McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Jul 1934, p. 3

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iigjPUBLfc fiBBnCE EMPLOYES ^ 1 TOGET WAGE INCRRASE T Employes of the Public Service " Company of Northern Illinois (except v officers and higher executives) are to -get an increase in wages and salaries 1 pn August 1, equal to one-third of the Teduction of August 1, 1932. Announcement to this effect was made this week by Britton L BucJd, "presi- • dent. • « * } In making this announcement tv \ pifnployes, Mr. Budd said: „ , 'The reduction in gross revenue that i$egan in 1930 made the pay reduction? of 1932 an economic necessity. This pay increase answers the question Which has risen-ih the minds of mat»v ....employes as to "when they might posgibly expect any restorationof the 11)32 reduction in wages. ' :. : "While there has been some im- •."••••fjipiroveijifeist,.. in business in .general •which is reflected in somewhat greater Sales of the .products of the Company, . viieverthele&s increases In taxes and Page Thm 2*** operating expenses, and adjustments under the NRA which required an increase in the payroll ly a substantial amount, limits the restoration at this time to one-third of the 1984 reduction. . "The pay reductions of 1932 wers much less°than men and women in almost all other lines of employment suffered, and were not as drastic as might have been justified by the losf of business and earnings- of the Cotapany." ... 1 ',">7 "When your husband buys ; you exactly one coat in 45' years of married life, that's grounds enough for divorce^" declared Mrs. Pauline Odesam. of Milwaukee in • filing suit against her husband. The diamond ring she lost tiure.? years ago while washing dishes was found recently by Mrs. W. P- Sherman, of Port Huron, Mjch., in a dahlia buib.-., --V' Crystal Lake Country Club AJTNOUNCES WEDNESDAY - SATURDAY EVENING yi:Partiem'r •* . /. -' /' Open To ^ Public. GALA OPENINCr Saturday, July 28th " FEATURING GEORGE KONCHAR Afid His Radio Recording Orchestra .with Earl English, World Famous Clown Trumpet JJtar . v BIG CELEBRITY NIGHT rJhuul Ash Stars - N.B.C. Celebrities . T ;VV-: Radio and Stage Personalities , • „ COME - YOU ARE INVITElJ Special Feature-Dancing In the Moonlight Only $1.00 Couple EtUl W MKMW TB MT FUST QIAUTT TIK HIT IflltUtt* IF USE, 11*11. IT *I«M Nuaricritii m it mat muce offeiei fm sale . I. immediate iwd enthusiastic acceptance of the new Firestone Century Progress Tire started a tremendous wave of buying that is keeping the Firestone f a c t o r i e s r u n n i n g twenty-four hours a day to meet this huge demand. • . ,.We knew that car owners would r e p l a c e t h e i r thin-worn, dangerous tires if they could get what they wanted in a tire at the price' they wanted to pay. , We found the answer through ten million visitors to the Firestone Factory at the World's Fair last year. We asked them--"What do you value most in a tire?"--and their answer was -- "Give us Blowout Protectioh, Non-Skid Safety, and Long Wear, at a moderate price." * Drive in to the .Firestone Service Dealer or Service Store today! Equip your car with these new Firestone Century Progress Tires, with the massive flat tread, deep - cut, non - skid, broad husky shoulders, and Gum -. JKpped cords. Tire prices probably never qgain will be as low as; they are today. At these unusually low prices for first grade tires, we make it easy for you to buy not only one tire, but a complete set. > And Remember --with every tire you are protected by the new Firestone Triple Guarantee --for Unequatod Performance Records --fcf Life Against AH Defects --for 12 Months Against Al Road Hazards* (°Si* Month* in ! Sfipiw) REDUCED PRICES FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY • 10-21 tu. N(. P-.<t Yo„ So»» O , On* Y»« So-re O A w Of 4 4.40-21 •«75 . S 90 S 3 60 .4.50-20, \T 6.10 96- 3.84 4.50-21 \Jl 6.30 »P» 4.04 4.7519 its 6.70 1.08 4»32 S 00-19 Wl 7.a« 1 14 *•*/ 5.25-18 At s.eo 1.27 5.25-21 ii| 8.SO 5.60 5.S»17 /) it 9tif 1.40 5.60 5.50-18 to. ll f.OI 140 5.60 Other S»« fl Fropor fKM«irfy Lew THE OUTSTANDING VALUE IN THE, LOW-PRICED FIELD TLRTILORF COURIER TYPE SIZK PRICE 4.40-21 4.50-21 4.t5-19 30X3V2 •4*45 4.99 5.ZO 3.65 Olhai Situ Proportionately Lev For those car owners who need new tire safety at a very low price the Firestone Courier Type Tire has no equal at these extremely low prices. -U^ Smmhotr Firestone Ttr*m are made at the Firestone Factory and Exhibition Building, World's Fair Usten to the Voice of Ftretiona --Featuring Gladys Swarthout --Every Monday Xight over l \ \ n . C . -- W E AF X e t K o r f i Farmers' May Now . Get After Weeds' •••« ^ ' Land Removed From Corn and Wheat Provides Splen- ~ - 4id Opportunity. " . By Brncs' Thornton, j Associate"'AtfeihMMi'* Colorado Agricultural College. WNU Service. - An "exceptional opportunity tot' farmers to control harmful weeds Is offered in the removal of large acreages of land from wheat and corn under the government's plan of'controlled production. " 6 Such weeds as field bindweed or wild morning glory, white weetl or perennial peppefgrass, poverty weeds, Canada thistle and Russian -knapweed maiy be controlled or eradicated by cultivating often, enough to prevent any green growth appearing above the surface of th£ ground. Clean cultivation is the cheapest method of eradication available at present. This usually requires . cultivating once a week ^or two consecutive years, Blthough cultivations may be less frequent as the plants are weakened. One year of clean cultivation has produced desired results under some conditions, weakening weeds so that a heavy Sowing of alfalfa lias smothered them out completely. However, there Vs always a chance that some plants, will survive under thte method. These weed pests defy ordinary con troj methods because of . the hpge 8mounts of food materials held in reserve in their extensive, creejiing root systems. Usual cultural practices, where care is not taken to keep green growth from appearing, often increases rather than decreases the growth and spread of the weeds. , Clean cultivation has been hindered In the past by the hesitancy to take land out of production, although crops produced in weedy areas usually are of poor quality and low yield. Now that farmers are being paid rentals "by the government to keep land out of corn and wheat, or the production of any crop competing with any basic commodity, an unusual opportunity presents itself for eradicating injurious weeds by clean cultivation. Weed eradication will increase th^ value of the land and remove a soured of possible further damage. " • Jacket EnsemM* Quail, Farmers' Friend, Must Have Food Supply Among the chief causes for lack of quail and .uplsftid birds on farms may be scarcity of necessary food and cover. Failure to supply substitute "patches" when natural feeding ground has been destroyM and neglect to pre serve the natural cover for the bobwhite's habitat, are among the chief causes of gradual reduction, says thf •Missouri Farmer. Many measures maybe taken on the average farm to increase or Improve the food for quail, and .help bring about an increase In their numbers. Seed can be broadcast In early rounc s.-aVc THE TIRE SENSATION of'34 *'//> <» Siatof % IShoiie Buss-Page Mote Sales Sales - FORD n Sefvice W. McHenr* roadsides,- around the borders of fields and like situations. Cain, hemp, lespedeza, clover and many species of small wild beans and cowpeas provide excellent sustenance for quail. Once started lespedeza volunteers year after year, unless killed out by burning the land over after the seed germinates in the spring. When harvesting grain a few rows on the outside near cover may be advantageously left for the birds. Quail at times do much work on the farm by destroying serious Insect pests^and are considered one of the farmer's best allies and deserve the serious consideration on any man's farm. : ' Bees Are in Demand Were It not that honey producing, is profitable enough to induce people to keep bees, it would be necessary to raise some type of insect solely for the purpose of pollenation, says Dr. E. F. Phillips, professor of entomology at Cornell university, in his recent'address to the Empire State Honey Pw dueers' association. So necessary is the service that bees render to the fruit growers of New York state that 800 colonies of them were Imported last year to aid in pollenization in Niagara bounty alone, and In other counties throughout the fruit-growing region i growers are renting colonies, of bees for the purpose. \Not only do bees produce a $2,000,000 honey crop annually in New York state but they pollinate more than one-third of the $10,000,000 apple crop as Along the Furrows Consumers in this country ate more than 15,000,000,000 pounds of neat in 1933. Sugar beet shipments from Utah In 1933 were 10 per cent higher than those of 1932. ~~ ' dumber of farms siTpplied ^ith high line electric service in Ohio rose4rom_ 16,000 in 1923 to 48.000 In 1933. ^ * Ohloans destroyed, in 1933, A tot*! of 178,994 common barberry bushes on 575 properties in 20 counties. • • • Past experience In marketing beef cattle Indicates that carrying cattle"" much beyond 1,000 to 1,100 pounds (• hazardous most months Of the year, - , *. -4--.. V In recent years, ovojs. 90 per cent of the United States* flax crop has been Twice T o 1 d Tales Items of Interest Taken Prom, the Files of the Plaindealet - . of Tears Ag» 7™ ; For hot weather days in town, travel, commuting, this fine quality cotton voile Is the perfect summer sheer. The jaekfet ensemble la of plume cblff«ai. Daniel BOOB* Daniel Boone was a man of culture. In his day, as in the present, disinclination to mingle In congested social fcftunts could not be interpreted as a sign of illiteracy. LiDcoln was one of the men who depended 6n few books, but those the best that the human brain has produced. " •1 ' FIFTY ^iLtRS AGO " We are requested by" the Board of Directors to say. that a good teacher is wanted as. principal of ppr public school. Nick Blake has. again opened business at -Ring-wood, an J can now be found in the old warehouse near the depot., prepared to do all kinda of 1)lacksniithing and repairing. live picnic to Fox Lake on Thursday last for the benefit of the cemetery kid' society, was a siicc&ss in every particular, and as we predicted it would be, was, one of the most enV joyable affairs of the kind that hat taken place for many & day. // 4 : The Circus has come and gtfne ah^ those whot attended piaonouiic<|>> it « No. Xpefformanee.; spring's spriflkfing wiB aot hold out the summer. \ James Perkins, employed with the Chicago Telephone company, is nursing a very sore hand, which he poisoned while at work t>ne day last week. The hand was poisoned by the handling of copper wire. ' Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A, Himler have disposed of their property at Crystal Lake and have moved to this Village where they will make their future home. ' : • . I The Chicago White Sox baseball team want to play an exhibition frame in McHenry and it is now up to the people of this village and Vicinity to say whether or not they wish to have them. » " • ' y. V- •• _ * TEN YEARS AGO The last cement, ^hich gives us a continuous cement road between Sher-- •man's hill, west of this city, to the city of Woodstock, was poured on Monday evening. John, Reg-ner, whbse fan^ borders ) Pistakee Lake, reports the' loss of a 1 Dr. C. Keller 1-, , OPTOMETRIST Sundays and Mondays at Summer Rome, Rirerside Drive^ McHenry, 111. All Work Guaranteed Tel. 2I1-R Navaijoc Hav* Prijrtf TK$ Navajo Indians have what are called prayer rugs. There Is a custom among the Navajos of. weaving Into certain rugs sacred symbols with symbolic meanings. Other tribes have saered objects which consist of packs or bundles containing a hodge-podge Of symbolic artlcleB. « t . Brazil la Modern So far as American nations are concerned, Brazil Is an old country and a . land of marked social customs and distinctions. It is democratic in ideas and modern. Few cities have boulevards which commaifa such envy, -j ' Long Hard Read ; Unofficial claims have been made that Illinois State Highway- 121f^Jbe- *tween Casner and Chrisman, a distance of 401>4 miles, forms the longest straight stretch of hard, rpad In the world. r e -1 • . • \ 1 "Matt Tak« Ghancet^" : :: "Polks," said Uncle Bben^" "sometimes git praised without deserving it and sometimes git blamed de same way. Looks like we Jes' had to go Uvin'along, takin'our chftnees." London'*'Larg^tt Re««rroir London's largest reservoir, situated at Littleton, measures four and a half miles round its banks, and could pro- "vlde ample.jiuchorage for a fleet ot tleships. ~T77" "T'y'" "'..v 1" Sciaoe* and Lift ,k,l Science approaches the question of the meaning of life by way of its phys-^ ical ^concomitants; philosophy from the point of view of consciousness. v v f . • f o r t y : y e a r s a g o Tlie pasture on the E. M. Owen estate south of the pond, was partially burned over on Sunday by an accidental fire. Persons with pipes and cigars cannot be too careful these dry times. TheTe is how a good prospect of? a telephone line being established between this place and Pistaqua Bay, which will not only be a great accomodation to the residents of that delightful summer resort, but to our citizens as well. Quite a number of our horsemen attended the races at Richmond on Saturday last. The running race on the Driviner Park, on Thursday afternoon last, resulted in an easy victory for the Sherman_ mare. It was half beats and the best time made was 59 seconds. 'Valuable- farm horse on Monday. The animals death having been caused by a stray bullet. The portable school buildipg, tfeeted under the-direction of th^ community high school board two years ago, and which, since tl\at time, has served to care for the crowded condition of the school building, is no more, the structure having been razed on Tues*- ;; day and the material is now being----1*. hauled to Grayslake, where it will be used as a chapel by the Catholic Circle at that village. • S to nil 6 H One dosp of AT~>T FRTKA quickly relieves gas bloating, cleaju out BOTH upper and krwet bowels, allows you to eat sleep good. Quick, thorough action yet gentle and entirely safe A D L E R I K A Thonuis P. Bolger, Druggist---in wood by S. W. Brown, Druggisi y;3 • - ' / "ifl TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO Automobiles passed 1 through $Tc- H/e'nry last Sunday at , the rate of about fifteen per hour.] ° A ten-poynd girl came to make her home with Mr. and Mrs. E. Mat-L, thews last Sunday afternoon. Now-^HT "Gene" gives you extra good wy^nt this week, just smile with him. Wm. Bon§lett is the possessor of the latest auto to make its appearance in McHenrj'. His is a four passenger Velie manufactured at Moline, 111. A deal was consummated the latter part of last week whereby E. C. Caylord, who resides near Ringwood, disposed of his elegent one hundredacre faign to Jacob Adams of Ringwood. The consideration, we untftrstand, was $12,000. TWENTY YEARS AGO Our oiled streets are again beginning, to diist. It looks as if last ' Plairidealers for sale at W SI. Illary's Cburcb Presents A-Seriesof Popular RADIO CONCERTS At McHenry High School Anditoriozn . Featuring' IN PERSON" Famous Stars of the The First, Concert Sunday Evening, July 29-8:30 p. m. "Resenting RUTH LYON Popular Soprano - National Broadca&tiilg Co. s Assisted by "••--1-:- ------ DEAN REMICK Concert Pianist »'• Admission Only 50c Hi Tickets on Sale at Parish House and All Stores - „ Concert Direction - Robert L. Hollinshead PER QUART FOR THE FINEST MOTOR OIL on the market k '" A',--- I S 0 V I S •' _ ' '• » . ' ' -~ more than 26c a STOPS COSTLY SLUDGE FORMATION ^ --* * oil you are simply throwing goot^money away. For that's the prioe of IsosVis ^D"--Standard's premium motor oil. It is the most advanced development in motor lubrication . • »/, for the patented Pfopane I)ewaring and Chlorex Extraction Process have givep it this unique quality: it will not sludge under the hardest, hottest driving. Sludge causes stuekr~ rings, one of the great causes of high oil consumption. produced in.\orih i>aKota, Minnesota, South Dakota and Slontana, tlie states ranking in production, in. the ordet njuued. '.V-- TOTAL 111 addition, Iso-Vis "D" does not thin out dangerously in contact with hot engine surfaces. Take a look at Iso=Vis "D" next time you stop in a Standard Oil Station.- It is, dispensed in glass bottles so that you can ^ see the full measure of clear, clean, fine oil you are getting. "You'll like its looks. You'll like its periormance and you'll like its economy! ; ISO = VIS "Off MOTOR OIL 3 P L U S F E D E R A L TAX . . . . . . r . At all Oil Stations and Dtahrs 25c a qt. It o qt. 26c a qt. Sludge causes stuck piston . rings and makrs an engine pump oil. It caue«es high r.i! consumption and is a grr-.it mcmey-waster. ISO-VIS"!) ' uill not sludge under bard t driving in hottest weatb r STANDARD OIL SERVICE >• ~/btt£-*S6idq£- Mtrttfi. Oi( ... :£':

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