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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Nov 1942, p. 8

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,,,T, „ l WHICH REPRESENTS YOUR 5TATE ? , eL .. V / *v ^wwy ' " V • " v*r ;y-if "'*$< -<*. ( -«, " v. • • * -:*r * -? ^ , \ '\jjr-... ' ,: 1 ,* * THX HoHZniT PLAHIDIALIK '•%Wfe-i s'i Thnr»day, November 96, IMS s^4-^.:rv I ... ' 1 I.n . I . . 1 . ALTHOUGH NO $TATE HAS AN OFFICIAL CLAIM OH ANY ONE ^TAR, TRADITION ALIGNS A DEFINITE . 5TAB TO EACH ^TATg 4 IN THE ORDER OF IT<5 ENTRANCE INTO THE UNION. 1 ^fNE 13 "STRIPES \; ARE <?A\D TO REPRESENT '• THE ORIG1MAL 13 5TAT£$ / Ledger SyiUicsi* EXPLANATION--Numbers is star* above coincide with ttte arrangement by Stot* in order of mtriDoe Into the Union: Delaware, Dec. 1, 1787; Pennsylvania, Dec# It, 1787; N«# Jersey Dec. 18» 1787; Georgia, Jan. 2, 1788; Connecticut, Jan. 9, 1788; Massachusetts, Feb. «, 1788; Maryland, April 28, 1788; South Carolina, May 2S, 1788; New Hampshire, June 21, 1788; Virginia, June 26, 1788; New York, July 26, 1788; North Carolina, Nov. 21, 1789; Rhode Island, May 29, 1790; Vermont, March 4, 1791; Kentucky, June 1, 1792; Tennessee, June 1, 1796; Ohio, Nov. 29, 1802; Louisiana, April 80, 1812} Indiana, Dec 11, 1816; Mississippi, Dec. 10, 1817; Illinois, Dec. S, 1818; Alabama, Dec. 14, 1819} Maine, March IS, 1820; Missouri, Aug. 10, 1821; Arkansas, June 15, 1836; Michigan, Jan. 26, 1887; Florida, March S, 1845; Texas, Dec. 29, 1845; Iowa, Dec. 28, 1846; Wisconsin, May 29, 1848; California, Sept. 9, 1850; Minnesota, May 11, 1858; Oregon, Feb. 14, 1850; Kansas, Jan. 29, 1861; West Virginia, June 19, IMS; Nevada, Oct. SI, 1864; Nebraska, March 1, 1887; Colorado, Aug. 1, 1876; North Dakota, Nov. 2, 1889; South Dakota, Nov. 2, 1889; Montana, Nor. 8, 1889; Washington, Nov. 11. 1889; Idaho, Inly S, 1890; Wyoming, July 10, 1890; Utah, Jan. 4,188ft; Oklahoma, NOT. 16, 19011 Mew Mexico, Jan. ^ 1012; Arizona, Feb. 14, 1912. ' ONGR£SS> HA9 NEVER •" SPECIFICALLY DICTATED THE. ' '• ARRANGEMENT OF THE STARS AND 5TRIPES tN OLDGrlORY/ BKLDEN RINGS BELL AOAIN do not recommend coercion with shareholders any more than with wage earners. However, I am fully convinced that when the opportunity to subscribe far War Savings Bonds is made easy and simple that a substantial part of dividends--particularly to the small shareholders can be diverted to these securities under the plan used by the BeUra Manufacturing Company. , By GEORGE PECK On August 3rd the Belden Manufacturing Company of Chicago pio- •eered a plan of furthering the sale af War Bonds. On that date it declared a dividend and gave its stockholders the option of accepting War Bonds in lieu of cash. The stockholders apparently thought!' well of the plan for they elected to take 10.6 per ,. x **a"1 ™ ""c"; •,,««* of the dividend in War Savings twn to what I consider the excellent • industrial relations created by such j T„ ' . ,a plan. Too little fras been done to j If the general public had any lin- the organized1 attempt to drive Bering doubt as to the success of the ,a we<igre between capital and labor, jpan, the directors of the Belden Com- i js an opportunity- to let the • fany have completely dissipated it, | wage earner know that the shareholxer on November 4th its directors de- js being solicited to put part of dared another dividend of 37% per his income into War „ the share, payable November 30th to, same manner as he is being solicited Stockholders of record November 16th, OTde^ the payroij and duplicated the offer to send War ievtr Banlie Mmj Wome» of the British royal family who never carried handbags since it way '"beneath" them to handle money,, now carry a purse for cosmetics auf incidentals. Ladies-inwaiting; ggatiiroe to handle the money. of cash, of1 "For the aforegoing reason we de- Savings Bonds instead ^ cided to repeat our offer to send War *»urse, entirely at the option of e~h 8 payment of ^dividual stockholder. the dividend just decTared^ In a letter received from Whipple; Mr Jacobs has the ^ for obs president of the Belden Com- hig c ,s plan, w cIearfy an<1 apt_ jWiy he tePs why its directors were , that ^ neJg ng, fuTther romment ttianlinous in deciding to repeat the i(. could to express our sur- ^rvice of offering War Bonds to its prise thafc many Ameriean eorpora. Stockholders. He says. tions have not adopted a similar plan "As you know, our offer to stock- to aid our government in financing its holders made in connection with ouf ' ail-out war program. I f f' - dividend last August, was well re- j _ ' ! Oeived by our stockholders. Many of them wrote us, expressing their approval and asking us to continue the privilege. "The payroll allotment plan as initiated by the Treasury Department has beep widely adopted. No coer- Mayor Has Umlntas Antomobllt Mayor F. H. LaGuardia of New York has an official automobile which carries luminous paint on its front and reer bumpers, as well as body stripes of luminous paint to make the car visible in blackouts. StapTe AsKhmetio - The circumference of a circle is found by nrnftiptyiRf the dimeter by 3.141$ Tb find the diameter of a circle, multiply the circumference by .31831. Far the area ei a circle, square tile; diameter and multiply by .7854. : 36 Pairs of Stockings The shrouds of a single army, parachute contain as much nylon as three dozen pair at stockings, or more than a year's supply for the average vwmaou War Plants Using Hunches on Speeding Output Of War Weapons Sought. -- a DETROIT.--Today's war worker is proving himself to be a resourceful "idea" to an. Corporations which once relied almost exclusively upon high-priced engineers for methods of improving production, now utilize the man at the machine for hunches on speeding output of war weapons, boosting efficiency and reducing scrap. General Motors corporation, which offers workers war bonds and stamps for acceptable tips, received more than 15,000 suggestions during a 60-day period and paid out more than $40,000 in awards to men and women in 33 plants throughout the country. Two GM employees each received the maximum award--a $1,000 war bond. The Packard Motor Car company, building aircraft and marine engines for the army and navy, has .received 4458 suggestions under its "Work to Win" program, 30 per cent of which helped to improve production efficiency. Merit: pins are awarded workers whose ideas are 'accepted by the joint managernent- .labor committee at Packard. i The suggestions which drew- one of the $1,000 war bonds at GM concerned simplification of the machining process on a part for the Allison airplane engine. A third worker suggested and built a machine that has eliminated a bottleneck in the production of a unit used in the fuel supply system of airplanes. President George T. Christopher of Packard said his plant already has adopted 117 worker suggestions for speeding output of war engines. Full protection is given the Packard worker whose suggestion may prove patentable, according to Christopher. Stop Worrying! There's Plenty of Bear Meat HELENA, MONT.--You've been hearing^ about this incipient meat shortage? Well, just in case it comes, nature --assisted by the Federal Fdrestry service--has cached away some emergency rations in the western woods. The annual big game surplus in this area could feed 5,000,000 soldiers for two months without touching the basic herd stock, federal officials estimate'. The Montana surplus could supply 12,300 tons of dressed meat annually, releasing sufficient beef, mutton and pork to feed more than 340,800 soldiers for one month, says Game Warden J. S. McFarrland. This sunylUs represents the normal annual increase in elk, deer, bear and antelope,, and; would leave the herds a* normal size for reproduction. Should an extreme* food emergency arise, McFarlansf figures the herds could be cut in half to release' enough meat fbom Montana alone to feed well over 920,OW soldiers for one month. And there would remain vast untouched flocks of wild1 sheep;, moontain goats, moose, grizzly bear, birds and fish--potential food for thousands more* soldier* ee civilians. Soldiers Query s Waitress; Get a DTprfoniKtic Reply LONDON. -- Two* American buck privates having- breakfast at the Red Cross Milestone club the other morning when one* asked the waitress, "Are you American?", "Yes," she replied1. "Married?" The waitress safat she was^ "What's your husband do?" "He works in the embassy." "What's he do: there?" "He's the Ameritean ambassador," the waitress replied. Her inquisitor peked his buddy in the ribs. "That's a good gag/' he roared. "Meet my pal. He's Joe Kennedy." The waitress;, Mrs. John G. Winant, laughed and moved away. In Which Billygoat Is Given, an Assist TAMPA, FLA. -- The ration board now expects most anything when motorists come ih to explain with sheepish grins they lost their gasoline-quota books. But they didn't expect this one: "I was-out feeding my goats, and the book slipped out of my pocket. Before I could grab it, a billygoat ate it." <, " ^ Rather Annoying They Bring Double Trouble To Pair of Dentists. CHICAGO.--There are two young men in Chicago who should meet each other--in front of a mirror. Neither knows the other, but they are so nearly identical in appearance that they are indistinguishable. They learned of each other as a result of a toothache that belonged to ftoger Hutchison, a merchandiser. Hutchison was sitting in his dentist's waiting room when another dentist paused in front of him. "Do you want the keys?" the deini • tist asked. Hutchison looked up at him blankly. "No," he said. The dentist stared for a moment and then with a shrug went into his office. Hutchison soon got to thinking more about the question than the tooth. He tossed asidfe the magazine he'd been trying to read and walked over to the inquiring dentist's office. He stuck his head through the doorway and blurted: "What keys do you mean?" The dentist turned impatiently and replied: "Why, the keys to the of? fice! Don't you want to go to work?" "I can't figure out what you're talking ' about," Hutchison said. "I've come, here to have a tooth filled." A few minutes later Hutchison related the incident to his own denrtist. The dentist nodded knowingly 5 and called a nurse. "Who is this?" he asked, pointing at Hutchison. The nurse, bewildered, replied: "Why, you know Dr. Johnson as well as I do!" While working over Hutchison's tooth, the dentist explained. A few days previously Dr. Merton Johnson, a physician who sometimes works in another office of the suite, had entered the office of Hutchison's dentist. "How's that tooth? the dentist asked him. "Tooth?" said Dr. Johnson. "What tooth?" The dentist was a fittle irritated. "The tooth I've been treating for you, of course." Dr. Johnson looked closely at his \ associate. "My teeth- are sound," he said, "and I think: you should get more sleep." Adventurous Youth Sees Service oir Egypt Front SCHENECTADY, R. Y.--Adventure might well be the- middle name of Harold Hennessy- Jtev Ik 1937, at the age of 17, and> while still a frsgh school student*, he crossed the Golf of Mexico in an I&foot canoe with two Senftinole Indians. A year Later he sailed the same' craft to the West Indies with ai fellow student. Now, he's with the- American ffieid service in the middle of the Kgyp^- taan battle against Nazi Marshal E*- wisn Rommel. Hiaroid messaged bonne that he'd esaaped wheni To bruk fell, but thatt He' was cOnficteaft Rommel would he* halted. EGe enlisted with the American field service three days before America declared war on Japan and sailed for Cairo last February. 0 BUT Will BONDS HOW MUCH areTurkevs A POUND WHAT ARE WMKlNfe WP Docks 7 ^ / g WNU Service) WHAT PIP VOV SW (&&&- A P0UNP -AND MX) DM V HAVE AMCMCKiHS LEFT? IM THANKFUL I HAVE 0AKEP BEANS 5> Lucky for Sergeant It Wasnt Two Other Girls MOORE FIELD, TEXAS. - The romantic aspirations of Staff Sergeant John A. Traeger, 504th school squadron, were considerably thwarted recently. After writing a letter to his girl friend in Seguin, Texas, he enclosed it in an envelope and addressed it to his maiden aunt in Hoboken, N. J. The letter written to his sunt was inserted in another envelope addressed to the girl friend. Result: His girl friend received a "thank you" rote for a delicious layer cake, and his aunt got an invitation to spend two weeks near here. How This Caw Got in Well Still Is Mystery CROMWELL, 0ONN.--Ding-dong bell: Bossy was in the well, but who put her im was not hak so deep a mysteny as how the feat was accomplished!. Superintendent Joseph Bromait of the Swedish Orphanage, found the cow struggling iin 12 feet of water at the well bottom. The cow was hoisted up with a chain and rope sling, but the opening in a heavy iron cover atop the well was so small she eotdd not be squeezed through it. A tractor which pulled away the cover sblved that problem, but not the mystery of how the critter gat down there ia the first place. V ' " 7 CHURCH SERVICES ^ -f%r'i~ ^ l*"" • ' • a t t" " *•' i V '*>. o THANKSGIVING A. WORWICK ^ PHOTOGRAPHER ' " Portraiture - Commerdtf ' Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying - Framing Phone 275 -- Riverside Drive McHENRY. ILL. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church Special: j: Thanksgiving Service--9:00 a^ jgu Divine Service -- Nine o'cIock*-.&^ Sunday School --- Ten o'clock. ' Rev. R. T. Eisfeldt, Pastor," : / St. Mary's Catholic Church . Masses: . Sunday: 7:00, 8:30, 10:30.: ,'- Holy Days: 6:00; 8:00; 10:00; * Week Days: 6:45 and 8:00. , First Friday: 6:30 and 8:00. "7* ^ Confessions: Saturdays: 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday- After 8s00 Mass on Thursday; 8:00 pat. and 7:00 p. m. v "; Msgr. C. S. Nix, Pastor. St. Patrick's Catholic Church ' _ Masses:. j '•, ; Sunday: 8:00, 10:00. Weekdays: 7:30. * ,-v: First Fridays: 7:80. On First Friday, Communion die- , tributed at 6:30, 7:00 and before and during the 7 ^30 Mass. Confessions: " ' Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00" p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday . 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 tr 8:00 Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, pastor. luio INSURANCE F£5S EARL R. WALSH Presenting f-:~? Reliable Companies &?•: ft^hen yon need insurance of any UMA Phone 48 or 118-M Green & Elm McHenrf St. John's Catholic Church, JoKasbnrg Masses: Sunday, 8:00, 10:00. . ^ , Holy Days: 7:00 and Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. i ; . Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:30. Thursday before First Friday: 2:8t and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. ( Community Church "Suuday School: 10:00 a. m. ~ Worship Service: 11:00 a. m. Junior League: 6:80 p.m. Epworth League: 8:00 p.m. Rev. J. Heber Miller, pastor. St. Peter's Catholic Chorch, Spring Grove Masses: V!> • Soifdays: 8:00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9#9|>: Weekday: 8:00. First Friday: d:00. u Confessions: Saturdays: 2:80 and 7:10. » Thursday before First Friday: and 7:15. Rev. John L. Daleiden, Pastor. McHENRY LODGE A. F. & A. M. McHenry Lbdge No. 158 meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month at the hall on Court street. Amazing Soil Fertility IB all the world there is, perhaps no other country more favorably en* dowed by nature than Cuba. The fertility of the soil is amazing. Pineappies produce three and four crops a year, and a planting of sugar cane can be cut for five years. Copper and iron are plentiful, there are asphalt and manganese deposits* and every tropical and semi-tropical plant known to man will grow. OteMth and lianas hang in magnificent chaste#* from mahogapy, * ad cedar trees. *••• Phone McHenry 677-R-l -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND & GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Filling . . . Black Dirt & Stone Power Shovel Service . .• Power Leveling and Grading ... Cement Mixers for Rent. J. E. NETT Johnsburg p. Q.--McHenry "- TEL. WONDER LAKE 158 > ;.!h. DR. C. L. WATKINS || ; * ; Dentist • - Office Hours - '.si!'*"' Tuesday & Saturdays: 9 a.m. to 5 pJHU . Evenings an4 Sunday Mornings; by Appointment.! Lookout Point Wonder Lake, IB. Telephone No. 300 . s v . --"i Stoffel & Reihaffi^Mfgw Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTOR^ AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Ybur Service in Building Your Wants. Phone 56-W McHenry A. P. Freund Co. Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic • and Crane Service. --Road Building--- Tel 204-M McHenry, UL PhoVe 43 Vmioa J. Knox ATTORNEY At LAW -- OFFICE HOURS -- Taesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment Meiry . . r .Illinois PHONE 15 J X-Ray Service DR. J. E. SAYLER DENTIST Office Hours 9-12 and 1-5 by Appointment Thardsys - 9. to 12 and Sim Streets, McHenry Lakes There are more than 11,000 lakes fax Minnesota. DR. FRED C. MILLER M. D. Specializing in Eye Work Win he at office of Dr. A. L Froehlieh. corner Elm and Green Streets by appointment. Charlie's Repair Shop Sign Painting Truck Lettering Furniture Upholstering and Repairing CHARLES RIETESEL Horses Wanted 1 B U Y Old and Disabled Horses. Pay from $5 to $14 • ARTHUR W. WERRBACK Phone 844 439 E. Calhoun St. Woodstock, IlL 'Musettes' to Teach Army About Reptiles NEW YORK. -- United States soldiers are to be taught how to tell whether a snake is harmless or poisonous and how "to detect poison ivy. They will learn all this from portable museums--"Musettes," which the department of education of the American Museum of Natural History is planning. Oversized Bread Tin Costs Baker $25 Fine DALLAS, TEXAS. -- Sam Weinstein, baker, blames the war for his $25 fine for selling loaves of biread that were too Large. State law prescribes 16-ounce loaves; one of Weinstein's weighed 19% ounces. He said his baking pans were too large--and he can't get priorities to buy smaller ones. - , WANTED TO BUY We pay $3 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt's Mink Ranch Johnsburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 659-J-2 r" CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES & CATTLE We pay phone charges. McHENRY FLORAL CO. -- Phone 608-R-l -- One Mile South of McHenry on Route 31. Flowers for all occasions! McHENRY TOWN CLUB Riverside Drive and Pearl Street Motion Distinguishes Satellite: A satellite is distinguished from it planet by its motion rather than by its size. A satellite goes around the planet. Kissed Good-by in 193$, Wife Tires of Waiting BALTIMORE. -- When her husband of one day kissed her good-by and said he was leaving, Mrs. Paul Strawn thought he was. "only kidding." He wasn't. That was in 1936 and Mrs. Strawn hasn't seen him since. She told Judge J. Craig McLanahan all about it in circuit court and was granted a divorce. Mixed Drinks of All Kindt VOUR SPECIAL BARBECUED RIBS Phone 1? McHenry Reverse Charge? The cost of stopping and starting „ Fair Raee "The pursuit of the perfect, then, is the pursuit of sweetness «»H light."--Matthew Arnold. Hinge Necessary "What a man needs in gardening rne cosi 01 stopping ana starting ^ a ca8t.iron back, with a hingeon 560-ton passenger tram traveling^ it"_Charle« Dudliv W™r at a speed of 50 miles per hour va ries from about 84 cents to $2.80. Order your Christmas Cards from -The. Plaindealer.' :: "" it."--Charles Dudley Warner. Taking Care "Take care of the sense and the sounds will take care of tltea> •elves."--Lewis CarroiL Good Brakes Save Your Tires "KEEP 'EM ROLLING" If you are ^having brake trouble, bring your car or truck to our trained mechanics for expert Brake Service. Remember, good brakes give your tires the chaise to give you the maximum service at minimum cost. Come in today for a checkup on our State Approved Safety Lane. These services will lengthen the life of your car. Motor Tuning Lubrication Tire Repairing Willard Fast Battery Charging CENTRAL GARAGE FRED J. SMITH, Prop. Phone 200-J Towing lohnibnri

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