Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Mar 1945, p. 7

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

'-V>' ' Mot |maraHy Inowu lathe ftet Hrr"** afc the* bonding agent tor too* brakee. PlMllca hold other materials toffhei and give teal physical characteristics flor knf lifle. **v! |M| buds pot M ajpTGn* to* TONAX their ni BvscMly sinr « anas if asp diMft And as • took Mi «aft> tiOMC. CMHkil BUMiMM'Oldi MttmBandlfedhsfeiooal IIMMitW. It pfOVid* «M rslisble irienl-- For enoo^b far 400 Bolger's Drug Store Gyccb. Street McHcnr> IILLVWIII RINGWOOD AUC HON On account of being unable to get help, the undersigned will sell at public auction their dairy,, On the farm located 2 miles north of Marengo on Route 23,. and % mile west of Max Wilson's corners, on Monday, Apr. S Commencing at 1 o'clock, sharp Jo Head Choice DAIRY COWS This is an exceptionally good, young herd. Thirteen of these cows are first calf heifers just freshened, seven are second calf heifers just fresh, and three more will be. fresh by the day of sale. The balance of the herd will freshen in May. THESE 20 HEAD ARE PRODUCING 14 CANS OF MILK PER DAT One Bull st+i. milking equipment Three-unit DeLaval Milking Machine, magnetic type, one unit new; also pipe line for thirty-four cows. Fourteten milk cans, paila and strainers. «| ' FEED -- Eight tons baled clover hay; eight tons baled tiaratky key. TERMS -- $25 and under, cash; *over that amount, six months' time on good bankable notes. Hake arrari& ements with clerk before day of .sale. Higglns Krof. \3HARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer Marengo State Beak, Clerk AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer m. § Hswng rented my farm I will sell all of my*personal property on farm located 2 'miles northwest of Waacondf, 4 miles southeast of Volo, and Otie^njle west of U. S. No. 12, on Thursday, April 5 * comnftncing at 12:30 sharp, the following property, to-wit: 20 HEAD OF CHOICE HOLSTEIN CATTLE, consisting of IS HEAD OF MILK COWS, all gee* y*m* • hoare-raised cows, KTtral cleee springers and now aiUkera. Average test for this herd for the jeer of 1944 being 34. HOLSTEIN BULL, 15 moiitfl* old. , HOLSTEIN HEIFER CALF, 4 moe. old. TEAM OF GOOD WORK HOR8ES-- Geldingsf weight aboat 1600 Set Doable Work Harness, HAY AND GRAIN *00 ba. Early Cohiaftia Oeta, for seed. <• 250 bales of first crop AtfalCe Hay. < tens Ear Corn. MACHINERY McD. FARM ALL TRACTOR, RUBBER IN FRONT, BEST OF CONDITION. McD. Tractor Cultivator. HcD. Tractor PUkw, 14-in., 2-botteei. McD. Taadeo Tractor Disk. Gehl Silo Filler, Model like -.now. *• McD. Manure Spreader.1 :'4 ... McD. Corn Binder, tike •ear." McD. 8-fL GraimBinder. McD. Mower. .McD. Da sip Rake. " Steel Wheel Wagon a*d Hey Beck. Cultivator. Disk. Steel Land Roller. Bob Sleigh. ^ Gehl Corn Planter. UNIVERSAL PORTABLE MILKING MACHINE, COMPLETE; DOUBLE UNIT. 9 Milk Cans. Pails* and Strminerw. Warhing and Sterilising Ifcpfcs. 6C-ft. Drive Belt. Simplex Oil Bnrner | "feeder, 500 chick capacity. . Forks, Shovels, sad" Small fnh. TERMS -- All sums of $25.00 and under that amount, cash; over that amount a credit of six months at 6 per cent will be extended on notes approved by. the clerk. Anyone desiring credit kindly make arrangements before purchase is made. No property to be Temoved until settled Ray L. Dowell* West Clerking! CHE'S A SHE-DEVIL to some Hot " lywood people; to others she's an angel. Jeaa F--tatae is one of those persons who never could be accused of being wishy-wariiy. She's electric, giving off with dynamic impulses, sometimes a sparkling positive, sometimes a crackling negative. Joan Fontaine .is never neul When die's angry she's lightning & a summer storm, and just as deadly; when she's gay she's a veritable pinwheel on wheels. Exploded into the ranks of the screen's first ladies feack in 1939 with a haunting performance in "The Women," Jeaa Fontaine Joan has frequently been a storm center, and 'most always town's gossip conversation piece. - Joan, when she wants to be, cap be a witch right out of "Macbeth." She once said: "I express my feelings by action. I have - a frightful temper, and I can fly into rages about almost anything that gets on my nerves at any time of day or night." • . ; Surprise, SttrpriMtf ' The big news of the moment is that she went through one whole picture without once losing frer temper. That was "The Affairs of Susan," lor Hal Wallis at Paramount. Producer Wallis, a wise man (he must be--anyway he won 27 Oscars during a 10-year period), provided Joan with everything an actress could set her heart upon. She had not one but four leading men-- George Brent, Dennis O'Keefe, Doa De Fore, and Walter , Abel. In the picture each of these men falls in love with her and wants to marry her. i In "The Affairs of Susan" Joan played her first comedy role, and that scared her, she confided to me. Says I to her: "You've got one of the finest comedy directors in the business--Bill Seiter. He knows more than many of our supposed big shots, whom he's taught all they know, but can't remember because their hats are now too high for them to balance the hat and the brain underneath 'em. So with Bill just let yourself go. He'll carry the ball over the goal line, and you'll get the credit." She did, and now says, "I prefer comedy to those droopy roles I've been playing." Ift Cmntatgimu But it wasn't always sweetness and light with" Joan. On her last picture, the $4,000,000 "Frenchman's Creek," there was more than a little trouble between her and Artnre De Cordova, the technicolor pirate. Joan was very unhappy on that one, and when Joan's unhappy every one within shouting and shooting range is apt to be unhappy, too. All due to a misunderstanding of the language. He apologized, she apologized, and th.ey were friends again. 1 Many of the reports circulated about Joan are pure malice. Joan Just never bothers to answer back. "But I don't let those things bother me any more," she told me. "After all, by this time they've said everything and written everything .that could be said or written about me, so why explain anything?" Don't Yoa &e/ie*e it < The Fontaiae-De HaviDaad "feud" manor*, fbr instance, are a part of the legion of legends about her. Joan contends there isn't any feud, never hen been one. "Why," says she, "if Liwy ever needed help I'd be the first one. she came to, and vice versa." No, there is no feud, but the fact that she took the name Fontaine, and not Liwy's made talk, as Joan knew it would. She wanted no one to write a story about Livvy's baby sister, said she. "If I can't win on ! state my own, being tied to Livvy's apron I strings won't help me. So what the heck! Just call me Joan Fontaine-- or don't call me." Regarding the reports that she has trouble with her directors she answers: "How's any one going to undermine a Hitchcock or a Cnkor or a BUI Seiter? It's ridiculous!" Joan is a determined person with a will of iron. If something comes up she disagrees with she just plants herself in the position she intends to maintain--and she maintains it. Ask David O. Selznick. He knows. "I was sick of being the sad sack of the screen," said she. "I wanted to play comedy, and now that I've done it, I'm happier than I've ever. been in Hollywood.'*"' \ (By Helen Johnson! Mrs. George Shepard and Mrs. Alan Ainger and children were visitors at Woodstock Thursday afternoon. Clayton Brace of Behridere spent the weekend here with his family. Mr. and Mrs. George Haberlein spent the weekend with relatives in Chicago^ Mrs. Roy Wiedrieh of Keystone was a caller here Wednesday afternoon. Miss Amy Laurence spent weekend with her parents, Mr. Oliver Laurence. Mr .and Mrs. George Shepard were visitors at Woodstock Saturday • morning. , I Miss Alice Mae Low spent Sunday | night and Monday with relatives in ! Chicago. Mr. and. Mrs. George Shepard spent { Sunday in the Alan Ainger home1 near Greenwood. Mrs. Emma Beatty, Mrs. Viola > Low and Mrs. Walter Low and ? daughter were visitors in the Leslie Allen and Elmer Olson homes near Hebron, Saturday. . ' Mrs. Doberstein, daughter, Doro- j thy, and son, Gus, spent Sunday with ; relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Van Dusen and daughters of Elgin spent Sunday in the Oliver Laurence home. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nordgren and Nancy and Kirk Creine of Waukegan were visitors in the Fred "Wiedrieh,, Jr., home Monday. Mrs. Oscar Berg and Mrs. Williari McCannon were visitors at Woodstock Friday afternoon. Mrs. John Hogan and Mrs. Paul Walkington attended a 4-H meeting at Woodstock Saturday for the leaders and new leaders of the 4-H. Howard Shepard, AMM, 3-C., of Smartt Field, Mo., spent Sunday and Monday morning with his parents^1 Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mrs. Don Smart and son, Bob, of Waukegan spent Tuesday in the Fred Wiedrieh, Jr^ home. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Berg were callers at Johns burg Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kooistra and sorjs of Harvard spent Sunday in the Alec Anderson home. V Mr. and Mrs. John Smith were pleasantly surprised Tuesday evening at their farm home by a few neighbors and friends in honor of John's birthday. Those to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Ben Freund and family, Joe Young, Mr. and Mrs. [Dick Young, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Young and family, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and family, Catherine I Freund and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Valian- I court. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brennan, Ctfrp. Bill Brennan and Helen Johnson were guests in the A1 Marks*, home at Ridgefield at a six' o'clock dinner, Wednesday evening. fLeland Berg was a Johnsburg caller Saturdav afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler and daughter, Muriel, were Sunday dinner guests in the Vivian Austin home at Genoa City. Mrs. Chancy Harrison and Mrs. Wattles spent Monday in Woodstock. Mrs. John- Hogan attended a Home Bureau meeting at Keystone" Friday afternoon. Mrs. Charles Peet and Mrs. Viola Low were visitors at .Crystal Lake Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Collins Wilmette spent several days thia week with the former's parents, Rev. and Mrs. Collins. Mrs. Agnes Jencks of Barrington was a caller here Sunday afternoon. Katherine, Gene and Esrline Vogel,~ Mrs. Georee Vogel and Phyllis, Mrs. Dan Laurence and Susan of EHtfepra* Mrs. Joe Kuhn and grand-daughter of Solon Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Don Smart and sons of Waukegan were visitors in the hchne Sunday. .Miss Helen Ruth Butter returned" to Bloomington Tuesday after a weeks visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Butler. Mr. and Mrs. Sibre Whiting and family spent Sunday with the letter's mother, Mrs. David Powers at | Crystal Lake. | Miss Helen Laurence of Chicago ! spent the week-end with her parj ents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Laurence. ! Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and j family spent Sunday in the Willi , Wurtzinger home at Woodstock. Mrs. Thomas Doherty and son* and in company wifli the Misses Florence and Svslyn Carey of lie- Henry, spent Thursday hi the J. A. Woll home at Winnetka. Philps Saunders of Sycankere spent Spnday in the Fred Wiedrieh, Jr., home. Mrs. Sihre Whiting- and children were visitors at Woodstock Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Wattles and son, Glenn, of McHenry spent Sunday in the Chan-1 cy Harrison home. Mrs. Roy Harrison and daughter, Edith Pearl, arid Mrs. Lonnie Smith, and son, Sam, were visitors in Elgin Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas "and family spent Sunday with relatives in Algonquin. Charles Carr and Mrs. Frankie Stephenson visited Mrs. Charles Carr •t Victory Memorial kegan Monday. Mr. and Mrs. son, Bob, of McHenry spent evening in the Roy Neal home. Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of Aafe, tioch spent Sunday with Mrs. Jsmnfis Bacon. Mrs. Harry Anderson of Richmond spent Sunday evening with Mrs. Je%. nie Bacon.. , r v' ^ j * ' : SPECIMEN BALLOT To be voted at the Township Election, McHenry Township, McHenry County, > Illinois, Tuesday, April 3,1945.9 H. WALTER ANDERSON, Town Cferk. INDEPENDENT Funeral Costs Are Important Because of the love held for a dear one whose funeral must be provided, oiks hesitate to consider cjnsts. Oft times* however, l6ircmMstances require that funeral costs be considered. There can be rio embarrass ment in the matter of cost: when we are asked to serve. Jacob Jusfcen Sons FUNERAL DIRECTORS Phone McHenry 103-R |Re sidence, McHenry 112-W| % Green Street, Corner Elm ' a t I nil I I :'r* • r*> ( .-M • nil I I * '* -"»« • (By Petitioa^ "' ^ Petition) ; ^ ^ ^v ^ For Town Clerk V , McHenry, Illinois ' t For Assessor n JOS. N. SCHMITT r~™ Route 1, McHenry, Illinois Justice of the Peace (Vote for Three) 0 ALBERT KRAUSB AUCTION ! Chas. Unknown Becomes Known A new guy named Tommy Trent, Six footer. 189 pounds, appeared at the studio, asking for a job. They thought he wanted to work as a laborer. Said he, "I want to act." As I joke, he was seat to Llllisa Barns. Metro's coach. After five minutes with him she phoned the boss, anr said, "If we don't kign him we ough to have our heads examined." The} Signed. He's finished his first, "Main Street After Dark." They swear from his performance he's been acting all his life. -•Cat Cake A cut cake will stay fresh longer if the heel of a loaf of brc-d i. fastened over the expoeed portion with toothpicks. Furniture is never "finished" in the sense that the wood can be forgotten bnce the pores have been filled and a soft lustrous polish has been developed. Voed need* to be fed with oil occasionally to keep it from drying out -- -+•- 1** Leonard A Ed Vogel, A act. Bank of RkhsMnd. Clerking On account of the death of my husband I will sell at PubUc Auction on.my farm located in the Village of Solon Mills, on ^ SUNDAY, APRIL t 1«B Commencing at 1 o'clock p. m., the following described personal property, to-wit: . 7 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK consisting of S Hoistein Cows, dew. teilhkra. These cows are an extra good of cows and are producing 4 tot sulk daily. Team Horses, 1 Sorrel Mare, I Brawn Mare, wt. 1S00 lba. each. Hay, Qraia A Far* Machinery 12 tons oat hay, loose in barn, stacks corn fodder, unhusked. ~ McD. Manure Spreader, McD. Corn Binder, Grain Seeder, C. B. Q. Corn Planter, 1 Sulky Plow, Drag Cart, McD. Cultivator, like new, Platform Scale, two-wheel Trailer, Dunvji Rake, 5-ft. Hay Mower, Horse Di i Cultipaeker, 4 Rolls of Barb Wii ! rubber-tired Wagon, iron whe i Wagon and Back, like new, light Bob Sleigh, heavy Bob Sleigh, Feed Cutter and 1^4-horse Motor, 1 Milt (Cart, Electric Clipper, 50-foot Garden Hose, Walking Plow, Fork, Shovel, Small Tools, etc., steel water tank* galvanized, 2 feed tanks, 100 loads manure, 2 sets of work harness, 3- section drag, like pew, wire stretcher# 100 ft, rope, several oil barrels, 't solution tanks, 8 milk cans, milk pails and strainers, electric Losee hot water heater, 18-ft. ladder. < TEJtMS -- All sums of $25 and under that amount, cash; over that nrfiount a credit of 6 months at 6 per Qefct will be extended on notes approved by clerk. Those desiring credit kindly make arrangements ior to purchase. No property to removed until settled for. ELIZABETH FREUND - For Town Clerk For Assessor For Justice of the Peace (Vote for Three) McHenry, Illinois SIBRE WHITING Rtngwood, Illinois Tsr Constable (Vote for Three) LOUIS SCHBOEDER Ringwood, Illinois For Constable (Vote for Three) FRANK C. MEYER McHenry, Illinois impty vacuum bag after using Dof|'f raplcm fust Uh|mi beg Is emptied sfter eadi usio^t at Puses act as safety vahres for root tlc^ufe wiring and equipment. You loee this vital protection if jfou bm Oughly, but neVer wssh it. ^ substicuce*. Avoid overloading wasnor Don'f uM fork to romovo toast a waaner must nuwr n«ice care of •E toastef aii resedopary, If yoa die overload, its life is shortened. So follow ^fMaufoeturer's recommendatiotuju to (Jhte light load for your washer * hhe's right. Just a slip of the fork stabbed right itt ^"•r -.ittoaster can Pgfrost rofrigorator rogularly 0onl drop kmrn m. svr Hore iroas are damaged by dropping thai any other way. You may break some vhaf ^ part difficult or impossible to replace The longer a refrigerator goes without defrosting, the less efficient it is and the more current it uses. Be safe --follow manufaotttrer'S' defroiting instructions. PUBIU 1BIVKI c 9 MP ANY OF

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy