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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Mar 1942, p. 7

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I t- > * '. { \ A *" > » ty- v „ -»• * v ^ ,v • a * f f v ' v "T *-• < • -% * ** •</ • ^ &.-*•>£»$-$ rv+» * • *• tt. - xrr _ <rj.._" '•& ? "M ' 4 •* J " w- ' --x. » , ^ _ _ - _ _ . J.^ „ j . ^ _ SR'j; " '•' . " .' "W* **» t*f? VMJ,v^W> *^v^§/f ^T; "i~ " '. -Frf Thnrsdaj.llanshie, 1MB -*-v- - • • • • [ ,;s* ati '•HrV^V:- • E' ;.. #'C*!PP! F/ * r-.*: v Vernon J. Knox, Attorney NOTICE OF CLAIM DATB Estate of Edward P. Ktiter. Deceased. Notice is hereby given to all persons that Monday, April 6, 1942, Is the claim date in the estate of EDWARD F. KELTER, Deceased, pending in the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. 7-: LILLIAN M. KELTER, V i' Exefcutrix. ;• ••% (Pub. March 5 - 12 - 19)' Vv,;:.\ Wm. M. Carroll. Attornlf Woodstock, IHwois U/ NOTICE OF CLAIM DATE Brfale of Henrietta Krepel, Deceased. Notice is hereby given to all persons that Monday, April 6, 1942, is. the claim date in the estate of HENRIETTA KREPEL, Deceased, pending in the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said estate on or, before si&id date without issuance of summons GERALD J. CAREY, V • i Executor/ (Ptab. March 5 - 12 - 19) NOTICE OF CLAIM DATB of Anna Knox, Deceased. Notice is hereby given to all persons that the 6th day of April, A. D., 1942, is the claim date in the estate <rf •J ANNA KNOX, Deceased, pending in the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, and that claims may be filed against the said estate on or before said date Without issuance of summons. ELMER H. WINKELMAN, Administrator. Eekert 6 Eckert, Attorneys, 207 North Benton Street, Woodstock, Illinois. v' (Pub. March 12 - 1» - 2j§ * Changes Color Qtanberry foliage changes its colfit. In summer the leaves are a vivid cool green, in autumn they turn a deep brownish red, and by December when cranberry bogs are flooded for winter, the leaves are a deep, deep purple. Cranberry vinefi^ do not drop their leaves in winter^ AUCTION y-v t.**m CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer Phone Woodstock 478 On aocount of the farm having been sold and having decided to quit farming, I will sell at Public Auction my entire personal property, on the Ed. Durkee farm, located 7 miles north of Woodstock oil route 47, 2 miles-west of 47, 8 miles east of Harvard, 5 miles southwest of Hebron, 4 miles southeast of Alden, on-- TUESDAY, MARCH 24 Commencing at 10:30 o'clock sharps . the. following described property, towit: 65 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK **«*•. . Consisting of , • . i.- 45 Head of Cattle g St head of high grade Holstein And Guernsey cows; 5 head of yearling heifers; 6 head of Holstein heifers, 10 mos. old; Holstein bull, 18 mos. old. Sixteen of these cows are close springers* balance new milkers and milkers. These cows are all home raised, mostly all are young. Twelve first and second calf heifers. A good producing herd of cows,T. B. tested. 5 Head of Good Horses Strawberry roan gelding, 6 yr*. old* Wt. 1660, sound, gentle and well broke; black gelding, 10 yrs. old, wt. 1600 lbs.; Mack mare, wt. 1660 lbs.; pair black geldings, wt 2700 lbs. 75 chickens, White Rock pullets and White Leghorns. 4 breeding geese; 3 Muscovy ducks. 15 Head of Hogs 4 Chester W hite sows and gilts due to farrow middle of April; Poland China sow, due to farrow middle of April; 10 feeding shoats, wt. 150 to }75 lbs. each. Hay, Grain and Machinery 3 tons mixed clover and timothy hay in barn; 3 tons baled timothy hay; 225 bu. of good yellow oats; 35 bu. Blue Ribboh spring wheat; 35 bu. JQlini soy bean seed. Universal double unit milking machine, 1 yr. old, with pipeline for 36 cows; 13 milk cans, pail and strainer; Colman gas stove; 3 rinse tanks; 10- 20 McCormick Deering tractor; late model in perfect condition; 2-bottom 14-in. tractor plow; 7-ft. tractor disc; Papec silo filler, like new, with 50 ft. of pipe ; 4 roll IHC corn shredder; 75 ft. 6-in. rubber drive belt, new; 100 ft. 6-in. derive belt. 7-ft. Deering grain binder with tongue trucks; Deering corn binder with truck; McCormick mower with 5-ft. cut; dump rake; McCormick side delivery rake. Keystone hay loader; 6-ft. grain drill; end gate oat seeder; Hayes corn planter with 80 rods wire; John#Deere 12-in. gang plow; walking plow; fanning mill; P. AO. 2-row cultivator; 2 sulky cultivators; two 2-section iron drags; potato planter; New ^ tie a manure spreader; grain box, new. Iron wheeled wagon with combination box rack; low wheeled wagon and rack; running gears; 7-ft. horse disc; McCormick-Deering 1S4 h. p. gas engine with pump jack combined, 2 yrs. old; bob sled; corn sheller; 600 lb. patform scales; Cowboy tank heater; Eagle Claw hay fork; 200 ft. hay rope and pulleys; 3 good sets breeching harness; extra collars; forks, shovels; all small tools; quantity household furniture. This machinery is in good condition, new. Crandall of Walworth lunch wagon on the grounds. TERMS: All s\ims of $25.00 and under that amount, cash. Over "that amount, a credit of six months at 7 per cent will be extended on notes approved by the cler^. Anyone desiring^ credit, kindly maUe arrangements before purchase is made. No property to i be removed until7 settled for. S. A. DICKSON b First National Bnk of Woodstock, Kathleen Norris Says: J Women's Share of War Is $eruice_ (BellSyndicate--WMUService.)" *\ *' n * --'---- • y X •& ^1 I Twice Told Tales iniHt WORLD fRCtlGIOn vUI.UI.RC ID m®! igffK mm «t MmiI Taken ef Tears Af» TWENTY YEAR8 AGO A number of her McHenry friends were given an opportunity to listen to I Miss Mary L. Moritz via the radioj phone at the homi of Dr. and Mrs. N. J. Nye last Thursday evening. The new apparatus, which was only recent- I ly installed at the home of the local physician, worked perfectly. J Mr. and Mrs. John Schuenetnann of I Chicago have puirhasad the M.. M. Niesen house on the corner of Riverside Drive and Washington street, and will take possession soon. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Heimer of The Leper hospital in Elat, Cameroun,' Africa, is caring for more than 1,200 lepers grouped in four separate colonies, according to Superintendent H. L. Weber, M. D. "Many of these unfortunates came as outcasts from among their own people,,r says the Doctor, "but are returned after from one to four years 's>mptom free,' healed in body and soul and many of them with an occupation 'or craft learned while under treatment. This places them on a higher social plane than their fellow villagers. The leper complex with which they arrive must be reversed and reconditioned: from beggars to producers, from idleness to occupation, from lawlessness to obedience-- indeed a major operation!" Dr. Ralph E. DifTendorfer, secretary of the Board of Missions and Church Extension of the Methodist church, lists 731 of the Division of Foreign Missions of the denomination as still Kenosha, Wis., who" recently rented ^ with" the Waite estate cottage on Green I ^?wa,s--temporarily, he believes--of street, moved their household^effects ^ ^UPled, "d to this village last week. « L P16 W,oman » D>v>sion A. J. Pouliot, local boat manufac-! 1 e ?oard has aln,ost .** m*«y turer, is now busily engaged in filling T* "In . lute order of row bo.tt for Se„s, ' f Roebuck A Co., of Chicago. THIRTY YEAItS AGO TI ! DOING THEIR SHARE Mary Cates might be someone you know. She might be one of your friends or neighbors. She might, in fact, be you yourself. She is a typical American mother, poorer than some, richer than many. With three children to take care of, neither she nor her husband has much money to spend on entertainment or luxuries. But they manage to buy defense stamps--not just once in a while, when they think of it, but every week. Mary -knits, and her little girls are also learning to knit. Her stepson wants to join the Marines. Simple, average, everyday Americans, they do their share to help our country win the victory which may, at long last, rneAn a permanent peace. tion, and she does not forget prayer. Every morning before seven she walks to church for 20 minutes of an earnest service, and when she walks home to start breakfast frier face is always bright. But perhaps the finest thing about Mfcry Cates is her mental, moral and spiritual attitude. Her only brother is out on the great north Atlantic on & destroyer; Mary knows in her heart what the news from Don may be at any moment. Mary has knitted more than one hundred helmett. The f--tff girlt knit, loo. They trt knitting those ull-^eriice garment* reputedly trt motl popular in any coldweather camp. By KATHLEEN NORRIS HE American woman is going to come of age in the next few years. She is going to put aside the grabbing, boasting, playing, unthinking ways of a child, and develop her own consciousness and her own soul. She is going to waste less food; buy fewer things that she doesn't want; stop throwing aside perfectly good garments for newer garments; stop flocking to poor shows that she doesn't care much about seeing anyway. She is going to learn the value of the things she has always taken for granted; things she has felt that everyone has and she must have as a matter of course. Money is going to look quite different to her in the next few years, and suoh commonplaces as a good dinner, a safe home, firelight and books and friendly fftes, suddenly are going to appear to be the miracles they are. AH One Now. And sihee immigration has stopped short, and may not begin again for a decade, we're gradually going to unify ourselves into a strong, nationally leveled people. Not Irish- American any more, not Italian- American, not belonging any more to the varied lands that gave our forefathers birth, but all one now, devoted solely to our own country, and the immortal principles that have made her what she is. We will not buy it cheaply, the world-peace that must come out of all this. There will be no nation in the world that will not be bled white before it arrives. But when it does arrive, if it finds us understanding ourselves and our neighbor and our social obligations better, it will not have been in vain. This is the story of Mary Cates. I know there are many women like her, but she happens to be the example that has come to my personal knowledge and I want the women who "would love to do something but don't know how to get at it," to hear about her. Mary is 34, the wife of a man whose income is $2,400 a year. She has daughters 8 and 10 years old, and a stepson who has just volunteered for service in the marines. To begio with Mary saves two dollars a week, and takes two more out of the paycheck each month, to buy government stamps. She puts these in her daughters' names. She made a house-to-house canvass of her entire neighborhood--a rather humble one--to pick up games and packs of cards for the boys' club in the nearest camp. She had printed at her own expense a list of things, often thrown away in the household, that would be acceptable gifts for soldiers. At Christmas time she had six soldiers to dinner, and a small present for each was on her tree. Mary knits helmets steadily; she has knitted more than a hundred altogether. The yarn is given her, but she does the knitting. Children Help. The small girls knit, too; they are knitting those all-service garments that reputedly are most popular of all in any cold-weather camp. These are first simply oblongs of knitting about 24 by 22 inches. They pre sewed into tubes, to be pulled up into the armpits to protect the entire body from cold, or to be drawn over the head to keep throat, chest and shoulders warm. An old and faithful Red Cross worker, Mary keeps up this obliga- It has been suggested by believers 'in women's suffrage to give the fair ones a chance at the coming school I election. Now, ladies, name your candidates. Quite a few were absent from school last week on account of the deep snow. Let us hope the snow will i clear away before spring vacation ' arrives. | Last Friday was contract day at the 1 Borden factory and as a result the fields work has not been interrupted by the war but has been made heavier," says Dr. Diffendorfer. The board's missionaries are still carrying on evangelistic, educational, medical and agricultural service in the West Indies, Central America, Brasil, Argentina, Chile, Bolivia, Peru, Uruguay, North Africa, Belgian Congo, Rhodesia, Portuguese East Africa, Angola, Liberia, Mexico, India, Burma. Free China. Because of the difficulty in securing American and European nurses for missionary service due to war defarmers are once more content and J wands, new emphasis is being placed should remain so for six months at {uP°n the training of native men and least. The prices that will be paid women as nurses in various fields, per hundred pounds milk during the Belgian government officials were escoming six months are as follows: pecially impressed recently when six April, $1.30; May, $1.05; June, $1.00; men an<l two girls were graduated at July, $1.30; August, $1.45; September, $1.50. Average for ate months, $1,26 2/8. J FORTY YEARS AGO Last iyeek Henry Stilling sold a bunch of hogs that averaged 604 lbs. each. They were full-blooded Poland China stock. Dr. H. F. Beebe has moved his office fixtures to his residence where he will hereafter be found. It is a wise move on the part of the doctor, for a separate office in a town ot this size is not necessary, but more apt to confuse his patients. The price of 27 cents per pound for prayer that Thou wilt keep the United butter was made firm on the Elgin j States in Thy holy protection; that board of trade Monday. • Thou wilt incline the hearts of the The McHenry Laundry Co., will ' citizens to cultivate a spirit of suborhereaftor deliver laundry on S*tur- dination and obedience to government the Son a Bata School for Nurses, conducted in the Belgian Congo by the Board of Missions of the Northern Baptist Church. The girls are the first to complete this five-year nursing course. The Belgian officials attended the graduating ceremonies, and spoke high praise for the school. One of the girls will remain in nursing ser- •vice at the Sona Bata hospital. During these days of war, many churches are using this prayer, issued by George Washington in 1783, and appearing on a plate in his pew in St. Paul's church, New York City: "Almighty God, we make our earnest the Indians, of the mountains of j vised on principles flowing from dees Guatemala, have recently arrived, and religious conviction," said former New the American Bible Society, the pub- | York City prosecutor, Thos. E. Dewey, usher, has received letters of appreci- in a recent speech. "Every essential 8 n for th,e translation from these . of our system, every essential of free people who but recently learned what society springs from the concept of their own language looked like on the morality, family life, and duties and printed pa®re. The work of reducing faith in the Fatherhood-of God, and this Indian dialect to written form the brotherhood of man. Each of was the work through many years of . these is denied by the materialistic the Rev. and Mrs. H. Dudley Peck, philosophy of totalitarianism. From missionaries in the mountain town of the religious faith of a people spring Ostuncalco, Guatemala, and they were also the translators of the New Testament into Mam. "Out* form of government was dethe right and concern for the well* being of our fellow men." < Order your Rubber Stamps at TIN Plaindealer. " ONE OF RUBE GOLDBERG'S INVENTIONS THIS IS MY SPECIAL MACHINE TO TIE STRING ON MY FINGER SO i WONT FOQ6ET TO BUY DFFBNSC BONDS EVERY PAY DAY.' m ' A! TO* THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR QUICK RESULTS days only. she faces whatever may come with complete fortitude. She will do what she can, in thd years ahead, every day arid every hour; she will pray and work and plan over each new duty, each change as K arrives, and no one FIFTY YEARS AGO ;f iNresh fish of all kinds at Howard's Market on the West Side every Friday. Also choice brands of oysters, by the can or bulk. Call and see what he has. The young friends of Miss Mary But ' gave her an agreeable surprise | on Thursday evening, it being her ! birthday anniversary. The guests on ^ their departure left tokens of their regards in the shape of several beautiful presents. I The Ladies of the M. E. Church are making extensive preparations for a will ever h^ar her complaining of j Cobweb social to be g^en at We resithe world that is at war, or vainly de?.ce °1 e y' 8<><Jn-. . wishing that things could go back I Walsh was quite sick last to wh4t they Were. week but is now reported much better,^ Things won't go back. They'll never quite go back. But perhaps we'll all be simpler and kinder, less exacting, less rapacious, when this tragedy is over. Perhaps the sacrifices, hospitalities and generosities Qf war will be extended to days of peace, and nobody will have ten times too much of the necessities of life, and nobody will have only onetenth enough. Lift Tour Hearts. So l||t your hearts, and get into the side of this fight that does not involve hate or revenge or ugliness of any kind, but just loving and serving. The situation is not of our choosing; the decisions have been made for us, and in that very fact there lies a certain sorrowful satisfaction, a certain conviction that no matter how difficult our path may be, at least it has been made plain. Many years ago I found some lines of an old hymn. I've thought of them often in the last few weeks. Here they are, perhaps imperfectly quoted, but the spirit is there: When yon come to the Red Sea place in your life, When there's nothing else you can do, There is no way back, there is no way 'round, There is no other way but through. Then trust in the Lord with a faith supreme, tin the dtfk and the night arc gone. He will still the waves; He will calm the storm When He says to your soul, "Go Monk .* * There is no other way for at now, but THROUGH. And we will get through. rrh* -w? An express omnibus doesn't mean a pretty fast means of automobile transportation--it is really the of a kitchen helper .in a hotel or restaurant. Easily Cleaned To dean plaster busts or. ornaments, try dipping them in thick liquid starch. Brush off the starch when dry and the dirt will come off CboAjft the, i ' . lUttY YEARS >61) George Owen's eagle is thriving on chickens that happen to wander too near his cage. We learn that Chas. Kuhnert will move his goods here and be ready to open his store, in Howe'B Block. May 1st. We bespeak for Mr. Kuhnert a liberal share of the public patronage. The sociable for the benefit of the Cemetery will be held at the residence of Geo. Gage, tomorrow, Thursday evening. James Ladd, our town collector^ re turned his books and settled with the treasurer on Saturday last, bsir^ the second collector in the county to do so. and entertain a brotherly affection and love for one another and for their fellow- citizens of the United States at large; and, finally, that Thou wilt most graciously be pleased to dispose us all to do justice, to love mercy, and to demean ourselves with that charity, humility, and pacific tamper of mind which were the characteristics of the Divine Author of our blessed religion, and without a humble imitation of whose example in these things w^ car never hope to be a happy nation. Grant our supplication, we beseech Thee, through Jesus Christ, our Lord. Amen." The first New Testament in the Mam language, the native tongue bf m WHEN PERSHING HONORED MacARTHUR 23 YEARS AGO-- This picture, made on a blustery March day in Remagen, Rhenish Prussia, shows the commander of the A. E. F. pinning the Distinguished Service Medal on General Douglas MacArthur then commanding the 84th Brigade, 42nd Division. The photo is from tko World War flies of the U. S. Signal Corps. • This was General MacArthur's second decoratios. He was awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for gallantry in action in Mareh, 1918. He also wears the Silver Star Medal with six oak leaf closteaab A bill is pending in Congress to award him the Medal of Honor. McHENRY COUNTY * AGAIN REVEALED BURAL TERRITORY figures released recently show that although McHenry county is known as a rural territory, only about one out of every three citizens of the county resides on a farm ».or in a town of less than 2 500 population. Information came from the U.S. department oI commerce. r , McHenry county has a total population of 37,311 according to the 1940. census with 12,076 of it being considered rural. At least as far as numbers are concerned, fet still a man's world in Mo- Henry county for male residents exceeded the women by 1,593. Men conv prisd 19,452 of the total while 17,8by females were listed. The native born outnumber the foreign bora by almost a ten to one' margin with all but 3,404 of the 37,261 white residents being- native citizens. For purposes of the census, the population was divided into three major classifications distinguished as white, negro and "other races," the last, including mainly Indians, Chin-^ ese and Japanese. Mexicans who were definitely not Indian or of other nonwhite races were classified as white io the census. Negro residents in the county are listed at forty-six while the total of other races amounted to only four. Saving Face in China Dentistry and watchmaking art frequently practiced jointly In Chi* save

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