McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Mar 1940, p. 4

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'f ihigigirj VmR*$ mmmv 1WS&; Mt^e^WMU *i 3TO»«r ^fcwW - ;'3F*2 ),~f\} " $*;'-\ " VT * **..': ^ ' " * * * ^ ^ r v t s ^ v j j r :•»»! «•• •ipalpsps Pige T*r~ ,?; '^'•f! •" .' vf- *<:.• *: ;•'* jjflfff-5| TSM McHEHRf PUUNDlALEfc THE M'HENRY PLAMDEALER Published every Thursday at Mohenry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., Under the act of May 8, 1879. A. H. MOSHER Editor and Manager One Year ... Six Months ...: $2.00 .-.. $1.00 vt V .' The Rev. Kenneth' E. Arnold of Addison, N. Y., built a set of chimes for his church out of discarded automobile brake drums.. 93 CANDIDATES FILED FOR FRETINWRR POSTS, 24 CONTESTS SLATED BUY YOUR COAL FROM "CHUCK" -- Quick deliveries mi any amount. A telephone call to 68-M will get an immediate response. Chuck's Ice & Trucking Co. 36-tf andecioks WOODSTOCK Theatre Woodstock Air-Conditioned t ^ • i iV •: ST • FRIDAY -- March 8 2 _ BIG Features -- 2, at Bargain Prices! Doors Open at 6:30- 15c 'till 7M -- 25c after 7K» "CITY OF CHANCE" with Lvnn Bari - P L I ' S ~ MEN ARE SUCH FOOLS' ' --• with -- Wayne Morris - Priseilla Lane SATURDAY -- March 9 Continuous from 2:30 r 2 - Fine Shows - 2 4'LEGION OF LOST FLYERS" with Richard Artel -- A N D -- The Jones Family in 'YOUNG AS YOU FEEL' Nlnety-thrfee candidates for precinct committeemen jobs are on file In the office of County Clerk Raymond D. Woods. Of this number 47 are Democrats and 46 are Republicans. In the Democratic party there are 13 contests while the Republicans hate eleven on schedule. Daly Is Opposed Opposition to C. Frank Daly, chair- £°R SALE --Two used Farm-All man of the county central Republican !Tracers with cultivators; one CC Case committee, appeared late yesterday j Tract°r °1» ™_bberi °ne used manure when Robert S. Andrew filed. On the i 1 8P^er* Geo- R Fre"n£ Democratic side of the fence, Milton J. i St ruwing, present chairman of the ALFALFA, $7.95, Clover, $7.20, Hyi county central committee, did not file brid Corn $2.00 and $2.75; all per ! for re-election. *r. Struwing holds a bushel. Also other bargains. Postal 1 responsible position with the state. I card us today for catalog and samples. Jesse Armstrong and J. A. Dvorak I Hall Roberts'Son, Postville, Iowa. 42-4 FOR SALE!--Baby Chicks from Ped. S. C. White Leghorn and New Hampshire stock. Also custom hatching turkey and duck eggs, 4*£c ea.; chicken, 2%c ea. Best hatches at Lehmann's Pity. Farm & Hatcljery, East FOR SALE--About 600 2-week-old Super Contest Baby Chicks ready for delivery on Monday, March 11. Farmers Mill. Phone 29. 42 SUNDAY -- MONDAY March 10-11 -- Continuous Sunday from 2Sli--- B I G D O U B L E B I L L ! "GREEN HELL" DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, J®, i JOAN BENNETT -- P L U S -- "THE EARL OF CHICAGO" ROBERT MONTGOMERY EDWARD ARNOLD ™ TUESDAY -- March 12 i5c - Bargain Night - 15c "MEXICAN SPITFIRE" -- with -- * Lope Velez - Leon Errol WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY March IS - 14 "A CHILD IS BORN" - s t a r r i n g - GERALDINE FITZGERAt© JEFFREY LYNN GLADYS GEORGE A l s o 'March of Time"" FOR SALE--Chickens, weighing from 2 to 3 lbs. George Scarbarough, Park St., Phone 135-W. *42-2 FOR SALE--Bargain 2-wheel trailer. Phone McHenry 217-J. Wm. H. Tonyan. . 42-2 WANTED m • have filed for his jpb l a Algonquin i three. ! Two other contests are slated in I Dorr township with Marcellus Senne ! being opposed for re-election in Dorr J two by Supervisor Roy J. Stewart * I In Dorr three A. J. Kuppe, Gordon I Green and Walter Mengs are seeking TI.„ _ . , _ i" *>u ! the post. Grant Nolan in unopposed Ro,<i' C)TSt*1 L,k®' ^ ' in Dorr four and Walter Reed has no opposition in Dorr fire. Contest In Mareago Fred Nelson, former state highway officer and present Marengo police chief, was a late filer yesterday. He is opposing the re-election of Fred Kelley in Marengo one. Mayor William L. Miller of Marengo is opposing the re-election of C. Perry Wright in Marengo two. A new filing yesterday was Claude McDermont in McHenry three. Mr. McDermont hails from Lily Lake and was much in the limelight during past months in the Lily Lake organization case in court He is seeking the McHenry three post on the Democratic side of the fence. This is the famou& "river precinct" and Henry J. Miller and Edward Thennea of McHenry are also candidates. Miller is former county chairman. A new'contest appeared in Dorr township In the Democratic race with S. T. Oliver filing against Arthur Freund in Dorr four. Both candidates hold state jobs. Oliver is a bank receiver and Freund is employed on the state highway. The complete list of filings follow: Republicans Riley- Marengo one--Fred Kelley, Fred Nelson. Marengo two--W. L. Miller and C. Perry Wright. ^ Dunham--Fred Gay. Chemung one--W. J.'Heatley. Chemung two--E. C. Chester. Chemung three--L. A. Douglas. Alden--Fred S. Pmith^. Hartland--Ray Brown "Sad Geo. Schneider. Seneca--W. F. Mueller. Coral --Charles H. Ackman. Grafton one--Frank C. Ferfls. Grafton two--J. S. c!ond. The Beautiful laTOVAl! Wm CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. McHenry Co's. Leading Theatre r~V FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ' Doable Feature ---- Jackie Cooper -- in -- "THE BIG GUY" Charlie Ruggles < "NIGHTWORK" SUNDAY -- MONDAY -- TUESDAY -- Son. Coal from 2:45 p. m. -- ffe to 6 p.m. -- 30c after; Child. - 10c The Giant Show Is On. the Way! * Paramount presents "GULLIVER'S TRAVELS" A Full-Length Feature Cartoon in TECHNICOLOR! A l s o MARCH OF TIME WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY Joan Bennett • --in. -- "GREEN HELL" -- with -- Drwijrlas Fairbanks, Jr. Robert Walter RELIABLE MAN WANTED--To call on farmers in McHenry county. No experience or capital required. Make up to $10 a day. Steady work, good pay. Write McNess Co., Dept. F, Freeport, 111. *42 WANTED TO RENT--Modern, 5 or 6 room house, located in or neat1 McHenry, about April 1. Telephone McHenry 170. *42 WANTED--Single person wants garage or 2-room unfurnished cottage for season. Low rate. W. S. Peterson, 7760 Eastlake Terrace, Chicago. *42 SITUATION WANTED--Housework, steady or part time. Experienced. Inquire at The Plaindealer Office. *42 FOR RENT FOR RENT--Seven-room house at Johnsburg. Phone McHenry 632-M-2. •42 LOST LOST--Bunch of keys on chain. Reward. Notify Ford garage. Phone No. 1. 42 NEW £MPIR! McHENRY, ILLINOIS San. Mat. 3 p. m. Continooos FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Wayne Morris - Priscilla Lane "BROTHER RAT AND THE BABY" Also -- Comedies SUNDAY AND MONDAY . «March 10 - 11 Frank Morgan - Virginia Weidler "HENRY GOES ARIZONA" A N D Johnny Downs - Constance Moore Mary Carlisle "HAWAIIAN NIGHTS' Also -- News and Cartoon Matinee Every Sunday, 2:45 Continuous. Prices change at 5:30. TUESDAY -- One Day Only Admission -- 10c - 25c Lew A) res - Slim Summerville "ALL QUIET ON THE WESTERN FRONT" Also Selected Short Subjects WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY "GREEN HELL" Dorr one-M3. Frank "Paly, Andrew. Dorr two--R.'j. Stewart and Marcellus Senne. Dorr three--A. J. Kuppe, Mengs,. Gordon Green. Dorr four--Grant Nolan:- * Dorr five--Walter Koad. Greenwood--Fred Wendt. Hebron--D. M. Brooks. Richmond--Slay Bartholf. Burton--J. G. Wagner. McHenry one--Earl Whiting. McHenry two--H. J. Kreutier, Edgar Landgren, J. Downfc. McHenry three -- Arthur Krause, Harold F. Miller. McHenry four--Japeph Frett. Nunda one--J. J. Barnings, Eugene Hughes. Nunda two--Wm. Rosenthal, F. A. Mason. Nunda three--Henry U Cowlin. Algonquin one--Edwin A. Benson. Algonquin two--Martin Bohl. Algonquin three--C. Russell Allen. Algonquin four--E. L. Cernocky, Andrew Dianis. Algonquin five--Fred Hitorgan. Democrats . Riley--W. A. Giblin. Marengo one--T. P. Higgins. Marengo two--Walter Dunker. Dunham--G. A. Whipple and Fred J. Wyse. Chemung one--D. K. Palmer, Charles F. Hayes. ~ - Chemung two--Thoa^, Nolan, C. J. O'Holleran. "TTT"'"*' Chemung three-- v Alden--Garret Fitzgerald. Hartland--John Hallisy. * Seneca--Wm. Hahn. Coral--Wm. Clasen. Grafton one--Wm. Hubbe, Herman C. Kunke. * Grafton two-- Dorr one--Thor Emricson. Dorr two--Oemir Olson, Dorr three--J. J. Hayea, -Frank Sheahy. Dorr four--Arthur Freund, Stewart T. Oliver. Dorr five--Melvin Johnson. Greenwood--Joseph Bonner. Hebron--E. J. Emmerson. Richmond--Geo. D. Webar, Greeley. Burton--Math Nimsgren and mund Keefe. McHenry one--Sibrc Whiting. McHenry two--Lestar Bacon, Robert C. Martin. McHenry three--Edward J. Thennes, H. J. Miler and Claued McDermont. McHenry four--John M. Pitren. Nunda one--Einar Johnson, Robert Knox. •Nunda two--Ambrose Galvln. Nunda threes Eugene O'Brien Algonquin one--J. A. Dvorak and Jesse Armstrong. . . Algonquin two--Richard W^lsh; Algonquin three--Stanley Pltchen, Ervin Kvidera. Algonquin four--A. W. Lansing, J. J. Hauck. Algonqjiin flvo Elmor Btling. -- LOST--Both 1940 license plates, No. 827959, either on old Crystal Lake road or in West McHenry. Reward. Inquire at The Plaindealer. *42 MISCELLANEOUS FARMERS--We pay $3.00 to $16 per head for old or down horses and cows. Must be alive. Prompt day and night service, Sundays and holidays included. No help needed to lead. Your pets will be shot on place if desired. Phone Wheeling 102, reverse charges. 44-10 Canadian Wild Horses Head for 'Last Roundup* War has been declared on the wild horses that infest the cattle ranges of British Columbia's Cariboo district along the course of the Fraser river. Because the wild steeds graze oiv valuable pasture land the government and ranchers have sworn to slaughter them to the last stallion. Again, after, 15 years of desultory skirmishing with the wild horse, In dian and white man •alike are oifing their repeater rifles in preparation for the big drive. "Kill the wild horse!" is the slogan- of the posters tacked to hitching posts and pasted to gas pumps from Lone Butte to Red Rock. In the past 12 years more than 10,000 wild steeds have been slain in the vast ranges of the Cariboo, chiefly in the land west of the Fraser river. The last great roundup was hi 1925. The animals were driven into corrals and offered for sale at $5 a head. The leftovers--thousands of them--were shot. At the same time the government posted a bounty of $2.50 for a pair of horse ears and a scalp. The bounty system Has lapsed, and the only inducement to professional horse hunters has been the cent-a-pound offered by dog-food fanners and fox ranchers. Under the existing ' method of grazing control any rancher who wants to dispose of horses at large contrary to the range law can get a permit from the forestry department of the provincial government for $2 .50 that entitles him to assemble all the horses he finds on a certain section of the range. The owner of a horse carrying a registered brand may, on payment of $2.50 to the rounder, redeem his horse. If the owner fails to buy back his animal, it will share the same fate as the rest. But now the roundup is to go forward relentlessly. Where droves of horses cannot be corralled, they will be shot by the rounder as he fires from his saddle, whether the target's brand is visible or not. Thursday, March 7, LOCAL COMMITTEE TAKES ROAD PROBLEM TO STATE OFFICIALS In an effort to push improvements On all roads in this community, a delegation consisting of State Representative Thomas A. Bolger, Roy J. Stewart, Chairman of the McHenry County Board of Supervisors, Alderman Jos. M. Regner and Supervisor Math N. Schmitt traveled to Springfield a few days ago to present their problems to Ernst Lieberman, Chief Highway Engineer. Resolutions petitioning improvements met with favor. Following is a letter received by the Johnsburg MUSIC LOVERS EAGERLY A.WAIT PERFORMANCE OF VV A UKEGAN ORCHESTRA Music lovers are eagerly looking forward to the appearance of the Waukegan Philharmonic orchestra which is to present a spring concert in the high school auditorium Tuesday evening, April 2. Sandor Kish, conductor of the orchestra which is but four years old, has realized a dream come true in this organization of talented musicians, and every performance is another tribute to the persistent study of a little Hungarian boy who at twelve years of age took his first music lesson in Community Club.' Similar letters were Budapest, Hungary. CLIFF'S RADIO SERVICE -- Expert repairs on all makes, work guaranteed. Repairs on all electrical appliances. Clifford Wilson, Prop., Tel. 18, Riverside Drive, MeHenry. 34-tf DEAD ANIMALS--We want them -- Pay Cash! $1.00 per head for cows and horses, if called at once! 1 Also pick up hogs and pigs. Day and night service, Sundays and holidays. No help needed in loading with our sanitary loading devices. Post mortems will be given if requested. Phone Wheeling 102, reverse charges. 44-10 GARBAGE COLLECTING--Let as dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 365 or 631-M-l. 2-tf 'Boot Stew* and Lizard Keep Lost Hunter Alive Woodsmanship, cool-headedness andTneals of boiled grass, boot stew and a lizard, are the reasons why Ross Snyder, 69-year-old California plumbing inspector, is alive today. Snyder was lost for seven days in the Converse Basin area of California's General Grant National park while on a hunting trip. Believed dead by many, Snyder had wisely waited for rescuers to find him instead of wandering aimlessly through the rugged Kings river country. A searching party led by Marion McClurg, expert woodsman, found Snyder in his makeshift camp beside a board flume, part of which he had used for firewood. Suffering no apparent ill effects from his week-long isolation, Snyder told his rescuers how he built his fires and boiled grass, acorns and one lizard in a tin can for food. "That lizard wasn't so bad, and 1 would have eaten more if I could have caught 'em. I made a wow of a stew out of my boot straps and my binocular case," he said. received Iby the City Counc^ of McHenry and Lions Club. March 1, 1940. Mr. Wm. J. Meyers, President Johnsburg Community Club < Johnsburg, Illinois. Dear Sir: This will acknowledge receipt of a copy of the petition adopted by the Johnsburg Community Club at the meeting held on February 5, 1940, in regard to the improvement of the road extending around the south side of Pistakee Bay between Route 31 and 59. Inasmuch as this road is not located on the State bond issue or Federal aid system of highways, the only legal manner in which this Department could improve it would be as a part of a Federal Aid secondary road program. The Public Roads Administration of the Federal Works Agency has recently informed Us that it will be necessary for the Department to lay out a system of Federal aid secondary roads and to confine our future secondary programs to improvements of that system. This system is to be established on factual data secured by the State Wide Highway Planning Survey in collaboration with the Public (Rioads Administration. We are giving this matter our attenton at the present time and expect to submit a recommended system to thte Federal Bureau within the near future. I am not alble to inform you at this time as to whether or not the road around the south side of Pistakee Bay will be included in our recommendations for the system, nor have I any assurance that the iSiblic Roads Administration will approve this project even though recommended by this Department. However, if the road becomes a part of the secondary system as finally approved, we can then consider it for improvement in preparing future secondary road programs. •' Very truly yous, H. E. SURMAN, Engineer of Design. The Johnsburg Community Club will hold their next meeting on Tuesday, April 2. Not only road problems, but any problem of civic betterment can be brought to light at this meeting. The club aims toward the creation and continuation of good will in the community. % MARRIAGE LICENSES George Haas, 36, of McHenry, and Jean Nowak, 26, of Chicago. Sandor Kish was born onf the site of the present parliament buildings along the Danube in Budapest. For as far back as he can remember, he loved music. In school, he worked iiard at such instructions as were given. Having established a fine , friendship with one of his boy friends who was the possessor of a trumpet, he persuaded this friend to let him blow on the horn. Seeing his great love for music, his mother permitted him to take lessons - on the trumpet. From his teacher he learned to speak German. ^ One day/ Sandor's father brought home a two dollar violin and handed it to the Iboy saying that all Hungarians are part gypsy and that he should play the fiddle. In his early twenties, Kish left Budapest and went to become a mem. ber of the orchestra of the City Opera at Breslau, Germany. He was here only two years, but played more operas that one would ordinarily play in ten years. From Germany, the young violinist went to Russia, then Switzerland and England, and thirty-four years ago, he sailed to America. He was lonely and terribly disappointed with the strange cities and hurrying people. He dreamed of Europen opera houses, symphonies, the contented peasants and fine horses mounted by proud sodiers. When the war in Europe in 1914 LAST RITES HELD FOR ' FEED JUSTIN BOWERS, WAUKEGAN, SATURDAY FIRST MORTGAGE LOANS --On homes and farjns, in and' around McHenry, 111. Low interest rates. See Kent A Co. Inc., McHenry, 111., Phone 8. 28-tf Photography Without Camera to interesting phase of photography is the making of pictures with* out the use of films or camera, a process simple for anyone who prints his own pictures. In making prints of leaves and insect wings, for example, results are in some respects superior to ordinary camera shots, bringing out detail. Wings or leaves must be perfect specimens, and pressed and dried, otherwise the ribs and veins will prevent perfect contact in printing and pictures will be "fuzzy," and therefore undesirable. When the specimen is placed right side up in the printing frame and a print is made in the usual way, the result will be a negative, or white-on-black print, writes John Willard Baechle in Nature Magazine. Scores of friends, relatives, schoolmates and fans mourned last week *s rites were held Saturday, March 2, at Immaculate Conception church, WaUkegan, following the tragic death of Fred Justin Bowers, star tackle with the University of Oklahoma "Sooflers." ' Bowers, who was born at Spring Grove, 111., on June 17, 1917, was killed on Wednesday of last week when an automobile in which he was returning from an Oklahoma University alumni banquet at Muskogee, Okla., crashed into a concrete culvert near Boley, Okla. Jack Steele, driver of the car and also a Sooner football player, escaped with bruises and nervous shock. Bowers' neck was broken and he died an instant death. At the tifne the accident he was asleep in the back seat of the car. At Norman, Okla., a tearful crowd of 400 students, professors and Norman friends filled the little Mater Admirabilis chapel in that city la«t Thursday to pay final tribute to the popular 22-year-old junior in the geological engineering school at the university. The church was decorated with the red and white school colors. Football teammates, their heads bowed with grief and some of them weeping openly, and members of Beta Kappa Phi, Bowers' fraternity, attended the services in a group. Catholic mass was held for Bowersat a separate service previously in ^te morning. Following these, two services, the body was sent to Wuakegan, his home town for the past twenty years. After graduating from the Immaculate Conception grade school in Waukegan, he became well known in that city for his athletic prowess at Waukegan Township High school, where he received three letters in football. Justin was in his third year at the University of Oklahoma, having continued his athletic activities there, partciularly in football. He starred in many of the Oklahoma team's blotted out the great opera houses and ! m®j°r contests and helped his team drowned out the music in his native swnmn Nnrth western'a WilHonfa >m > 1.50-Year-Old Fire A fire 150 years old this year has been constantly burning on the hearth of Bill Morris near Saluda, N. C. Mr. Morris, who is 79 years old, has kept it burning most of his life. Before that it was cared for by his mother and prior to that his father's family kept it going. It has become a tradition and the old settler has refused offers to have it removed or cared for by others. First Petroleum Still An 85-year-old petroleum still, rusting in a corner of an industrial plant at Salina, Pa., typifies the humble beginning of Pennsylvania's $1,000,000,000 oil industry. Purportedly the first oil "refinery" in the Western hemisphere, the contrivance was built about 1854 by Samuel M. Kier. Henry COMING EVENTS March 7 Ladies' Aid--Methodist Church Hall. C. D. of A.--Business Meeting. Evening Bridge--Mrs. Edward Nickels. March 8 Mothers*' Chtb--Legion Hall." March 9 Bi-Weekly Five Hundred--Will Bishop Home. March 11 O. E. S.--Regular Meeting. March 12 Legion of Mothers--Mass Meeting in High School Auditorium March 14 Election of jotricers. March 19 Jge--Mrs. George Still W. C. O. F.-j --~--Oldest Efop of Water -- Scientists will be interested in the discovery of a single drop of water which, it is declared, must have remained encased in a solid lump of transparent amber for millions of years. The age of this particular piece of hardened gum of the conifur tree, taken from the famous amber beds in Hungary, has been placed by archeologists at 60,000,000 years. Provided that estimate even approaches accuracy, it makes that tiny drop of water the oldest drop on earth. The lump of amber, in which the prehistoric drop of water can be seen rolling around in its tiny case, has been mounted for preservation as a curiosity. Mountain Sickness Men and animals working at 10,- 000 feet altitudes are subject to a malady called mountain sickness. land, any dreams Qf his going back were destroyed. For ten years he was first violinist with the Cincinnati Symphony. During the next busy years, he played under the conductors Carl Busch, Damrosch and Stakowski. He was first violinist in the Chicftgo theatre for sometime also. • Tired of moving around, he consented to move to Waukegan sixteen years ago to teach violin. Through the course of these years he has organized a few groups of musicians, the orchestras gradually petering out of existence. As a reward for his many years of honest hard work, his present Philharmonic orchestra is the realization Of a lifelong dream. The concert which they are to give you next month will be born of sincere effort and persistent determination. They will give their best. McHenry is deeply grateful to be able to sponsor this organization and brilliant and distinguished leader. Kados to the Mothers' club which has mfU^e the arrangements. *Permanent Finish* $ A variety of cellulose derivatives and synthetic resins is being used! to give a so-called "permanent finish" to shirt collars. Most of these are covered by patents. swamp Northwestern's Wildcats in game at Evanston last October. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Margaret Bowers; three brothers, Le- Roy, Avin and Stephen; two sisters, Carol Ann and Ellyn, all of Waukegan; and two uncles of McHenry, Nick P. and Fred Justen. The Bowers family received hundreds of telegrams and letters of sympathy. One came from the Gpv- _ ernor of Oklahoma and House of Rep- * resentatives: word" also came from all states of the south and west. The active pallbearers Saturday were Alvin Justen, Edward Callahan and Jerome Huff of Waukegan, Walter Brefieid of Libertyville and Richard Justen and Wilfred Justen of McHenry. These boys were cousins of the late Justin Bowers. I The honorary pallbearers were Tony Stidham, Doc Erskine and William Allais, University of Glklahoma coaches; Mo Moore, coach at the University of Northwestern, and Brown Bnd Wilson of Waukegan Township High school. Dr. Roberts' Stock Wattles Drug Store. Remedies at 42-4 Panama Canal Toll# Hie average commerciu going through the Panama canal pays $4,000 in tolls. FIGHT SCOUR LOSSES GOLD BOND CHEXIT ' Stop scour losses on calves, pigs, lambs, cattle and milch oows. Also mix CHEXIT in feed as bowel and digestive tonic. At your dealers -- Brown's Drug Store, Ringwood; Toppen's Drug Store, Richmond; Bolger's Drug Store, McHenry; Royal Blue Store, Spring Grd¥e; Wattles Drug Store, West McHenry. our Contract ing. F L A S H ! Our office has just received word that we can finance your new car at 5%. Can also show you big savings or* insurance. Speedy service on finance deals. 'l£AJHf. WAiLSR,.fkea# 41. " March 23 Bake Sale--Home of Mrs. F. C. Feltz -- Sponsored by Zion Lutheran Ladies. '• March 24 Sunday Evening Club--Ford Jackson » home. March 27 Fathers' Night--Sponsored by P.-T. A. March 28 East River Road Pinochle ••Mrs. 1 Sutton. April 2 Waukegan Philharmonic Orchestra -- Spring Concert--High School Auditorium. Public Card Party--Riverview Ca Birthday Party -- Fox JRiver Valley Camp. V^' April S P.-T. Al..----RReeggtufllat r Meeting. K. of C. Dance--(Bridge Ball Room. Order your Bobber Stamps at The Plaindealer,* i* Drouth Resistant Flower One of the best drouth resistant annual flowers is the sanvitalia; popularly known as the creeping zinnia. It bears miniature flowers of golden yellow with dark purple centers, some single and double, on plants' which spread over the ground instead of growing upright. The season of bloom is exceptionally long, as flowering begins in June and continues until frost kills the plants. They must be planted in full sun, and do not need rich Soil. The flowers are excellent subjects for arranging in bowls, and they are attractive in the border. Chemists Changed Colors During the early years of the 1914- 18 World war, it was necessary to start styles for black and white .in wbmen's clothing because of the inability of the American chemical industry to produce good colors, it is pointed out in Industrial and Engineering Chemistry. American chemists, however, soon learned to make good dyes. Geno Podtry Remedies at Wattles Drag Store. ? 42-4 Ir TEOOLK is art safety feature of proven worth net present in a LaSaDe, owners have failed to mention it. But they do mentbon--' frequently--that one of the pleasures of LaSalle ownership is a priceless sense of security. Put your money--and your• self--in the safest place. Get a LaSalle! • LaSaOe pricm begin at »124* Jttimnd « Detroit. Trmtparmian bated on rail rate», ifctfe local tax* (if any), optional equipment and «oom| .Pricmutbjecttochangeujithoutnatitm i SMhe Hti ymr Mgkd . 1940 R. I. OVERTON MOTOR SALES Phone 6 . y -- McHenry, Pi

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