McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Nov 1938, p. 4

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V. iscin; .'?• mV V'i' W ',s« Ftft Tout THE M-HEKRYlPLAfflDEALER Fire Protection Made Much Cheaper by a Flameproofing Published every Thursday at Mc henry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111*, under the act of May 8, 1879. One Year ... Six Months $2.00 |LOO A. H. MOSIffER Editor and Manager FOR SALE FOR SALE--Fresh eggs and chickens at the sign of the White Leghorn. \ mile south of high school on pavement. *25-3; SPRING ROOSTERS FOR SALE-- j Wt., 2, 3, 4, 5 and 6 pounds; 20? per j pound. Chas. Pomrening,I&. 1, Box 22, West McHenry. . *26 FOR RENT FOR RENT--7-Room Apartment on Waukegan St., in McHenry near grade school. Strictly modern. Call T. M. „ . . Rafter, Woodstock 262. *26 Thus its flameproof ammon:u? 1 salt was too high-priced to be read- By ROBERT D. POTTER Dallas, Texas. -- Increased low-cost fire projection for America's homes should soon be possible through advances -in chemical engineering repealed at the meeting of the American Chemical society Jiere. Chemistry, by a new process, is now able to make cheaply and in vast quantities an acid from which can be made a unique flameproofing chemical. The chemical, known as ammonium sulfamate, does not change the appearance or* feel of fabrics or paper impregnated with it. Moreover, it is not affected by dry cleaning methods so that it will safeguard draperies, upholstery and other household furnishings during their lifetime. Parent raw material of the flameproofing chemical is sulfamic- ac:'d which, while known for more than 100 years, has previously been mere only by costly laboratory procc?rc". Just & . i y*ii \ \ t 7"VT'p , November 17,1938 FOR RENT--6-Room House, one mile from Volo oti Fox River Road. Large yard. Inquire of John Piitzen. *26-2 FOR RENT--145-Acre Farm, 1 mile north of Vqlo, known as John Molldor farm. Call McHenry 647-R-l. v.-;. 26-2 ' "A. . WANTED ily available to most people. A method for the large scale production of sulfamic acid has now hesen devised and put into operation, Martin E. Cupery, chemical engineer of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., declared in his report to the chemists. ' Developed Here and in Germany. Sulfamic acid is. made from urea and fuming sulphuric acid by the new process which, by one of the coincidences of science, has almost simultaneously appeared in Germany and in the United States independently. The new large-scale commercial method of making sulfamic acid, said Mr. Cupery, has made available for many uses a new industrial raw material. As prepared, it is a colorless, crystalline substance looking something like the naphthalene of moth balls but without the odor, for sulfamic acid is odorless. A particularly useful property of sulfamic acid, Mr. Cupery asserted, is its inability to take up water. Because it is non-hygroscopic this very strong acid can easily be shipped and stored without danger of wetting. However, the salts of sulfamic acid, of which the flameproofing $3.00 CASH $3.00 \ chemical is only one, are soluble Paid For DEAD HORSES & CATTLE in water with one exception. Im WANTED TO BUY--Old furniture,} china, glass, picture frames, music • box, old clocks and lamps. What have i you in antiques ? Address "M," carej of The Plaindealer. *25-3- 2 j WANTED--To do Washing and Iron-i ing. Reasonable prices. Call Mc-' Henry 648-M-l. *26 MISCELLANEOUS TREE SPECIALIST--Spraying, pruning, feeding; cavity treatment. Twelve years' experience. LEO P. THORNHILL, McHenry. Phone 129-J. Call anytime. 8-tf GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route,* formerly Georee Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 157 or 631-M-l. 2-tf More for Crippled, and Down Animals MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. I Rione Elgin 5989--Reverse Charges' *26-4 mersion, in fact, is the way the flameproofing chemical is applied to fabrics or paper. For this reason the materials flameproofed cannot be washed without destroying the DO YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING fire-combating effects. EARLY--Call at my home and I will demonstrate a very fine line of I ,, Avons' California Perfume Products' Animal Inventions ShoWH of Cosmetics, fancy soap and a good . ; _ line of Perfumery. Also for Men--a 111 a Vienna Museum line of Shaving Sets and Shaving Creams, and Astringents -- and of Household Goods. Call at my home. Helen Schneider, Riverside Drive and Pearl streets. Telephone 278. 26-tf ?&- KU.: AUCTION Having decided to quit farming, I will sell at public auction on the farm known as the Kelsey farm, 5 miles northwest of Barrington, 1% miles &ist of Fox River Grove, and 4 miles south of Wauconda, second farm north of State Route 22 on Kelsey *tf»d, TUESDAY, NOV. 22 Commencing at 12 o'clock sharp, following described property, towit;- * 41-- Head of Livestock -- 41 Consisting of 34 milks cows; some jtltsh, balance springing; one Guern- • >; Nf stock bull. 6 good work horses. Hay and. Grain 80 tons alfalfa hay in mow, 10 tons horse hay in mow, 65 bu. winter wheat. 2168 shocks hybrid hill corn, 1000 bu. oats, 10 bu. potatoes, one stack straw. Machinery and Tools %-ton Ford truck pickup.. Some household furniturd, McCormick-Deering lO-^FTtSStor, John Deere tractor plow--14 inch' tractor disc'(new); tractor disc (old), McCormick-Deering mower No. 7 • (new), McCormick-Deering corn binder (nearly new), hay loader, hay ...-w_$sjte, side delivery hay rake, McCormick- Deering 6-roll corn shredder. International silo filler, McCormick grain binder, 8-ft. drill, International corn planter, International iO-inch feed grinder, double row cultivator (Dew), single row cultivator, fanning mill and grader, walking plow, sulky Plow, 2 hay racks, steel wagon. Steel roller-bearing wagon, manure lx>*. wooden wagon and double box (new), potato planter, end-gate seed. '*r, three-section drag (new), electric milk cooler box, 3 sets double hai- Jfliess, slip-scoop, 1500-lb. scale, milk ' - .. • «trt. ,J 8-inch hammer'mill belt (40 ft.), t?inch 75-ft. belt, feed cart, milk cans, ;y"Utensils, etc., electric Universal milkviiig machine--two double units and pipe-line for 42 cows, cream separator, Skel-gas stove and can washer, :\:jrtnse tank', milking1 machine sterilizer, . 200 ft. hay rope and hay forkl Other small tools too numerous to mention. Circulating Fireside Heater. About 50 chickens. „ TERMS OF SALE: All sums of $25 and under that amount cash; over that amount a credit of 6 months will fee given in equal tnonthly installments, on notes approved by clerk. Arrangements for credit must be made before purchase. H. D. KELSEY Vienna. -- Inventions by insects, birds, and other animals, that anticipated by millions of years some of the devices of man himself are ' shown in a special collection at the Vienna Museum of Natural History. The exhibit makes available for public inspection a large number of examples of animal workmanship from all corners of the world, that iordinarily one sees only as pictures in books--if even there. Prominent are specimens of houses as built by wasps, termitek, and other social insects. One of these, a wasp nest from Brazil, is cut open to show how the insects fnove from floor to floor on a perfectly fashioned spiral ramp. Airconditioning systems, powered with the insects' own wings, feature a number of types of insect architecture. Other arts and crafts include weaving, basketry, netmaking, pa per-making, and double walls for heat insulation. FIFTY-FIFT* Old Stone Age Implement^ Found in New Mexico Cambridge, Mass. -- Possibility that ancient America had an "Old Stone age" is raised again with the discovery in New Mexico of crude stone axes strangely resembling handiwork of Europe's primitive Old Stone %ge men.' That the unknown Americans, who made the crude implements, were not necessarily as ancient as Europeans of similar culture is plainly stated by Dr. Kirk Bryan of Harvard university, who found number of tools in an old quarry in Rio Arriba county. Discussing significance of the prehistoric tools, in Science, Doctor Bryan also says that no direct re lationship with' European types is implied. The tools do, however, represent a baretofore unrecognized type of ancient inhabitant of this continent, possibly preceding known Indian tribes. £ Slops Bleeding Munich. -- A new German preparation, derived by chemists from the spinal fluid of animals, is reported here to be effective in stanching minor hemorrhages. "Manetol," injected intramuscularly after first being dissolved in water, stops bleeding of wounds in which the tissue is so injured that blood oozes in a number of places and is digwi* to atop by any other means. ;; Charles Leonard, Auctioneer ' August Froelich, Auctions* • First Natiooal Bank of Woodstock, Clerking Japanese Marriages Most Japanese are married according to the rites of Shinto, the religion of ancestor worship. Japanese women usually are, like their menfolk, followers of Buddhism. The two men had been partners in business for more than 50 years. But now the partnership was abcJut to be dissolved, for one of the two lay dying. The sufferer called his friend to his bedside: "I know I haven't much longer to live, old man," he said. "Before I go I've got a confession I must make. During our years of partnership I've swindled you out of thousands of pounds. Can you forgive me?" "That's all right," said the other cheerfully. "Don't you worry about it, I poisoned jrou."--Stfay Stories Magazine^.' For Husbands Only Mr. Smith came home one ©vetting to find his wife visibly displeased. ' . "Do you realize, John," she said, "that you have forgotten that this is my anniversary?" * ? He answered readily : "Of coursfe I've forgotten. There really isn't anything about you to remind me that you're a day older than you were a year--or even 10 years ago I" No Liars Wanted The prospective juror asked the court to be excused. Prospective Juror (explaining)-- I owe a man $10 and as he is leav^ ing town today for some years, T want to catch him and pay him the money. Judge (in a very cold voice)--You are excused. I don't want anybody on the jury who can lie like that. Fooled Them Plenty "I was in the jungle when suddenly a horde of savages swooped down upon me." 'Good heavens! Whatever did you do?" 'I stared at them till I was black in the face and they took me for one of their own tribe."--Stray Series Magazine. MANY OTHERS *1 take to water like a fish," "Pve even heard you referred to as (me." Hot Stuff In a certain Sunday school the lesson was the return of the ark to land. In the primary class, cards were distributed showing Noah burning offerings at the altar: Teacher--What did Noah do when he first landed? Boy (promptly)--Made a fire. 1 Oh, Sad Awakening! • Qinny--Grandma has just had a terrible accident. All her teeth got smashed. Vinnie--Was she hurt bad? Ginny--She doesn't know yet that I stepped on 'em. She's still asleep. ---------- fc Had the Equipment Angry Driver (having to stop trafe* tion engine for a little boy)--Well, what do you want? "Mummie said could you steam open this letter, please? It's one ot dad's."--Stray Stories Magazine. A Family Trait Dorothy--Mother, what did you do when a boy first kissed you? Mother--Never mind. Dorothy--That's funny. I did th* same thing.--Stray Stories Maga zine. In a Bad Fix Old Ge^ (at party) -- What's wrong, Joe, I haven't seen you eating anything yet? Poor Old Joe--I can't get a chance. The lady next to me is cross-eyed, and keeps eating off my plate. SAVING BY THE CLOCK Household Hints IMRM . TW if* m My BETTY WELL# rt'./"' '"PHERE'S a fine art to this business of being a hostess. And for the sake of brides just starting out on their careers, here are some of the rules: Yourself, first of all. No use to toy to put a party over unless you are looking like a million. So have a festive dress all ready to slip into at the witching hour, and a schedule that permits a last minute primping after you've got everything finished in the kitchen. The Menu--Whether it's to be a company dinner, coffee and cake on the porch, or iced punch in state, have one interesting touch. Something unexpected in homemade cake; sandwich filling that will enchant the men; a salad that is as beautiful to see as it is gOotf to eat. If you have one high point, you can get by with staples for the rest. That makes even a big occasion easy to put over. The Appointments--Have all the dishes and all the glassware you're going to heed sparkling on trays There's a line art to being a hostess. ready to bring forth to set the table whether it's for buffet supper, formal dinner or tea on the porch. It will save no end of flutter or dish washing during your party. The ideal way is to settle on the kind of entertaining you can do best, them buy enough china or glass to serve as many people as you're likely to have at once. This need not all be such expensive ware, but it's better to skimp somewhere else in order to afford it. The Decorations -- Flowers arranged where they do most good and in colors that do things for the house. From the garden if possible, but when there isn't just the right thing available for the picking, don't hesitate to balance the budget to include some "boughten" blooms. They'll be well worth the investment. The House Itself--Don't try to reflx the whole place the day before company comes. If you start too many ambitious plans for changes just before the party, ymi'll get all involved and probably hot finish anyway--only make a wreck of yourself. Just clean up enough to be presentable. Be sure there's a place for coats and hats and a good mirror for the ladies. The Guests--Invite as few as possible *just . because ypu think you -should. :-s You Can Picture the Bouse. "Our house is a genuine B. C. model--Before Cars," said a woman we met at a friend's bridge-luncheon. "And we still use the old barn for a garage, though it belongs to the days of bobtail horses and beplumed ladies. You can picture what the house looks like! "The entrance hall separates the house square in the middle with front and back parlor on one side and dining room and kitchen on the other. However, we are trying to do something about it. The dark gloomy woodwork is being painted cream and we've selected a misty Find Ruins in Peru Qf Around $00 A.D. Museum Aide Unearths 'Art Of Mountain People. NEW YORK.--Discovery of dwelling places, temples, pottery and metal work of an* ancient civilization was reported by Dr. Wendell C. Bennett, assistant curator in the anthropology department of the American Museum of Natural History. Doctor Bennett recently returned from a Six-month archeological expedition into northern Peru. The site of the ruins he uncovered is near the town of Huaraz in the upper part of the Santa river valley at an altitude of 10,000 feet, between the White and the Black Cordilleras. 9£om the evidence in the tombs, such as pottery, copper pins and discs, and arrow heads of flint and obsidian, this people of the Recuay civilization predate onfe branch of the Tiahuanaco civilization and the Inca civilization. According to Mean's method, the Recuay ruins would date around 500 A. D. • / ' Subterranean Houses. Doctor Bennett found whole vlfc lages containing as many as 50 subterranean houses, roofed with tremendous slabs of rock apparently cut from the mountain sides. The Recuays are built tombs of rock Slabs, fashioned into boxes. How the rock was cut and transported from the quarries to the village site is unknown. Many of the sunken houses extended two stories below the surface and contained five or six rooms on each floor with narrow passageways leading from one floor to another and from room to room. Two temples, each having three stories above the ground and rising to 30 feet in height, were discovered. Stone puma heads and statues representing human figures also were found. In the ancient village 10 subterranean passageways with single openings were unearthed. Pottery found at the ends of the tunnels showed they were used as dwelling places. Village Takes Historic Tree as Name of Place PITTSBURGH--An oak tree that now exists only in the pages of the nation's colonial history has given its name to the Pittsburgh district's new community. . Charter Oak, a settlement in Scott township, has been named after the rugged landmark that once helped settle an argument between the domain of Pennsylvania and Virginia. After the French and Indian war, when a community at the junction of the Allegheny, Monongahela and Ohio rivers grew to mark the site of present-day Pittsburgh, Virginia claimed the town. Pennsylvania argued that the village was within the grant given to William Penn by Charles II, more than a hundred years before^ For the first time, colohists discovered that nobody had taken the trouble to define the lirtiits of Perm's grant. • As surveyors marked the line between the land claimed by Pennsylvania and Virginia, they blazed the large black oak with an ax. A few years ago, the tree, dead and weather-beaten, still showed traces of the blaze. Since then the storms have destroyed the natural marker. Recently, when residents of the Heidelberg - Glendale - Carnegie- Greentree area decided to organize a new community, they remembered the tree that helped give lasting outline to the tri-state area. Charter Oak now is a modern community. "Do you believe in daylight saving?" "Well, yesj^it's easier saving by daylight than after the night club lights are on." No Cinch Oliver--Say, Chief, what's the hardest thing when you're learning to ride a bicycle? | ,:. Billy--The sidewalk. Draws Water From Great Well " San Gimignano, "the famous town of towers in Italy, draws its water supply from a great well which was driven in 1273 and has not failed in more thaii six centimes. Queen Liked Marjoram Marjoram is an herl} of the mint family. It is imported mostly from France, Germany and Hungary. The "good Queen Bess" liked perfumes in which it was used. Sky-Blue Mourning Color Sky-blue is the color of mourning employed by the Syrians and Armenians because it symbolically expresses their hope that the deceased, has gone to/ heaven. Our house is a B» C. model. soft scenic paper in cream and sepia for the walls of dining room, hall and both parlors. Then I'm having carpeting throughout -- a grayedgreen solid color in texture weave. The sofa in the back parlor I'm covering in burnt orange with one easy chair in the same material--this room is used as a library-living room. Two other chairs will have a figured chintz in antique floral colors on a parchment ground and repeating flecks of the dull green and orange. "The front parlor will run more to pale orange and pale golds with accent pieces in rust. The lamps in both rooms I'm having in brass and copper. The dining room chair seats will be in a pale gold, but here accent notes will be pewter and old silver. Curtains for all the windows will be ecru with the figured chintz for* draperies, finished with pleated ruffles of dull green. "The furniture is walnut but nothing to brag about, so I thought a mellow yet compelling color scheme would bring the rooms together and soften the effect. We're as pleased as if everything were,streamlined-- jaaaybe morel" . © By Betty Well*.--WNU Strvic*. pest Poison Chief Stock Of 1900 Texas Pharmacy FORT WORTH, TEXAS.--Prairietjlog and wolf poison were the chief inoney-makers for pioneer west Texas druggists--hot cosmetics and a sandwich counter, according to Walt Cousins Sr., publisher of the Southern Pharmaceutical Journal. . Cousins was a young cowboy in J898 when he bought a book to study pharmacy in his spare time. He quit the range three years later and opened a drug store at Munday, Knox county, Texas. "If it hadn't been for the wolf and prairie-dog poison I sold to the ranchers, I couldn't have kept the store open," Cousins recalled. Immensity of the Amaion The area drained by the Amazon and its tributaries total more than 2,970,000 square miles, largely untamed tropical forests, and the volume of water discharged into the sea annually is probably five times as much as that of the Mississippi. Turin Colder than Copenhagen The mean annual temperature of Turin, Italy, is lower than of Copenhagen, Denmark. "V Children Worry Less In Poorer Families LONDON.--Nerves and nightmares are the penalty a child pays for "well-to-do" parents. Children of poor families show less worry, timidity and instability. These are the conclusions of Dr. W. Lindesay Neustatt-er^ a clinical research assistant at Guy's hospital, published in the Lancet, British medical journal. He selected thr^e groups of families in an attempt to discover the effect of poverty and bad social conditions in producing nervous disorders. Nine per cent of the children in the poorer groups had been restless and irritable in their first year of life, compared to 30 per cent in the rich group. INTERESTING - ~ NEARBY NEWS TAKEN FROM COLUMNS OF OUR EXCHANGES Despondent over the loss of his dairy barn, which was destroyed by fire, last Saturday nigh!, Anton Hudek, 67-year-old farmer, near Barrington, committed suicide by hanging himself in his garage Tuesday afternoon while members of his family were away. Saturday of last week, a group of men at the Dan O'Rourke farm, located three miles east of Union, were preparing to shred corn and were lining up a tractor and the corn shredder. The belt was placed on the two machines and* the tractor started, but the two machines were not exactly in line. The belt came off the shredder and started to snake toward the tractor, winding up on the tractor pulley. Mr. O'Rourke attempted to throw the belt off the tractor pulley and was caught in the Ipop, the belt catching him at the knees. He" was dragged to the tractor, lodging between the radiator aird the front wheels, but th« weight he threw on the belt choked the tractor down and killed the engine. Those present were sure he had at least broken his legs but after untangling the belt, Mr. O'Rourke got ujp and went right back to work, his only injuries being bruised legs; • ; Picking an oriental poppy ih her garden Tuesday of last week while the first snow of the season was falling 1 was the nov^l experience of Mrs. Charles Wieneck, Grass Lake. The large red oriental flower usually blooms early in the spring and a "second" crop" is unusual. She also picked roses on Monday. The unusually mild weather that lasted up to the present time is considered responsible for these phenomena. John Dulam of Harvard had a close call from the attack of an ugly bull on the homestead farm southwest of that city one day last week. While driving through a field to a pasture lot, the bull sighted the car and driver and dashed with full speed for approx-' imately eighty rods to the scene of an anticipated conflict. Mr. Dullam was disturbed as to how to ward off the attack, but by keeping his car engine functioning and the machine moving about the pasture lot he was able to frighen away the animal, which he describes as large and ugly. i Gerald Michels, a member of the football team at Crystal Lake suffered an injury last Tuesday afternoon while in a game with Arlington Heights, when both leg bones right above the ankle joint of the right leg were "brok-1 i. | Many hunters spend a whole season without bagging any game, but Ernest Stading, Jr., of Huntley had better luck Sunday night and brought home a fine buck deer weighing 150 pounds -- which he bagged unintentionally. Ernest was returning home early Sunday morning of last week on the black top road east of Gilberts. As he drove along the highway he noticed an animal running at top speed in the ditch at the side of the machine. He believed it to be a German Shepherd dog. Suddenly the animal leaped out of the ditch directly in front of Stading's car. It was not until he stopped and backed up that he discovered that he had killed a deer. Frank Kado, 38, residing eight miles east of Marengo, is in Elgin hospital a" the result of losing all the fingers and the thumb of his left hand last Thursday afternoon in the knives of a corn shredder. The accident occurred on the Danielson farm. Robert Knilans, caretaker at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Sydney J. Knowles on West Hillside Road at Crystal Lake, last week discovered sweet peas and luscious red raspberries in the garden. The berries are perfectly formed and ripened and are to be found in huge quantities. White lilacs, nasturtiums, strawberries, lillies, violets and other unusual horticultural findings have been reported as a result of the unseasonable warmth of the last few weeks, the raspberries and sweet peas seem to be the most astounding. JameA McMullen, 45 years old, of Grayslalie, was killed instantly in" an accident which* occurred Sunday evening of last week on Highway 75 near the Kenosha-Racine county line in Wisconsin when his automobile skidded on a curve and crashed into a tree. Raymond Galylor, 17, of Woodstock, narrowly escaped serious injury last Friday night when the car he was driving struck a horse on the Country Club road, near that city. Gaylor, who was returning to a farm on which he works after visiting with his parents ih town, sustained two cut fingers and damaged his car considerably. George Pye, 19, son of a farmer residing near Waukegan, killed himself Saurday morning after accidentally shooting, one of his young hunting companions. Another friend struggled desperately to snatch the-gun away from him, but in vain. I Pillar* in Giant's Causeway ! There are 40,000 pillars of basalt crowded into the Giant's causeway in the northera part of Ireland: ^ 5 - J - ' SPRING GROVE f SBBBB-: Mrs. Steve Schaefer was hostess to the members of her club at her home in Fox Lake on Wednesday afternoon's diversion and lovely awards for high scores in five hundred went to Mrs. Frank Prosser and Mrs. Eldred Johnson while Mrs. Arthur Klein received consolation. Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer and Mrs. Thelma Brand were the lucky winner*, of trayeller's prizes. A lovely lunch was served at the conclusion of cards. Quite a few from here attended the Forester Dance held at St. John's pariah hall in Johnsburg on Wednesday night. Mrs. Frank Sanders and daughter, Evelyn, left for Montana where they we're called by the death of Mrs. Dale Sanders who was suffering from a concussion of the brain. Mr. and Mrs. Frank May, son, Eugene, motored to Urbana on Saturday where they visited Arnold May and Edward Shotliff who are students at the University of Illinois. St. Peter's church and parish hall is undergoing a fresh coat of paint. The entire interior, and exterior is being redecorated. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Schmeltzer visited relatives in Rockford on Sunday. ' Misses Virginia Rasmussen and Florence Werdell and Clarence Lund of Chicago Were callers in the Chas. Freund home on Sunday and visited Mrs. Freund at St. Therese's hospital. Mrs. M. J. Freund of McHenry is visiting friends and relatives here this week. , DON'T SLEEP WHEN GAS PRESSED HEART If you can't eat or sleep because gas bloats you up try Adlerika. One dose usually relieves stomach gas pressing on heart. Adlerika cleans out BOTHupper and lower bowels. At All Leading Druggists ---- BRING A FRIEND Oil Permanents, 2 persona for ....95 up to $16, singly $S to $12 complete Non-Ammonia Waves $2j50 e'mprte 8TOMPANATO*S Beauty and Reducing Safoa Phone 641 Woodstock, I1L Be Good. Not Too Trustful "Be good and be kind," said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "but at the same time don't be too trustful. The fact that you own an umbrella that some rascal has borrowed will uot keep the rain off of you.'* Bass Go Twelve Miles a Day Thp United States bureau of fisheries established that striped bass average 12 miles a day in their southbound migration. 69218 fte £[JX9U '89JIX PQSfl. 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