baby Chick Bargain, j few weeks. ROP sired big type. Leghorn. Also j Mrs. William Smith of Chicago vis- New Hampshire Reds and White: ited in the home of her parents, the Rocks. Starter chicks two to four. Clarence Martins, a few days the weeks old. Foxldale Farm fa Hatchery, last of the week. Ingleside, 111. Rt. 5y,-Tei. Fox Lake; Mrs. Vaughn Jones of Chicago 2318. 4£1& | spent the weekend in the Jones- Goodell home. Funeral services for George W. Lemmers, who died at Tils home in I! Woodstock oa Saturday, March 18, , . , , , . 1944, were held on Monday afternoon Woodstock were weekend guests in, J ^ MerVin funeral ^ Mr the Ben Justen home. Mexico's School Teacher* Mexioo has 80,000 country school teaehers. Mrs. Harold Skow and MerWi Lemmersi,, fnaitth er of Mrs. William Miss Kathryn McAndrews, who Carroll, was a prominent Woodstock has been employed in Chicago for: citizen for many years, beginning the past two years, entered the j jjjs care€r in the abstract office of Henrotin school of Nursing in Chi- j R|chard & Jewett. At the time of cago, this week. j his death he was vice-president of Mr. and Mrs. George Kane spent! the McHenry County Title Company, the- weekend visiting in the Elmer | Besides his wife, Stella, whom he Winklemann home in Oafc I^k»r : Biff City Stalino, one of the big cities of the Soviet Union, before its occupafr/ y' > tJn'COUntyf t M^HenIL^11 room suite. Ciill McHenry 90-R. S^1 uie weexena ai ner norne nere. State of Illinois, that the Annual j *43-2 Mrs. Charles Carso of Chicagp Town Meeting . of said town will : ^^ a :*• spent the' weekend in the Henry Kin- ' , . take place on Tuesday, April, fourth, FOR SALE--Ford-Ferguson tractors sala home. ! A. D., 1944, being the first Tuesday ,_We are taking orders and making Mrs. Charles Miller and family | » of said month. deliveries on new tractors and equip- and Miss Elsie Home were Chicago :* . The town meeimg for the transaC-, ment. Ford-Ford Ferguson Services visitors Monday. • • - .I*011 miscellaneous bus'ness of saia an(j Sales, 248 Throop St., Phone 851 .Mrs. Lee Wiamsley and daughter, FOR SALE--8 room house in the Mr and Mrs Robert Thompson and block across the street from grade jjjss Maud Granger visited Floyd, -- , and high schools in City of McHenry. Covalt at St. Therese hospital, Wau- I tion by the Gentians in October, ° T "7 T" **° ° 1 1941, had nearly half a million residents. The annual capacity of its metallurgical plants was estimated at well over 500,000 tons each of cast irdn and steel. Workers em- Notice is hereby given to the legal P- J- Cleary, W. McHenry, 111. *43-3 kggan, on Sunday afternoon, ••^'.^••^ers, residents of the Town of Mc- FQR SALE_g piece Hffht oak dining Miss Eileen Kilday of Chicago spent the weekend at her home here. married fifty years ago, he ifc survived by two daughters, Mrs. Carroll and Mrs. Geofge Ladd of Westmont, ill. friends Learn Of Deat£ V A\ Of Former Resident Here We have** been notified the past week of the death on Feb. 26, 1944, ployed in the near-by mines and lo- ' of Nick Klein, who passed away in Woodstock, III. 40tf Frances, of Walla Walla, Wash.* were callers a few days this past cal plants numbered one-sixth of the total industrial workers of Soviet Russia. . Commercial Mushroom* , , America's appreciation of mush- j ^i^d n^an7i rooms is seen in the commercially cultivated crop. Nonexistent at the from our • y',' . ,-town will be held* at the hour of 2 -o'clock p. m. oh said day aV the ______ _ r " ' Schiessle building, town clerk's office,1 FOR SALE---Year-'round comfort and jn the home of the former's 'rv »" West McHenry. Illinois, and a mod-., economy _ with, fire-proof Johns-Man- brother. Clarence Martin. ' • ' ; " erator having been elected, wi]J: pro?'• villi? Rock Wool Home insulation Mr. jUd IVJrs. William Hansman of " coed to hear and consider reports of ?-'Blownin" walls and ceilings. Call Chicago were local callers on Satui ! million pounds in 1942. Growers in officers, to appropriate money "to | LEO J„ STILLING, MAHenry 18. day .and Sunday. ( Chester county, Pennsylvania, pio- ; defray the necessary expenses as ] 36tf. , Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Buch returned neered the industry around the last weekend from a week and one- • towns of West Chester and Kennett Square. This fertile farm area still Chicago. He was the husband of the late Sophia, and father of the late William Klein. Surviving is one brother, Adam Klein, of Omaha, Nebraska, Two sisters, Susie and Anna, Last rites were held on Feb. 29 from our Lady Help of. Christian turn of the century, it totaled 48 T may in pursuance af law, roR SALE_Two.we<,k old chicks lore the meeting. Given under my hand at this 16th dav of March, A. D., 1944 MRS. ROBERT J. CONWAY,; Town Clerk. (Pub. March 16 and 23) " " xt iT-lT half visit with their son, Jerome, in! ociu^re- in]S ierine iann area mwi McHenry Oklahoma City. Oklahoma. j Wb-tt'Ms o'the commer- White Mills. Flour 44 Miss Joan Reihansperger, student I at the University of Wisconsin at j cial crop, but mushrooms are now grown near Boston, New York, Cleveland, Chicago, Kansas City and San Francisco. « church, Chicago. Many old friends here will hear with regret of, his passing, for.he .was .a resident here for some time before moving to Chicago. -. ; ' . •- Named by Spaniards New Guinea was named "Isla del | FOR SALE1--Two cows, one register-j Madison, spent the weekehd at the ed Holstein, fresh in April; one year-; home of her parents, the C. J, 'ling bull calf, Holstein; 6 brood sows Reihanspergers. Lone with six pigs, 2 weeks old, five William Vales of Cicero spent Sunto have pigs in April. Swayne, 2 day with his parents, the Albert #W' hv the Snaniard Saavedra in miles east of McHenry, 1 mile east of Vales. and was so known until.** ..^ansfonner on gravel road. Tel. Mrs. Frank Kempfer Sr. spent a of their A t into war bonds McHenry 662-W-l. 44 few days last week in the home of soldier de^sUs ^ Qfflce ^ her. daughter, Mrs. Mane Simon, in 1528, named in 1545 Soldiers Buy Bonds Soldiers of the United States Soventfr army, while fighting the Axis in Sicily, put more than 30 per cent Bomber Output On December 7, 1941, building of a four-engine bomber required the work of '70 men for one year. Only 17 workers do the same job today. • j FOR SALE--Jerusalem artichoke seed Chicaeo° Mr Kempfer spent Suriflav 6y kep^ °n^y 14 P®r have no equal as live Mock feed, mn Shlc,ag°A. Mr. Kempfer spept buMa> cent for their immediate use. The lbs. at 5c 40 hogs, low feed cost. Agency, Genoa City, Wis. lb. will plant feed f^. I"-saccpmpaiiie*! * rematoi^MVTcenrorthrAu^t Bel void Clean Babushka ' One babushka can be made to l&St all winter if it is given an occasional wash. As most of them are made of soft wool, either woven or knitted, they should be laundered gently. A few dunks in lukewarm suds', a couple of rinses, and .the job is done: The knit headgear should be dried flat. woven material- may be hung on a his wife home that evening. . pay went for allotments, including Mr. and Mrs. John A. Freund of family allowances and Class E vol- 44Chicago \vere guests in the George untary allotments. FOR SALE--1,000-hen poultry farm, Wirfs home Sunday j 40 acres and modern 9-room home, Winter Legumes Winter legumes serve a number of purposes, the* agronomists say, They decrease leaching and the loss of soluble fertilizer nutrients; they prevent erosion; assimilate nitrogen from the air and store ij. in the roots of the plant for use by the following crop. They also help to maintain the supply of organic matter in the soil when turned under and add some nitrogen to the .soil. Mrs. Nick Miller, Mrs. Anna Miller, [out-buildings; five m'ileT'from 'iu'ke 'a"d ,5"™? • ^£*1 were visitors in | Geneva, Wis. Belvoir Agency, Genoa the \\ illiam .Miller home m Chicago | Citv Wis *44 on Sunday- • * ' ' Mrs. Rose Miller and Mrs. Ida Mix Sedimentary Rock Composed chiefly of carbon, coal is a sedimentary rock formed frorfl decayed vegetable matter. It generally is believed that coal originated in swamps similar to present peat bogs, near the sea level and subject to repeated submergence. In decomposing it became peat; oxy- FOR SALE --800 bushel Vangard; spent the weekend in Chicago where seed, just resisting; from yield of they attended the wedding of Mrs. 80 bushel per acre last season. Readv Mix's grandaughter. for seeding. Jersey and Guernsey Mrs Genevieve Swenson and Mrs wwiiifubiii|s ifc The triangles and squares of* cows' good famlly cows" 10"20 Inter- Kenneth Murray of La Grange^spent and hydrogen were eliminated Jmatenal mav be hJig on a nationa! tractor' ^ood^haPe- Fann- the weekend m the^Alfons Adams to & greater extent than carbon. ^une« oorr rroudu . Press lnigguhtulyy wwhxiecnn dry. ;lngr m,n and c0™ elevator. Tel. I10"1®' 0n ®u,nday ^ v4s,^ed Metamorphosis or a change of form T 2223. *44-2 m the Ray Walsh home in Fox Lake. : ; > ir-- -- Mrs. Zena Baconl^ returned last Frost Form V WANTED week from Kenosha, Wis., where she Follow Land Bolivia has an area of 266,500,000 acres, but in 1938 only 4ol,000 acres, or about one-fifth, of 1 per cent of the total area, of the nation, was under cultivation. Put in another way, this meant a little over one-tenth of an acre per inhabitant, while in theUnit-t ed States the ratio of cultivated land' to population is approximately 2% acres per inhabitant. » Colony MoHenry, Hlinoia ytj#11-' ; FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Donald O'Onuior Peggy Ryan TOP MAN" SPECIAL ATTRACTION: IN COLOR. WITH THE M^BpiES AT TARAWA. SUNDAY AND MONDAY ' • March 26-27 Alice Faye -- Carmen Miranda "Gang's All Here" PLUS-r-Cartoon and News. f'/^ESDAf (ONE DAY> . :Areturnengagemeot. V In Color Roddy McDowell--Edmund Gwenn Donald Crisp 'Lassie Come Home' PLUS--Short Subjects WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY Lionel Earrymore -- Van Johnson "Dr. Gillespie's Criminal Case" WAR BONDS will buf - f Stake || your ""country's future. ^ £3 MILLER WOODSTOCK, ILL. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY March 24 and 25 ^ They call themselves ; " ' "Sons of Heavgft* You'll call them Something Else! "BEHIND THE RISING SOT' Plus: No. 2 Hit ITie Ritz Brothers in "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" SUNDAY AND MONDAY March 26-27 At last the picture that is different! 'FLESH AND FANTASV' with ' CHARLES BOYER BARBARA STANWYCK' BETTY FIELDS EDWARD G. ROBINSON ROBERT CUMMfNGS TUESDAY ONLY, MARCH 28 BROUGHT BACK BY POPULAR DEMAND! "YANK IN THE R. A. F." with TYRONE POWER and BETTY GRABLE WED., THURS. & FRI. - March 29-30-S1 Matinee Wednesday, March 29 "DESTINATION TOKYO" CARY GRANT JOHN GARFIELD V had been spending a few weeks in 1930 or the h. Damm home. When frost forms, the temperature (--tt--~ is 32 degrees Fahrenheit or lower at MtKlel-A Ford, tte spot where the frost occurs. The JJSl model See George Gora/ison, Migs Georgianna Donahue of Hunt- . temperature a few feet above the McCollum Lake. Rt. Si, West Mc- ley visited Genevieve Knox last weefc- •urface of the earth on still, clear Henry. / 44 end ' mornings often is several degrees ^ ; „ _ , • higher than it is on the surface. WANTED TO BUY--Poultry of all] Mrs, Dorothy Witt and mother, Hence frost may occur on the grass kinds. Wm. Staines, West McHenry. Mrs. Aylea, were Waukegan callers and in low places when the tempera- Tel McHenrv 638-R-l *44.2 !'ast Thursday, where they visited a ture on one's porch, for instance, is ^ 1-- :----- nephew and grandson, William Do-wjdistinctly above the freezing poipt. 'WANTED--Feeding pigs, 100 lbs. or; den, who was home on furlough. * I under. Frank Ehredt, Round Lake, j Mi's. A. J. Butler of Chicago vis- Protects Seed When seed is sown, or plaft&Hfet out in the fall in ground which has been newly spaded, a mulch put over the soil after it has frozen to keep the frost in, is usually advisable. It aue. > helps prevent winter thaws which resulted in lignite and , mjght heave the plants out at the ground, or uncover the seed. . • FOR TASTY FOODS TRY EVA'S RESTAURANT Riverside Drive which was due in some extent to pressure, coal. . ' Tel.- Round Lake 2223. ' Canned Sea Mussels Canned sea mussels, a product placed on the market for the first time this year by the seafood packers of Maine and Massachusetts, have been so well received by the public that the industry is planning a much larger pack next season, according to the Office of the Coordinator of Fisheries. Well over a million pounds of this food--40,000 cases to be exact--were packed during the 1942-43 season. Though mussels have always been highly regarded in Europe it is only recently that this country has shown any interest in this highly nutritious food. AUCTION OF DAIRY COWS WANTED--Pasture for 16 head of heifers. Ella Bauman, Rt. 2, Woodstock, 111. Tel. Woodstock 1612-W-l. Reverse charges. *44 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED--Men or women. McHenry Tent and Awning Co. 43-tf WANTED- " war work. Phone 195. *44 | ited in the home of her parents and relatives here over the weekend. She also called in the home of Mrs. B. T. Butler in Ringwood and in the K. M. Bradley home in Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Alby Krug, and State Tax Trends Trend of state personal income tax legislation this year was, with few exceptions, toward lower income taxes. This is in marked contrast to state tax legislation in several other fields--tobacco and liquor excises for example--where the trend was toward more and higher taxes. Two states--South Dakota and West Virginia--dropped out of the income tax field altogether, West Virginia repealing its eight-year-old personal Income tax over the governor's veto. Two other states, Wisconsin and Oregqp, repealed surtaxes on income. Convoys Lose Time ^ Convoys lose time by forcing ready ships to wait for laggards, by running at the slowest ship's pace, by zigzagging and losing position, by cluttering harbors, burdening facilities through arrival all at the same time, and through waiting turn while other ships discharge their cargo. The turn-around time to England is 70 days, against the 25 days in which a fast freighter could make it alone. Will cater to card parties and banquets. Italian dinners on short notice. Stricty home cooking. OPEN FOR BUSINESS ON APRIL 1st Chemical Industry The Society of" Chemical Industry now numbers nearly 5,000 mei>i^>ers. 1? o -Draft exempt man for Apply Miller Products. 39-tf WANTED -- H e l p e r and w o m e n -- H u n t e r B o a t C o m pany. 41 tf ANIMALS WANTED DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE ^AR --- Five dollars is the least we pay for dead horses and cows in good conditiqjn. Wheeling Rendering Co. Phone Wheeling No. 3. MISCELLANEOUS The undersigned will sell the des- 'N V; *eve/s* th* cribed cattle at public auction on ?har^s-No helP needed to load. 14-tf • the farm known as the Ross Sill farm located 1% miles northeast of 13t7"l!,T\'KrTPC!T% * v m ad/^tt via Alfalfa $15.60, Clover $18.30, Blue WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29 Tag Hybrid Seed Corn $3.5§, all per ^ Commencing at 1 o'clock, sharp . bushel. Also many other bargains. Forty-five head. Holstein dairv'cows: Postal card us today for catalogue 25 head Vill be fresh with calves by and samples. Hall Roberts' Son. side, balance are springing. The herd '• Postvjlle, Iowa. 41-5 is of best quality, young, all being ~~---- ; ' ' -- first, second and third calf cows. HA\ E YOU HEARD about the new They are hand picked from the reduced Auto Liability and Property dairies in the state of Minnesota. All Damage rates? They will surprise are TB and Bangs tested. This is you. Ask us for insurance rates Copportunity .you cannot afford to The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8 . Bliss to buy the best dairy cows at ** 27-tf auction. These cows may be seen ' '; ~ • • • :--•: •'. - any time lefor^ sale. GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let m JACK REYNOLDS • ' ' d i s p o s e , o f - y o u r garbage each week. •V:'!Wm.n Stat? Bank.'Clerkinfe •°£ttner ,if desired* Reasonable • ; l"sual Bank rIWmS iates. Regular year round route, forl. H. J W * Sm.Uj ^ Auctioneers ' ' •' • ' • • r • Help chicks and young birds grow and develop. Give them TONAX in their mash. Especially after an attack of any disease. And as a tonic and conditioner. Contains mild astringents to help relieve Entefttis; also blood building elements. Tonax helps control intestinal parasites. It provides trace minerals and reliable stimulants. For layers too. Inexpensive and convenient. 2-lb. can enough for 400 chicks for a month, 75c Bolger's Drug Store Green Street J0 McHenry Keep Off Feed Hogs should be kept off feed from' 12 to 24 hours before they are slaughtered, and they should have olenty of clean fresh water to drink. • Heavy Eaters The average adult rat, one weighing more than a pound, eats in one year about half as much as a*laying hen does. €olor Blindness Corrected That color blindness is susceptible to correction is evidenced by recent studies involving the use of vitamins and eye training, reports the Better Vision institute. In one group of 45 men rejected for military service because of inability to distinguish colors easily, after vitamins were added in substantial amounts to the diets of the men and their eyes given intensive training in color discrimination, 35 passed eye tests upon reexamination and were accepted in various branches of the military services. After six months the eyes of_ 35 men were found to have retained improved color perception. Green Street McHenry Open Saturday Evenings until 10 p.m.--Sunday mornings '.until 12 Noon--Telephone 182 SPRING HAS ARRIVED SUITS Stunningand Smart Plain Colors Plaids Sizes 12 to 44 ^ tt's time for that NEW COAT We have the new shorties jrou have been waiting for. Plain and plaid colors $9.98 and $15.75 HATS The Kind You Will Adore STRAWS AND PELTS Flowered Trimmed and Plain Large and small head sixes BLOUSES Sheer Flowered ahd Plain and Cottons in all Shades Sheer Rayon and Mercerised per 44c to $1.39 $1.29 to $3.45 GLOVES That come well over the Wrist. In rayon and kid--all colors 79c to $1.39 DICKEYS and COLLARS Non- Ration# Dressy Sheer lacy and tailored White and Colors Red, Beige, Blue and Black Also New Rationed Shoes $1.00 TO $6.95 Silk, leather and cloth Draw strings and various trims 39c to *2.98 Q :'<y o ) o o

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