Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Sep 1953, p. 15

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

* T rr<f ^ ^ '*"* W*T%"f**:* f'IS *T*4 • ^**TT *: l "• • ' r" r'*'^^,*4.,,":',i' r'- «'"" r + ... '>^ .,«; •.?._•». ..#' ^ V' £***# r sf.-*,K> i r: % - >«&:•. 4 tondav. SUnfeml** 24L ldSflf ^ ^ , ««., u. DELfifQUENT TAXUSTFOR^^^ •feHEHRY TW&* >*^.v 111. -4-r-A (Continued from page 14) 401 *.74 #** 2S.39 #.01 T. G. Montgomery, It 61 blk 17 Thomas * Vera Montgomery, It 62 blk 17 Thomas & Vera Montgomery, It 63 blk 17 Thomas & Vera Montornery, It 64 blk 17 Roy E. Swanson, It 4 blk 18 Roy E. Swanson, It. A blk 18 ..Ut.-w Ahton j. Malochleb et al, 4t 10 blk 18 . . . . . . . . •Awton J. Malochleb et al,: It 11 blk lg . . . . . . . Anthony J. ft Anna ^Grosso, It 6 blk 19 P. Borchardt, It 7 blk 19 Ella McMahon, et al, It 11 blk 19 Sebastian Maiusa, f* *5 bik 19 Anthony J. QrosSo, It Ho 1 9 - • j , . . ' . t<. Wonderview Unit No.. Widoff Realty corporation, E 12' It 12 blk 6 Widoff Realty Corporation, E 15' It 6 blk 7 • st- Wonder Woods TlU*. J, Williams, It 24 trtk l B Silvio Pioll & Wf, It 16 blk 2 . . . . . . . Silvio Pioli & Wf, It 17 blk 2 August & Grace Wenkel, It 3 blk 3 Richard L. & Barbara C. Sager, It 20 blk 3 J. Maurer, It 15 blk 4 B Charles P. & Valorie Doran, It 17 blk 4 ... L. J. Hunt, It 18 blk 4 B J. R. Maurer, It 1 blk 0 . . . . . B Glenn A Eileen Paulsen, ^ It 6 blk 5 ( Wm. J. Bullis, It 15 blk 7 Mrs. Ernest J. & Marion J. Sherman, It 21 blk 7 Virginia L. Ames et al, It 3 blk 8 Axel W. Soderberg, It 6 blk, 8 Inez C. ft Norma Wiedeman, It 18 blk 8 Herman ft Phyllis Gangel, It 12 blk 9 B Rocco ft Ida Maggiore, It 7 blk 11 Richard ft Helen M. • Cpge, It 16 blk 11 . . . . " I, . Wonder Wootia Dorothy Geise Prkiier, K 17 blk 16 B *^10 Orville F. Bird, It 21 blk M assi Dr. John ft James Nel- •; son, It 13 blk 18 Wm. R. Clarke, -It 3 blk 19 $J>1 • fAi ... •yfF* fc.02 25.39 13<U0 4».45 M M 9.T6 ,|45 55.99 87.24 68.08 7.36 129.99 66.47 ^Ifc78 4.60 , 9.20 15.16 1.15 3.68 15.52 1^®8 mm mo 10.70 Anna Wickline, (Ex N 75' C - - - . of S 185') (Ex E 70' >' of S 110') Co Clks • Plat It 5 blk 13 Anna Wickline, Co Clks Plat W% It 1 blk 14 B JOB. L. ft Jeannette Naponiello, Co Clks Plat N 120' S 380' It 1 blk }P Walter H. Naumann, Co Clks Plat S ICO' .It 1 blk 15 Clarence E ft Eleanor A. Naumann, Co Clks Plat S 120' It 7 blk 15 Philip John & Lake Hastings Co Clks Plat It 5 blk 19 lagox Anna Wickline, Co Clks * Plat (Ex DR 299 P 574) It 3 blk 23 8.p2 Anna Wickline, (Ex SWly .-v' 175' It 1 blk 24 ......; 4J01 Wood lawn Park Wm. Richard ft Esta P. Meeker, It 4 ..,,. . 22.36 Waller E. ft MaVy D. Rogan It 22 ...250.88 In the foregoing list the abbreviations are used as follows: B for back or forfeited taxes; N stands for North; S' stands for south; .W stands for West; E stands for East; frl stands for fractional; und for undivided; M for middle; assm't for assessment; Co for County; Clk's for clerk's; sub for subdivision; Addn i -> •iff?-". • : : Woodstock in the said County on the First Monday in October, A.D. 1953 to-wit: October 6th 1953 for Judgement against the above described lands and town lots and blocks in the said county for taxes for the year 1952 together with interest and costs due and to become due severally thereon, or as much of the said taxes and cost as may the remain due and unpaid; and that an application also will be made to the said County Court at the time and place above mentioned for an order to sell said lands and lots for the satisfaction of said taxes and costs. And I do hereby, alsp give notive that all lands and town lots and> blocks in the above and foregoing list and for which such order of sale shall be made, will be exposed to public sale at the Court House, in the City of Woodstock, in said county, on Monday the 29th day of October, 1953 commencing at ® 9:00 A.M., central time for the amount of said taxes, interest and costs, as provided by law, unless prevented by previous payment. Dated at Woodstock, in said Co.unty of McHenry. this 24th day of September, 1953 at Woodstock, Illinois. ^ J. G. STEVENS, County Treasurer and Ex-Officio County Collector for addition; A for acres; It for' Subscribed and sworn to IWSf&fe lot; blk for block; Elx for except; me this 24th day of September, No for number; RR for railroad; 1953 at Woodstock, Illinois. :t- THE McBENRY PLAMBEALM Pag* Fifteta Sept. 24, 1953 and that the said list was carfully examined and compared with the list furnished by the Treasurer of said County for publication and found to correspond therewith; that the number of copies wa& equal to the whole circulation of said paper for that day. I do further certify that the said McHenry Plaindealer is a newspaper that has been regularly published for at least six months prior to the publication of said notice, and that I am duly authorized to make the certificate., .^WILLIAM BUJtFEINDT, JR. Subscribed and sworn to before me this 19th day of September, A.D., 1953 at McHenry, Illinois. EARL R. WALSH, :--v •-." Notary Public. bal for balance; bet for between; int for interest; adj for adjoining; C for County Clerk's plat-; D for drainage district. R. D. WOODS,' County Clerk STATE OF ILLINOIS The cost for each tract of land COUNTY OF McHENRY listed aJbove is 46 cents per tract I, William Burfeindt, Pi ' Jr. do and 24 cents on each lot. If paid hereby certify that I am the pubbefore sale, 46 cents on each tract lisher of the McHenry PlaindeaJer and 24 cepts on each lot in addi-: a newspaper of general circulation to which cost, all such due! tion Printed and published in the and unpaid general taxes will ( City of McHenry, State of Illinois; bear interest on first installment | that the foregoing list at lands after the 1st day of June, on the; and other real estate situated in second installment after the first I the County of McHenry, Stale of day of September, at the rate of Illinois, on which taxes remain one percent per month until paid or forfeited. Parts or fractions of a month will be regarded as a month. I, J. G. Stevens, Treasurer and Ex-Officlo County Collector of the said County of McHenry in the State of Illinois, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a list of delinquent lands, lots and blocks upon which taxes remain due and unpaid fpr the year A. D. 1952, together with the owner's name, if known, the amount due thereon for taxes, and the year for which the same is due and I hereby give notice that application will be made to the County Court of McHenry County, State of Illnois, tin the 5th day of October, thereof, to be held at the Court House in 27.55 2.29 . ^x . Wooded Shores Nante L, Burch, E 482' blk 1 Anna Wickline, Co Clks Plat (Ex S 100') It 4 blk 9 Theodore Sz^wlowski, Co Clks Plat N 55' It 1 blk 12 DR 269 P 77 S 10' W 125* It 2 blk 12 B: Anna Wickline, Co Clks Plat Pt It 5 blk 12 . . . 53.46 21.40 43.76 due and unpaid for the year 1952 are duly published in the said McHenry Plaindealer in the issue of pound. 19S2 WORST POBK YEAR IN NATION ' IN TWENTY YEARS Hogs are more profitable this year, biit in 1952, they oaid the lowest returns in twenty years. Yet, according to 612 records kept in the Farm Bureau. Farm Management Service, efficient farmers still made money last year. The 113 least efficient herds actually returned only 92 cents for every dollar spent for feed, while the 110 most efficient returned |1.37. The average' herd returned $1.16. > Farm accounts showed these differences between most profitable and least profitable herds: pigs weaned per Jitter, 6.8 compared with 6.1; litters per farm, 38 and 28; pigs lost after weaning, 9 and 16; and pigs sold per farm, 250 and 156. Least efficient farmers suffered more than double the death loss of the efficient farrr*. ers. They lost 3.3 percent of their pigs compared with l.i percent, and they sold an ave*» rage of one fewer pig per sotf. It cost 17.5 cents for the le^a efficient farmers to produce pound of pork. The most efficient ones did it for ll.f cents C IF. IT'S WORTH DOING! i CLARENCES SHOP Bird Houses - Lawn Chairs • Lawn aad Porch Swings v Picnic and Umbrella Tables • Pier and Park Benches Juvenile Chairs, Swings and Saofll Boxes • Window Boxes flower Wheelbarrows - Rose Arbors, Trellis • Picket Fences, ate.' Cabinets, Chest of Drawers, Cornices, etc. it Chimney Caps and Cesspool Ring* and Coven MADE TO ORDER PHONE 58S-J-1 CLARENCE J. SMITH JOHNSBtrai ILLINOIS Only Care Saves You From Fire (An Editorial) Y_ oJui/hhaadd bbrreeaakkffaasstt tthhiiss mo r a ing--prepared, most likely, fay electrical appliances--and no fire destroyed your home. Then you went to work in a1 modem fire-safe industrial plant or office building. After dinner tonight you may go to the theatre--a fire-safe theater. Yptir day will end when you clinrb into bed and flick a switch that snaps off the electric light. But in those eighteen waking hours, and while you're sleeping, t6o, the National Board of Fire Undei writers played a significant part in your life. It protected you from fire nearly every minute of the time! This is so because National Board engineers applied the standards that strengthened your fire department's personnel and equipment, that provided the building and fire prevention codes that now protect you at work, at home, at" the theatre, or wherever you go. Tonight you will sleep soundly because you know you're safe from tiresafe, that is, as it's humanly possible to be. If at home .now, look about you. There are probably twenty electrical appliances that will be used sometime during the day. Not one is likely to electrocute you or set your house on fire, provided, of course, you don't misuse them. Most of those appliances bear UL markings. The marking denotes that the article has been If it's a job for Bottled Gas • IT'S A JOB FOR SHI1LANE Prodvd of th* SheU Oil Company KRUSE HARDWARE COMPANY Richmond, McHenry County, I1L Long Distance Phode 101 tested and listed for safety by Underwriters' Laboratories, Inc* a non-profit engineering organization sponsored by the National Board of Fire Underwriters and devoted to this sort of service for nearly sixty years. Every year 500.000 different products, touching on almost every phase of modern life, go through its rigorous te«-ts-- safety tests so thorough that to the average person the appliance undergoing one seems actually to be "tortured." For instance, it's pounded, dunked, bent, twisted -- given the roughest treatment imaginable--all with the idea that some day your life may be saved by showing up the weak spot in a potentially lethal appliance. And now as you tnink of your safety, remember, too, your carelessness. For neither the National Board of Fire Underwriters. nor Underwriters' Laboratories, nor Uie most efficient fire department in the world can protect you from carelessness, a crime that last year resulted in 1,000,000 Are*, 11,000 deatns! Plan Fifty-Second ! 1 Nursing Convention -- A full-scale review and revision of personnel policies and recommended minimum employment standards in t£e field of industrial nursing will lie one of the major items of business at the fifty-second annual convention of the Illinois State Nurses' association in Chicago Oct. 1-3, spokesman for the organization reported. A recent survey in which 177 j industries which employ nurses responded, discloses that while i. the average monthly salary af an Industrial nurse in Illinois i* $288, there are some recetviy-ti as little as $165. Even though great progress has been made in lmprovta^1 working standards in industrial nursing the past several years, it is plain that much remains to be done if sufficient qualified, trained personnel is to be attracted to this field." June A. Ramsey, R,Nj executive secretary of tiki . ppinted out. Read The Waat Ads! IOC aoaoc Warwick's McHenry Camera Center . Cameras Bought Sold and. Exchanged^ PHOTO* SUPPLIES "Ow- Fiaa: Expr t Service Does Not Stop Wlt|| A. See us before you buy. ; WORWICK'S STUDIO 117 N. RIVERSIDE DRIVE I0E30I SOI U0 fR(S» fRSSIr Our Whitman's refrigerator gives you kitchen-fresh canity all year 'round... tot some today! CHOCOLATES BOLGER'S DRUG STORE • S *34" • • bmaASi • it Ct» cj i:' .1 • MeaiA-**! 103 S. GREEN STREET PHONE 40 McHENRY, ILL. VI It's Worth Doing Right. There is No Substitute For Good Plastering. Phone McHenry 1189 N A T I O N A L >'• M #^4 M"fefcvn«A MTURMOEmMfiER 26& Spoasered by KIWMHS INTKftNATIOMAl md Tfci HUoeeI KM*' Ny fiuihtlyii, toe. li BY CHILD WE BUILD OUR NAttON" • 3 t -{> * K I W A N I S CLUB ' ' of • McHENRY TOWNSHIP TAG DAY For Underprivileged Children FRIDAY and SATURDAY, September 25Hi and 2Uk JROU CAN'T BEAT THE CAR Don't invest your money until you see us and put the husky, high-compression power of a Pontiac through its paces! From your first touch on the accelerator to the last smooth, assured stop, you'll find you have a real performer in hand. And Pontine'# record for dependability makes every mile much more «n]oyabJ*. M YOU CAN'T BEAT THE PRICE The price of a Pontiac is actually just a few _ dollars above the lowest priced cars! Come in and check for yourself! With its »i/,e, -- luxury and power, Pontiac ofiers n vast dif ference in quality for a small uu.erence in price and makes fine car ownership easy. fOU CAN'T BEAT THE PiAI. You want the best vaiue, of cuursz. Then do this: After you've experienced Pontic's powerful performance. Un >w it.v extra ',uality and its low price, let us prove to you that Pontiac has one of the very highest resale values in America. Everything adds upf to one fact: the Pontiac deal is your best deal! i-4 GBNMMJL MOTORS LOWEST PRICED ElVlff yar Ibr Dollar you cant beat a OVERTON CADILLAC 4C)0 Front* Street McHenry ^ PONTIAC Co. Phone 17 > - A!

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy