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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Oct 1941, p. 4

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in history such paymasters' i organizes en for her •very Thalsrtay *t Me- , XL by Charlss P. ssueNow a* Woman Forces. festered as Mcond^M matter at tibe postoffice at McHenry, 111., the act of May 8, 1879. 12.00 $1.00 One Year Six Months O gerie of). For the an item tna Cosmetics, lins, for the use FOE SALE TOR SALE--Five - room yet r- round house, all improvements; double gar age; located in Woodlawn Park. Write Box "O," care Plaindealer. lS-ff The New Hal AUCONDA r 9ELMA HART^ TOPICS (McClur* WNt7 afcnfee.1 FOR SALE--Lot on Center Street, West McHenry, 66x132 ft. Price , |860. Also lot at intersection of routes 81 and 120, price $2,000. Ed Mischke, Center St., Phone 107-W. 19-tf FOR SALE--Year-'round comfort and economy with fire-proof Johns-ManviDe Type A Home Insulation, installed in vour home. Call L£0 J. STILL. ING, McHenry 18. 20-tf FOR SALE -- Potatoes, New York rurals, $1.25 per 100. Located in Bull Valley, east of Woodstock. K. M. Fisk, Phone Woodstock 1617-W-2. 28-2 FOR SALE--Two-wheel auto trailer with bumper coupling, $25.00. Phone McHenry 253-M. *28 W; $m.C4> PLAYER PIANO aritt Rolls, I will let it go for $39.00. $5 a month to reliable party. Write today as to when piano can be seen in McHenry." Write Mrs. Mary Schultx, Route No. 6, Box 229-A, Waukesha, Wis. *23 FOR SALE--Large White Rabbits, 75c and $1.00; also 1931 Dodge. 4- door, heater, "perfect, $75. Cole's Radio Service, 218 Riverside Drive. Phone 101-R. 28 FOR SALE--Pears, 50c a bushel and •P; Phone McHenry 186. V 23 FOR RENT FOR RENT--Suite of offices -- one waiting room and four private offices; November 1, Wm. Pries, Phone 80. ' > 20-4 FOR RENT--Peter Pan. fine winter home, insulated, gas and electricity, not, funnirtg water. Severingh*»< whose ulance and operating, dental operati «Rn9^^^^HKtion of X-ray "slightly less" than yBMRtw corresponding rank in $he army. The women will wear a khaki uniform, aimiler to those worn by the women's transport corps in England. , The uniforms will not be finished in bultu aa soldiers' garb ia, but will be isf«ft) ifi semfcpfady form, so that they can be further fitted to meet the oeejis of the individual wearer. '1 " " This, the '&esi|piei; explains, is due in part to the wider variation in various portions of feminine anatomy. The designer has also refused to undertake responsibility for designing any undergarments to accompany this uniform. Each recruit will receive ah initial allowance of $15 to meet such needs; thereafter, she will be limited to the specified $3 monthly. ' i'v"< The isSue td eatfiWoman accepted in the Corps, win include one cap, two "officer pattern". jackets, two slightly gored skirts, three shirts, two tits, three pairs of stockings, two pairs of brown shoes, or\e pair of rubbers, ohe greatcoat, one raincoat, brown' leather gloves and a "knick-knack" 'haversack. Pistakee Bay. II 28 ! r WANTED WANTED--A neat girl for general housework. Hours--9 a. m. to 5:30 p. m. Thursday afternoon off. No Sunday work. Salary, $10 per week. Pnone Mrs. Lowe, McHenry 167. *23 WANTED BY NOV. 1--All modern b or 6-room home, close in to McHenry. Responsible party. Three in family. Address Box 214, West McHenry, 111. i 23 WANTED -- Experienced machinist; steady work. Address "BC," care of The Plaindealer. 23 War Children From Great Britain Going American NEW YORK. -- British children who were taken from the war zone and brought to America more than a year ago are losing their English and Scottish accents. The British-American ambulance corps, which sponsors goodwill broadcasts between the children and {heir Oarcnta, reports the youngster! ar£ fcecpjning Americanminded. For" example, the ptijfflge that has taken plate uf Jgck and Jain McDohafS is cited. ~ US i Clydebank shipbuilder who arrived m this country abpt^ a year Sgo. Sincfc then they Ka^e' lived in Chattanooga, Tenn/ Oh* recent brpadqast they startled their father with slow southern drawls* Asked whether he preferred cricket to baseball Jack responded: "Ah don' know bow ,to play cricket anv mo^," - • OtKer instances are cited in which popular American slang has invad-x ed the children's speech "Ev thing's swell" oj "O.K.y their fathers atid mothers. The tra- 'ditional British Reserve, associated with young well as old, seems to have disappeared. DILL KEMP, the head of the exchange department, looked up wearily from his desk. It had been a day of odd jobs--refunds, complaints, exchanges. Everything had been relatively unimportant and yet everything demanded instant attention. Had Bill Kemp been ten years older than he was he would not have taken it so seriously, and consequently would have been nearly as fresh at the end of the day as he was early in the morning. "I want," said a pair <rf violet eyes, at least Bill Kemp would have sworn that it was the eyes that spoke, so timidly and questionably did they regard Mm. "I want to know if I could do something about my lace hat." Bill Kemp sighed. They were such marvelous eyes. And then to be mundanely interested in a hat-- a silly lace hat. "Well," he said gruffly, "what did you contemplate doing about this lace hat? If it's been worn it cannot possibly be accepted for exchange or refund." The latter words issued mechanically from his mouth, and he wondered subconsciously how many hundreds of times he had uttered that same sentence -- sometimes about gloves, sometimes about hair goods, sometimes about shoes. "Oh, it hasn't been worn!" came the soft voice again. The voice sounded as though it were full of tears and he looked at the violet eyes again. Sure enough, there were large tears there. Bill Kemp steeled himself. All women used tears as a means to an end and he determined that he would not be taken in. "Well, go on, go on," he said as testily as he could. ° '•You see I decided last Saturday that I could take it--it's a beau-; tiful hat. Oh, it was really the most beautiful hat in the whole world, I think," she said wistfully. "I looked and looked at it--before, you know-- and on Saturday I paid a deposit on it, a deposit of a dollar. I was to take it this Saturday, but--" the lips that were soft and pink closed firmly. "I--I believe that I shan't need it after all." "And so you want the dollar back again I take it?" he said, tapping his pencil against the desk and relily. -- SWEET POTATO HARVEST TIME WANTED--Attractive girl for 26- game. Inquire at Bernie's Oasis, Lily Lake. Phone McHenry 395. 23 WANTED--Any person looking lor a good time Saturday night to turn to page 3 of this paper and read the Hard Time Barn Dance.Ad. McCullom Lake Community Club. 23 WANTED--Oil burning Heater. Call iverythey Jell Thf LOST DOG LOST--Llewellyn Setter, female; black and white. Reward for return. John Petrie, Route 2, McHenry. Phone •08-M-2. ' 23 MISCELLANEOUS BEAD OR ALIVE ANIMALS £|k> fLOO to $15.00 No help needed fo-r floxad*ing,! Prompt and Sanitary Service Day and Night, Sundays and Holidays Fhowe Wheeling 102--Reverse Charges Flying Lessons Are Made Sunpier by Stovepipes need for thousands of airplane pilots can be met pa^ly bousing stacks of stovei#ptaySMO|dE£ to Comdr. Eugene 1 Mffnap Jr., glider enthusiast. He has rigged up cheap versions ™ i of a win4 tura^cl>an9 is giving them _ J away. Arglider^ia jwchored in the windstr@un lino, according to McDonald, anttfcfntiljtf pilot can learn the fundamentals by "flying" a few feet above ^/fseuad, His "wind ulimerMs about 12 feet high. But instead of being hollow, it is packyd with lengths <of stovepipe through wjpi*K*MTlvinA is driven. "The windmaklril a£e inexpensive old automobiles. The chassis is stripped and a 4agge propeller is mounted on a,Pedestal in the rear. The blades stilt driven from the drive shaft. CLIFF' S RADIO SERVICE--107 Riv. arside Drive, Phone 436. Repairs on all radios and electrical home appl: ances. All work guaranteed. CLIFFORD WILSON, Prop. 9-tf GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us dispose of your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable nates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J Smith. Phone 365 or 631-M-l. 11-tf E HAUL--Black dirt, sand, gravel i ^hogs Also do light hauling. Merv n Staines, West McHenry, 111. Plume 638-M-2. 22-2 COLE'S RADIO SERVICE -- Expert guaranteed work; dealer in Philco, Emmerson, R. C. A., Sentinal and Ad miral 218 Riverside Drive. 23 is the largest at the republics. Si A misogamist is a hater of mar* Clergymen and sheriffs in Eng. -i are not eligible for election to house of parliament. New Hampshire Seeks Fisifng Industry Revival DURHA|/Ir*"N. CjtThough it has the shortest feoal line of any coastal state, New Hampshire once had a $1,000,000 saltwater fishing industry. The industry virtually is nonexistent now, but two University of New Hampshire professors--C. Floyd Jackson, and Herbert Warfel--believe the industry can be re-established. 1 ' 1 Preliminary surveys, they say, indicate ^that modernisation of fishing and mSfc^Ertg ifcetiiods, control of shore pilliaidn dbd%^clamation of waste fish would make the state's coastal city of Portsmouth one of the nationff l^iljiifii In ij centers. Vanish Program WASniTTCTON. ~Ybe dream of every small boy--a bicycle decked with aii kinds oS gleaming gadgets --is * tea"-#>"der The <^fe|o$ IjMlaction Management discfo&d 12 leading bicycle manufacturers had agreed to cut the weight of bicycles and eliminate unneeded metal decorations in jflorder to -save vital materials for defense "production. Frisby on Wi and auke- Mr. and Mrs. Robert slaughter, Lenore, called 0tn relatives Sunday. - * Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rauen of -Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Madden of Kenosha, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Waller of Antioch and Dorothy Rauen and r-les Hall of Evanston were Sunvisitors in the Wm. Justen home. Mrs. Zion Baker is spending a few visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joseph in Iowa City, Iowa. (larding it cooDy "$h m fiPi 'M said softly. Of erse tney wouldn't give b< m ftrtment and the clerk sax el that I had agreed to take it qid I~wmild bave to finish paying for it. l--I have the money, but--" "Will you sit dqwn?" said Bill Kemp, rising suddenly, wondering why it was that he had not thought of it before. "I haven't been head of the department long and I am at a loss to understand one thing. Why do women buy a thing, take it home and theQ run right back here to retyra ft r; Tne violet eyes crinkled at the comers and the soft pink lips twitched. "I don't know," she confessed. "I never do myself. It's not that I probably wouldn't if I had the chance, but I work and so scarcely have time to buy what I need let alone buying things for the fun of thinking I really owned them for a while before I returned them. It must be lots of fun, mustn't it?" "And so you want to leave this flower hat on our hands," he expostulated. "Oh, no, .not flower!" she exclaimed in horrified tones; "it's lace, And besides, I don't want to lea,ve it on your hands. I'd love to keep it myself only I heard about this Mrs. Benzinger whose husband is in the hospital and whose children are all so small that she can't work. It wouldn't be right to wear a lovely hat when they might be--hungry. If yo\i say I don't have to take the hat I'm going to take a basket out there tonight." She looked at her watch. "It's 'way, 'way out in--" "You run along and get the basket and I'll see about the dollar refund. Then \yhen you get the basket filled come back here and get th/ dollaV and I'll take the basket out for youJwherever it is. You can't iae rjdnning all over town--a girl like you--" He listened to her words of thanks with an air of abstraction. "We ought to get a bit of supper at a restaurant, first, maybe," he said nonchalantly, quite as though ht were in fee habit of asking strange girls to eat with him. He sent the call boy for the dollar and pulling a card from his pocket, wrote down-: "She'd like a hat--lace--later." And the violet-eyed Mrs. BiB Kemp with, her still-shiny wedding ring was happily surprised on he* birthday a few months later with a round hatbox wife a huge violet bow. The hatbox held a hat of lace. Grqwecs Cheat 'Jack Frost' i$y Digging Quickly. * LEWIS F. WAfSON^: J 1 (Kxttnsion HarticulturiMt, V C' * JT. C. Sff Colltf.) , * Shortening days and cooler nights herald the arrival of fall and harvest time for sweet potatoes, one staple in the diet of many farm people. • • - Potatoes keep best when they are allowed to mature before harvesting and before frost kills the vines. If the vines are killed by frost, they should be removed immediately and the potatoes dug soon. Use a vine cutter, attached to the beam of the plow, when vines are not removed before harvest. This attachment should be constructed so as to prevent the blade which cuts the vine from going deep enough to injure the potato. One of the most .important rules at harvest time is not to bruise the potatoes. They should not be thrown from one row to another. Three rows can easily be placed together without throwing the potatoes. Bruised yams not easily in storage, and dark spots caused by rough handling lower the market value of the crop. As the potatoes are removed from the soil and piled in the heap row, they should be graded carefully. All cut or broken yams should be piled separately from the No. Is and fed to stock as soon as possible. For curing and storing, a regular storage crate has many advantages over the bushel tub. Besides conserving room, the crate allows a better circulation of air. Potatoes should be stored and cured in a thoroughly cleaned and dry house immediately after harvesting. Proper temperature and moisture conditions are essential factors in keeping the orop. fever May :n Door to Asthma, Etc. By bll. JAMES W. BARTON (HclaiMd by Western Newspaper Union.) IP YOU were to try to raise mnnpv fnr enme nnnr KlinH KentisSfc iroox Ot«m **, Welt ' TOUT'S Dr. Btrtoa AGRICULTURE IN INDUSTRY By Florence C. Weed (Tbit ft am* of a s»errei esfi nodti nagr ticles sbomint «a important .*»*. CA§TO$ BEAPS To make American industry less dependent upon foreign products, castor bean growing is being revived to supply a fast-drying oil for paints and enamels. It is found to be a good substitute for tung oil, a product of China which has been extensively used in the paint industry. Since fee Japanese invasion, this foreign oil is both costly and difficult to get and the domestic sup- Ply Rgt being produced in large quantities. • v . Castor bean growing is not new to this country for it thrived in a half dozen states around 1850 when 23 oil mills were operating, most of them located around St. Louis. After the Civil war, production increased until Kansas glutted the market with a boom crop of 766,143 bushels in 1879. Prices fell and interest in the castor bean declined. Last year test plots were grown in 33 states from coast to coast, in the South and as far north as New York. New seed was imported from Java, Brazil and India by the National Farm Chemurgic council in an effort to find a new market for the farmer. It included shatterresistant varieties which do not require a prohibitive amount of hand labor, since they are less likely to eject their seeds as they start to ripen, and can be harvested in two or three operations. . One of fee firsi commercial uses of castor oil is in lacquer for lining cans in which food is preserved. By treating it with sulphuric acid, an oil is obtained which is used for softening textiles. It is also used in the manufacture of soap, aniline inks, and non~brittle tire cement. money for some poor blind perspn or a crippled child, you would find that practically everybody that could help would do so. There is* something about the appearance of the blind and the crippled that bring» a ready response from us all. However, when the medical health officer of a municipality asks for an appropriation to cut down the ragweed ta the neighborhood to pi event the Spread of hay fever, he is not likely to get much suppon. The average member of a council, even if one of his family suffers with hay fever, simply says: "It's only a severe head cold; it will pass away when the cold weather comes." What these councilors, legislators or other representatives of the people do not realize is that hay fever is often the starting point for a large percentage of the attacks of head colds, bronchitis, bronchopneumonia and pneumonia. Added to this is the fact that almost one in every three hay fever sufferers develops asthma. The sight of a patient suffering a severe attack of asthma should excite the sympathy of us all with its desperate gasping for breath and the suffocating appearance of the patient. Can this hay fever with the diseases it causes be prevented? Cat Down Ragweed. It is estimated that about 3,000,000 people in the United States and Canada are afflicted with hay fever in the autumn, 80 per cent of the cases being due to the pollen of ragweed. All that is necessary to prevent this immediate and later suffering is for the municipalities to cut down the ragweed before fee pollen ripens and is carried by the wind to these unfortunate victims, who are sensitive or allergic to ragweed. This has been amply proved where this has been done in a thorough manner. I i Dr. H. B. Anderson, Toronto, in praising the Ontario government for its rigid enforcement of the Weed Control act, states that public spirited, intelligent, law-abiding citizens should not have to suffer on account of the carelessness or neglect of selfish neighbors who permit diseaseproducing weeds to flourish on their premises. • .. • • « " ^*4? High Blood Pressure Calls for 'Slow Down' tin audit*. Martin Sehacfer have returned Cram a visit to the former's mother in Dtftftta. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carr of Barrington, Mr. '•aid Mrs. Perry Johnson of Crystal Lake, Dr. and Mrs. Golding, Mrs. James Carr and Mrs. F. L. Carr attended the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. E, B. Neville on Oct. 14, at their home at Grayslake. Mrt Gold*lig>, Mrs. Johnson, and Mrs. Carr are sisters of Mr. Neville. Mrs. Carr and Mrs. Johnson attended the ffrst wedding in 1891. Word was received here last week of the accidental detah of Allen Murphy, son of the late Dennis Murphy and Mary Murphy, former residents here. His death occurred in Baltimore, Md., and the funeral was held on Saturday at Libertyville with burial here in the Catholic cemetery, east of this village. Born to Mr, and\Mrs. Russell Cashmore at St. Therese ho*pitafc Waakegan, an 8tt-lb. son, on Saturday, Oct. 21. He has been namid Jahn Kirk. Mr. and Mrs. Franeis Bonslett of Evanston called on Mrs. F. L. Carr Sunday while*enroute to the home of a sister near Elkhorn, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Spangler and Mr. and Mrs. Backer of Milwaukee, Wis., spent the weekend at the Hubbard home. Dr. L. E. Golding and Mark Neville are en joying a fishing trip in Wisconsin this week. Mrs. Margaret Schubert ftnd Miss Mary Daley spent Monday in Chicago. James Carr, who has been ill with "flu" the past week, is again attending to his store duties. The children of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Gainer are ill with measles. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Bangs of Texas were called to Barrington by the death of the latter's father, August Boehmer, who died there Friday. Arthur Boehmer of Waueonda is a son of the deceased, Wm. Fink, who recently underwent an operation at St. Therese hospital, has returned to his farm home near town. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hunt and datightej, Miss Betty, spent the weekend at Gary. Henry Is Lucille Edna Ifth, 21, Grove. Leslie C- Calbow, Brooklyn, N. to Amelia Onafrey, Glen Lyon, William Andrews, Crystal Mildred E. Scheldt, Crystal Lake. Arnold R. Larson, Ringwood, lian M. Nordin, West McHenry. Karl P. Dziadiela, Palatine, to dred M. Rund, Cary. - James H. Gors, t*oIo, III., to M. Smith, Polo. Donald E. Montgomery, Waukega to Clarice Blake, Waukegran. Lowell W. Koeppell, Milwaukee, Emily J. Kulovsek, Fox River Grov.e Clifford L. Burke, Marengo to ian E. Flemming, Marengo. marriage license was issued WaukegSfrl to Paul M. Adams, 32, of ' Richaiond and Bernice M. Sommers, 29, of Waukegan. Order your Rubber Stsmips Plaindealer. lot wmm Mf Sa4«Ml*M SSTtotwS Opium Poppy The opium poppy has been suggested as a war-time food crop in Ehgland, since the seed--which contains no narcotic--yields oHifr1* Not Ball Player «Naders of fee sport pages might k that a sack man is a baseball player, but his real job ia in a corn products plant • . •• Canary Importation The United States normally imports 175,000 singing canaries a year. v" . V "v-C7 Farm Notes "frb •/!<& Diam--ds, Platinum la Steal Diamonds and platinum, ifsed in steel manufacture, run into thousands of karats and grams a year. Most diamonds look like dark gray, ^harp-edged pebbles, cost $100 a 'karat, "come from Brazil, are known -as "carBons." Another type of diamond -used 'to '4x»rts," imperfect white diamonds, cost $30 <a karat. -Diamonds are for rock -drilling in iron ore mines, for truing grindiiig Wheels, for making dies for drawing wire. Platinum, fine jewelry grrfde, has-at least 10 ^iiffereiit uses in-steel -laboratories. NEW AGRICULTURE COtfftSfe It is expected that a new agriculture course will be given at the high school soon. It will be an eight-week course and will be given by the state under'fee defense program. * The course will deal mainly with repair work around the farm and woodwork. The program, if it is car ried out, will be under the supervision of Ralph Primm and will be taught by Elmer Baum. Details will be giten within a few weeks. Mad the Wa^t Adsl Milk cows on farms in fee U. S. increased nearly three per cent between 1940 *nd 1941. ^ . ; One hen worm ally will eat about 80 pounds of teed a year, of which approximately one-half should be mash and one-half grain, itt order to obtain best results. • e e An inexpensive and efficient homogenizing machine for small dairies, operated by a quarter-horsepower jnotor and weighing only 189 pounds, is now on the market. • e e The 1941 United States lamb crop probably ia the largest on record. • • e The 1941 U. S. hay crop of 96,- 000,000 tons is expected to be the largest harvested since 1927 and the third largest produced in Ilka last 30 years. e e e July 1 estimates on corn in the 'United States indicate a harvest of '2,548,709,000 bushels, which will be •>4 iper cent more than fee 1940 crop and 10 per cent above the average Crop in the period 1930-39. A NE of the questions every physi- ^-'cian is asked is why is there not some drug that will reduce high blood pressure. Physicians are not interested in a drug or other preparation that will' reduce blood pressure for a few minutes, hours or days. What physicians want is a method of preventing the blood pressure from increasing because fee present high blood pressure may be necessary for the safety of the patient. Patients with a pressure slightly above normal usually feel well and it is only when fee pressure gets so high that there is a possibility of a blood vessel breaking -- paralytic. Stroke or coronary thrombosis--feat treatment becomes necessary. If no remedy, no medicine, is available, what can be done for patients with "dangerously" high blood pressure? In cases where fee blood vessels supplying the heart muscle have lost some of their elastic tissues or are too tightly closed (by nerves and muscle fibers),operation to loosen or relieve this tension is performed in some cases. The earlier this operation is performed, fee better. However, most of us are naturally interested in not allowing our pressure to get too far beyond normal limits. For this reason, fee advice given by Dfs. E. V. Allen and A. W. Adson, Rochester, ' Minn., in Annals of Internal Medicine should be helpful. "Rest and the reduction of nervous stresses and strains are advisable. Young persons who follow occupations that are strenuous from a nervous standpoint may well consider it advisable to change to an occupation feat ia more restfuL" -- . v * . . Dollar, a Minute To operate the bureau of the mint costs $5 a minute. Mrs. A- J- Butler of Chicago visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. Heimer, last weekend. Mrs. Heimer returned to Chicago with her daughter to spend a few days. Bolger's Drug Storei Greca Street MeHswy Friday & Saturday -SPECIALS^ Men's Work Shoes Heavy Work Jtabbenf .^..98e Cottage Curtains, jet 79c Calo Coffee, lb 80-square Muslin, y<L _.14c Children's Sweaters 59c to 90c Men's Corduroy Caps ^ . 59c Boys' Sweaters 98c Printed Percales, yd. ,15c - 19o 81x99 Saxon Sheets frl.lfl Shredded Wheat 10e Crape Huts r6* J. - lOe .... ; fTi v*-** Wheaties ... ...., ?. iiw> QUESTION BUGI&NE JUSTEN INJURED IN COLLISION SUNDAY Eug«ne J. Justen, 21 years old, of McHenry, was injured early Sunday morning when his car overturned after colliding with an automobile driven by Alex Largo, 27 years old, also of McHenry, on route 31, north of town. Both cars were northbound and Largo skffved up and started to make a turn onto a side road just as Justen was trying to pass. Justen's machine swerved into a fleld and overturned after the impact. Q.--Please describe the cause, appearance, symptoms and possible cure of tuberculosis of the skin. A.--Cause totercaloais at si --the tubercles taint stta throvgh 'any little cat or "scratch. Lapas vulgaris---tuberealosis ef skia--has patches of small, soft "apple butter" 'like lamps. Affects (ace and cose mostly . There was aa Jmowa cure ap to a few months ago, bat a eare is BOW being tested. Hew Brass Is Made « Brass is made by alloying copper with zinc, and there is no substitute known for the zinc. Priaeipal Eapert' . . . Peanuts are the principal export of French West Africa in normal times. • Leprosy Victims Upmy takes about SB livas • year in the U. S., aooordtng to Inlet census figures. rAKftOKMNr Chant wallpaaM «i«4«w ih«4*t BARN PAINT A pere linseed ell paiaf. Prete<t* oad 4-HOUR KNAMU Make* everything - $1.79 ~ *1.25 REPLACE THAT BROKEN GLASS NOW! pliable High (raae, Iwig SexiMe brittle*. Unwryonij fer vtrwiihim, SPAR VARNISH Fer fleert, furnjtu . Crystal cl*or VMM drying *4.75 WM. J. ALTHOFF HARDWARE Phone 284 ^ Vain Street West McHenry " . . 4 . * . . . * ! . . t - ' ; - ?' L'J'.'.'?: .. • ^ V t* V, s-" ':i r

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