Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Sep 1941, p. 4

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th 0*':' ' Altered as second-clan natter at -fee postoffire at McHenry, 111-, under Mm act of May 8, 1879. OmTw P* Months $*.00 .$1.00 .-MlHlia.. SOVIET PRISONER Si^#'. h» Poultry 'the Urbandale jfiew managethot % mile sooth Veldinisen. Phone *16-4 -Lot, W*Jt2 ft., on North Call OmHrine Schneider. . .7^ ifl-t£ ith prices increasing, now is the time ^.wdM ytur Full-O-Pep FeedaJWd jtWM^-JTOaltry and Dairy supplM^l^MM^Fottltry Farm. Phone FOR SAL1&--14 lengths of pipe covering; gq* chair. Reasonable* ' GsB JW&dfcfl* , 17 FOR stock of Dr. ediss at the me 29. J7 •B FOR S.4 US---Davenport, opens into full sixe bed, jgoqd waitress, $5, Cost $60 when r*ew„ G«0£g^ Then, Pistakee Bay. 17 Ike young Rnssiaa soldier above vfcas beta eaptared and is being ItBtrehei to the rear by a Nasi. Bis Sideward ilaiee at the wicked leekiaf bayonet Jest behind his back indicates he dees net tally trast kb («apter, who wears the typical pin . scowl of the Germaa soldier. "T: nm& *a»pat* Order s**W .jplaindealer. ABDOMINAL SUPfOHTHtS Surgical Mb Hmm* at p«opl« «• daily l»«iwlf bam t* aMate nIM «ad comfort by A tpociol typo d wapirtir May ha had far mf abdawlMl aWai--I fadaShg: abadtv, mataraHy, feHaa pod apfOWTO. aacro llUc, • wipporHri am aatura la aMtemkai canocMant. Oar aa^ariaacad fHtan witl fladhr d«inuartiata tha vartaai tvpa* at Afcdomtaal <»pBor>m. faatanaa tfca antad NON-MID slaw; atoalMaNc >to> •iary, NOM-WID *•» tad Tram* - JkaiW Itkm. QoaWv, Mm b«at--Prica, Mm r's Drug Store Green Street FOR S ALEr--3^ui-phy's Vigo-Ray Con. centrate. Mix &00 lj>s._ ground corn, 100 lbsT'mi^Uings or ground wheat, 100 lbs. af iCT0^^ (jftjfc an<* ^8. Murphy's V^Ky-Ray concentrate. This mixture lbs. of good Egg Maah. - FARMERS MILL, Phone 29. k 17 FOR SALJG -- Heatrola - heater, will heat fon^to six rooms. Call at Dreymiller'& titbfer shop. *17 FOR SALE--A carload of Red Brand Fencing and Barb Wire arrived at our plant this week. Phone your order today! FARMERS MILL, Phone 29. 17 HOUSE FQI John street; 71-R. ited* at 406 Telephone 17-2 FOR SALE-- Concord/ Crapes, $1.00 per bu„ Also apples/ $>1.00 per bu. Oriole SpriOrchard On the state line between Ricfftneridand Wilmot. ' / . 4 , *17-8 FOR RENT--"-Furnished 5-room, insulated, winter home. Hot and cold water, gas and electricity. Also*garage. Sev. eringhaus*. Pistakee Bay. 16-2 -WAHXKD FARM m apartment, 300 acres.. If price Give acreage v»ng sold my rm from 80 to fully stocked, pay all cash, ip and section numbers. Box &23y Waakegan. *16-2 «&?v fev5 McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY -- 8A1TJRDAY < Wallace Beery - Virginia, WefcUer "BARNACLE BILL" -- Also -- News . Cartoon . Three 8<sogos SUNDAY -- MONDAY September 14 - 15 JasMs Cagmey - Bette Davis "THE BKIDJE CAMS o . o . ©4 m = • - Also -- News aad Cartoon Saaday Matinee -- 2:45' TUESDAY Adalts 2«e "XJDKB8 Or THX DESERT" "AlfOXLS WITH : BRosnr wnos" WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY "MAHHTOT" WANTED--*OH Heater for 6-room home. Mimt he Af4 wqidition. Write Box "S," <*re! ol'The McHenry Plaindealer. .J 16-2 duties. Write &i' ^ fMr feneral house- V*ifk. iy« in faft®y. • ^dndays free. Write Bo* «GS* cm^k TOe McHenry Plaindealer. • ' ' 17 WANTBDt-flirl or wmaan for housework and' feeoldaci #!O per week. Home nigfctsUWiMft Bak *K," care of The McHeH^r^Flslndiltltr. 16-2 FARM wXHilv^lnditkhial wants half • erf ion, --yin or daisy* for cash. jfrftb* yojnr (iraii.raitf W **»* buildings. Give size, location and conditions in reply. No agent* considered. Address ^PlM nw IKiadealer, Mc- *«ry. Jill 11^ 17-2 BBLP WANTHD -- Exp, aan fwr driver; saL. mA-jOWL , Ladies' and men's pressor that can do tailoring Relax at Z'Tke IteiktlM I'! IOVA .J! CRYSTAL LAKE, 11 lidlcwy Co'fc Leading Tkeatrm C - O - O - L - E - D FR|. - SAT. _ SHPT. 12 - 18 ---- Doable Feature ---- Joan Perry . Arthur Kennedy bp "STRANGE ALIBI" Eve Ardea - Roger Pry or in "SHE COULDN'T SAY NO" WANTED--Good home for 14-yearold high s^hobf |rirl. Moderate board paid and calk iikstinie llfftlt household bare of The •16-2 W^NTEW4tt j^ftessd housework, $8 to $10 week. Winter in Chicago, summer in McHenry. Thursday and Sunday afternoon, evening off. Phone McHenry 651-W-l. *17 WANTttlJlQdrf^ift h. p. Johnson Onboard motor, late jp^odel. SUN. - MON. -- SBPT..14 . 15 Sun. cont from 2:45 p. m., 25e to C p.nu; 30c after. Children, lie. The Marx Brothers in THE BIG STORE" -- with -- Tsnjr Martin - Virginia Gvey "Th| Big Musical fun-Fest!*! "i ASsf -- latest '# *»'* 'i fi >.i* TU»MY 10e gpodsl >15c Merle Okeron • Dennis Morgan "AFFECTIONATELY YOURS" ttta Hayworth . Ralph BeQamy WED. - THURS. -- SEPT. 17 • 18 Walter Ptdgeen - Joan Bennett In " M A N H U N T " with George Sanders Alas rv-JNews and Popeye Cartoon Phone Promise BRISTOL, CONN. -- This town has a "phantom burglar" who .keeps MS wtrd. On New Year's day he ransacked a cabin and penned on the back of a calendar: "January 1, 1941. The Phantom has struck. I Will be back again. Happy New Year." He came back a few weeks later. Hitchhiker Gives. Advice to Tyros Smile and Pick New Car b Winning Formula. ' SAN ANTONIO.--Kenneth Croswell has some ideas about hitchhiking. And he ought to know. He's "hitched" more than 27,000 miles, or the distance around the earth, in three years of shuttling back and fortK between his home and St. Mary's university. He has made 18 mind trips between St. Mary's here in San Antonio and his home in Warren, Ark., and each trip totaled about 1,500 miles. « Giving some pointers on hitchhiking, Croswell, a Junior and an ace basketball player at the school, warns the novice not to select beforehand a specific route but just keep going in the general direction of his destination. After you get within 100 miles or so of where you are going, he says, then you can get particular about the route. Croswell advises the hiker to wear' a semi-military uniform if possible, to carry some kind of identification such as a placard showing his destination j to travel alone, to Show a smile while thumbing a ride and to be courteous and interested in whatever the driver chooses for discussion. New cars are best for thumbers, Croswell says, because they're usually going good distances at fast speeds. However, if there are two or three people in the car already, it's useless to thumb since most drivers pick up hikers either to get relief from driving or to have someone to talk to in order to keep awake. As for expenses, Croswell estimates that a one-way trip has cost him on the average 25 cents. He estimates that there are some 500,000 college students who use hitchhiking as their customary mode of travel. These students are hurt by those who use hitchhiking for crime. Since hikers have robbed and murdered drivers, some states have a ban on hitchhiking, but CroSwell believes these laws too difficult to enforce. Wedding Ring Luckily Is Found in Bomb Ruins LONDON.--Hilda Cross and Leslie Booker, London sweethearts, planned a quiet wedding. No guests, no reception, no breakfast, a • quiet ceremony in a quiet little church off the main road.: Buton wedding eve, Hilda said to, her mother: "I'm too excited. I cannot sleep. Something's going to happen." Something did. Lots of things.;: Sooir after dark, bombs began to fall. There was' a Mfvy jKlwfire. This was a big raid. Near midnight, there was a hammering at the door of the Cross home. Hilda opened the door, saw a wild figure, with face covered with blood and dust. "Bombed out," Booker said. "But mom and dad are all right." : At daylight on wedding morning, bride and fcfoom begtti poking in the ruins of the Bookers' home. They rescued the groom's wallet, searched it feverishly, found the ring and ran home. Booker found Ms-best trousers in the next door garden, brushed them up lor -the wedding. Then, at 2:30 in the afternoon the ceremony took place. Vety quietly. of Urn Work & theUaim Nv States «f§1 6,500,000 maxhdays They Must Pay ' Sam $35 a Month. COOPERSTOWN, N. Y.--Pacifism means hard work for the six young men spending a year at the American Society of Friends camp as conscientious objectors to the draft. They hack at tough brush with a heavy knife eight hours a day, do kitchen police, wash their own clothes--and pay the government *35 a month. They are "dog-tired" at the end of the day and go to bed soon after dinner at 6:15 in the evening. However, for one vof them it is just a continuation of the work he was doing ani his chores are lighter than the rest. Justin Reese of New York city worked at the camp as an employee of the Northeastern Forest Experiment station. Thus when he was classsified as a conscientious objector, he merely continued assisting with office work, only now he pays the government, instead of the government paying him. ' The other five are George Kingsley of Rochester, Albert Ast and Gordon Kashner of Buffalo, Warren Miller of Elmira, and Wilbur Hazard of Union Springs. The "camp" itself is an estate building lent to the Quakers and occupied also< by members of their society. It is a large house surrounded by trees, flowers and shrubs. The Objectors rise at 5:45 a. m. for breakfast at 6. Then they make up their bunks and meditate on religious subjects. At 7:30 they pack a lunch and ride 17 miles to the state conservation and reforestation projects. There they clear' brush from roads. In the evening, if not too tired, they may study, listen to visiting speakers or join a "bullfest." Sterner Rationing Urged In Prisons of Britain LONDON.--Convicts who enjoy luxuries beyond the reach of the ordinary civilian may have a few meatless day? if the suggestion of a prison officer, writing in the- current issue of the Prison Officers' magazine, is put into effect. "Surely it would not hurt these fellows any more than it does us," he writes, "and remember, too, that one prisoner gets as much cheese in one week' as I am able to geteight ounces for four of us in a fortnight. "Ih our prison of a daily aiverage population of 120, I have seen seven cheeses, of 70 pounds in weight, go during one vreek. "Meat also is a problem to us and all outside, but the meat that goes into our institution does not seem to indicate that there is any scarcity at all." •> • - *EM*Bfp PERa^BKANTEI|-*o call on farmers in north half of^Mc cap] e'^irttfll|fTrOO'.ora^#eek. Write* MeKlBSQ OOi) Ptpt. %'Fieepoil» 111. LOST-^MArifl pAift^hrtmgh McHenry SawdaS Sptft/1941, lost a coat. Find* pMsricm know. Reward. Edward BereSh, 6426 N. Mozart GA bought out .|he Rui in McHenry and tory. Our trucks will make daily trips. Call Staines isros., McHenry 638-M-2. *11-7 ---We have garbage route terri- DCAB ok auvx ahdcals SLOP to 115.00 Oaah . Cows - Hones - Hogs ( Pro P HAVE^1^®£DE aUtatt ner's Cider mill, Spring Grove, 111. Please call Richmond 912 before bringing apples. Pressing price, 5c per gal. . *14-4 CLIFF erside all ra ances. FORD ICR--107 Riv. Repairs on home applied. CLIF- 9-tf Mother Saves Daughter, 2, From Drowning in Well TUPELO, MISS.--When her baby fell into 11 feet Of water in a 40- foot well, 25-year^ld Mrs. Boyd Goedson--who can t swim--plunged in. and held the infant afloat until rescuers came, . . The mother squeezed .through a foot-square opening to go-iptei; the two - jsear ~ $ld girl, which she qnatched froro vroderthe w§t*iv Ly- ' " «|i. her back with feet^aced ' one side of the concrete apd ber shoulders agitiprt th* r, she shook the child until its breath was restored. A youth descended and the mother and child were pulled to safety. Four Accidents in Row Discourage Croup of 8 PORTALES, N. M.--Eight Dora N. M., residents learned that some time! the try, try again method doesn't work and after tour consecutive accidents they quit trying. Starting for a dance in four cars, the group's troubles began when they had to abandon the first cat because of a blowout. A double smashup put the next two cars out of commission and the eight people piled into the remaining car. t ^ W^eo it Hit a. flick piece of higb way and turped ov*r» 4^ey decided to quit. They took, ap !^n^ulanc into Portales. V . •" j • gStk SurteySh^wiSotdiert Read Better Literature FORT JACKSON, S. C.-A recent Survey 4n. the tnro libraries: here reveals that soldiers of the army of 1941 like good literature. Topping, the. lists of favorite books read by the New York, New^ Jersey, Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Missouri and Delaware soldiers is Jan Valtin's "Out the Night," closely followed by . Ernest Hemingway's "For Whom the BeU Tolls." This was in pharp contrast to the expected, choice of literature by soldiers, formerly thought to be harrowing tales, of adventure in the Orient or Wild West yarns., .". Poll ruiifcl Trfcfife On S Rfrers Reported PHTSiBlURflBEL-jhreight traffic on the AOsiMttK" Koeoacahela and Ohio rivors'-ittrlBf IMF-was at an alHime higH, fee lfoited States engineers office Eere disclosed. Total tonnage on the three rivers during the Year was^S,644J04, compared with 33,T41,196 toni in 1929, the previous record year. Greatest cargo canied'iqr the river boats was soft coal, the tttgiiiedrs office said. Individual records of tonnage for freight handled on the Monongahela and Ohio rivers also were shattered, according to the engineers report, ' • .• - •/' , Jie*t So Dumb at School * He Wins. Plu ^ Beta Rappa NEW YORK.--For 12 yeam Walter Gottermattn, 44 -years old, a native of -BetheL Germany, went to City College slight Classes to pass his leisure time. He was surprised, then, to-be told he would be graduated, for he didn't know he had enough credits. His astonishment was increased when he was- told he would get a degree of bachelor of science magna cum laude and had been admitted to Phi Beta Kappa, national scholastic fraternity. Seven Come--a Dirndl Crap Oame Costs Cop NEW YOl^L--Patrolman Morris Serf arrested seven Negroes tor shootin ft flee, then had to go down into/^s jeans for a dime when the seven fOund they had only $6.90 to pay fines of $1 each. But that wasn't all. Each deferrant suoptssfully induced the patrolman to fl;five-cents each for carmre jiome. *•* »< t&mi m s* Ths j* FORT ERIE, ONt.-Canada's answer to the wartime housing-shortage problem is being rushed to completion here in the fprm of prefabricated homes that are constructed rapidly, rented reasonably and may be r^ITiOV ed when emergency need for them ends. In a manner similar to the rising ' of boom towns in the Old West years ago, a wartime village of 234 homes is rapidly taking shape on the outskirts of this Canadian border community for the convenience of defense workers. Just 12 days afte^ the' first carload of lumber was delivered eight houses had been erected. Provided lumber is available, the entire group should be finished within three months. Other Projects Laid Ont. Hie Fort Erie project is the farthest advanced of scores of similar efforts started by Wartime Housing Ltd., to provide needed housing for the sudden influx of war-industry workers in various parts of the dominion. In the local project Wartime Housing Ltd., took .over 380 lots from Fort Erie and will retain title to them at least until the end of the emergency. At that time, if local home owners find it too to tent their hemes, the new units will be dismantled and stored or shipped elsewhere. Foundations for the houses consist of large logs,, stripned xif bark and treated with creosote. Floor Joists, roofs and gables an fabricated at the project. "Jigs" are provided for the workman, slotted to receive the exact piece of lumber, and carpenters, working in pairs, can assemble any one section in 24 minutes. Panels Are Assembled. Wall and partition panels are assembled at a shop in an old cattle barn at the Canadian National railway spur an eighth of a mile away. Siding, roofing and other construction are built in the normal way: Prefabricated sections are bolted together. Three-inch insulation is laid under the Norwood pine floors, two-inch rock-wool batts are placed between the walls and a three-quarter- inch insulation board goes over the ceiling. Smaller units will provide a living room, two bedrooms, a kitchen, and a bathroom. In the larger units, downstairs rooms will be slightly larger. The type of heating unit will be up to the tenant. W. R. Manock, chairman of a committee in charge of the project, said no rents had as yet been established for the new homes. "Nothing can be done until it can be definitely determined what the cost of these homes will be," he said. "However, I expect that tha smaller will rent for about |y " '. Pronunciation Now 1%^, 'Holstine'--Official LANSING, MICH.--The Holstein- Friesiafi Association .of America has s e t i t o u t ' a / t e t f e n - w ! M * t h a t hereafter Mpis gfjthe blackand- white cow should ua jtteaeunced "holstine" and not "holsteen." The decision to estsblish pronunciation of Vie name came after the association,. j$ its apnusl convention mre, voted the move, 250 to 25. The issue was decided on the basis pf reports from Martin D. Buth, Comstock Pa|k, lflch., wbo^ie a native of The Netheriiwii, whlre the breed originated. He "said that "ei" is pronounced "i" hr.Jjwt..$ld country. • •. . This Htir-R«ip*Wfa^- Here Medal for Soldier LONDON. - Hate's how Harry Spreetland, 36, a garage proprietor, won his King George VI medal for heroism: ' » After picking up .a bomb victim and starting toward an ambulance, a t second bomb hurled him, still clinging to the injured man, onto telephone wires 30 feet above the Street. Their weight sagged the lines until Sweetland could drop to ft* Street, contiribe to the ambulance, then carry up two more injured. After that |>e collapsed. , . ^ ¥hunj»m)djng King* Sent 1] w'-SfeSBES: known as Italy's "plum pudding king," was sentenced to four years and six months in prison on charges of hoarding butter. The same tribunal acquitted Luigi Locatelli, the "Gorgonzola king," of charges of hoarding milk. Reindeer Ranching Qrovrsf " Train Fsliimoa lor Task OTTAWA, ONT.--Reindeer ranchtog is a growing industry in the Northwest territories* says E. G. Poole, fish and gaiiie expert. Young Eskimos are being encouraged to secure training in caring for native herds, he says, to establish an additional means of livelihood. The main reindeer herd on the government -rsdsTVs near the Mac kenzte delta came thmQfci fito winter ifi excellent conditkaw NEEDED MUSCLE It.was on a bright spring Suitday morning that*the colored pastor happened to notice a new attendant at the church meeting. Who? he finished his sermon the pastor made it his business to Speak to the new comer. "Erastus," he said pleasantly, "this is the first time I've seen you in church for a mighty long time. I am very glad that you came."« "Parson, I came 'cause I needs strengthenin'," answered the other. "Yuh see, I got a job washin' a chicken coop an' bufldinv a white fence around a watermelon patch, an' las' Sunday I done heard yuh preached a sermon called, "Come heah for strength.' An' heah I is." Modern Age Dude Ranch Owner--Yes, we can use a cowboy, what experience have you? Cowboy--I'm an expert roper, rider, bulldozer and a good shot with the revolver or rifle. D.R.O.--Can you sing, play the guitar and other musical- instruments? * C.B.--No. * D.R.O.--Sorry, no Job for you, we run a real ranch here. many Life In Reverse Mistress -- Time* brings changes, Bridget. Bridget--Indade it do, mum. Why, whin Oi wus a little tot Oi usta cry fer fear th' policeman would get me, an' now Oi cry fer fear Oi won't get the policeman! I TIGHT FELLOW| ' r».«n1s "The fellows down here all claim to be millionaires." "They're so stingy they must have saved nearly that much since they .arrived." i a5 sold,out instead I Or Chain 'Bm storekeeper was on the poison Spay ; so bought some cod-Uver oil." "But that won't kill the bugs. It'll just make them big and fat." "That's what I thought. Then I can throw rocks at 'em!" ^ , Spend 'I made^a quarter today, spa.". 'That's good! How did you make it?" 'Borrowed it from ms|M Fanner's Diary ^ "How did jjrOur tulip bulbs fcome up this spring?" "With the aijiitiiti si 0*,* bar's Airedilef' Expensive WBe "Is your wife as extravagant as ever?" "Sure. She asked for another quarter this morning." ' * Stranger--Sonny, can you tell me the quickest Way to get* to the station? . -v ; • Oliver--Run." f- OS BOMEtWN* Percentage to Visiters _ clubs of the ftatkgial and American leagues receive 22% per cent of the regular admission taken at the gale, Sporting News Niltvs Landlocked to the Lake are indigenous region of Maine. Afbena La«SSt State Arlsona was tha last pi0- mitted to the Union. ' -T7 % ~ When cleantwg, beware at dirty dusters. You wul usually leavt just as'much dirt as you take away with a soiled cloth. fer OUve 08 ff you run short of olive oil making salad dressing melt butter and add it to the oiL It makes a good substitute. fhlek Armer Plate gams «t the armor plate ea a 25-ton tank is two todies thick. ^ *• < -J4' *. v - ' A ? - . ' 2 4 . . "Do you think a follow ought to kiss a girl before he's engaged to her?" "Well not till he's engaged to her or some other girl.*' Caps'.: Production of bottltcaps ha* riaea from $7,060,000 worth to more thaar < $10,000,iw in live years, according ^ 'to the census. Base Heat Importaat ' Base heat is of great import«W%, to many kinds of plants. An elec^E trie bulb in water gives soil heat to the seeds. 'Gerrymandering' * v' V: Gerrymandering means dividing:^' ; an area into uhfair political district^- to the advantage of a particular • oartv. ":m Shoes Wider for Summer ;•* ; Shoes for summer wear should be both wider and longer than- thpesj used during the cool months. • Ascending Grades , The maximum ascending graded . on the Pennsylvania turnpike do no|" , „ " 1 exceed 3 per cent. v.'. V Elephant's Rations The average circus etephant**^'^ daily rations include 125 pounds hayt one-half bushel of oats, sevenr , pounds of bran and about 50 gal-[;t, 4 Ions of water. • First of Lcghs r First casualty at the A.SLF. In tt*si,: " ;. .first Wotl^ war was First Lieuf.+ ,'* I^ouis j. Genella, whe suffered s^/ shell wound on July 14, 1917, whileg Serving on the British front. ( Canadian Border Statloei i' There are 37 Canadian border stal tions where one alien a minute i# being examined. Asbestos in Africa Some kinds of asbestos used Industry are obtained only i* ca in quantity. • Modeled AMst U. S. - The Argentine system of govern^ ment is modeled after ^that of the^ United States. Joseph Smith Organiser Joseph Smith was the organise!^ of tha Church of the Latter Da#'. Saints. OBve Flavor Olive flavor is imparted to cornf^ oil by a net? prorws, * Pari-Mntuel System A Frenchman named Oiler oriftf nated the pari-mutuel system. Os Msrisr or ishilm lows olweeA Mk«4MhNeAtot swas ieim Jne Ewind ias.Rii«**y NICKELS' Hardware Phene2 .. . ! / i Reverse SMa#r:"^' ^Remember," wrote thr tjfetfrctor of the cor^spondence school of journalism, "to write en only one side of the paper." And by return mail came the following inquiry from thAew pupil: "Which side shall 1 wrifl. m 1%J: , r, ^ Hg Order Six-foot-three Soldier--Shine, Shine Boy (lopking at thei-, vast expanse of boots before hln^z .K^re, Bert, give me a hand. ae •ropy contract. - "i • Most nut andrfrujt bread give greater vohime tf ^ey are allowed to stand in the pan for 10 to SO minutes before baking. Bletttog Paper as SB--ssr Blotting paper placed under fsncy shelf paper where dishes and glasses are kept WflT as a silfbeer. / Aey Are Feeds "EDikM91 fcui bd A«nrkh#dM bread an consiidsred foods aad have ™ wmwimawBMve MILK! »v >« .» •• OiTM Hon "B»" *• iV,..- Tonr Boj ... . - - • A quart of milk a day is essential to every growing boyj it^g to take as a .]b$yer9ge„ with flavor, or in foods. We route man -oil yotir block dluly1--fo hi^Ve him ser^ ^^.call McHenry 436- ' i ti * * All dairy products delivered at your door aad also sold at the store ,--- Freuod's Dairy , On Kont6 31, north af McHenry •i 'v_ p. 'A .'M iSMtMMM "S* s'/l 'feiii 3^;. m

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