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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Mar 1930, p. 7

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• 'i- " 3! V, 1 "•HP THE H'HKHBY PLAINDXA^EK, THURSDAY, HABCH 20, 1930 lllilk Manufacturing Plant for " ^ s a L - :*f-n • * - * CT» V ' T 1#*~ A 'Vr* ;;!•. --oili.itiwi i f i--f i LiTjtgAajqv RuitPew jFrem* p0 CCWiftK af6^f »KKl\^QrHGBOtNl)MnvDlAM HlkRM- "' -- '/jP* • By W. A. RADFORD a#. WMliam A. Ra4ford will ****** questions and give advice FREE OF COST on all problems pertaining- to the ' subject of building .work on the farm, t*T the readers of this paper. On account of his wide experience as editor, author and manufacturer, he is, without doubt, the highest authority on the •Ubfect. Address all inquiries to William A. Radford, No. 407 South Dear- -- born Street, Chicago, 111., and only ingles* two-cent stamp for reply. (One of the best authorities on farm i' 'Mtilding construction has termed the barn "the farm milk manufacturing plant." He takes the position that milk is a manufactured product just as is any other commodity. The cows are the machines which, from feed and water, manufacture milk, and the barn which houses them and the buildings or space in buildings which stores tbeir feed, can be well likened to a building in which fabricated commodities are made. Shown in the illustration^ is a "milk ginnufacturlng plant" for the farmer Wtio has forty cows. Adjoining and attached to the building are two silos With a feed mixing room between them, and at the side is the milk bouse where the cream is cooled, separated and the cream made into butter and the whole milk or creanTbottled ready for the market. This plant I* laid out for progressive manufacture. The feed is kept in the silos and in the mow; the cows or machines which manufacture the milk are on the first floor and tbe milk room adjoins, where tbe finished product ia turned out. - v The barn itself Is of frame construction and is 100 feet long and 36 feet Slide. These dimensions provide for two rows of stanchions. The cows face the center alley over which are three hay chutes through which roughage is dropped directly where It Is needed and overhead is a carrier track leading to the feed mixing room and to the two silos. At one end of the barn are threa pens, one for the bull, one for the calves and one for the cows. It will be noted from the floor plan which accompanies the exterior view of the plant and milk house that modern barn equipment is specified. The floor of the stable is of concrete with gutters pitched to drains. Wood block or ( lank flooring are in the stalls which are separated by steel stall partitions. At the stall heads are swinging stanchions which give the cows freedom of action; a concrete manger which can be kept clean and drinking cups where there is a constant supply of fresh water for the A pfffjtifflfl vcutifV- OPT) DemlAtC DETAIL AT PLATE HAYMOW Trussed Jal "FecDAiiEY !»&"• 6 rusBTux CROOSOCCTIONOFDAIRY bARN lafton carries out the foul air and sucks in fresh air in such a way that the cows are free from draft but are always provided with clean pure air. Such a barn as this, of course, will only appeal to those farmers who have a rather large dairy herd. However, It can be shortened to accommodate a smaller herd or lengthened to accommodate a larger herd. The same is true of the milk house, which can be made the proper dimensions to accommodate the number of cows, the | farmer has. SAVINGS PASSBOOKS SOUGHT BY BROOKS Use Them to Steal Money by Forged Slips -- Should Be Guarded as Carefully as Cash. Continual vigilance in safeguarding savings pass books, as well as blank and cancelled checks, against .theft by crooks, who use this material in forgery operations, is urged on bank customers by James E. Baum, Deputy Manager of the American Bankers Association, in charge of its Protective Department. This department is continually vigilant in promoting means, both among bankers and the general public, to thwart the operation of bank crooks. It annually investigates hundreds of crimes against banks and Is responsible tor the majority of arrests among this claaa of criminals. * "In a large majority of cases of forgeries on checke or savings withdrawal orders investigated by the American Bankers Association, stolen blank checks or savings pass »:ok« were the forgers' chief stock in trade," Mr. Baum says. "In many instances the temptation presented through the careless handling by depositors of cancelled or blank checks or pass books so that they tell into the hands of others was the immediate stimulus tor hitherto honeet people to commit their first criminal offense." Banks should educate their depositors to exert the same degree of care la handling these instruments and to avoid leaving them about unguarded aa they exercise in respect to actual money because they represent money, he declares. For dealing with the bank robbery aituation. T'r. Baum recommends the use of electrical alarms actuated by any tampering with the wires or mechanism and also wider adoption of the plan of state police forces now employed In a few states, declaring that last year In seven eastern states where state police forces were maintained there were only 20 bank holdups as against 164 similar attacks perpetrated against banks in five states in the central and far west, where banks are denied the advantages of the speedy and coordinated action given by statewide police forces. "The records of the American Bankers Association Protectiva Department reveal that for many years the odds in favor of state police protection have been at least 8 to 1 when measured by the experience of banks in states where efficient police protection Is missing in the rural districts," he ays. Henry L. CowKn, Solicitor. State of Illinois McHenry County, aa. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County, State of Illinois, May Term, A. D. 1930. William A. Heimann, Complainant, vs. Erna Steben Heimaxm, Defendant. " In Chancery--Bill For Divorce. Notice is hereby given that the above is the title of the Court and tho names of the parties to a suit which is now pending in said Court and that process for said defendants has been issued to the Sheriff of said County returnable to the said Court at its Court Room in the City of Woodstock, County of McHenry and State of Illinois, on Monday, the 26 day of May, A. D. 1930. In testimony whereof I have hereunto set my hand and affixed the seal of said Court, at my office in Woodstock this 10 day of March, A. D. 1930. 41-3 WILL. T. qierk. Here's a S»n«itlwi • 'Bees seldom live longer' than two fears, doe no doubt to their steady Met of sweets. Induce them to mix i little spinac-li, and they probably will live longer and have less fun.--Kansas City Star. • ----MiBingpIp .Baby's Good Lack A baby today, born into a reasonably Intelligent family, stands a far better chance of developing into a healthy, happy and more reasonable human being than did his ancestors.-- The fonntrv Hnm* a really STUNNING New Tire yon ought to see The Bigger, Handsomer Goodyear Heavy Duty The Bigger, Handsomer, Goodyear Heavy Duty. It's for extra STYLE, extra mileage, extra road protection. Your car looks'smarter on these bigger, handsomer, stronger New Goodyears with their deep-rut, extra-thick All-Weather treads, the outer blocks of which are prismed down into silverstriped sidewalls. Be sure to see these leally stunning new Goooyears before you again bay tfcrea. NO INCREASE IN PRICE! 'We also offer low 1930 prices on Now style Pathfinders, superior to many high-priced makes. Values passible because Goodyear builds nearly one-thind of all tires sold in America. AH firsts--standard lifetime guarantiee. Walter J. Fremiti jiffg.gtii Chains, Alcohol and Pwrtme for Radiators, Top Dressing, fte. Tin and Tube Vulcanising Battery Charging and Repairing CRANK CASE DRAINING A SPECIALTY Quaker State Oil--the best in tbe world All Work Guaranteed Phone 120-R West McHenry THE THINKER LEADS MODERN PROGRESS | By JOHN G. LONSDALE ir President American Bankers Association * TUB greatest need of the world today Is interpreters of our times --modern Dantela in agriculture, finance, polltlca. Industry -- who can see through the fog and hate that enshroud our difficult problems and advise, instruct, and influence those who are either Indifferent or limited In their perceptions. T h r o u g h t h e thinker and the John G. Lonsdale Interpreter, u n - known situations are disclosed or puzzling conditions explained in logical light. The American people are So constituted that they can meet and combat any situation once it la known and understood. It is the unknown, that comes like the tbleC In the night and brings disaster. Borne one has defined prosperity as something the business men crsate for the politicians to take credit for. But America's present-day prosperity can be defined as a product resulting from tbe business man's ability to study and to interpret. Huge corporations maintain research staffs and special bureaus to interpret the times for them. Disaster looms in the offing for any industry that goes blithely on Its way day after day without due regard to significant trends in trade and business. ^Keeping Up With Change Leaders of finance have discovered' that they cannot remain passive In an age When all the rest of the world la In a transitional stage. The modern banker not only must know about tbe changing styles in other lines of business, but above all must be alert to tbe transformations which are taking place in his own. He must be a man of keener broader vision, because tbe order of the day is for larger units of service. Mergers and consolidations have taken place in great numbers. We now talk of billions where a few yesrs ago we talked of millions. We have only begun our changes. What disposition is to be made of the many problems that they bring will depend in large measure upon oar leaders, upon the students and the interpreters who can read accurately the slgne of the times, so that we may base future actions and hopes upon their wisdom. Tbe quickest way to go to the top Is to go to the bottom of things, and let us hope that among them will be found many who will not only aspire to leadership but will be successful te reaching ifcefcr goat. Eternal Cypres* tMagfes of cypress laid on the roofs of many New England homesteads two hundred or more years ago are still turning tbe weather and keeping those houses tight atfd Warm.--The Cotlhtfy Home. •egaa Great In«Uatry the lift frtiflcisl dp If said to have been obtained In 1806 by Dr. William fL Perkln, an English Entranced by Strains of "Magical" Calliope That herald of the circus, the calliope, made Its first public appearance in July, 1856, screeching "Old Dan Tucker" down the Worcester & Nashua railroad. A contemporary account describee the effect as "oiagieal, nay wonderful, exciting and amusing. Men left their workshops and rushed tor the ^railway. Women and children swarmed like ants when tbeir anthill is trodden on, agrln with wonder and delight The horses danced pirouettes to the music; the very pigs relaxed the tension of their tertuous tails, and stupid calves . . snuffed the music- laden air their pendent tails oatstanding straight behind. " Twas marvelous, and we should not have been surprised If all the bending woods, charmed by the Orphic strains, had walked adown the shaded hills a^d made obeisance to the Calliope . . . even as Birnam wood came down to Dunsinane P* State of Illinoia. McHenry County, ss. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County. January Term A. D. 1980. Gerald J. Carey, Trustee, et al., , vs. Herman Schaefer, et at., Defendants. General No. 24067--Term No. 229. Public notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a decree made and entered by the Circuit Court of Mc Henry County, Illinois, in the above entitled cause on the 15th day of January A. D. 1930, I, John C. Friedland, special master in chancery of said Court, will, on Saturday, the 5th day of April A. D. 1930, at the hour of 10 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the east door of the Court House, in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest bidder, the following described real esfafn tfuwit1 • 'Lot No." 6 in Block No. 6 of the original plat of the Village of McHenry, on the east side of Fox River, situated in the southeast quarter of section No. 26 in Township No. 45 North, of Range No. 8 East of the third Principal Meridian, in the County of McHenry, and State of Illinois. TERMS OF SALE: Cash on day of sale, at which time a certificate of purchase will be issued as directed by said decree. Dated this 10th day of March A. D. 1930. JOHN C. FRIEDLAND, Special Master in Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois. * 41-3 Great French Soldier Knelt Long at Altar One day In France when thousands of guns were roaring, an American named Evans went into an old church to examine It. As he stood there with bared head satisfying his respectful curiosity a gray man with the stars of a general on the collar of his shabby uniform entered the church. Only an orderly accompanied him; no glittering staff of officers--juat an order iy. The American soldier paid little attention to him at first but was curious to see him kneel In the church praying. The minutes passed until three quarters of an hour had gone, before the man arose from his knees. Then Evans followed him down the street and was surprised to see soldiers salute the man tn great excitement, while women and children stopped in their tracks with awe ln spired faces.' ' * If was Savior's Image oa CroM The crucifix or cross with the Image of the Savior upon it appears not to have been used before the Third century, and then apparently only by private persons. It was painted in the Syriac Bvangellstry in 582. This is In the library at Florence, Italy. Fa aiiliar Sayimg The phrase, "it is no use cniag over spilt milk" was picked up from some source by Ray. who puts it. "No weeping for shed milk." The Italians say, "Where remedies are required, sighing is of oo avail." The French saying is, "It is better tp try to forget your troubles than to speak «f them." GLYCEME HX CAUSE OF SNUCt Simple glycerin, tradktfcAfc aaHne, etc., as mixed in acts on BOTH upper and fewer bowel, removing poisons you never thought were there and whoich cauasd gas and other stomach trouble. Just ONE spoonful relieves GAS, soar stomach, sick hcadache and constipation. Don't take medicine which cleans only PART of bowels, but let Adlerika give you a REAL cleaning and see how good you feel! It Will surprise you. Thomas P. Bolger, Druggist. Our Want-Ada axe twainesa hringnrs WEST SIDE GARAGE Adams Bros., Props. '"i :; t •General Automobile Repairing TeL 186 Ree. Phone, 639-K-2 ; " Shockproof A newspaper man must be prepared for any emergency, says a magazine writer. Even for the self-made man to admit that It was pure luck that he won success. -- South Bend News- Times. Political Advertisement tot the office ft% r* of McHenry Gounty Primaries, Tuesday, April • Your support is respectfully solicited i! State of Illinois. McHenry County. 3k , .»$ In the Circuit Court of McHenry County. January Term A. D. 1930. Floyd E. Covalt, Trustee, et al., vs. William Schaefer, et al., General No. 24068--Term No. 280. Public notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a decree made and entered by the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois, in the above entitled cause on the 15th day of January A. D. 1930, I, John C. Friedland, special master in chancery of said Court, will, on Saturday, the 5th day of April A. D. 1930, at the hour of 10:30 o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the east door of the Court House in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, offer for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest bidder, the following described real estate, to-wit: Lot No. 7 in Block No. 6 of the original plat of the Village of McHenry, on the east side of Fox River, situated in the southeast quarter of section No. 26 in township No. 45 North, of range No. 8 .east of the Third Principal Meri- • dian, in the County of McHenry and State of Illinois. TERMS OF SALE: Cash on day of sale, at which time, purchaser will receive a certificate of purchase as directed by said decree. Dated this 10th day of March A. D. 1930. JOHN C. FRIEDLAND, Special Master in Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry County, Illinois. *1-3 Among Hi* Souvenirs Donald Mai-Kiddle. « famous Scotch musician, bud many admirers In :hls 'country. On one concert tour he had Just, urrived In New Yoik and was walking from his room to the theater A young woman admirer who recog nlzed him dete-mined to procure some souvenir of the great man. It was mining, and from beneath her nice new silk umbrella she called to bim MacFlddle stop -ed and gazed at her from beneath his old cotton umbrella, green with *ge. "Oh. Mr. MacFiddle," the woman said, "If yon would oniy give me some light remembrance of yourself--no matter bow small!" The great man surveyed her keenly, glanced once up at bia old umbrella, then in a burst of words, said: "Certainly, ny dear voung lsdy. I shall be delighted. We will exchange (UB breltas."--Psthfinder Magazine. Cucambcr Long Delicacy De Candolle says that cucumbeqp were originally from tbe Bast Indies, but other botanists ascribe them to Asia and Egypt Literature proves them to be more than 3,000 years (rid In Asia, and It ia known that tbey were brought Into China 140-86 B. C. They were known to the Greeks and Bomans and were mentioned by Pliny, who says that tbey were grown In Africa, and that they were such a favorite with Emperor Tiberius that he had them daily on his tabl& Charlemagne ordered tbem planted on his estate in the Ninth century, and they were grown by Columbus In Haiti in 1494. Capt John Smith mentions them as being cultivated In Vlrtn 1684. , Plainfefkra at Watties. Political Advertisement 'VOTE FOR of Marengo • • -'r. Republican Candidate for ^ SHERIFF Of McHenry County • years as Chief of Police of Marengo, and six pears as Deputy Sheriff of McHenry Comi*3f>^ "An honest, efficient, fearless office#?^ m in •X!, \ SPLIT SECOND STARTING .i TV";-1!! WHEN you get up aW--scarcdy get warm before you bolt a little brcakntt and rush out into a cold garage--it's mighty satisfying to know that you can start your motor instantly--in split seconds! That's just what you can do with CONOCO Winter GASOLINE--because it is made especially for cold weather. Just step on die starter and your motor is humming efficiently-- ready for summer-like performance. Starting--acockryioo--pcrPU-- yoa'U get all three in CONOCO GASOLINE * unmA QUICK sTAxnNQ-wnwMs caar % mi,* \y Ji%*' flS m '."S-'Sw S

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