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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Aug 1942, p. 4

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*_ - ' jfrllfofri ««<•£• ^ ""** «W*r4-t >«» il)K •jr SW-* ; ". " "" - - ' ^ fai r - ' * r * * rsrs THE McHlNRY PLAINDEALER sxaa Thursday, August 27. 1942 TH€ M'HENRY PIAIHOEALER Published every Thursday at Mc- £enry, 111., by Charles F. ReTiich. A, H. MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at Hie postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8,<sl879. FOE SALE One Year ... &x Months • $2.001 Good tires fl.OOj FOR S4LE--'Model 'A' Pickup Truck. and Motor. .JMcHenry i Brewery. 14-2 rJfaps Terrorized * vBy Demon Planes Of Flying Tigers Fuselages Painted to Look Like Snouts of Sharks Spread Terror; 1 ^^H^RIET^mayw^JJ^ |FOR SALE--Cottage at McHenry; i grounds' 100 by 100. Fdr information i inquire of Mrs. Patchen, owner. Phone Winnetka 2134. . * 3-tf FOR SALE-- Inka Walker Ormsby Sth Bull, 17 months old, whose sire's dam made 30,249 pounds milk,, 1,068 pounds fat. This sire should improve nearly any herd in state. James D. Curran, West McHenry. *15 ^ Some Facts About Dairy Farming , iThe question of whether or not to fort his farm into a dairy farm is '• y,}"iWie which many a farmer finds it difficult to answer. Actually, it is largely .a question of the tempera- * anent of the individual farmer--since 'all men are suited to dairying >•:. sfe an occupation--and of the s'u'itai/ vftMity. of any particular farm to the >vrequirements of dairy-stock manage- '"^"-/./'alnent. V" > •• • ;^*ROS AND CONS *"1 - y •; OF THE PROBLEM' ' » Amo^lf the features which dairy farming as a business has to comttend it are: . 1. It is a year-around business and furnishes a steady labor market «t all seasons; 2. Cash receipts are regular and A;; "frequent; providing for current'-expenses, and for financing farm op- ^-Tiraticns, as well as for systematic Savings; . > . 3. A good dairy herd provides a home market for hay, grain, silage, root crops and soiling crops; 4. The manure from the herd may fee used to maintain the fertility of the fields. >_.On the other side of the ledger, however, should be entered these , 1. Dairying is a 365-day-a-year - occupation. It allows for no holidays and no vacations, except for Cuch rare times as those in which the dairyman can find a competent person to carry on in his absence; 2. Dairying and crop raising convict, during the summer months, find since neither can be neglected, the result Is quite sure to be long hours of heavy labor for the dairyman ; 3. Dairying is such an exacting Occupation that the man who would - find success and satisfaction in it tnust be strong, industrious, and not easily discouraged; he must have, U^-Snoreover, a definite liking for dairy •' T^istock. FOR SALE--:Black Team; Guernsey Cow; .Heifer Calf.'.Cap Round Lake 4223. 16 ersonm WASHINGTON. -- Childrenseare each other by making a horrid face and saying, "Boo!" --* And so do men. They've been c Mrs. Zena Bacon visited Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Dam at Kenosha, Wis., Sunday. ." ° Miss Estella Miller of McHenry and M rs. Donald Boehmke of Ridgefield left Wednesday for Las Vegas, Nevada, where they will visit ;with Private Merlin W. Engels and Private Donald feoehmke. s^Mrs. Elsie Olsen of Chicago and M iss Dorothy Doberstein of McCullom Lake spent Sunday afternoon with Miss Sarah Miller. . - Arleen Bacon and-Carl Hiatt of,Chidoijpg it for hundreds of years and are still doing it. Latest and mosst spectacular evi- j cag0 visited Mrs. Zena Bacon liast dence of it is in the Far East where j weekend and attended the Milwaukee the American Volunteer group j Fair on Sunday. ("The Flying Tigers ), in U. S. j Fred Schoewer, Floyd Coleman and planes whos^ fuselages are paint-. papei au members of the Amered to reserrible the snouts of tiger j jcan Leg.jon post 491 attended the sharks, have struck terror into the 5 sUte conVention in Pe0ria last week- FOR SALE--Govt, feed wheat, $35. per ton. Will grind for you for $2.00 J per ton. McHenry Flour Mill. 15-2 | FOR SALE--Oats and Wheat. In- j quire at 202 S. Green. Street. A. E. ] N o o n a n . , • '. j FOR SALE'-- Well established milk j route in McHenry and Vicinity, Very reasonable for immediate sale. Snow | White Dairy. Phone McHenry 321. 15 I hearts of Jap airmen. This is not to imply that the Yankees under command of Gen. Claire L. Chennault have had such astounding success in sending Japs crashing earthward merely through the use of paint and brush and not by vastly superior airmanship. Nor, , does it mean that the Japanese I Th*f werp accompanied there on Wedscare easily, s&ys" the Chicatoj^^day evenmg by Mr and Mrs.Uar- HeraldrAmencat). ' ; ence Kortendick and Joseph Korten- But psychologists and anthropologists are of the opinion that the I end. I Sister Mary Clarita of St. Cecelia (convent, Omaha, Neb., and Sister j Mary Veronica of Visitation convent, ' Chicago, the latter a sister of Mrs. 'John Bolger, spent several days the last of the week in the Bolger home. FOR SALE--Pioneer Hybrid Seed j planes, which began as a grim "gag" Corn. Have been appointed agent for t j® not without its psychological efdick of Rockford. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Kiphte anci son, weird decoration of the American ' Brucefleft Sunday to spend a vacation McHenry township. Meta Gumprecht, 224 Ellsworth St., Crystal Lake. *14-i FOR SALE!--An eight-room modern home and garage on Richmond R»ad, neai- St. Mary's «hurch. A be.rgainl Call Mrs. John R. Knox. Tel. 17. 10-tf FOR SALE--Year-'round comfort and economy with fire-proof Johns-Manville Type A Honffe Insulation "Blownin" your Vails a*id ceilings. Call LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. 20-tf FOR RENT FOR RENT--Furnished cottages, 2 and 3 rooms. Very reasonable. Tel. Crystal Lake 8C55-Y-3. *15 LOST LOST --Lady's Wrist Watch, white gold, at Northwestern depot, McHenry, Saturday morning; Aug. 22. Reward. Mrs. Roy Lades, Lake Defiance. Phone McHenry 614-W-l. *15 WANTED POSITION WANTED -- By married man as Farm Manager on high class farm; dairy or otherwise; years of experience. iBox 22, R. R. 1, Genoa City, Wis. *15 OTHER POINTS TO CONSIDER It is necessary, for the success of dairying, that there be a good and Steady market available. The principal markets are wholesale and re- Itail market milk, creameries, cheese factories and condenseries. In some localities, too, ice-cream factories may furnish a limited market for O^bole milk and sweet cream. .Authorities agree that retail milk routes and city milk-distributing plants to which market milk is sold •wholesale, usually furnish the bestpaying markets The prospective dairyman must also consider the adaptability of his .'land to the requirements of dairy -ffitock. A dairy farm must be fertile; it must be large enough to allow for the production of feed and cash crops; it must be located in ' convenient nearness to a ctofiry marlet; and it must have a plentiful supply of pure water. CHOOSING THE ^JrUUNUAIlON HiDKU There are, in the United States, a inumber of highly satisfactory dairy fcreeds. The farmer should choose the one which he likes or know« best, •with due consideration given to the breed which is predominant in his locality. It is strongly recommended that the beginner start with grade Etock. The best practice is, usually, to choose young, healthy grade cows of good conformation and producing -lability. If it seems advisable,, purebred stock may be purchased fater, as finances permit. It must be kept in mind, however, that as the initial • cost of pure-breds is higher than that of grades, so the risk is greater, and management will require correspondingly greater knowledge and skill. By all odds, good grade stock is best for the beginner. The most V important member of the herd is the bull. He should, of course, be registered. He should be well-grown and , vigorous and should have an estab- ^ lished record as a sire of highproducing daughters. The best bull to buy is a mature bull, of proved ability. LABOR REQUIREMENTS IN DAIRYING Co-operative records kept by the U. S. department of agriculture and the University of Wisconsin indicate that man labor averages 171 hours , per cow, per year, such labor including milking, feeding, caring for utensils, and cleaning the barns. It did not include hauling the manure, delivery of milk or caring for young stock. However, the amount of labor required for a dairy herd will vary greatly according to equipment, management, climate. For farther ioiormtion. tend 6vr cent* to Superintendent of Documents, Wathingtoa, D. C., tsking ior farmers' Bulletin No. If 10. • • • I LOGS FOR FARM STRUCTURES If propeWy constructed, log builds ings are both attractive and serviceable. Where a new home is being made in regions where timber is plentiful, logs cut in the process of clearing may well be utilized. _ GOAT MILK FOR INFANTS It is said th£^t in England and in many parts of Europe, people who go to the country for the summer months, or otherwise indulge in travel with their families, take a milk goat with them to . provide fresh milk tor the children of the family Bf*d tke Want Ads! WANTED--120-acre farm, near McHenry. Must be good land and bldgs. Cash. S. J. Burton, RFD 1, McHenry. Phone McHenry 609-J-l. *15 WANTED TO BUY--McHenry Dwelling. State location and price. Mail' correspondence to "E. A. J.," care of The McHenry Plaindealer. *15 at The Oaks, Crystal Lake, although she is continuing to live in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs.^Ben Miller and family are enjoying a vacation at* Fay Lake, Wis. " Mr. and Mrs. iBen Justen of McHenry and Chuekte Skow of Woodstock were weekend guests pf ti»e former's son and family, ^Dr. and Mrs. J. W. Justen at Momence. .While there they saw the Gladioli Festival and the gladioli fields. Ger.cvieve Knox, Mrs. Kathryn Conway and daughter, Marion Grace, and Mrs. George Phalin and daughter, Terry, Visited the Milwukee fair Wednesday. f • Private Leo J. Scha^fer is enjoying a ten-day furlough frorii Camp Funston, Kansas. He is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Schaefer. Mrs. Helen Heuser spent Saturday visiting relatives in Chicago. Miss Wanda Jepsert and sister, Mrs. H. Christensen, of Chicago, in company with a group of relatives, spent all of last week camping and fishing at Maiden Lake, near the city of Mountain, Wis. They st$te that fishing was good, appetites better and the scenery very fine. ; Mrs. Lawrence Hedstron of Hot Springs, Ark., returned home after spending two weeks with her parents. Mr. and Mra» D. E. Payne. # • t • t $ < • • a a t' •• Several cities can boast of having one centenarian bul Barrington now can claim the distinction of having two century-old residents. One of them is George Jackson of Donlea road, who was one hundred years old &n June 3. The other one is Milton Henry Myers, now living at the Barrington Rest Home on West Main street, who will be 101 years old on November 7 of this year.. 1 , -t ' Dr. J. C. Purvey of Crystal iatfce left last ThtfTsday for Louisiana aijd Dr. F. L. Alford, also of that city, left Monday for Utah. Both enlisted in th^ U. S. Army Medical Corps. Dr. Alford.has been commissioned ^jeaptain and Dr. Purvey a lieutenant. Aitiong tlie Sick, 4 ' ' I < * ' 1 ' » " » » » • » » < WANTED--Good home for three 8- week-odl pups. M. Budil, Lily Lake. Phone McHenry 395. 15 HELP WANTED HELP WANTED--Girl for waitress work, need not be experienced. Also woman f«r work in restaurant. Part time. Karls Cfife, McHenry. Phone 26. 1-tf HELP WANTED --Girls for soda fountain work; steady, full. time. Bolger's Drug Store. 15 ANIMALS WANTED DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE WAR -- Five dollars is the least we pay for dead horses, and cows in good condition. Wheeling Rendering Co. Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the charges. No help ne^^d to load. 14-tf DEAD STOCK WANTED We pay cash with silver dollars that clink. 5 to 25 for dead or alive horses and cows. Highest priaes paid for hogs, sheep, calves. Prompt day or night service, including holidays. Farmers Rerdering Service. Crystal Lake 8003Y-1. We pay phone charges. 5-26 MISCELLANEOUS WHEEL BALANCING, WHEEL ALIGNMENT--For maximum tire wear, smoother riding and safe driving have your car checked by our New- Balance Master and Manbee alignment gauges. KNOX MOBILGAS STATION, 100 Grant St., Crystal Lake, 111. Phone 77. 2-tf feet on the Nips. It would be setting one's face against the experience of all mankind to deny it, they say. It's Old Stuff. Ages ago, some bright soul among the earliest representatives of mankind on earth introduced an innovation in battle by wearing the hejad of a tiger or lion that he had kil with his spear. His appearance w1 as much of a shock to the Neand thai warriors on the other side the first British tanks were to t! Germans in World War I. ^fThe example was generally imitated, but soon it was found that wearing the head of an animal was hot and uncomfortable. So another innovator took to wearing a strange headdress and painting his face to resemble the animal. It's still being done wherever primitive tribes exist--among the natives of Africa and Asia and the Pacific isles. The Flying Tigers therefore have a good deal of human history to justify them in turning their airplanes into semblances of wide-mouthed tiger sharks with a vicious array of teeth. The lad who first suggested it to them knew something of Japanese ways and thinking. The tiger shark is as much feared by the Japs as is the tiger by the natives of Burma, Malaya, India and other far eastern countries. Large numbers of Japs, an island people, garner their livelihood at sea, as fishermen. Their great enemy is the swift-striking, terrible tiger shark, most vicious of all the voracious shark family. Superstitious Japs believe these sharks are demons. Started in World W*. Japs don't like to die, even though their leaders try to build up for them a legend of fearlessness in the face of death. And they prefer, if they must die, not to be eaten by sharks. In their religion such an end seriously compromises their chances' of entry into Jap heaven. The practice of adorning planes with characteristic insignia began in World War I and has been followed ever since, though never with quite the pictorial effectiveness achieved by the Flying Tigers. Capt. Eddie Rickenbacker's 94th Aero squadron in World War I adopted an Uncle Sam hat in a ring as its "coat of arms"--a sign that German fliers soon learned to respect. The American Indian, especially those on the Pacific coast, says Dr. Wissler, a leading authority on the red man, painted his canoe in imitation of animals. A few weeks ago an American shipyard launched two new cargo ships as part of the Victory Fleet. Each of these vessels has an enormous eye painted on either side of the prow, where the anchor-chains slide. Workmen said this was to put the "evil eye" on Axis submarines. The ships certainly present a hobgoblin appearance. in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Smith and son, Dennis, of Beloit visited in the Martin ^ makes bis home. Conway home last weekend. James Powers is° enjoying a two week^ vacation. -Sunday he and Mrs. Powers attended the State Fair at Milwaukee. Bob Bacon, who has been spending the summer at Arlington Heights, and Mr. and Mrs. Budd Rapp and daughter Carol, visited Mrs. Zena iBacon the last of the-week. -- - Mrs. Eleanor Reed has returned from a three day visit with her husband. Corporal Edwifi S. Reed, at Holyoke, Mass. Mrs. Reed also spent a week visiting relatives in New Yoriv. Private LeRoy Conway, who is stationed at Camp Claiborne, La., is enjoying a furlough at his home here. Mrs. O. Cs. Murray and daughter, Marjorie, of Geneva --were guests of Miss Kate McLaughlin one day last week. They also visited in the David Powers and W. F. Doherty homes. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Whiting jnd ^ hospital'Wednesday. Lanette Whiting of Elgin visited Mrs. Ellen Whiting last Sunday. John Molidor of Mundelein arid Mrs. Catherine Molidor of Volo visited John Scheid and daughter, Rena, on Monday evening. Phillip S. Mayes, a native of McHenry who was born here in 1869, is critically ill in Minnesota where he He is resting in a hospital, receiving treatment for a lung congestion which followed pneumonia several months ago. Mrs. Anna Wicks of SlocUm Lake entered the Woodstock hospital last Friday evening as a medical patient. Mrs. Ethel Lawrence has been a patient in the Woodstock hospital this week. Ann Smith fractured her right arm in two places Tuesday evening when she fell while roller skating. Ann has been staying with her grandparents, Mr. arid Mrs. Clarence Martin, this summer. * Tommy Weldt was a surgical patient, at the ^oodstock hospital Wednesday. ,*-- Miss Orville Fisher underwent surg?, ery at the Woodstock hospital Wednesday. jpve-year-old Ralph Patzke underwent a tonsillectomy at the Wood According to official information received last week from the war department by Mr. and Mrs. L. I, Price of Harvard, their son, Corp. Hugh Price, who was stationed on Corregidor Island when it fell to the enemy, is listed on the army records as "missing in action." It is possible that he is still in" the Philippines where he may be with one of the several squads not captured that are still fighting the Japs with guerilla tactics while living with the natives, but it is more probable that he has been taken prisoner. WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS Attorney C. Russell Allen filed a writ of habeas corpus in circuit court Martin Heckmann of Chicago vis- Friday in behalf of Fred J. A. Smith GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us dispose «f your garbage each week, or oftener if desired. Reasonable rates. Regular year, round r»ute, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 366 or 631-M-l. 11-tf COMING EVENTS Playful Hugging Habit Costs Husband His Life MILWAUKEE.--Mrs. Mildred Baker has expressed the belief that her brother's "playful" habit of suddenly grabbing and hugging his wife cost him his life. Testifying in the inquest into the death of Philip P. Kasten, 36, by stabbing, Mrs. Baker said that Kasten, her brother, evidently intended to embrace his wjfe by surprise and Overlooked the knife in her hand.^ IJilrs. Kasten vvas using the knife to cut a lemon £>ie. L August 28 Red Ch)SB Business Meeting--4 p. na.- Accomplishment Day -- High School f. August 30 Annual Forester Picnic -- Conway's Woods." September 1 Fox River Valley Cam>p. R. N. A. C. O. F. -- Election of Officers. Ed Leffelman Farm Auction Sale at North City Limits, McHenry. September 3 East River Road Pinochle Club--Mrs, Ed Sujtton. „ • September 5 Firemen's Annual Carnival ~ Spring Grove.- •< • " ' , • September ft Meeeting of Township Officials -- M c H e n j f y -- 8 p . m . - ' • * September 12 ' Dance Bridge Ballroom, McHeriry Sponsored by Property Owners Association of McCullom Lake. „ September 14 Advance Night -- O. E. S. -r Masbnic Hall. /' , • , - \ September 22 , f : Red Cross County Meeting --~ Crystal Lake High School. California Has Rival For 'Available Jones' SAN JOSE, CALIF.--Mrs. J. E. Bishop has opened up a new profession in the field of human endeavor. It is that of professional listener. "Everyone knows it is a relief to tell your troubles to someone," she explains. "But you cannot always tell your friends and relatives. "Our service permits you to unburden yourself to a stranger. We guaxantjgg absolute secrecy, confidence and offer advice." Aluminum . The first commercial production of aluminum was just prior to 1890. Back Yard Pieaies To save on tires this summer and still have the fun of family picnics, consider the possibilities of a fireplace in the back yard. A picnic at home may«rfcfe even more comfortable than one in the open among the (^higgers, ants, mosquitoes, ticks and flies that sometimes detract from full enjoyment of the scenery--along with nearby poison Ivy. ^ ited his mother. Mrs. Frank Heckmann at Lake Defiance Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stenger of Indianapolis, I nd., former residents here, called on friends in McHenry last week en route north. Joseph Diedrich has returned to his home on Park avenue, af^er receiving treatment in the Woodstock hospital for three weeks. Georgianna Donahue of Huntley, Mrs. Olive Sill of Rockford and Florence Holland, Chicago, spent the weekend as guests of Miss Genevieve Knox. Mr. arid Mrs. Carl Weber and family attended an Omar picnic near Lake Zurich last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Kramer and daughter, Betty, returned Friday from i a vacation spent at Spring Lake, 31inn. "Si" Meyers and Bonriie Page were Chicago callers Tuesday where they saw the Cub ball game at Wrigley Field. Private Albert G. Vjales, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vales, spent Monday at the home of his parents. Private Vales is stationed at Fort Sheridan at the Anti-Aircrft Training Center where he is receiving his basic training. He is also playing with the A. A. T. C. army band and has been selected leader of the dance orchestra. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon J. Kramer of Kokomo, Ind., spent the weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Kramer. Mrs. Arthur Lawrence and son, Francis, of Stevens Point, Wis., Mrs. Robert Vanston and baby of Wauconda and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hirsch of Chicago visited in the home "of Kate and Tom McLaughlin recently. Jeanne and Mary Lou Warner of Elgin visited theij^ mother, Mrs. Walter Warner, at the home of Miss Anne Frisby last Sunday. Mrs. Warner returned to hen. home in Elgin Monday evening after spending several weeks here. . . June Hagberg of Chicago spent the weekend in McHenry. . ' Dorothy Weidling of Camp Juniper Knoll, Wis., visited at her home here ior a few days this week. Raymond Powers, Jr.," of Crystal Lake was a^ local caller Tuesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. James Watterton of CJiicago, former residents here, visit* ed Miss Christine Adams last Sunday. Miriam Sayler of Chicago and Frank Altman, Jr., of Detroit, Mich., were weekend guests in the James Sayler home. ~ /_ Mrs. Jessie Yous and Miss Gertrude Heckmann of Chicago and Mrs. Frank Heckmann of Cleveland, Ohio, are visiting friends here and at Lake Defiance for a few weeks. Sister Mary Henry and a companion Sister from Holy Angels Academy, Milwaukee, are visiting relatives here this week. Sister Mary Henry is the former Anna Bolger. Miss Anne Winner of Chicago has been visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Frett. The Walter Carey family has returned affter spending a week at a cottage at Twin Lakes. Mr. and Mrs. ^Robert Ulrich and daughter, Virginia, of Oak Park called^ at the home of Mrs. Nellie Bacon Sunday on their way home from the North Woods. Other Sunday guests Avere Mr. and Mrs. Carl Courier and family of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bacon and family, Crystal Lake. / » Mr. and Mrs. John McGlave of Chi cago are visiting Miss Anne Frisby this week. Miss Irene DoweU is now employed of Elgin. In the writ Smith asks foi custody of Lois* TBstelle Smith, his thirteen year old daughter, who now resides with Carolyn Welle, her sister at Crystal Lake. The writ followed action brought by Mrs. Welle on Aug. 3 when through the state's attorney, a petition for dependency was filed in the county court. .. Expectant Mothers Are Advised to Drink Milk Recent experiments at the University of Iowa indicate that liberal amounts of milk, along with other protective foods, in every meal, protect the prospective mother from loss of teeth during pregnancy, according to the National Dairy council. In reporting a recent study on this subject, Dr. E. D. Plass, who was in charge of the work, asserts, "The importance of using large quantities of milk and certain of its prepared products cannot be overemphasized." This report emphasizes the repeated recommendations of nationally known scientists that liberal quantities of milk and its products are essential to the health of both the expectant mother and her child. • fAr luie. Cciu uiuill,- ' ftlU&lJllUi UO CUMJ Ml" trogen metabolism of five pregnant women was studied during the last five months of pregnancy and during early lactation. In each case the diet-sjncluded a quart or more of milk daflyUogether with butter, cottage cheese and ice cream. Other protective foods included at least one egg, two servings of vegetables, two servings of fruit, one of which was raw, and a teaspoonful of cod liver oil. Bread, cereals, and potatoes in quantities sufficient to satisfy the appetites, completed the diet. The results of the experiment indicated that this diet furnished adequate quantities of calcium and phosphorus. At the beginning of the test, all five of the women had dental caries (tooth decay). A month after their babies were born, no new caries had developed and, in all cases, consistent improvement in the old caries was rioted. Three Chicago youths confessed to Sheriff Lester Edinger arid Chief Deputy Sheriff Harold-Reese last week that they had taken a\car from its parking place at the WoWjstock Typowriter factory last Fridayr ^belonging to Herbert W. Schisler, RFD, Woodstock, a night worker at the plant. The youths are LeRoy Gagen, 17; Joseph Motyka, 17, and1 Joseph Jame. Doyle, 18. The three were apprehended later the same day at Des- Plaines. Bond was set at $3,000 each. The three admitted having stolen a car in Chicago to make the trip to Woodstock. An t instructor was killed and his student pilot was injured seriously Sunday m,Qrning, August 16, when a training plane from the Glenview naval air base went into a spin and crashed near an auxiliary landing field at Palatine and Barrington roads, four miles south of Barrington. Other air- Ihen who were practicing landing and taking off at the field said that Berge and Simundza, coming in from the east for a practice landing, apparently overshot the field, attempted to gain altitude, and went into, a spin at about seventy-five feet. ARTHUR LINDER TO r BE HEARD ON RADIO BROADCAST FRIDAY A former production clerk for the National Biscuit compnay, Arthur Linder, 30-year-old apprentice seaman from Chicago, will make his Ifirst coast-to-coast radio broadcast Friday evening, August 28, as a featured entertainer on the "Meet Your Navy" program. Now in training at the U. S. Naval Training Station at Great Lakes, 111., Linder will sing his own "Join the Navy" medley as his part in the radio show which stars new Bluejackets in a half-hour program aired directly from the Training Station at Great Lakes by WLS, Chicago, and the Blue Network at 9:00 p. m., CWT. In the navy since August 3, Linder has had previous radio experience singing with an orchestra in the Nicollet Hotel, Minneapolis, and in winning an amateur hour program in 1935. His wife, Helen, will be listening in from their home at 2608 North Washtenaw, Chicago, and his father, Mr. T. J. Linder, from his home in McHenry. Friday night when he makesJhi8 first appearance on the air for the navy., / V Way Up Thar Mt. McKinley, Alaska, towers 1T,« 000 feet above timber line. . Many Names for It The fur sold under the largest number of names, is probably rabbit fur, which is sold under the following names: Australia seal, Arctic seal, sea-musquash, sealette, sealine, French seal, New Zealand seal, lapin, Red River beaverette, Belgian seal, molin, moline, visionette, nutriette, French sable, ermiline, erminette, coney-leopard,^chinchilletta and Baltic tiger. & Hubbet Stamps at The Plaindealer V ' Old Order Is Reversed* Boys are taught cooking and girls carpentry at a new school in Worcester, South Africa. ~~*AUCTION Duffield Farms on Highway 42, one mile south of Highway 120, 6 miltnortheast of Libertvville, on-- SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 5 "M2:30 o'clock Cattle--38 Holstein, Guernsey, Swiss Cows, consisting of 7 -close springers. 8 fresh, balance milking good. 5 Growthy heifer's, 2 bred, 3 open. Holstein bull, registered. Herd ave. test, 3.8 per cent. IMgs •-- 25 Shoats, ave; wt. 40 lbs. Milking Equipment -- Blue Ribbon double unit milking machine. Two Blue Ribbon Single unit milking machines. All milking equipment including 3 gas hot water heaters. - T - Chicken equipment, including 5 battery brooders. Usual terms! DUFFIELD FARMS ' R. F. Stien, Owner Route 2 Waukegan, 111. William A. Chandler, Auctioneer Public Auction Service Co., Mgrs. A. We ate eqtiipped to reader complete Funeral and Ambulauc© service . . .. . / promptly. ^ Jacob Justen & Sons • -- Funeral Directors -- ; Phone McHenry 103-R Residence, McHenry 112-W ' Green Street, corner 51m -- McHenry Scottish Name . '.*j, In Scotland the. raven is csfledfi^ - ; "corbie." . - > : / : McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY -- SATURDAY Charlie Chaplin with music and words S ^ " (1) "THE GOLD RUSH" William Tracy - Joe Sawyer in (2) "ABOUT FACE" SUNDAY -- MONDAY . August 30®- 31 Bob Hope - M adeline» Carroll ia "MY FAVORITE , BLONDE" ^' • -1-- Also .y-;-• DoiiaH Oxick Cartoont>and Comedy ' TUESDAY -- Adults 22c Ann Rutherford - Robert Sterling Virginia Weidler (1} "This Time for Keeps" Harriet Milliard - Ken Murray in (2> "Juke Box Jenny" WEDNESDAY --- THURSDAY W illiam Holden - Frances Dee in MEET THE STEWARTS1 The Beautiful I I I O V A I f mM CRYSTAL LAKE. ILL. McHenry Co'a. Leading Theatre C-O-O-L-E-D FRI. & SAT. -- AUGUST 28 - 29 Marj. Woodwwrth - Win. Marshall 'FLYING WITH MUSIC Miriam Hopkins - Brian Donlevy in "GENTLEMAN AFTER DARK" SUN. & MON. -- AUGUST 30 - SI Sunday Continuous from 2:45 p.m. Ami Sheridan, - Ronald Reagan In " K I N G ' S R O W " -- with -- Betty Field - Claude Rains and an all-star cast! Top-Screen-Triumph of the Year! 18c TUESDAY 10c Tax 2c SPECIAL X Tax lc George Murphy - Anne Shirley m "MAYOR OF 44th STREET" WED. & THURS. -- SEPT. 2 - 3 Ginger Rogers as " R O X I E H A R T " Adolphe Menjou - G. Montgomery Also--Popeye. News and Specialty Soon "MRS. MINIVER" „ That Wed. and Thurs. Event! Coming Soon "MRS. MINIVER" AIR CONDITIONED ThuA-Baca tPxaU MILLER Friday and Saturday Gout. Sat. from 2:15 p. ill. 2 - Grand Hits - 2 " -- No. TWINBEDS MISCHA AUER No. 2 f*0Y ROGERS LINDA H A Y E S Sunday and Monday <1ont. Sunday I'n.uu J; I p. m. Direct from p. record H-woeks run in the loop . . It's groat. Novel «--grS£ ,57*^- vOWr u * Outotaj SHERIDAN RtUU CUMMINGS RoMaJd REAGAN B E T T Y F I E L D CHARLES COBURN CLAUDE RAINS Judith ANDERSON y->Cr

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