•0 niiiim • 1.111114 j|jiiiifiiiuTij!i i |i "i SOLON MILLS m M t • Mr. and Mrs. George Meek of Chi- |';'K;'C«go were callers In the A. £. Merrell ^^f^ihome Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schaffer were din. ^^.^iter guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Adams jV -^Sunday. ft - Mr. and Mrs. Art Fenery spent the 4,; weekend in the Henry Aubert home. * V" v Russell Turner and son of Chicago f&f^spent Thursday in the Lee Turner home. Otto Urase ofJLftke Geneva was a £r„ Sunday caller in the Bill Schulta • ;j'/"'h0,nf. jtn- .. Charles Westlake and John Pester I*,.' • 'attended the Milwaukee fair Monday. Mr. and Mrs. John Pester spent -, Sunday with Mr. and Mr.s Sid Meeker *%*" • 'of Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Barth and H^;^Mr. and Mrs. Brady of Milwaukee ' • .were Sunday guests of the latter'* > ^sister, Mrs. Hulda Buchanan. tl 7* Alice Carnes and Melvin Anderson •\<4- of Chicago were married at her moth- , er's home on the beautiful lawn. Rev. .'Gable officiated. There were fifty Quests present. The young couple will intake their home in Chicago. Mrs. Charles Westlake and Mrs. *%• " Sollivan were callers at Walworth and l^^iVDeiavan Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Reading and ' 'Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jones of Brooklyn, ^ Mich., were visiting at the E. E Cropley home Friday and Saturday. • Mrs. E. E. Cropley and Mrs. Prank 1 - Kilpa trick were Woodstock and Mc- "Henry shoppers Thursday. Mrs. Carlson is caring for Mrs. Antcliff who is on the sick list. Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Cropley and Pp--^Mrs. J. Jackson attended the Orlando, ' '-Fla., picnic which was held at the Harry Orvis resort at Camp Lake on •Tuesday, August 12. There were about sixty people in attendance. Mrs. G. Westlake and son, Charles, "went to Woodstock Tuesday to visit |at the home of Mrs. Westlaka's grand, son, Charles Buchanan. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Gardner, ac- ' * 1 companied by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence I Johnson of Hebron, left Saturday morning to attend the-wedding of $ . their son, Robert, to Miss Jeanette Hopper at her home in Hastings, Neb. Mr. and Mrs. W. .F. Reading and Mr. and Mrs. Ray Jones attended the *. . ^funeral, of their aunt, Mrs. Ajngie , Beall, during their visit here. Wm. Watts and Sallv H*mra of Fox %/j.Lake were married at Waukegan last •a • -^Saturday. They are staying with his V parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Watts. *' During the.storm of last Monday 'the big dairy bam on the old Richard Aylward farm, north of Solon, now <oecupied by Matt Sheid, was destroy- J*** :4 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Osborn, ac- enpanied by their cousin, Eleanor rage, drove to Elgin Saturday eve are they stayed overni|fht with the jformer's sistter and husb*»d, Mr. ana iMrs. Ernest Begalka. They all atg ; 'Jtended a picnic at Buffalo Grove Sun- Jday. J Ray Kilpatrick, who is employed in JjChicago, accompanied by Ruth Cor-. ^'Irigan, was calling at the E. E. Cropley . {home Sunday. •' j Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gardner, after Impending a week down at Young t campr at Lake Bloom ington, (spent Sunday it West Point and ght Mrs. Gardner's sister, Virjginia Guthre, home with them. Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Turner were ^JU*Uers in Crystal Lake Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Roland Jackson and Miss Floy Haldeman were callers in e R. R. Turner home Tuesday even? Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Benson of onder Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Cltford Miller of Huntiey and Mrs. Ben Benson and. daughter,, Ruth, and Mrs. ~ rold Osborn spent Thursday at Madison and at Mount Cave. Mr. and Mrs. George Bell and son, nald, of Bhrington were callers in ie home of the former's parents* Mr. Mrs. Artiiuf" Bell. Mr. and Mrs. Joe London, Sr., of arengo were visiting in the home of oe London, Jr., Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Morris Hogan were •ISunday visitors in the latter's mother's home, Mrs. Freund of Johnsburg. j. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thomas and family of Woodstock and Marshall Booth of Chicago were Sunday evening callers at the home of Walter Watts. «... 105.00 50.00 26.00 48.00 M.00 SO.OO S0.00 so.oo 30.00 SO.OO 50.00 ground McGee's Men's ^ear, i SPRING GROVE Mr. and Mrs. John Jung and fam- . fly moved on Wednesday to the home jtof her uncle, Joseph Schmitt. The - j- ~ Martin Stoffel family of Lake Geneva K/^-iiave moved into the house vacated by \*| Jthe John Jungs. About twenty-five relatives and ; friends spent a pleasant afternoon at the home of Mrs. Albert Britz on >' ^' Hiursday at a shower held in honor * rf Mrs. Paul Lewis of Fox Lake. The ^ ' Haying of five hundred furnished the ' *" entertainment and prize winners were jp,* • Mrs. Lewis. Mrs. Maude Parker, Mrs. s" PVilliam Britz, Mrs. Joseph Britz, Mrs. B Arthur Klein and Mrs. Ray May while ? T*E sonsolation went to Mrs. Ed Hoffman. ^ J? v Following cards the honored guest ' • ras presented with many beautiful ^ ind useful gifts. The serving of a de- ; icious lunch competed the party. Miss Evelyn Sanders of Woodstock , Enjoyed a weeje's vacation with her [i* ^ »rents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sanders. _ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thompson of lockford and Mr. and Mrs. AI :}i Jchme!tzer attended the game beween the Cleveland Indians and the ; • White Sox in Chicago Friday night. * ' i Mr. and Mrs. George Wagner and. ?am'ly visited in the Frank 1 Wagner home on Sunday. , j Miss Lorraine May and a girl friend are vacationing in northern 1 Wisconsin this week; Mr. and Mrs. Albert Britz. Mr. and a*.J Ifrs. Martin May, Mr. and Mrs. Ger- ^ < i'd Klaus. Leo Lay and Miss Dolores < unis enjoyed an excursion oA Lake j kichigan Saturday night. . •> •' Mr. and Mrs. Charles May and chil- I 3 Iren were dinner guests in the home wf her mother, Mrs. J. J. Freund. 1 Sunday guests in the Bertha Bsh v V " lome were Mr. and Mrs. Andy Straub, ie, Kr. aal in. Glen- S*1 of CfctMg» and Mr. and Mrs. Glen Esh of Barrfngton. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Wagner of Chicago visited his mother, Mrs. John Wagner, on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Shotliff entertained at their home on Sunday Mr. and Mrs. O. Lindmak, son, James, of Joliet; Mrs. Laura James, Mr. and Mrs. Vera Farmer, Mr. Harrison of Rockford; Mrs. Leonard Franzen, sons, Lyle and Lloyd of McHenry; Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shotliff, sons, Glen and Melvm, Hebron; Wm. Patterson, Chicago; Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Orvis and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph G. Wagner. Guests jn the home of Mrs. Nick Freund on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Hilger and Mrs. Mike May of Kansas and Mr. and Mrs. George Freund from Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund and children visited his mother, Mrs. M. J. Freund, in McHenry Sunday evening. «ty Oounoil PrmMdiagi Council Room, August 4,1941. The City Council met in regular monthly meeting with Mayor Overton presiding. Aldermen present: Buss, Ferwerda, Freund, Nye, Regner. Absent: Bolger. Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Buss, that the minuses of the last meeting be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Nye, seconded by Freund, that the treasurer's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Freund, seconded by Regner, that the collector's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Buss, seconded by Ferwerda. that the clerk's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Nye, seconded by Regner, that the following bills be paid as approved by the finance row wit tee: Howard Cairns, Police ser service ..$110.00 W. C. Felts, Supt. streets and alleys M. M. Niesen, Waterworks superintendent Earl R. Walsh, Office expense R. I. Overton, Mayor service Gerald J. Carey, Treasurer service John A. Bolger, Alderman service Edw. J. Buss, Alderman service Fred Ferwerda, Alderman service George P. Freund, Alderman service A. E. Nye, Alderman service Jos. M. Regner, Alderman service - Vernon J.'Knox, Attorney service Earl R. Walsh, Clerk service 105.00 McHenry Co. Fanners Co-op., Supplies L. J. McCracken, Supt. pta?> 40.0# Police clothes McHenry Band ....... Special Sewer Account, Sewer 'service .... «... Peter Wirfs, Special poliee service McHenry Plaindealer, Printing, publications Illinois Bell Telephone Co., Tatokone service -- Chatf.es ftietesel, Sign painting Carey Electric Shop, Repairing street lights ..... ........... Alexander Lumber Co., Sewar pipe Grande Cleaners A Dyers, Garment cleaned Metro Flag & Decorating Cau, Flag for city hall ..... J. W. North & Co., Extra copies of audit John J. Vycital, Supplies Mike Freund, Labor, cutting weeds Wm. Tesch, Labor at city Anderson's Service Station, Gas, oil, poliee car Chock's Trucking Go* Hsuliitg crushed gravel ..i.~ N. F. Colby, Police servioa, special Mayme Buss, Clerical salary, commissions 1~... Jack Smith, Police service ...... Publ ic Service. Co., Street lighting ..... 190.98 Public Service Co., flmhs at waterworks ...» 4S.70 Public Service Co., Service at city hail -- --103S Math N. Schmitt, Cenpensa* tion insurance ............-- ^ 46.00 N. N. Freund, Gasoline fordisposal plant 1.97 Fred C. Felts, Supt disposal plant 106.00 Edw. H. Nickels, Sewer supplies McHenry Lumber Co., Lime far disposal plant Public Service Co^A"PWerrand light at plant ... Mathieson Alkali Works, Two chlorine tanks Motion by Buss, seconded by Ferwerda, to authorize the payment of $1,000.00 sewer bond and interest due August 15, 1941. Motion carried. Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Nye, to pass and approve the Tax Levy Ordinance for the current fiscal year, as read. Motion carried. Motion by Freund, seconded by Reg. ner, to pass resolutions as read, designating the West McHenry State Bank as depository of funds of the City Treasurer and City Collector. Motion carried. Motion bv Buss, seconded by Ferwerda, to adioum. Motion carried. - R. I. OVERTON, Mayor. EARL R WALSH, City Clerk. $ SMy 8n From Peak A -mountain workshop for study of the secrets of the sun has been established on the slopes of Fremont pass. 11,513 feet up, in the Colorado Rockies, near Climax, Colo. It is the only one of its kind in the Western hemisphere and its completion is the culmination of six years work. The observatory is expected to give scientists their best inforrantinn «r> disturbances at the sun. \\ 1.60 8.14 400.00 76.00 40.00 36.60 2.46 6.60 5L71 2.86 1.90 4.22 It .60 6.4S 1.00 2.00 70.76 4.00 26.38 74.00 MAKE THE MOST OF YOUR LEFTOVERS! ($e« Recipes Below) ' nrantco TO tempt ,: Leftovers on purpose! Th.ere are so many delicious ways of using .e:tovers, why not call them "planned aheads"? Casseroles, meat loaves, salads, soups and so on w i l l do much to turn the tag ends of daybefore - yesterday's dinner into mealtime "come- •ns." The trick is not to serve the same old hash or stew in the same old way, but to give leftover foods fresh faces with fresh recipes. Like many thrifty homemakers, you, too, can discover the economy, both in time and money, of buying and preparing a large roast, or more than enough vegetables with leftovers in mind You can't always make mealtime foods come out even. So, let's be practical about the situation. If you serve roast chicken or baked salmon for Sunday dinner, plan to do all sorts of things with the leftover portions for weekday meals. Here's a roll call of leftovers and how to fix them--proof that "dayafter" foods can be not only good, hut delicious! #>-^4 jfcuuner Meat Pit. • (Serves 6) f finds beef neck or or IH cups leftover rnaat, cubed 3 tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons lard 1 small onion, sliced . I green pepper, chopped 1 cup carrot slices Sliced mushrooms ^ Salt and pepper Have the beef neck or dunk cut toto 1-inch cubes. Dredge in flour, seasooed with salt and pepper. Brown meat in hot lard with onion and green pepper. Cover with hot tatsr sad 1st simmer 1 hour, with kettle tightly covered. Transfer to baking dish, add carrots and mushrooms. Thicken msst liquid, pour over meat and vegetables. Cook in moderate oven (390 degrees) about 40 mirtutes, then pips a border of mlitffiltf potatoes around the edge, and bake till potatoes brown. Tig WEEyg MBENP *Salmon a la Bing Buttered Peas Head Lettuce Salad French Dressing Apple Tarts, Cream Beverage * Recipe given ^ - !--* "Salmon a la Blag. 4 tablespoons butter iV. 4.18 6.16 68.00 ... 16.06 te piMiento ^ ^ % small green pepper ~T\*~ t cups flaked salmon t egg yolks lib cup mayonnaise $slt and pepper to fesls Melt the butter, blend in flour, add the milk and cook slowly, stirring constantly until thickened and smooth. Add green pepper and pimiento cut into strips. Add flaked salmon. When hot, add egg yolks which have been beaten, cook a moment, then fold in mayonnaise and seasonings. Heat again and blend thoroughly. Serve this mixture in the center of a rice ring which has been turned out on a serving platter or chop plate. Garnish with the buttered peas and sprinkle with paprika. Man-Faced Fish Fishermen cut off the heads of moonfish before bringing them to' port, because their htatoanlik* fsces make them hard to sell. ' wnti SAYS: ft brown sugar hardens 90 that it cannot be measured accurately, spread it in a shallow pan and heat it slowly in a 275- degree F. oven. If too high a heat is used, the sugar caramelizes. Stir and mash it with a fork. Only enough sugar to be used at one time should be softened, as it hardens sgsin as soon ss it is cold. To sour (me cup of milk, put one tablespoon of vinegar in a cup and fill the cup with sweet milk. Stir well. To clean silverware, mix one tablespoon soda and one tablespoon salt with one quart of water. Boil the silverware in this in an aluminum kettle until the tarnish is removed. Rinse and rub dry. Give the baby his cod liver oil in the bath tub to avoid the brown stains on blankets and clothes that are so hard to remove. trails Car Servie# In six midwsstern cities is a socalled "cradle car" service in which nurses drive up to the home of s newly born baby and present, free, to the mother a basket containing 10 items such as baby food, diapers, soap, powder and evaporated milk as good- will gesture by the various German capitalists aune showing interest in producing cellulose from cornstalks. Bice Ring. Cook 1 cup of rice A 8 cups of boiling salted water. Cook rice until tender and fluffy. Remove from boiling water and rinse well with cold water. Drain thoroughly. 1 cup parsley, chopped fine 1 onion % green pepper 1 cup whole milk '2 tablespoons any well-flavored cheese » ,4 eggs f Salt and pepper to ts|Ms Beat egg yolks until thick, then add the milk, rice and other ingredients. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites last. Pour i n t o a w e l l - greased ring m o l d . S e t i n a pan of hot water and bake from 30 to 40 minutes in a 360 to 375-degree F. oven. Or you may want to add leftover meat or fish to your rice foundation. Try one or all--you'll find the combinations tempting. >-- Bemantle Msst Pis. (Serves 6) lfc#ery nutritious kind of pie is fMt one, with crescent biscuits riding a sss of meat, vegetablss and gravy. And it's an excellent way to serve left-over meat. Almost any of the thrift cuts' can be used. You'll need: 4 tablespoons fat i tablespoons chopped onion 5 tablespoons green pepper % cup dicsd celery ^ ^ 1c u p d i c e d c o o k e d m s s tt f e f f . 4 tablespoons flour 1 cups milk or mest stock % cup diced cooked carrots Slowly brown onions, pepper, celery and cooked meat in cooking fat, stirring often. Add flour slowly, stirring constantly until brown. Add remaining ingredients. Heat thoroughly. Pour into well-greased baking dish and cover with baking podftgsr biscuits which havs been cut in crescent shapes. Baks in s hot oven (460 decrees F.) ab6kt IS minutes, or until triscuits ar| ^rgwg^ Why not try "this Twee? potato leftover which is sure to be a hit with either fish, fowl or meat: Mash the potatoes and shape into Mi-inch cakes. Sprinkle with flour. and brown quickly in hot 1st. Then servo. Sure, it's a big problem to figure ways of using assorted flakes and bits of yesterday's meal. But, don't eye them coldly--show them the heat again. Your family will love you for it! •am Sesfle. 2 cups scalded milk 3 tablespoons butter or other Itt 3 tablespoons flour ^ - % cup bread crumbs* % teaspodn salt v Buttered bread crumbs 2 cups ground cooked ham :b : 3 eggs' Grated cheese Make a cream sauce of milk, fat, flour and salt. Add bread crumbs and cook 3 minutes. Add ham and egg yolks and carefully fold in whites beaten until stiff. Turn into well-greased baking paa or casse role, spread top with buttered crumbs and sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake about 30 minutes in moderate oven (350 degrees F.). Serve at. once. Meals .that follow holiday feasts can be made beguiling by clever use of foods left from the feasts themselves. Salvage leftovers from the relish tray, grind or chop them, moisten with a little salad dressing and out comes a brand new sandwich filler. Spread some between hot toasted rolls or bread slices at snack time. bjr Western Newspaper UntakJ Mile-Long Yam Some cotton yarn is so fine that SO miles of it are needed to make one pound, according to a department of agriculture processing expert. This fine yarn is spun on ordinary machinery and is used in making typewriter ribbons, airplane fabric, and even fine dress goods. Busy Again in Panama Zone Great Shovels Claw Way few- New Defense Channel and Bomb-Proof Locks. WASHINGTON. -- Earth is flyfrig in the Panama Canal Zone, where Uncle Sam is spending some $600,- 000,000 to modernize the isthmian waterway. Rock and earth is being blasted sky high. Steam shovels are groaning as great steel jaws gnaw into the sun-baked hills. Dirt trains are hurrying along hastily laid tracks to haul away the debris left behind by dynamite gangs and the greedy bites of shovels wielded by mechanical giants. The early canal construction days have been revived on the isthmus without the horrors of the yellow fever and malaria that, once made gringos shiver in the sun. Remnants of those hardy pioneers are gray-haired men today, dwellers in the mild climates of Florida and California, but they spend their savings to revisit the isthmus and see how the -new hombres get things done. Easier There Now. They say things are a lot easier down there now. Water, for one thing, may be drunk without calling a hearse. Mosquitoes no longer fly on the wings of death. The ear-roaring produced by daily quinine doses no longer is heard. For Uncle Sam has cleaned up the one-time pest-hole and recently some 10,000 new civilian workers have gone down to the zone to help install the $277,000,000 set of bombproof locks for the navy's exclusive use. The new channel and locks will be a half mile away from the existing ones. An additional $323,000,000 is being spent for secret protective works in and around the existing waterway, and tor enlarging other defense, housing, electrical,. water supply and transportation facilities on tht isthmus. All these new activities have caused a sudden increase in civilian population of the little Canal Zone, an area only five miles wide along each bank of the 50 miles of channel from ocean to ocean. Population Jsaps Official figures show the American civilian population has lumped from the normal of 2,700 to about 6,500 since the new construction work got under way a little ovsr a year ago. The poulation of imported alien laborers, recruited from West Indian islands and surrounding republics, jumped from 13,000 to about 20,000. None of these figures include the large numbers of increased army, navy and marine personnel sent to the isthjnus for defense purposes. The increased population has put a heavy additional load on the electrical generating and distribution system, on the water supply system, on the telephone service, the commissary stores, the highway system, and has resulted slso in s general housing shortage. The governrfient is enlarging the water-supply system. Mid installing new generators of^ electric current Erase Blue Laws to Help Army in South Carolina COLUMBIA, S. C.--Long-fought Sunday baseball and motion pictures are finally coming into South Carolina, but only as the result of the national defense program. ball and movies in Richland and Charleston counties only and the governor observed he was signing it "solely in the interest of national defense in abnormal times." Large military and naval establishments are located in the two counties and the Sunday bill is designed to provide wholesome entertainment for military officers anH • ' V' . Men at Utah Air fease Get Taste of Fanning OGDEN, UTAH. --Army authorities consider adding a general course in agriculture to training of new air corps enrollees. For men of the air corps unwittingly joined a "back-to-the-land" movement when the war department acquired 1,600 acres of farmland near here for its new Utah general depot -- ultimate military supply center 'for the entire West. Officers and men of the Seventh Bombardment Group were pressed into service cutting hay and picking strawberries when harvest tim» found the army with a farm on its hands--and no farm hands. IMPOOTAWT NOTICE! Bids and estimates will be received by the directors of Harrison school, district 36, McHenry County, 111., for the erection of a new school. Blue prints and specifications may be received either in person or by mail from Pioso Peterson and Lang Associate Architects, 11 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, 111., on and after Friday, Au gust 22, 1941. Deposit of $2.60 required for plans and specifications to be returned upon receipt of bid and or return of plan. Plans and specifications to be returned with sealed bids to Pioso Peterson and Lang not later than 1:00 p. m. (one) Wednesday, September 3, 1941. The directors reserve the right to rejelct any and all bids. KENNETH CRISTY, :: OTTOHEILMAN, URBAN J. JANISCH, 13 Directors. Sea Level Rises Ttib sea level all over ths world has risen an average of four inches in the past century, scientists st the California Institute of Technology And. ^ Hettermann r,; Service SINCLAIR OA8 AKD OILS Telephone 640-W-2 «* 382 -- Johnsbnrg--. Blacksmithing, Horseshoeing, Ornamental Iron Work and Wood Work. Aeetylene gelding and Chitting Lawn Mower Sharpening and Grinding of all kinds! Woman and U. S. Hunt for Seedless Apple Secret HUNTINGTON PARK, CALIF -- Mrs. Libbie Wilcox and the department of agriculture have formed an unofficial partnership in the hope of making "coreless and seedless" apples as common a table delicacy as the navel orange. Mrs. Wilcox's part of the bargain is to go on nurturing a lone tree in her backyard that bears the unusual fruit and to send samples to the government's laboratory. mm .• •'. Ratttesaaks's VeaeM' The full contents of the rattlesnake's venom gland is worth 20 cents at* current commercial prices. s New Kind of Cigarette A new top-priced cigarette having ginseng mixed with the tobacco will soon be on the market. In the Orient ginseng root is highly rated as a medicine, particularly |or exhaustion of body and mind. Wax Spots From Rtrgf Wax spots may be removed from s rug by scraping as much as possible off with a spoon, then putting a sheet of white blotting paper over the spot and pressing with a hot iron. Dancing Every Saturday Night ** Throughout the Season PINK HARRISOrS AT PISTAKEE BAY yt Fried Chicken--60c Assorted Sandwiches Perfect MlTed Drinks . Sunday Dinners a Specialty MUSIC BT BARBARA HORICK'S ORCHESTRA Check Up For Vacation ! and Travel Trouble Free Avoid annoying breakdowns on the road. Let our expert service men give your car a complete overhauling before ysu start, to insure safer, smoother driving. We have one of the best equipped garages in dinois. Drive in today. CENTRAL GARAGE RXDJ. SMITH, Froft . .. H0J Towing ' • Jahaalmii Defense Bond QUIZ 9* A. Can my children buy Defense Savings Stampsf Yes. Hundreds of thousands of American children --are buying Stamps regularly as their share in the national savings program. Why should children be encouraged to buy Savings Stamps! . . Because by buying Stamps they write their names on a Roll of Honor of Americans who are doing their part to show the dictators that united An.er- • Ida will never fliRfih to preserve hier sacred liberty. ATfer my cfilld has collected enough Stamps to exchange for a Bond, can the Bond be registered in the child's namef Yes. A minor may own a Defense Savings Bond. Many parents are registering Bonds in their children's nanus to prepare for future educational ^•fceeda •" *- -4 . T"54 NOTE -- |To purchase Dt fense Bonds arid Stamps, go to the nearest ppst office or bank, or write for information to the Treasurer of the United States, Washington, D. C. AUCTION SALE! Charles Leonard, Auctioneer Gaulke's Sales Barn . ^ ^ Woodstock, TlH--is Wednesday, Aug. 27 Commencing at 1KX) o'clock, Daylight"Time ^ WtJIHave.... 50 Head Of Dairy Cows Close springers and fresh 7 10 Head of Heifers $ Bulls Plus many cattle, veal calves, hogs, sheep or horses that ;,:: are not consigned at this time. Come to the auction if you want to buy. Ooneign y livestock if you want to sell. All*consigned cattle must be delivered to Sale Barn by Tuesday at 2 o'clock unless they have T. B. chart accompanying them showing teat within six months All consigned stock settled for night of sale. '•* ' TERMS -- 25* down, balance from 1 to 6 moe. thm* on monthly payment basis, plus 7% interest on unpaid bal-. ance. , • _ Woodstock CommissionSalesCo. WM. E. OAULKE, Owner Thorp Finance, Clerking Phone 572 • - '• ,'T * -i -V#4, ' • '-J "ill " v ^ f ' '{j . • ; 5 i i i ; ' "I j v.,- - •; . i • -'^4 * v$ . <? 'V ^ -I £ !"i£ W • * . ^ ' ; CJ,-'-: * srH*.JL.. La.. ..^£4.