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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Nov 1941, p. 5

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, Hovember 20,1941 by EARL WALSH We aire thankful for a beautiful thought contributed by a mother, who {(refers to have her name withheld, we are about to celebrate Thanksgiving day. A MfflKBTO THANKSGIVING /Thank you, dear God, for baby's hand Lying softly there, '•f^or so it's been, so peaceful like, " Since early evening prayer. ffhe moon is out, the stars shine bright The curtains gently swell. nk You, dear God, she knowsn© fright Cone's evening'! sleepy spelL thank you, God, this war to end. Let other stars shine bright-- they may see their baby's han4 Lie peaceful through the night. ballot. Yea can i**rithiitI|lnr«bMit your choice players any time now. ' •! , See you next week with ipore dope- Must get oat now and shoot a turkey. --I-- Our high school basketball team rolled up a 42 to 24 victory over Ela last evening on the local floor. This {was the first game of the season, but ! the home squad looked all right. The | Reedmen travel to Fox Lake next j Tuesday evening. Your sport page J will carry box scores and complete reports of games throughout the sea- "*• ' . s bowldto «w» •" " Palace uck" Weldt was the bowler of the week at the Palace, piling up a 630 series with a 242 game as Selling's Tire Shop ralle<$ * Via aginst Tonyan Grinders. ^ : w That mother looks deeply into the rue meaning of Thanksgiving. It is v .i-S thought that will linger- > • "-i ™T". iv, J"' Bat* we must be on with tense. Hight now we are very thankful to our "SBC" for tickets to the btre Dame-Northwestern game. •-- ^ Man-o-man!That was anybody's 11 game. From all appearances orthwestern had the better team, ut, like thr"¥ankees, you cant give jihose Irishers a break. r Never have we seen a NOtre Dame team so short of man power* They have a crackin' good first team, but 4he reserve situation is something else. I . * Just to .give you some idea, three of t<he backfield men played without a •thought of turning the job over to a :$ub. Only the quarterbacks were ~ ;*hifted. ' That look like Not** ®*n*. HWhile we have never agreed, it was generally supposed in bygone years " Hhat those fellows could get along just well with the second or third team , -; as they did with the first raters. Sometimes they did! * --I-- Last -Saturday it was Northwestern that boasted reserve strength. When you can call a DeCorrevant a second |team man, you've got something. •; -- * On our team, we'd put both DeCor- •^evant and Graham into the fray at .the same time. If those two threats' "wouldn't drive a secondary defense muts then our "SBC" was calm as a . -cucumber at the hour of four last Saturday afternoon. . 1 I, " " One fellow that Northwestern should have signed up is that right v>nd, Kovatch, of N. D. He was roam- * Sng around the Northwestern back- Jf'ield all afternoon. He'll do. Abother fellow we'd want on oar ;team is that fellow Kepford <gf N orthwesterUf • f 1 •• i ' ' '.-"J That Irisher "O'Jurwtk** flfe i > defensive genius. And he kicked that 'point! Green's 561 and Steffes' 213 are all we can talk about in the County gang. "Fire Sale Fits" shows Servant (who responds to a ring)-- Excuse me, please, but we are hi great trouble here today. The gen* Ueman of the house has been -blow* up in an explosion. Peddler--Ha? Hurt much? Servant--Blown to atoms. Only grease spot left of him. Peddler --AAh! Only a grease spot, you say? Well, here's a bottle of my champion eradicator, which will remove that grease spot in two minutes. PARTED to Scare , Spirit of Death Tucanos of Brazil, Kp»wn People, H^ye Queer Ctastomi. mrnmiim mm OPPORTUNITY VP Herman Steffes reports that he is actively engaged in the development of a high school league. The American High School Bowling Congress has been m motion the past two years developing young bowlers. The plan when worked out requires "You say you and your husband have separated?" "Yes, he spends his vacation in the country and I go to the sea- » • Vv/ iHWfMli •' '• Two elderly men at a club were discussing the table manners of a new member. "Well, what do you think of him?" asked one. "Very remarkable," replied the other, thoughtfully. "I've heard soup gargled and syphoned, but, upon my the sanction of local school boards and thata the first time i'veever superintendents. known it to be yodeled." Bacon's 202-525 lndt-tti lleM in Equal to It the Old Titnem parade of stars. A farmer's son, just home from , school, seemed to take pride in us- Gus Freund (sometimes known as' Aug.) followed up a 575 series in the' Forester league with a 567. | Henry Weber slipped to 134 in his third game after two 191 games. Had j a 516 series, but might have been way ! up there. j "Uncle Ed" Smith should have had i 600 series, but a drop-off in the; third game gave him 684. Well, that's not bad! ing college slang, and at the breakfast table called out: "Mother, chase the cow down this way!" Mother was equal to the occasion, and remarked to husband: "Give the poor calf some milk. Don't you. heir him bawling far it?**' Ed Thames hit stride with 510. Schaefer's Charlie Dowe led Althoff Hardware to three straight over Weber Plumbing. Pete Koob, one of the classiest of local bowlers, hit the pace as he led Miester Brau in two out of three from McHenry Beer. Faltum holds a fast pace for the McHenry Beer team. Ann Krieger's 456 series may be Just a warning for kmk elassy pin toppling. , Vernon Fi*eund rolled • feifty 256 [game. - ^ Here's that man again"? "Patsy" Boley came up with a 246 game. Of course, he prboably wouldn't want it mentioned. "Sonny" Miller leads the yedn* bowlers this week as he posts a 201 game. "Bis" -Oovalt faded in the third or would have boosted that 477 over 500. Fanny Freund is next in line with. 458 while Marion. Krause is one pin behind. Next! And when Delilah cut Samson's hair, he became mild as a lamb. Can you understand it?" asked the Sunday school teacher. "Well," said, little Tommy reflectively, "it does make you feel 'shamed when a woman cuts your hair." WASHINGTON, D. C.--Ceremonial dance costumes of one of the earth's least knoWn peoples--the Tu- Cano Indians of the Rio Uaupes on the Brazil-Ecuador border -- have Just been added to the collection of the Smithsonian institution. * . They were received from Lt. Col. Sina Machado, air attache of the Brazilian embassy, who spent 18 months in this little-explored hinterland a few years ago and gained an intimate knowledge of the native peoples. Scare the Demons. This particular tribe has been described by travelers in the past but femains almost unstudied anthropologically. The costumes, used in dances to ward off evil spirits who are supposed to cause sickness and death, are of beaten bark cloth made from the bark of the Brazilnut tree. Each of them includes a mask intended to frighten the demons. Among the articles collected by Colonel Machado, but not included in the material acquired by the Smithsonian, were rubber shoes used by the Indians in these dances. These may represent the most primitive use of rubber for footwear. The medicine man, according to the account given by Colonel Machado to Smithsonian anthropologists, must dance well when he dons his weird costume for if an important patient dies in spite of his incantations he is held responsible for it and is likely to be beaten in puBr . ishment. • Are Real Artists. Other articles of South American ethnology just acquired for the Smithsonian collections include remarkably lifelike portraits painted on goatskin by the Quechua Irwlians of Imbabura province, Ecuador. These Indians have acquired remarkable proficiency in the white man's style of painting. Fvoquent Feeding for Uleers; Cuts DeetkRite Frequent feeding of ulcer patients during hemorrhage hhs cut the mortality from this complication to a third of the figure recorded under the starvation treatment. Dr. T. Grier Miller, professor at clinical medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, declared. Dr. Miller said that under the starvation regime 9 pel- cent of the patients died, whereas only 3 per cent have died among the 1,500 patients reported in recent medical literature as having been managed with a feeding regime. VQLO Mr. and Mr£. Bernard Hanke and son of Evanston were Monday evening guests at tine home of Mr. and Mrs. Prank St. George. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence, Grabbe and sons, Donald and Harold, Mrs. Margaret Grabbe, of Crystal Lake, Mr. and Mrs. William Wright, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rosftmanrt and son, Gene, of Barreville, snjoyed a pheasant dinner at the "home of Mr. and Mrs. W. Vasey Thursday evening. ' William'Wirtz enjoyed dinner at the Dr. Martin Rehfuss, professor of J Karcher hotel in Waukegan Thursday medicine at Jefferson Medical col lege, who said he has not accepted the feeding treatment of bleeding ulcers, discussed the uncomplicated peptic ulcer and remarked that most success will be obtained "when patients and physicians leam to regard the dietary management of ulcer patients as a way of life, just as we regard the management of diabetes and tuberculosis." New-born infants and older children in the critical stages of pneumonia are being saved by large doses of the new sulfanilamide group of drugs given by vein, Dr. Theodore Wilder, Germantown hospital, said. Before their use many patients were given up as hopeless when first seen by a physician. Now, however, many get well when sulfathiazole and sulfadiazine are injected by vein. Dr. Wilder said that he had used these drugs recently in premature babies weighing 214 pounds and 3 pounds who were blue and were in the early stages of bronchia] pneumonia. Tsbaeco to Mew Terijt Dutch Em! Indies tobacco grow* ers are shipping most of their crop to New York. * * Bertlli can't carry the ball wi Graham, but well take him for our pitcher. He doesn't fade to pass. You .^nearly faint waiting for him to pitch. 'He puts the ball up near his ear and ^just stands there. But, brother, when _?;he cuts iooge you'd think it was Bob ^Kennedy throwing a strike Xroia third ' to first. - ,# But, Bertlli didn't get Much cfwmee * to show his passing genius last Sat- ^wday. Northwestern was playing in "the shadows of the Irish goal most of 4he afternoon. You don't pass muc]^ .. .. undar those circumstances. Northwestern looks like a team that shouldn't lose to anybody. Notre Dame looks like a team that nobody :is going to way-Leah-y. _ " "I1 •• r * See that path acrosk Green street? Jipi Powers hired a blonde in the Nap ** tional and Bob Adams has baea buy- ' ing a dosen eggs--one at a time , :. t "Where does *1Bruce" Nickels get that stuff in his ad of last week? All .the pheasants that "Fussy" Frye v 'brought us won't have any bulging p jyeffeot on ous waist-line. We're b^gin- I fning to suspect that -ing blank shells!" 'Bru6e" is Sall- Oh! "Fussy" did pick aif t inr Hack-rabbits at 40 rods with a BB gun. -"W^TTie rabbits were too big to carry " home in the car. Out that way they hoist 'em up on a barbecue pole at roundup time--and ship the beef. All season Frank' Schreiner has • been telling the boys about that boy, Schreiner. who plays spectacular end ;for Wisconsin, being his cousin. Now* - John Bolger comes along to claii^f this Mathew Bolger of Notre Dame < as hi* cousin. You'd think the least they could do would be to call the / beys their nephews. They call 'em the wwsWr sex, bait two local girls are said to have smash ed down a door and stolen a car from the Rossman garage last Sunday Well, maybe they didnt steal it--they just took it! --*_ Captain Winkfl ha* Vf>n*on Knox on his bowling team in the Forester League since the new lineups were arranged. All that bothers the Captain now are stories of those big ? scores that Knox rolls at Crystal • Lake. Must be he uses a bigger ball -and wider pins at Crystal Lake. --I-- Here's something to think about You rriders are goine to. have « schance to choose an All-Star MCHS Alumni basketball team to play the Vic Johnson, plumber man, looked good with a 217-576 with the Pit. Johnson's 572 led Kleinhans Lumber in taking two from 0)4 Bridge Tavern." - , A Puzzle to Ber "There is one thing I can never understand," said the patientlooking woman, "and that is why a man who has been sitting with the crowd all the afternoon at a baseball game will come home and say the noise of the children makes him nervous.4* '• . *n si C« , "Haven't you had your vstation yst?" "No, I: don't intend to take one this year." "How much are you behind in your accounts, old man?. Maybe your Mends can help you ML" Antiserum Increases Hope for Cancer Cure Discovery of a cancer antiserum which increases the hope for cancer cure has been announced by two doctors, William H. Walker and Lawrence H. Mann. They are members of the University of Illinois medicine research staff. They claim the antiserum reacts positively with blood serums from persons with cancer of the same organ as that from which the antiserum was developed, but does not react at all with blood serum from _ healthy people or those with illness They will be grouped with a sim- j other than cancer. This may be of ilar collection of portraits by native artists obtained many years ago from various tribes of Peruvian Indians-- the Cashivos, Piros, Lorenzos, Orejons, and Campas--by Lt. W. E. Stafford, who explored the country for the United States department of agriculture. The individual portraits show remarkable variations in physical features and faithfully record details of personal adornment, costume, and weapon types. British Decoy Planet Of Rubber Fool Nazis Practical Idealist--1 shall leave footprints on the sands of time. Practical Person--What for? Nobody will want to go 'round looking for footprints. What we want to do for posterity is to help feuild some j year^Tire it Rubber company has , AKRON, OHIO. --An Akron manu facturer disclosed that Great Brit-* a in is using decoy planes of rubber, inflated like balloons, to lure enemy raider^ into waiting bombs. Cliff Slusser. vice president in charge of production, said the Goodfood roads. Lee Adamft* ft# carried tl^iead as McHenry Laundry took two from Kreutxers Prager five. Perkins' 516 led McHenry Plumbers in two over Meister Brau. Herb Sintaa's 510 led the losers. 4IKL 8CO U R| 4 A Thanksgiving treat of fruit awaited the Girl Scouts on Monday. While we were eating and thanking Miss Larkin and Miss Bauer for our surprise, we talked over the various business at hand. We then divided into two groupa, one going with Miss Bauer fee do some painting, and the other staying with Miss Larkin to play a Thanksgiving game. Virginia Stratton won the game. The weather seemed too perfect not to take advantage of it; so we chose up sides and went out to play baseball. Yes, baseball, even in November if the weatber man says yes! Rosalie Williams' team won with a score of 4 to 1. After the game it was time to close our meeting, and so we all left wishing each other a very pleasant Thanksgiving holiday. See you next Monday.. Jean Nickels, 8cribe. Time Out A comic interlude in the grim reality of war on the Russian front-- According to the German caption, this soldier, who is enjoying a brief rest, is a member of a telephsne battalion stationed in occupied 8a- Proceeds will be used to treat the I *»et territory. The claw-like gadgets soldier boys who have left our com- J ^ 'M' •r« apparently Ml SS munity in the present emergency. i telephone poles. "high school during the holiday reason-- December 23 to be exact., ? Hi Oueh! ~ A Washington paper reports that "The men's Bible class were hosts to the ladies of the Helping Hand society at a lawn party Saturday night. Sandwiches, pie, and pinch were aerved in abundance*" • r-« . - • . Kitty Cat |>r, "My worst sin," she dqfhifl, *1i vanity. I spend hours every day admiring my beauty." "That's not vanity," her replied. "That's imagination! . 4. "They say She cams down looking for a match.*' "Yes, she smokes like a volcano,' lad far Siss "X wish I'd enough money to buy an elephant." "What do you want an elephant for?" "I don't I want the money. ---- '?'&»* Xme Indeed "Water attracta electricHy." "Have you made tests to prove Here's Reel 'Bottleneck^ 1 Acute Shortage of Corks ' WASHINGTON.--The commerce department called attention to a real bottleneck of potential concern to millions of parched patriots. The dry facte are, the department said in a report on the alcoholic beverage situation, that "rationing of limited supplies of cork has introduced a new factor in beverage distribution," particularly since "no suitable substitute for cork for bottle caps and stoppers is at present in production." The department added, however, that the possible use of s composition of rubber (also a strategic imported material, but relatively more abundant than cork) or of developing s cork source in. Brasil was under consideration. it?" "Yes. Every time I'm in bathtub the telephone rings." the Mistake Customer--Come, John, we are ready to go. Milliner--Pardon, madam, here's the hat you bought--that's the boa you're wearing. Progress has your baby learasd to talk yet?" "Oh, yes. We're teaching him to keep quiet now." Aa Usaal .Fattier -- Remember, curiosity killed the cat. Janey--How, daddy? my child. . Hopeless "Even s worm will turn." "What's the use? It's the same both 7' • - i P ir built life-size planes, with exteriors duplicating those of fighting ships, out of rubber. From overhead, and even close on the ground, the deception is so complete it baffles experienced airmen. "The rubber planes already built by Goodyear include English Spitfires-- now in u?e 'somewhere in Britain'--and other types whick have been seAt overseas,*' Mr. Slusser said. value, they say, in assisting or confirming cancer diagnosis. Through increased knowledge ft may aid in treatment. The doctors do not claim it to be a cure, or even yet a treatment, as at the present it is but a small step in the fight against the disease. Many more tests must be made and possibilities explored, but they hope it leads to a new attack on cancer. Apparently the serum is specific not only for a certain organ but also for a certain species as the antiserum produced from human cancers was found not to react with blood serum from cancerous animals. even though the cancer might be of the same organ. Carrier Pigeons Relay • Story of Army Induction TRENTON, N. J.--Francis P. Duff relayed home by carrier pigeon the step-by-step story of his induction into army service. » He brought with him from his hillside home, 50 miles away, six pigeons. The first flew homeward with a message reporting his arrival. Then, as Duff passed through the various stages of induction, the rest fluttered away, the last pigeon taking to the air aa Duff bonded a train for Fort SMa. Wile Beater--the Rat- Turns Out to Be Mouse ANNISTON, ALA. -- A woman's screams aroused the neighborhood and someone called police to "stop a man beating his wife, or something t^-rible." A police car dashed up and officers ran into the house to find: A wife standing on a chair and a hpshand pursuing a A . ... • -- Mechanism of Cancer Evidence that the mechanism of cancer is dormant in all healthy tissue cells in the form of minute particles about a 350,000th of an inch each in diameter was presented in Chicago recently. The suspected, particles are known as mitocchondria. They are thread-like bits, which have been observed microscopically for many years. Their function in cells lasts almost eon* plete mystery. Electricity ss Uluminsat Electricity was first used aa an illuminant in private homes in Philadelphia in 1889, say officials of the Philadelphia Electric company. In following years gas was gradually displaced as an illuminant. The process was slow, however, as most houses were piped for gas and it wss necessary to wire entire building to get electricity. Officials of the Electrical association estimate that in period 1900-02 there were about 12,000 electrical customers in Philadelphia. About two-thirds of this number were industrial and commercial consumers, thst is, stores, factories, etc. Therefore at least 3,00u private homes had electric lights in those years. For some time only the largest of new homes were wired for electricity. evening as guest Of W. C. Petty. Mr. Wirtz attended the county school survey board meeting at Mr. Petty's office after the dinner. Mrs. George Scheid. Jr., of Wauconda, spent Friday «*eitmg at the home of Mrs. Pr*arl Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. James Valenta, Mr. and Mrs.' Janies Dusil, and Mr. and Mis. Eddy Sivotka of Berwyn were Sunday visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fratik St. George. Mr. and Mrs. James Williams of Crystal Lake were Wednesday dinner guests at the Lloyd Fisher home. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Wagner celebrated then* golden wedding anniversary Saturday evening. Congratulations. Mrs. Llo^'d Ffsher and daughters called on her mother, Mrs. Albert I Hafer,, in Fremont township Sunday. Mrs. Carl Magnussen and Mrs. Rus- Sell Taylor gave a bridal shower at the home of Mrs. Russell Magnussen Wednesday evnieng, in honor of Miss Enid Williams. Miss Williams- became the bride of Milton Magnussen Saturday, Nov. 15. The evening was spent in playing cards. Miss Williams received many pretty ,rfnd useful gifts from her guests. Refreshments were served at the close of a very enjoyable evening. Mr. and Mrs. N. Merganthaler of Wilmette spent Saturday evening at the home of Mf. and Mrs. Frank St. George. Miss Edna Fisher of Waukegan and Arthdr WackeroW of Wauconda spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Sarah Fisher. Mr. and Nrs. Alvin Case and family enjoyed Sunday dinner at the home of Mr. and Mis. Martin Shaefer in Wauconda. Mrs. Catherine' Wagner of Slocum's Lake spent * few days the past week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner. Community njgh^ was held at the Volo p&blfc* schbol Friday evening. W. C. Petty and son of Antioch, G. Getschell r>f Cray slake and Mr. Calhourt of Waukegan were Sunday guest* of William Wirt*.. They enjoyed the day pheasant hunting. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crook, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thorsetl, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Anderson and daughter, Betty, Mr. and M*n." Russell Magnussen. Mr. and MrS. Lloyd Fisher and Miss Beatrice Wilson' attended the Williams- Magnussen wedding at the I van hoe church -SfctWrtBJf evening. Donald Ahreni, Delmar Ahrens, Clifford Petersen, Harry Case, Frederick Vrt.oey and' Richard Fisher exhibited *h^r grain and poultry FFA projects at the \fauoonda high school Saturday.* Rev. and Mri,J R. C. Halock of Wauconda' vYifted Mrs, Pearl Dowell Friday aftemooiC /A Higher, Warper Still another of science's unsolved problems has been brought to light-- the fact that if you get high enough in the air the North pole is warmer than the equator. This has been proved by means of experimental balloon ascensions into the stratosphere by varying altitudes. Unmanned balloons carrying recording instruments were sent up and reached heights hitherto unrecorded. In the tropics the temperature 10 or 12 miles up was 148 degrees below zero, while in central Europe and farther north, at the same height, the instruments only recorded 5e to 85 degrees below zero. Another theory heretofore accepted by scientists, but which now has been contradicted, is that the temperature diminishes as the height increases. ... Sleep an Anesthetic Deep sleep of exhaustion is itself an anesthetic potent enough to permit of wounds being dressed without the sufferer knowing anything about it, according to Dr. G. H. MacNab. surgeon in charge of air-raid casualties at Westminster hospital, London. This discovery was made when KG wounded men, still carrying their rifles, arrived from evacuated Dunkirk, Dr. MacNab told a. London meeting. Many of the wounds, he explained, would normally have required anesthetics, but the men had marched 50 miles and they slept while their injuries were being dressed. The pain would have been acute, but they slept on for 48 hours. < Western Meadow^lifrtc^*^ *' The western meadow lark has been chosen the official state bird Sf seven states. \ -- Income of Farmers The total cash income from HiHt, cream and butter sold by farmers In 1940 amounted to £1,526,702,000. These Fine Days Are not going to last much longer. Winter is approaching, and it's time to get those windows fixed np to kieep oi^t jthe eold. We can supply ybu ; with |rindow glass, putty, etc. C4o8e up the eracks in your home by using caulking compound. It doesn't cost a ^reat deal and will mean a saving in your fuel bill, besides the comfort provided. We have the necessary supplies. Drop in today at NICKELS' Hardware Phone 2 West McHenry YES, that's literally true. We take that bit of paper upon which your Physician writes • ^ prescription, and transform itjf ^ with skill and care, into some* thing that is "just what the Doc* tor ordered." In briagiog yoar pcsscriptioa here to be coAt founded, you're assared of the •scvices of capable registered pharmacists. Oar drags are always fresh and poteac. Weill every prescription with preci* sion and care. Aad oar prices are Mr to swryoaa ia every caaet May we have the pleasure of filing your next prescripdoaf v Bolger's Drug Store r Green Btresl Worm Your Hens- FflcV Wflv «£»>>© v; . 1 no'ir B&y knm PMtey Vinwr, it corti ifcml lutt tht p^&ofwonn ctpeales and is just aa affective, It requires only four pounds al jtfam Fontey WwiM100 pounds of m--h. , 4 ^freif (en or twelve days. ^ v * type of Wormer will not stofc egg* fuottuctlou and is jnuch less work, as it does not require the catching and the handling of yonr hens. Try it today. ^.^I^'will Wormer with£9|ir mash for you? McHenry Flow Mills rut Starr Ls., C. S. Whitney Cross lake ft* flhreveport, La. returned from nearby with a fish story: on one cast he caught five catfish. Someone had lost a string of five, and one of the five went for Whitney's worm. Ek&iise Bond QUIZ • • .A • >• only regret that I have but one life to country**1 '•" U. . , who prave hfcflife for Aiw»r?«^ l*ke £re»t IflHlTf of his fellow countrymen. We arc only iskf<i#$o lend our dollars for Defense Bonds and defend the liberty for which they died. work there is, no pay-roll allotment plan for billing of Defense Savings Bonds and Stamps. I get on* starlet! V y •< * f ...... ... _ ^ ^ .. |:,: is depends on your position, and the kind of organ- ' iviaatioB in which you are employed. Generally •*& shaking, your immediate su)>erior would lie the f*1 |>er80ii to receive vonr suggestion that you would like to have a voluntary pay-roll allotment ]>lan introduced. The firm's bank can supply in•> «i .*rf. f o r m a t i o n a b o u t s u c h a p l a n . . i r , , NOfE -- To purchase Defense Bonds sre>' --nearest post office, bank, or savings and loan association; or write to the Treasurer of the United States, Washington, D. C. Also Stamps now are on sale at most retail stores. "Sip , v - - .j ••'A ' ' V -

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