KINGWOOD &:r LIFE HISTORY OF LIFE-SAVING N' i r (By II:'Jen Johnson) Mr. and Mrs. George Shephard and Howard, and Mrs. Alan Ainger and BOti, George, of Greenwood called on Seaman 2/c Charles Foss at ^he Great Lakes Saturday. Mrs. Jennie Bacon ifc spending two weeks with her daughter, Mrs. Lou Abondroth, at Elgin. Helen Johnson and Janet spent JSun- J day /with Mrs. Dan Lawrence and Susan Kay at Elkhorn. Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, >Mr?. Viola Low and Mrs. Ben Walkington at-| tended the Methodist conference in j Chicago Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown spentj Monday afternoon at Janesville. , f Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Merchant and Alice Howard of Kenosha were callers*1 in the Ray Merchant home Sunday « evening. ' • v . , >MrS. Edyth Faulkner of Wilrtiot and "Mtp. George R. Harrison were recent ijftfrsts in the Walter Harirson home. ".•'•The -Ringwood- Home Bureau will meetwith Mrs. Wheelocfc on Tuesday^. jJuly 6, at 1:30 p. m. Mrs. Sweeney,.; the* advisor, will give the lesson. - ;j ^ •"••Amy Harrison of Madison jspejrit | Saturday with her parents/ M^;ftn<i ' ; Mrs. Chancey Harrison,."' . :V* V,~ Mr. and Mrs. Rogers Collins, ^nd; baby Arid Charts Lefocco of Chicago ~ guests ,of Rfiv. sipd :CoWin.s v '".-for tJie weekend. . .-7 ' -Elaine and George ' Wiedritih >of Capron .spent several days with their : . grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. 1? red Wiedrich. •i 'the 4-II club met at the home of Mrs. Paul Walkington on Thursday IARIY AGESHEAT MiTHOD 1530- BillOWS METHOD^ METHOD TODAYSCHAFER PRONE PRESSURE METHOD TROTTING HORSE METHOD Six of twenty colorful, scale-model ; craftmanship the medically authentic evening at 6:30 p. mr A talk was dioramas depicting the history of. life \ story of. resuscitation practices from given bv Fariol Martin. The eluji will being featured in the American ancient days to the present -moment, meet with Mrs. Walkinjiton on Thur - Red Cross exhibit at the Museum of The simple Schafer method shown day evening of this week. • Science and Industry, Jackson Park, t lower light) is one commonly used Mrs. Ed Bauer and Mrs. William Chicago. todayon victims of drowning, asphlx^ McCannon were callers in Woodstock , With thousands of persons now tak- iation, or electric shock. The entire Tuesday afternoon. i jng- wartime first aid course^, the ex- exhibit, known as the "Evolution of Ethel Krohn left on Thursday for. hibit is one of the Museum's featured Resuscitation," was presented to the Pdrt Devens, Mas§., to begin her basic attractions. By work of artist Howard Museum by the Public Service corntraining'as a WAAC. . .• . . i Cox. the dioramas tell with skilled pany of Northern Illinois. Mrs. George Harrison is visitingher"j i i-------- SLOCUM LAKE • * daughter at Crystal Lake. Mrs. Roy Wiedrich and children were callers in Woodstock Wednesday, Donald Wilson and friends of Fairjdale called on Howard Shephard Sunday. Mrs. Walter Harrison and Eark* were guests in the Bert Doolittle home at Antioch, Sunday. , . home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping. . . Jlev. an< * ?s* .. „ , Miss Frances Converse was an over- Tretsven, extension dairy specialist xgttiests visited in Betoil Sunday. Milking 3 Times Daily Would Boost the Output I i--------' • • -3- 1 Three times a day milking offers farmers having dairy herds of 10 j (By Mrs. Hnrry Matthews) cows or less an opportunity to in- Miss Mafylin Darrell of Wauconda crease production to help meet the i spent last Friday and Saturday at the ever-growing wartime demands for milk and milk products, says J. O. ASKKUII*] N+»«ptr« CHATTERER FINDS A HOME When your plana are upset and all scattered about ' ' . Just make up your mind that you'll And 'Sp way out. pETER RABBIT went straight * over to the old 9tone wall on the edge of the Old Orchard lipperty, lipperty, lip, so fast that it didn't take him long to get there. But Chatterer the Red Squirrel never feels really safe on the ground unless there is something to climb close at hand, so he went a long way round by way of the rail fences. He always did like to run along a rail fence, and he wouldn't have. "Rinded it a bit this morning if he hadn't been in such a hurry. It ieemed to him that he never would get there. But, of course, he did. You know you always get somewhere if you keep on going ldrig enough. • . , • V When he did get there he found Peter Rabbit sitting on Johnny; Chuck's doorstep staring down Johnny Chuck's long •. ha-lj.." /."Thev^^. •Asleep," said he, as Chat^feT^r:CSTije: gup all out of breath. ' Peter shook his head in a pulled tyay: and continued to stare dd'.vn the long, empty hall. Of course he Was talking about Johnny" and Polly Chuck, who had gone to sleep for the winter. That sleeping business always puzzJes Peter. It seems to him like a terrible waste of time. But Chatterer had too much on his mind to waste time wondering how other people could sleep all winter. He couldn't himself, and now that r. A « u . r night guest last Saturday ,at the home ®t Sflontana State college. Pvt. Jame, H>m», Miss Dayis> near Dairy studies show, he Said, thrt zie, Texas, and Mrs. Harrison ana W™a-uauccoonn{dja^.' ^ -- - more ^3,, gg per cent Df ajj cows son of Wabena, Wis., spent Saturday Touhv of Clii-aeo and milked in the United States are in and Sunday with the fo™'^ ^:'c^s' I Staff Sargent Robert Johnson of f.erds of ten c°ws °.r Ies* a.nd K th£j Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harirson. Pvt. ram„ a,,**;,, r»vac they are owned and milked by 90 Harrison is enjoying a furlough with ^ npPasBt^n^eUSe^rMrSS>er Cent -ho milk Six-Footers Now Given Preference III Show Business f ' . ---- Tall Girls Are in Demand on Stage and Wages Are High, Too. NEW JfORK.--Pulchritude is hitting a new high in the show business. Show girls six feet tall are much in demand. Wages are up because of that demand. In Hollywood there is a' genuine scarcity of showgirls, both six-footers and those nearer the traditional five-feet-two. In New York there is no pronounced shortage as yet, but a showgirl who really has something to offer in the way of looks is having little trouble finding a job. Sooner or later, the Hollywood shortage probably will be felt in New York, if only because secondchoice showgirls decide to buy tickets to Hollywood. But vetefan showmen here anticipate no trouble in finding girls--yet. . To begin with,"a showgirl should not be confused with a chorus girl. All a showgirl has to do is look pretty and strut around In as few clothes as the law or her conscience will permit. A chorus girl has to know how to dance, and if she wants tq work steadily, should be $. bit decorative as well. S'-vj'M-'-- War Causes Shortage. : Charles R. Rogers, Hollywood producer who came here for a preview of "The Powers Girl," attributed the West coast shortage of showgirls directly to the war. Girls in and out of films, he said, are finding their time taken up with interests like the Red Cross and the wartime ington National Editorial Assodatto* Washington, June 30--Aftermath of the Congressiqnal rampage against bureaucracy is the exodus, of many government employees this week as the appropriations for their agencies expire and their jobs are automatically abolished. Hundreds of other highly placed and minor officials are on tether-hooks as the-new fiscal year begins tomorrow with their status still undetermined owing to the failof workday increased most in tit# States where power equipment is most generally used. Youngsters r.re rv># called to work. Reports indicate thjfc: about 13 per cent of farm workers were under 14 years of age as compared with 4 per cent as of April H 1942. Survey^ indications also revegl a sharp increas® in the percentage «ffemales working on farms. ^ Workers who have been flittii% from one job to another will find transfers difficult under the extension of War Manpower Commission planfc New acute labor shortage areas have been defined so that job switching will be covered by striat regulations in 291 important regions. At the same time this Federal agency is increasing its training courses for war industry and agriculture. Estimates call f<pr; pre-employment training of 1,300,000 inexperienced workers this year in ure to enact appropriation bills before,the plans where trainees will work a* the time limit. The discomfiture of- soon as they are ready to begin actulfl officialdom is balm in the wounds of j production. In-plant traitftng of pr»- the lawmakers who havei been rebuffed j duction and skilled workers, inehidin* or ignored in their relations with ad-1 apprentices and advancing worked ministrative agencies. It is signifi-1 will alsq be needed in 100,000 plajitfcV cant that money absolutely necessary for military and naval operations is services. There available with a minimum of restrictions which have been imposed upon the civilian wai agencies long at loggerheads with Capitol Hill, ' A variety of reasons inspired the} axe-wielding over grants of money. The flare-up in legislative circles rep-; resents a strong undertow which pre-; vailed for many months, The.net re- ( suit is to make the departments and t bureaus more concious of their reeponsbilities to the public and con-; vince them of the need for a change in their tactics. Powerful agencies, like the Office of War Information, were obliged to swallow their pride and appeal to groups they had previously denounced in frantic efforts Need Rubber Stamps! Otd^r at Tlitf ^ Plaindealer. ^ , * •It sciousness of uniforms, he said, and many girls are finding it embarrassing not to be wearing one. There also is a big trend toward all-girl pictures in all the major studios, and showgirls and dancing is a great con- ^ salvage their#outfits from oblivion < at the hands of the solons. Some pri- j vate agencies which came to their aid j in the emergency frankly skeptical that the crisis will bring about any i marked change of heart once the money is available for the continuance .his wife and son. Mrs. William Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Orville Granger and daughter Bonnie Carol of Woodstock Mrs. John W. Smith and Dorothy Katherine Smith spent Friday in the F*ed Zappe home in Chicago. , The following enjoyed a reunion in i were callers Sunday at the home of he R. C. Harrison home Sunday: Mrs. j. B. Vol'man. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Erooks. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dehne of Gten- Vollmn, Karen Rita, Mr. and Mrs. were callers Sunday at the home fcg production. Elmer Johnson and Miss Audrey Scott of *r Mrs. W. E. Brooks • - • • of Elgin; Mr. and Mrs. August Bur- ^r and! Mrs. Wm. Burkhart were ro„« and daughter and, Auju*. Krohn T"? STJ? cows. Yet these small herds produce only 55 per cent of the nation's total milk supply. In other words, Tretsven points out, with better management these small herds could produce much more and three times a day milking is one means of boostof Harvard; Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Howard and Alice and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Merchant of Kenosha; Pvt. and Mrs. Alfred Stienke of Indianapolis; The dairy specialist also points out that conditions now are favorable for pushing cows to the limit. Feed is generally plentiful and there will be a market outlet at good prices SI •:y: ; Mrs A Knockemus Sr. at Williams Park last Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. William Burkhart of for every gallon of milk and cream, Williams Park spent from Saturday j and for every pound of butter that Mr? and Mrs^r e7 Walked,'7^^ "oon "^il late Monday at the home of i small herds can: produce beyond Bobby, Mrs. I. E Walker, Sr., of Wau- Mr- H" Ludermann in Chi- family needs. kegan; Walter Krohn of Hebron, Mrs. .Saturday evening about Charles Coles and Suzanne of McCul- forty relatives and friends gathered lom Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Benoy, ! at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Htfl- All That, California Too Ttrrv and Glen of Greenwood; CharleJ *ka where a party had been arranged ©«n and oyster^shells were foimd Krohn and Lois, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur m honor of ^ thirty-fifth wedding j «te of six villages of the lost Krohn and children, Mr. and anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Burk- Clarence Harrison and David, Leonard I ^art; Dancing and visiting was the Krohn, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Merchant, ' of the evening. The serving Rita and Audrey, and Mr. and Mrs. of delicious refreshments climaxed an K. E. Harrison, Edvth and Loren. •. j-enjoyable event Mr a^d Mrs. Burk- The Ringuood Junior Dairymen!^ ™any beautiful gifts. 4-H club met at the school Thursday 1 ^ George Lundgren of ^evening. Talks were given by Norman ^ a^onda were Sunday dinner guests Carlson and Joanne May. Date of the i®* c home of Mr. and Mrs. John *l)*xt meeting will be announced later. J Mr. and Mrs. George Shephard and } Mrs* A. Knockeftius and son, Roy, tribes of Channel Indians, on a marshy island 12 miles west of Santa Barbara, Calif. Fire-blackened stones and four burial grounds, with shell beads among the skeletal remains, were unearthed. fent Friday evening in the Fred I past eighty yeat-s old. iedrich, Jr., home and helped Mrs. 5? Oops Paint Bikes Kansas City's police department is in the bicycle painting business to reduce casualties from bike-auto col- Hmvard speht Monday in Elgin. jand granddaughter Judith of Chicago ] hsions at night. After tests made by Mrs". George Haberline spent sev-1 sPerit last Friday at the home of Mr. ^he Missouri city s police Ehowed that eral days last week in Chicago. Und Mrs. William Burkhart at Wil- i *hite Paint increases a bicycle's visi- Mrs. Frank Wattles of McHenry lHams Park. biUty the department offered to put was a Sunday ^dinner guest in the j Mr. and Mrs. B. Ruthenb^rg of My- j deity's bicycles freT oT^haw C. L. Harrison home. . j lith Park were callers at Oak Park J Thi»r«» Iro An rwi in »h« ^llv' Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders and | last Thursday, while there they called ' ^ Mrs. Bertha Saunders of Harvard on Mr. Ruthenberg's mother who is -- Lost and Feund--Provinee -- , Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Rodene of Chi- ' The lost province of Quivira, Wiedrich celebrate her birthday. ! cago were guests last Sunday at the which lured Spanish conquistadors Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Payne of j home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rodene ! four centuries ago, turned up in JBarvard called on Rev. and Mrs. Col- : at Mylith Park. Kansas according to a report of lihs Sunday afternoon. j Mrs. Carl Hansen of this commun- 4116 Smithsonian institution. Digging Lois and Ethel Krohn were callers ! ity received a telegram at midnight showed storage pits of Indian vilriil the R. 'B: Merchant home Monday last Wednesday bearing the sad news*la8e.s> Possibly of the Wichitas, who Stfternoon. - 1 that her mother, Mrs. Morgan, had cultivated com, beans, and squash, • Charles and Joe Carr spent several. passed away following a heart attack a^e w^d fruits, and killed bison, anrdays with their cov_3ins, Merle and i and burial would be at Cherryville, an<^ other animals for food. |toy Wiedrich at Capron. Kansas. Mrs. Hansen left last Thuvs- Fro™ Jbison Shoulder blades they Loren Harrison was a Monday day morning for Kansas. made hoes. Their painted glazed evening dinner guest in the J. .'jfc. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and ^ ®Jjowed 0181 traded with Harrison home at Greenwood. i Mrs. Elmer Esping were among the . Ue ! members of Mayflower Chaptei^No. 1 555 O. E. S. who accompanied nieir Worthy Matron, Mrs. E. H. Prior, to Easter Chapter North Chicago last Wednesday evening. Mrs. Prior serv- | ed a? W6rthy Matron for the evening : and Mrs. Matthews appeared in the i escort. j Mr. and Mrs. Ted Carlson of Gurnee j were callers last Sunday at the home j of Mrs. M. Carlson at Mylith Park, j Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stasch of Burton's "Have you foun| yet?" asked Peter. he had been driven away from his own home in the Green Forest by fear of Shadow the Weasel he couldn't waste a minute. He must find a new home and then spend every minute of day time layi: up a new store of food for tlv days when everything would be covered with snow. He shivered at •the thought. * Up and down the length of the stone wall he scampered looking for a place to make a home, but nothing suited him. You know he likes best to make his home in a tree. He isn't like Striped Chipmunk, who lives in the ground. Poor Chatterer! He just couldn't see how he was going to live in the old stone wall. He sat on top of a big stone to rest and think it over. He was discouraged. Life didn't seem worth living just then. He felt as if his heart had gone way down to his toes. Just then his eyes saw something that made his heart come up girls who formerly got jobs when-1 f lH , i u7 , ever they could now have contracts ^?abet,cal J1 8r°vernm?nt b"r" and are loaned back and forth be- T - T 16 m/nyJaTs,n* s,t.01j tween studios | £oing the rounds about once high "The girls are in a patriotic frame !a"d Fed!ral officials who turn- j of mind," Rogers added, "and are , a deaf ear to communications of, not doing style shows and personal lawmake™ appearing before the | appearances. They are 'making same men ,n a ^eferential mood and ; down* instead of 'making up,' using exPressing repentance for their blund- j less lipstick and rouge, and as a re- ers an<* Courtesy. j suit we are seeing a more natural ' 11116 Pla«s for a Congress- j beauty." ional recess beginning July 15, may | On the West coast also, many girls j ^ thrown overboard as tensons in-1 folt it their duty to work on the har- !crease over the miners' wage demands 1 vests, and a great number have left and the highly controversial price conthe films altogether for jobs in air- ! trol program. President Roosevelt craft plants that pay more thin the iand union labor have advocated subshowgirls average, and take much ! sidies for roll backs in food prices less for clothes. -! Powerful segments of Congress are WAAC Calls Girls Away. ; opposed to this program. Little sue- New York seems to have more {cess has been noted in efforts to reach | ; male employables for the war indus-1 a compromise. Farm organizations ! . tries, and there was not the same ' are on the warpath against certain | ! concern here over harvesting. Also, {subsidy programs which would bene-! according to such Broadway show- j fit food processors and leave the grow- { ; men as George Abbott and Michael |ers out in the cold. The agriculture I j Todd, New Yprk can draw its show- i groups are asking for stimulation of I ?,r* recruits from a bigger area, jfood production by means of per,mia«- j including the profession s training I ible price rises. Farm area spokesmen i (i CIVt YOUR CHICKS (rfwrozo/K farm for drinking WArre cnoi* AND iNTrsriMes 1ST, ACTS IN DRINK Inlul l«J utd DmUtU with wbkk H Maw In aontaot tb«r«. 1HD, ACTS IN CROP! Otdatn dldait* purify drink, trot i an klao pleted up from nt- Ur-dropptojs. O«rmoioti« ACTS la •n*. too. 3RD, ACTS IN INTESTINES. G*rmojon« la not only aa aatdncent In lntcatlnca, it alao acta acalnit h*nnful bacteria tbcre. Valuabla for many ilmplt crop, dlfwtlm, bowel dliordcri, 4 os. 40c; 1J oi. T5o; wooomy IS ox., tl.BO. P> Bolger's Drug Store Green. Street McHenry schools. There never has been an oversupply of really beautiful girls, however, and Broadway is showing the same demand for all-girl casts. I are demanding tighter wage controls j to keep down production^costs with- j out huge subsidies to hold back food j prices. Mr. Roosevelt's balloon for the induction of men over 45 years,' enough six-foot showgirls in Hollywood, cacried his search to New York and located 10 to which he offered jobs in the film version of Gypsy Rose Lee's epic, "The G-String Murders." Before the picture went into production, however, lulll8 uim lliav,c I41» tuIIIfr tw0 ot the g'rls had joined the again with a great bound right where j 'our were doubling between Stromberg, unable tc. find)as a means of preventing strikes in Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., has received word that her son. Pvt. WiU lianv Brennan, has arrived safely in North Africa. .vl»\ and Mrs. Lyle Hopper : and daughters of Chicago were callers in the S. W. Smith home Saturday afitinoon. ^ v • • What tyo* With J0MD3 Prmvnts the "Bends" it ought to be. Just then Peter Rabbit came hopping along. . "Have you found a new home yet?" asked Peter. "Yes," replied Chatterer, "I think I have." "That's good," replied Peter. "I was sure you would find one oyer, here. Where is it?" Chatterer opened his mouth t® tell Peter, and then closed it with a snap. He remembered just in time how hard it is for peter to keep a secret. If he should tell Peter it would be just like Peter to tell some One else without meaning to, and then it might get back to Shadow Tthe Weasel. "I'm not going to tell you now, Peter Rabbit," said he. "You see I don't want anybody to know where it is until I am sure that it will do. But I'll tell you this much," he added, as he saw how disappointed Peter looked. "I'm going to live right here." Peter brightened up right away. You see he thought that, of course, Chatterer meant that he had found a hole in the old stone wall, and he felt very sure that he could find it by keeping watch. "That's good," he said again. "I'll see you often. | But watch out for Black Pussy. Her ! claws are very sharp. Now I think I'll be going back "to the Old Briar Patch." ' <* "Doa't tell where I am," called Chatterer. j "I won't," replied Peter, and, fes j usual, he meant just what he said. war industries, has elicited a storm j of protest from the military legisla-; tors and trade unions. The White House is working hard to cultivate the good will of the Senate as a count- j er-offensive to the disturbing actions of a rebellious House. | Floods and. excessive rains have j Broadway shows and posing for art- j forced farmers to work longer hours I ists and changed their minds about leaving, and the four others had night club contracts and couldn't get away. So Stromberg went back to Hollywood and began casting all over again. as a means of producing a food crop. While Congress and government agencies are wrangling over farm policies, the real dirt farmers are working hard to make up lost time. More concern is now being expressed over handling the harvest than in planting and cultivating the crops. Farmers on the whole, however, appear to be adjusting: their programs to the situation Woman Neighbor Chokes Girl With Apron String CINCINNATI, OHIO.--Gail Marie j better than they did a year ago and Bradner, three-year-old daughter of 'apparently feel that with the govern- Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bradner, waSjm€11t making every effort possible to »pu^i oo *° dealh. ^ Miss Marie ^provide them with assistance, they ill turn out a large crop this year. 1 may be significant that the length I Thiel, 33, a neighbor, who surrendered to police. "I don't know why I did it," she said. The child's body was found in Miss Thiel's apartment. The child's parents live in the same apartment dwelling. i Miss Thiel told police she pulled | an apron string tightly around the ! child's neck. ! Detectives found the body of the | child on a small stool. Efforts of a ' rescue squSd to revive the child j were unsuccessful. j Police said the woman walked into | Central police station and an- i nounced: ! "I have choked a baby to death." ' Miss Thiel recently was an inpate j of a hospital, police reported, and ; lived with a sister, Mrs. ' Alice j Goode. The child's father was working j while the mother had left the build- ! 1 ing on an errand. WANTED! MEN AND v WOMEN 100% WAR WORK We have openings for both experienced and inexperienced workers. WELDERS DRAFTSMEN ASSEMBLERS BENCH WORKERS LATHE OPERATORS MACHINE bPERATORS The Frank G. Hough Co. Libertyville, Illinois - 4 EFFECTIVE JULY 2 Fhia station will be open from 10:00 &, m. until 10:00 p. m. Closed all day Wednesday. "' * Huck's Standard Service Larry J. Huck, Prop. Gars Washed Greasing Simonizing Tire Repairing Rug* and Worship Make Kairouan Famous Site Kairouan, scene of clashes in Tunisia, is famous for rugs and worship. Arab conquerors of North Africa in 670 A. D., schooled in desert cavalry combat and knowing nothing of naval warfare, chose the desolate, waterless site of Kairouan on which to build a governing town. Kairouan, in April, long has been a festive city where thousands of visitors have gathered to examine the year s output of native weavers at the annual rug fair. Fostered by the French, prizes have been awarded to the best weaver^, while com- Before our fighting pilots take to the air for stratosphere flying they D ., „ must be "suped-up." To do this the Bridge were callers last Sunday even- ; pilot just before he takes off pedals ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. i a stationary motor driven bicycle to EXIT QUIETLY PLEASE Mason at Mylith Park., Tamerlane's Grandson, THagh Soviet scientists reported finding, at the foot of a mountain near Samarkand, the palace of Tamerlane's grandson, Ulugh Beg, 15th century emperor-astronomer. This palace was^known as the Porcelain House because of its Chinese ceramics. Ronghage Supplement Grain should be looked upon .AS. petitive exhibitions of horsemanship *uPPlement to roughage. If the and a large variety of side shows *" ---,S4~ - have given the event much of the character of the county fairs known to all Americans, Jugglers, beggars and snake charrpers with bags of cobras ease the " tourist's dollar from his purse. ^Order ^your Rubber Stamps at The receive all the good quality roughage they will consume without waste, a Jersey or Guernsey should get slightly more grain than a Holstein or Ayrshire. For instance, a Guernsey or Jersey producing 20 pounds of milk daily needs about six pounds' of grain per day, whereas a Holstein or Ayrshire producing 20 pounds of milk daily needs about four pounds ot grain. reduce the amount of nitrogen in his blood. Otherwise gas bubbles would collect in his blood stream. Mrs. Jones--Why does that concert singer always close her eyes when she sings? Mrs. Smith--I guess then she can't see the audience suffer. GOOD DESCRIPTION The stationary bicycle is an inexpensive piece of equipment, but "the vast quantities of this and other materials of war make it imperative for all of us to keep our fighting men well supplied by greater and greater purchases of War Bonds. V. S. Trtaturj Dtfarlmtnt Mother--Would you go"Snt! see if the grandfather clock is running? Betty--No, room, it isn't running. It's just standing and wagging its tail.' • ^ Diplomats "U. S. marines," says Arthur: ("Bugs") Baer, "are America's best diplomats ,, Severe Betaettm The announced 1943 AAA payment rates on farm crops include 3.6 cents per bushel on corn, 9.2 cents per bushel on wheat, and 0.4 cent per pound on burley tobacco. Severe reductions from total crop payments will be made for failure to plant at least 90 per cent of an acreage allotment and 90 per cent of a special war crop goal. Stolen Coat Contains An Explosive Chemical CINCINNATI, OHIO.--The thief who is wearing the jacket stolen from Walter Vizcarrofido, army ordnance department employee, had better be careful. Vizcarrondo told police the jacket, which was stolen from his automobile, contained a two-ounce bottle of chemical more explosive than TNT. A plaid shirt saturated with gunpowder also was stolen. Vizcarrondo is employed in the laboratory. Supersensitivity Both man and animal sometimes develop such an excessive hypersensitivity to a foreign protein that a repeated injection, although very small, may prove fatal, says Collier's. For example, when a guinea pig is given 1-100,000th of a gram of horse serum, a second dose, only one-tenth as large and injected two weeks later, ' will kill the animal within a few minutes. Read the Want Ads! CLARENCE'S SHOP * * Lawn chaars, pier and park benches, bird and dog houses, trellises and picket fences, window boxes, etc. Full line of house and barn brooms and milk can brashes, etc. * ? Hand woven wash baskets, clothes hampers, shopping and market baskets. v- ^ General line of men's and women's leather belts, billfolds, purses and war ration book cases, etc. Clarence J. Smith JOHNSBURQ, ILL.