McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Jul 1939, p. 7

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

" '5 - *« - f» • • Wi •f*,c *%' Thursday, July 13,1939 THS McHEHRT PLAIIVDEALER • V"'-' GEORGE DATING, SUMMER RESIDENT, DIES JULY 5 I ; George Dasing of 4940 N. Oakley avenue, Chicago, and a member of Lasch's Colony in this city, died Wed- ' i nesday, July 5. Funeral services -were . 1 held at a chapel at 5501 N. Ashland ; avenue, Saturday, with interment in Bosehill. He was a member of lodge No. 2, I. O. F. A.; Schwaebische Unter Stuetzungsverein, Schwabenverem and Schwabischer Saneerverein. Surviving are His wife, Margaret, Emil, George and Edwin, and grand- . daughter, Mrs. Lillian Lucas, sons, children, Arthur, William Robert, Marilyn J. Lucas J Robert E.t George L., and Olive Dasing. A brother, Leonard Dasing, and sister, Mrs. Marie Breitbarth, also remain to ?j/T mourn his loss. British Proviaees Grow Frail Commercial fruit growing is high* ly developed in Ontario, Nova Sco- ! tia.and British Columbia. Lady Elizabeth Nightingale The Lady Elizabeth Nightingale, referred to in Washington Itving's writings, was the eldest daughter and co-heir of Washington, Second Earl Ferrers by Mary, eldest surviving daughter of Sir Richard Leringe, lord chief justice of common pleas in Ireland. She was born in 1704 and married in 1725 Joseph Gascoigne Nightingale, Esq. She died in 1731. Her Well-known monument in Westminster abbey is by the sculptor Ronbiliac. The Ferrers family intermarried with the Washington of Sulgrave--hence her father's Christian name--and Florence Nightingale was of the same family as Lady Elizabeth's husband. Origin of Word 'Assassin' The word "assassin" is from .the Arabian hashashin, eaters of hashish, the name of a sect in the Thirteenth century. The Old Man of the Mountain roused his followers' spirits by this preparation and sent ttiem out to assassinate his enemies. THE POCKETBOOK (/KNOWLEDGE A *ww w23t) m tumt *mw moxmmx MM. *> Hi MvWTOD "MB SANDWICH SO HE COULD E*r WHILE HE Mm as.A. uscs perttoLtuM AT THE RftTECFfffc •AMttft A PEMON CACH VEAR -- Mate thah rmce thb KATE OP THE SECOND JtAtSfWA OOUUTtiii Joo toHH INTH» HUMAN ) eooyj ocsnTt poKxcrnoMS THAT TWt OcMS BOTTtE MAK1N6 MACHINE WOULD OCSTBOV JOBS, IT CfiCATfO THOUSANDS Of NgWOHK. fOCAV MOSt MEN oeuven Borneo mux THAU Tut total NUMBER oe SlASS 8lOW£/*S Before THIS MACMHE WAS USED. OF THE S/9,000 STOCKHOLDERS WHO owrt THE STEEL INDUSTRY, ¥0 Afiff Ctur ttOMBtL WHY NOT A SAFE AND SANE FOURTH? 4NTI" SuilNtS' r! \u HOLVBr: Indians of Northwest Hold To Many Ancient Customs TOPICS ELECTRIC FENCES NOT ALWAYS SAFE |. ' Northern Pacific Railway Photo The National Editorial Association, special train through the American Northwest, June 11 and 12, came upon "open spaces." coWhoys and Indians "as they were in the beginning." While Indians have cottages > %uilt by Uncle Sam and by themselves, they go back to teepees lit Summer. There are^ approximately 9430 Chippewas in Minnesota. 309{ ' , r ^pioux and Mandaris in North Dakota, and the native population of the,.--."' ^tribes along; the Northern Pacific follows: Crows 1987, near Billings^- ; Cheyenne 1508. near Forsyth. Mont.; Flatheads 2.929 near Dixon and V' Ravalli. Mont.; Nez Perce 1412 near Lewistown, Idaho; Co'eur d'Alen# i|33. near Caeur d'Alene, Idaho. From Spokane and West there are inany tribes on lands along the Northern Pacific, including Spokanesc r,.v Colvilles. Yakimas. Makahs, Quinaults, Quillayutes. Chinooks. Sko?" komish. Clallams. Lummi. Muckleshoots. Suquamish, Puyallups, Swin->, ri'iich ^£^iga^§^ohorgisji/ and. Xookaks. ^ ^ TMTH iktit ADVERTISING By CHARLES B. ROTH THE RESPONSIBILITY OF SUCCESS -- Iftrproperly Charged Wiring May Kill Live Stock." . •••Hi David S. Weaver. Agricultural, Engineer. North Carolina Slate , College. --WNU Service. T; Caution should be exercised in the use of the electric fence, which is becoming so popular with farmers in pasturing live stock. While electric fences have met with general acceptance because the cost of the fence and the cost of operation is materially less than the standard type of stock fencing, all electric fencing does not have a clear slate of safety. Reports by investigators have shown several instances where stock has been killed by wiring that was improperly charged. In some instances it was homemade contraptions which were rigged up by persons who did not knt>w what degree of shock the apparatus was delivering and did not understand how much shock was necessary or safe for live stock. A word of caution to those who might be contemplating installing an electric fence would be to secure the equipment from those sources which have had extensive experience and have the equipment on a safe basis. The buyer also should follow throughout the directions by the manufacturer for safely installing the controller. No person should attempt to install a homemade apparatus without first consulting some person competent of giving information as to safety precautions to be followed. The proper grounding of the wiring system and electrical equipment around farm buildings is also important, as a slight shock from improperly grounded systems has been known to kill cattle. JWE OFTEN say when we discuss various things we acquire that it isn't the original cost that counts. It is the upkeep. This is particularly true of success. The fact is that there is a responsibility of success which failure or mediocrity never knows. The man who is successful, who achieves in whatever line he may enter, has an obligation and a responsibility which requires that he continue to do his very best. Especially is this true of business. To make a brief success of a business isn't hard. To build a lasting success require* close application and a fine sense of the obligation which success implies and demands. U advertising served no other purpose than to create the obligation of success it would perform a useful social and economic act, for advertising holds up this obligation of success and demands that it be observed constantly. Whenever a manufacturer or a merchant begins to advertise he sets selfimposed standards on himself. By these standards do others judge him. By these standards do they also classify him. He has an obligation to live up to •very day thenceforward. Charles Roth If he hadn't advertised, he could give good quality one day and poor quality the next and get by with it. But when he comes out boldly in print and advertises, the die is cast, and he must forever live up to the highest ideals. Shrewd men have thought that they could controvert this law. By putting quality and good value into a product and then by advertising it, they have succeeded in a short time in building up a big business. And then came temptation. "Why maintain all this quality?" they ask themselves. The public will never know. Why not cut the, quality but continue the advertising and clean up? They have tried. But the public does know quality, is quick to perceive deception, and abandons the man or product which tries to substitute inferiority for honest merchandise. There is no quicker way to ruin a business than to set up a standard and then violate it. There is no better way to build a business than to set up a standard and then live up to it, Advertising is the great s setter of standards in American business life, and advertised goods are the standards by which you spend your income, confident of getting your money's worth every day. The man who advertises has assumed the responsibility for success. You'd rather deal with a responsible man, wouldn't you? Charles B. Roth. MI PLACEfRESTAU^ANT Ph0MS77 JUSTIN Arozims, Prop*. Oram St FISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY FRESH PERCH Come and Enjoy Yourselves Saturday Evening at !;5|MHMRISON«^V At Pistakee Bay Divine Musi® - Perfect Mixed Drinks TOED CHICKEK -- 60C : ASST. SANDWICHES BARBARA UORICK'S ORCHESTRA Dancing'Every..Saturday Night Throughout the Season CHURCH SERVICES Eggs With Thick Whites Are in Greater Demand Eggs with a large quantity of thick albumen, or thick white, are regarded as of excellent quality. Consumers also want eggs with a large percentage of thick white because it stands up weil around the yolk when broken. Such eggs are particularly in . demand for poaching. Some fresh eggs have more thick white than others, and poultry specialists of the United States department of agriculture have been experimenting to find out why. They find that a hen's ability to lay eggs with thick white is an inherited characteristic. They find that some hens lay eggs with a greater percentage of thick white than other hens of the same breed and in the same flock. The season has a slight effect on the percentage of thick white, but other factors, such as feed, periods of light and heavy production, and: egg weight do not affect the percentage. - At the national agricultural re* search center, Beltsville, Md., Dr. C. W. Knox; geneticist of the bureau of animal industry, has bred two flocks which further prove that the thick white characteristic is inherited. One flock lays eggs that average 68 per cent thick white. Egg$ from the other flock average only 45 per cent thick white. The average fresh egg has from 50 to 52 per cent thick white. ? | Tree Booster v Voting trees never stop growing when they are moved from the nursery to permanent locations, if a< bucketful of moistened peat moss is placed in each hole at planting time,, reveals the Country Home Magazine. Dr. H. B. Tukey, of the New York Experiment station, found that apple trees which were set in peat; moss produced six times as much top growth the first season as those that were planted without it. By the end of the fourth season, the peat-fed trees looked like five-yearolds. A 150-pound bale of peat moss, costing a&und $3, is enough lor 90 trees. Outwitting the Weather Some 6,000 cotton growers now get perfect stands of their crops, irrespective of soil and weather conditions, by using variable-depth planters, says the Country Home Magazine. They place the successive seeds at different depths that vary from a fraction of an inch tQ two inches. If the weather is dry, the deeper seed will come up; if if is wet, the shallow ones come up. If conditions are so favorable thai all the seeds germinate, the least thrifty art hoed out at chopping time. White Tomato ; California state department' of agriculture announces a new white tomato, developed by Dr. Jonas- Clark, a farmer and physician ot Gilroy. The doctor describes th% new ,species as "absolutely white, about the same size as the ordinary tomato, but much sweeter." It wai developed after eight years of experimentation, states the Indiana! Farmer's Guide. The Mexican workers on the farm have chris^: tened it "?f!l Tomato Blanco." (Daylight Saving Time) £ St. Mary** Catholic Church Masses: Sundays: 7:00; 8:30; 10:00; 11:80 Holy Days: 6:00; 8:00; 10:(W. Weekdays: 7:00 and 8:00. First Friday: 6:30 and 8:00. Confessions: «. : Saturdays: 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m Thursday before First Friday. After Mass on Thursday, 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. S. Nix, pastor. St. Patrick's Catholic Church Masses: Sundays: 8:00; 9:00; 10:00; .11:00 Weekdays; 7:30. First Fridays: 7:30. 1 On First Friday, Communion dis tributed at 6:30, 7:00 and before and during the 7:30 Mass. Confessions: ! Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Thursday before First Friday: 4:00 to 5:00 p. m. and 7:00 to 8:00 i p. m. Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, pastor. St John's Catholic Church, Johnsburg Masses: Sundays: 7:00; 8:30; 10:00; 11:15. Holy Days: 7:00 and 9.:00. M'tH'kiiays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: * Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:80. Thursday before First Friday:: . 2:30 and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. Community Church Sunday School: 10 a.m. Epworth League: 7:30 p.m. Rev. Minar Gerrard, pastor. Lutheran Evangelical Church •Sunday St>rvice: 8:00 a. m. Rev. Herman P. Meyer, pastor. SNUG HARBOR TAVERN Good Place to Eat and Drink FISH FRYS FRIDAY -- CHICKEN DINNERS ON S A T U R D A Y A N D S U N D A Y Ifusdc by Ben Thonneson Watson Schimmel CENTRAL GARAGE --One of the best equipped garages in Northern Illinois-- STANDARD OIL PRODUCT® Guaranteed Servtee (M) All Makes of Oars and Trucks Full Litis ot Attiui and Ooodyear Tires Electric and Acetylene Welding Oar Walking and Polishing FRED J. SMITH, Prtft. Phone 200-J Towing Johnsbiir^ V. NEW! ^ EXCITING! DIFFERENT! USE IT FOR COOKING--SERVING! Just Pick Up and Plug In... Cooks Quickly, Family-Anywhere.' IN THT KITCHEN ON THC PORCH v^W FOR BUFFET SUPPERS Portable, Automatic GENERAL ELECTRIC ELECTRIC AT SUMMER con AGE (Capacity 1« Quarts) ON BCACH PICNICS Used and Praised by Thousands Daily! • It's a hot day. You're tired and dinner time's coining. That's where an Electric Roaster comes to the rescue! FREE . . . HOME TRIAL AND DEMONSTRATION! Try an electric roaster--for one week -- in your own home. Find out, for yourself, its many features and advantages. Then, if you don't like it •-you pay nothing--you are not obligated in any way. Take advantage of this amazing FREE offer now. For this portable, modern appliance lets you cook delicious dishes and com-, plete meals anywhere you choose--ill the kitchen, on the terrace or porch. Accurately controlled electric heat is automatically maintained--a thick blanket of insulation keeps heat in the roaster and out of the room. You do the cooking quickly, easily ... in cool comfort. No wonder Electric Roaster users are so enthusiastic in their praise. Try this thrilling new cooking method in your home--on one week's f&££ TRIAL. You will not be obligated in any way. 0»LY *2 DOWN Service bill. ' Coot Whole Oh, 7W / OTHER APPLIANCE DEALERS ARE ALSO OFFERING FINE BARGAINS IN MODERN ELECTRIC ROASTERS. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF_ NORTHERN ILLINOIS •»« )W RM„.r for Bniling, tool Ttlephont: Crystal Lake 2fB *

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy