McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Oct 1943, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

m M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at Mt fcenry, 111., by Charles F. Rcinch. A H. MOSHER Editor and Managet HELP WANTED Entered as second-class matter at poftoffice at McHenry, III., undei act of May 8, 1879. One Year ... Six Months |1.<X j WANTED -- Middle-aged, woman for housekeeper in motherless home in country, twelve miles from Waukegan,_ 111. Mrs. D. D. Shea. 920 Ash Street, Waukegan. 22 HELP WANTED--Womap or girl foi soda fountain and general store work. Steady. Bolger's Drug Store. 18-tf NATIONAL €DITORI Al__ ;n/!5 VC ASSOCIATION ISO ' FOR SALE FOR SALE --Pears, B J. Brefeld, , " VjGreen and Washington Sts... Tel. 88-M. FOR SALE--Studio couch in good '""'condition; also two lamp tables like " v „/pew; one kitchen chroihe finish, also " "f". in good condlitjon. Tel. pistak*>e -1, \ HELP WANTED -- Boy to work in drug: store. Bolger's Drug Store, McHenry. 18-tf WANTED -- Woman or girl for restaurant work. Tel. 377. 14-tf WANTED--Painter's helper.. Boat Company. Hunter 13-tf Miss Kathnyn McAndrews of Chicago is spending a two week's vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl McAndrews. Sunday guests in the McAndrews home were Mrs. Blanche Green, Mrs. Loretta Weber and son, Bob, and the Misses Mary and Margaret Walsh of Chicago. Mrs. George Williams and Mrs. August Panknin attended a birthday party last week for Mrs. Hazel Using at the home of Mrs. William Alvis in Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bohlander spent the weekend with relatives at Elkhart Lake, Wis. " ' Mrs. Charles Unti spent sieveral days last week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. IJugh Morris of Chi* caigo spent Sunday at their summer home at Fair Oaks subdivision, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kempfer and Miss Lois White of Crystal Lake were Sunday visitors in the George Williams home. ; > Mrs. Jack Rernert and daughter, Margaret, of South Elgin spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and . Mrs. John Blake, W ANTEIK-pony saddle; state price Miss Katherine Kinriey of Minneaand condition. Write Box "D, care; polis, Minn., is spending a vacation of Plaindealer. v. - *221 with her sisters, Mrs. Earl McAn- M ^ , WANTED--Child's trieycteL Call Mt-1 drf*s ««<!' ^iss. Mary Kinney. - ^ FOR SALE--APPLES^rHand picked : „ 77 vr 22 i Mrs. George Williams will attend T *1 l„„ i «o eft 1 ne ^ M-iu. u WANTED--Maintenance man. Hunter Boat Gomoanv. 50-tf ANIMALS WANTED DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE WAR --r Five dollars is the least we pay for dead horses and cows in good -rpn'dition,••'••Wheeling - Rendering Co. Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the <•harges4. No help needed to load? 14-tf ersonm Released by Western Newspaper Union. WANTED -•Jonathan apples.J $2.50 bushel. Theodore G. Stock, 616 Waukegan road. I *22 FOR SALE--Old corn. Tel. McHenry j 606-R-2. 22 FOR SALE--1937 Hudson Terrsplane ; 4-door sedan; radio, heater. Exceptionally good oversize tires. Mechani-. cally perfect/ Price $365. Call Grays- ; lake 4571. 22-2 FOR SALE --Dwelling, 8 room and bath; located near grade and high schools, also short distance from parochial school and four McHenry churches. Reason for kelling, aged. Address P. J. Cleary, West McHenry. . *22-3 FOR SALE--Nine Muscovy ducks, 5 -to 6^ pounds. Tel. McHenry 651-R-l. •• 22 FOR SALE--75 pigeons. Phone McHenry 186. ^ 22 FOR SALE--Full size Simmons, fourposter metal bed, box spring and mattress. Call McHenry 645-WM. *22 FOR SALE-»-Dining room set, davenport; 9x12 rug; dishes, dresser and odd chairs. ',Frigidaire, 13 cu. ft. Tel. 613-J-l. , ; j 22 FOR SALE -- Very choice Holstein, Guernsey aid Ayshire heifers, $25 t-ach and up. Shipped C. 0. D., if desired.. Ball free with . 5 heifers. Homstead Farms, McGraw, N. Y. - 20-5 FOR SALL -- 22-ft. Larson Speed.1 Boat with S ripps 125-h.p. engine, or will trade ft>r a 16-ft. or 18-ft. in-' board. Call or write Joseph J. Vavrik, _ , , , . , 558 Twentieth Place, Chicago. Call I?"Si°*k^t SP.aCe' free" 6t£w£er- Canal S44«i *0-tf "eS {°T wmter 8 use- ber* ^" ries are hulled and washed, they FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE FOR may be Packed whole or chopped. PROPERTY in or NEAR McHENRY Chopped fruit usually retains a better flavor than the whole berries. Use four pounds of fruit to one [the Women's Relief corps at Dundee WANTED--One air compressor, \ or! Friday. 1 H.P. job complete; A. C. motor. W.J Mr. and Mrs. WSlliam Wicke of Des Koenemann, Round Lake, Route 1 | Plaines were weekend, visitors at *22 t their summer home at Fair Oaks. Recent guests in the Earl McAndrews home were Mrs. McAndrews' nice, Miss Dorothy Soutar, of Cleve- Here's Don-Jan-Yu, Tasty Steamed Flounder in Eggs Chinese cooks do some interesting things with eggs that should be of interest to ration-harassed American housewives. Egg dishes supply needed protein, and--if cooked in the Chinese manner--they will turn any entree into a hearty and tasty main dish. Here is the recipe for Don-Jan-Yu, or Steamed Flounder with Eggs: Cut in Vi inch slivers 2 pounds filet of flounder; blend 1 tablespoon oil or melted fat, 1 tablespoon cornstarch; 1 teaspoon soy sauce; finely dice and add 1 tablespoon scallions and 1 tablespoon green pepper; then blend together and add 4 eggs, 1 cup water or chicken bouillon and 2 tea<- spoons salt and a dash of pepper. Pour over fish. In deep frying pan or kettle with tightly fitting cover, place water Vi inch deep. On a trivet or rack deep enough to hold fish above water, place dish containing fish mixture. Cover and steam for about one hour. Serve with hot boiled rice. ; Eire's Liquor Law Strict Eire's liquor law permits drinking places to be open only between 10 a. m. and 10:30 p. m. on weekdays. ... ' -j 11 • i.* • i Freezing Berries If you own a home freezer or pound of sugar. Stir sugar and fruit together until the fruit is coated with dissolved sugar and fruit juice. Pack in container made for frozen foods. --My year-round lake front home, story frame, ou Wilson Road, Long Lake. Automatic oil heat, hot •fend cold running water, garage and boathouse and other buildings. Price $7,500 -- terms'. Geo. Van Minnen, owner. Address Box 497, Ingleside, III. Phone Fox Lake 3126. *19-3 FOR SALE -- Double lot with two houses on same, which warrants an income. Across from McHenry park, one block from river. Reasonable. Addre.«s "G," care Plaindealer. 4-tf FOR SALE--Year-'round comfort and economy with fire-proof Johns-Manville Type A Home Insulation "Blownin" your walls ahd ceilings. Call LEO J. STIRLING, McHenry 18. 20-tf. shaving, not for paring corns or toe- Watch Sharp Edges Open cann with openers, not butch* er knives. Openers with disc cutters, which fold cut edges under, are safer than the "pry type," but if you must use the latter keep your hands out of the way, use short lifting strokes, and be wary of jagged edges. Keep ice picks sheathed when not in use. Razor blades are designed for FOR RENT nails or sharpening pencils. Dispose of used blades promptly and proper- , (vR ppVT TT ~T~T ~~ ly. Don't throw them into waste- • xt and two-room baskets or leave them on wash baapartments. New, modern; tile floors, sins or on medicine cabinet shelves block ceiling; knotty pine walls; in- where hands, little or big, can get a-door bed; Frigidaire, white porcelain cut by them. When using a knife, range; built-in cabinets and sink, chisel, ax, hatchet or any other bathroom -tile recessed tub and show- sharp teol, cut away from yourself, er. Heat, light and gas furnished. Make sure you won't suffer even if Myst be seen to be appreciated, Mc-! the tool unexpectedly slips. Henry Town House. Phone 35. 21 PRACTICAL LESSON ON INFLATION WHEN YOU BUY • $100 war bond, you dig down into the old sock and produce cash that is in existence, cash for which you have worked and which you have earned. When the bond issue is floated through the banks, it is a different story. The bank is told to take a million dollars worth of war bonds. It does that by placing on its books a million dollars to the credit of the govr ernment. For that the bank receives a million dollars in bonds. With these bonds as security, it issues a million dollars in new money. . With the issuing of every million? dollars of new money, we have added to the inflationary spiral. That/ spiral is a spring enclosed in a box.; When the tension becomes too great,: it will burst the lid off the box and out will spring the snake of extreme and uncontrolled inflation. Remember a toy of childhood days ,--a snake in a box which jumped, at you when you unfastened the lid? That was a harmless snake made of cloth. It did not, and could not bite. The snake that government financing through bank loans, or bank credits, has cooped up in the inflation box is not harmless. Should it break the fastening, it can, and will, bite. Its venom will poison( all values and reduce us to a nation of paupers. When the people, rather than the banks, buy the bonds, there is no danger of inflation. In that way we can enjoy and'retain our prosperity^ * • • A SPENDTHRIFT * IS A SABOTEUR THE NATIONAL INCOME' has jumped under the impetus of war production from around 70 billion to 143 billiop dollars. It means the average income per individual-- man, woman and child--has increased from about $538 a year to $1,100. That can mean prosperity for now and some years in the future, or it can mean financial ruin. It all depends on what we do with that increased income. If we attempt to spend it at this time, when commodities for civilian consumption are not available in quantities sufficient to meet such a demand, we but push the price to a point that means uncontrolled inflation and financial ruiri for all of us. If we invest it in government securities and save it to spend#for what we will want in years to come, or to invest later in stocks that will finance the peace-time production of after-the-war years, it will mean continued prosperity for the individual and for the nation. The present day spendthrift is sabotaging himself and the future of his country. NATURE LESSON WHAT WONDERS nature provides for our enchantment! Across the street from my home, where I can look at it each day and each hour, is a great, wide-spreading magnolia tree. In the spring and early summer it is covered with magnificent blossoms -- enormous, pearly white flowers, each as large as a dinner plate, with delicate pink centers. Their beauty^ is enhanced by a background of the greenest of shiny, green leaves. That tree is one of nature's masterpieces, more beautiful than anything made by man. • • • BONDS WILL BE PAID THE PRESIDENT tells us it does not make much difference as to the size of the national debt because we owe if to ourselves and it is practically no debt at all. Just the same, -the millions of Americans who are patriotically buying war bonds expect to be--and they will be--repaid. The fellow who will pay it is the American taxpayer. If he has bought bonds, he will be paying himself. If he has not bought any, he , , . . . „ . . , w i l l b e p a y i n g t h e f e l l o w w h o h a s . >ng( of the Advisory Council of the, The moral is; Buy bonds so you National Editorial association at a win n0^ ha.ve to,pay the other felthrec- day session in Chicago last low, and he will have to pay you. weekend..- " •' ;':•.' . ' Miss Gertrude May, in company With relatives from Zenda, Wis., is land, Ohio, and a nephew, Donald Olsen, of Scott Field, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Weingart and | Mr. and Mrs. Walter ^Anderson ati tended a surprise party on Mrs. Ver- ! non Mikkelsen at Woodstock Thurs- ! day evening. I Mr. and Mrs. Edward Wilson and j family of Waukegan were visitors of | the August Panknins. ! Guests in the Frank- Kempfer Sr., I home last weekend were Mr. and Mrs. ! Arthur Carlson of Blue Island, 111., and Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. That- | cher of New. York City. ! Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mason of TElm- • hurst wene Sunday visitors in the , home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Weingart. | Sunday visitors in the Harry Fredi ricks home were Mr. and Mrs. George | Berthold, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Berthold and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harry ' Hubbell, Mrs. M. Arendas and son, ; Mickey, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fred- | ricks, all of Chicago, and Mrs. Alfred Miller of Oak Park. ! Mrs. Dan Gilfoy and son, Lee, and j wife of Chicago were Sunday callers j in the home of „Mrs. Mollie Givens. i Mr. and Mrs. Edward Baer, Mrs. i Betty McManus, Mrs. Kathryn Barzotti and Mrs. Marie of Chicago were recent visitors of friends in McHenry. j Mr. and Mrs, Clarence C. Wiedling arid family of Chicago spent the weekend at their summer home on the | river. Mr. and Mrs. William Hansman of j Chicago were wekend callers in McHenry and Wonder Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hart and son of I Chicago visited her parents, the ! Jacob Justens, last weekend. Mirs. Eunice Kosinski spent the ; weekend visiting her husband, Pvt. J A. L. Kosinski, at Fort Benjamin Har- I rison, Ind. ]. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Huck are vaj cationing in the North this week. ' Barbara Carey, who attends school in Evanston, spent the weekend with J her parents, the Gerald Careys. ' Warren Jones, who left Saturday 1 for Camp Seymour Johnson, N. Carolina, was accompanied as far as Chi- ; cago by his aunt, Mrs. C. W. Goodell. ! The Martin J. Stoffel family were , Woodstock callers Saturday. | Rcy Redwanz returned to his work with the Chicago and Northwestern railway in Chicago Monday after a week's vacation. Editor and Mrs. A. H. Mosher and Editor and Mrs. Charles Renich of Wopdstock attended the autumn meet- The English are fartrious for sizing up a situation end then dismissing it in a few words. Note this incident-- When the crowded bus stopped, • stout, middle-aged man descended the stairs, carrying a small girl. Placing her carefully 6n the curb, he climbed up and brought down a smaller boy. Again he made the journey, and this time carried down an even younger child. "Lumme!" said a passenger waiting in the impatient queue " 'E must 'ave a nest up there!" your sister Uiry? Prenatal Influence ! Bill--How's Married? Will--Yes. Lives at Quadriple Lake and has four children. Bill--How's your pther sister? She married, too? Will--No. Pa won't let her because the fellow . she' goes around with comes from the Thousand Islands. . '" • ./ ' •JMON'T BLAME HUVf INTERESTING NEARBY NEWS TeKamp of Kenosna, wis., well known New York tap dancer who was born in Barrington, was found dead Saturday night in her Brooklyn apartment, fehe apparently had died of a heart attack. She was found by her fiance, Army Lieutenant Robert F. Gallope of Newport News, Va., who had arrived in New York Saturday night from NoTth Africa, planning to come to Ktnoaha with his bride-to-be. He had arranged the trip during his furlough and the couple had planned to be married in Kenosha, .climaxing a romance started before he- entered the service^. - •; ;- be put aboard a train and Sent out «f • Burlington. ', ? ; , • • Search for the an automobile-train collision Diamond Lake early Saturday waft launched by the state police after tlie driver of the car, William Shadeu, 17, of Mundelein, failed to satisfy police that he was alone in the car. j Shaden hit a southbound freight <in i Lake avenue, at the Diamond Lake crossing of the E. J. & E. railroad,* j according to State Policeman Paul Wells, about 2 a. m. Saturday. Mr. Smith--My wife can trace her ancestry back to an English lord, Mr. Jones--What chance has a dead man got to defend himself? Just in Case Said the cowboy: "My Pardner and I are taking a trip through the desert next week. He's taking along a gallon of whisky, for rattlesnake bites." "/End what are you taking?" "Two rattlesnakes.'* ^ Last Monday was the birthday of Aoe-ha Cottington of Reedsburg, Wis., and the war department had a gift fhr her son--an air medal awarded to her son. Tech. Sgt. Orna E. Cotmissing in Action sine*? February 16. The presentation was made at the Coggington home near Reeds- 4>Mr? by Brig. Gen. S. W. Fitzgerald commander of Truax Fifeld, Madison. |In th^se days of meat rationing; a nice, white roasting pig", trotting a onyMain street, is of much more thanf passing invest. In fact, "yum, yiin^" are likely to be heard from' point-shy civilians. Saturday afternoon such a pig was on Main street, but soon Mrs. Jacob Zellweger had sent out an alarm. The pig had escaped from a pen near the Zellweger tavern. And the poker was to have been the reward to some fortunate patron. Everyone who participated in the chase reported a "good time was hid by- all." Grow Goldenrod for Rnbber ' Growing 500 acres of specially de* | feloped strains of goldenrod for exfierimental purposes in the producion of war vital rubber is now a Sroject around Waynesboro, Ga. lootings grown at the United State# department of agriculture's plant in» troduction gardens at Savannah willbe used, and celery transplant ma-* chines employed for the operation*' Land leased for growing goldenrcK^. is in areas not devoted t,o raising es* ' sential food crops.. v "'S; :•?•;>:•• The Skin Game Beggar--Buy a pencil, sir? t } ftfan--If you're blind, how did you know I was a man and not a woman? Beggar--Blind? Oh, they must i have put the wrong sign on me. I'm deaf and dumb. Mother Dear Betty--I can't marry John, mother. He's an atheist and doesn't believe there's a hell. Mother--Marry him and between JUS, my dear, we'll convince him he's •wrong,-,; ' Overwhelmed She--Was my father very Violent when you asked if you could marry me? He--Violent! Why, he nearly wrung my hand off! ; Foreign Languages Too Customer--I like this parrot but can it really talk? Salesman--Talk! Why it came all the way here from Paraguay and asked its own way all the time. Observance of Rosh Hashana, Thursday, dimmed the effectiveness of the showup at the Chicago detective bureau that night of the three Chicago hoodlums arrested in Libertyville Wednesday evening. Many of the victm.s of holdups in Chicago recently are of the Jewish faith and because of the religious holidays were unable to attend the showup. Eddie Melton, the negro member of a construction crew on the Milwaukee railroad who have been ^working ir. the Burlington vicinity, was picked up by the police last Frir day charged with having slashed a fellow workman with a razor. When the case came up before Justice E. J. Cook it developed that injuries inflicted by Melton were not serious and the justice dismissed Melton on his employers promising that he would RETORT COURTEOUS Girl--What are you following me ! for? Didn't you ever see anyone j like me before? i Boy--Yeh, but I had to pay a quarter! Home to Papa "I hear Joe's dad has two'^ wives to support now." "What! You don't mean that he's a bigamist?" • "No. Joe just got married." Better Way JPather--Won't it be nic#. when your baby brother starts to talk? Junior--What does he want to talk for? He gets everything he wants by just yelling! FOR RENT -- 165-acre farm. Excel-' lent buildings. - Flosum Farms, 1 mile west jof Me Henry on Route 120. See Mr-. Joseph. Phone 65^-J-2. *21-4 ; MISCELLANEOUS Ship Slanguage A "Soogee moogee" barrel is any container in which a cleaning solution is mixed or stored. A "Beetle" is a heavy, long-handled wooden tnallet. A "dead man" is a static «--- object to which is secured a tie- WE BUY AND SELL4JSED GUNS back or tackle from a retaining wall, of all kinds and Ammunition of all *A "Dutchman" is a piece of wood types. Ask us about ammunition for 0* metal fitted into an opening to fall. Hunting licenses issued. Com- conceal a defect. A "blue pigeon" plete stock of sport clothing:. Bohn \ 8 sounding lead. A "bleeder" is Hardware Co., Woodstock ,111, 18-G " KEN'I ILE--No priority on tile floors. Ideal for schools, churches, stores, " liospitaT^, basements, kitchens, etc. Variety of colors. Also FLOOR SANDING and refinishing with DURA SEAL. Henning Newman, 932 , Marvel Ave., Woodstock, 111. Phone 131. 39-tf HAVE YOU HEARD • about^ the new reduced Auto Liability and Property Damage rates? They will surprise you. Ask us* for insurance rates. The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8. 27-tf GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us a" small cock or valve to draw off water condensation from a pipe. A "gilguy" is a makeshift. A "lazy guy" is a light rope by which, a boom is, prevented from swinging around. A "monkey fist" is the heavy knot placed on the end of a heaving line to give it weight. The 2^U -'bitter end" is the extreme inboard 1 •nd of a chain cable secured in the hain locker. 1 Cnrling Tomatoes ' Scientists as well as gardeners would like to know what causes curling of tomato leaves. The plantdisease experts say it is not caused by disease. The entomologists say it is not caused by insects. Whatdispo^ e of your garbage each week, j ever it is that upSets normal plant visiting relatves at Syracuse, New York. Mrs. Annabel Aicher spent last week visiting relatives in Chicago.! Her brother-in-law, Arthur Bickler, is I recovering from surgery which he under, went in a Chicago hospital recentiy' Mrs. Kenneth Granger has returned lo her home in Richmond after spending a few weeks visiting her husband, who is in camp Van Buren, Ark. The! Grander family formerly resided in McHenry. ! Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cairns, Peter j \Yi;ber and Mrs. Martin Conway,' ac-j , companied by Mrs. Celia Knox of ; Crystal Lake, were Chicago callers j last Thursday, having been called by the death of a relative and j friend, Mrs. Elizabeth Wiswall, who j died unexpectedly of a stroke. Also! spending a few days in Chicago by the death of her sister were Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dowe. John Stoffel was a Chicago visitor last week. Mrs. Etta Wattles has returned SHOULD THE bureaucratic eeon-' omists at Washington accomplish their purpose of outlawing all trade names on branded commodities you will be taking your "grade A" crack- , . ers out df a barrel, as our great grandmothers did, instead of buying your Uneedas or Sunshines in a box. When you do the ever-increasing demand for commodities, and the ever-increasing number of jobs that demand creates, will be over. We will be back tb the "horse and buggy days." '-I1'- - . . . . . • * • • • • ; • , • IMPRACTICAL IDEALISM can be a sharp-edged tool with which to destroy that which makes real -advance- possible. • • •_ ••/'";;' ' Man We Need Major--Now, you're ready to die for your country, aren't you? Rookie--Well, I'm willing to help some Jap or Nazi die for his! The Beautiful I'. I I OVAI! mm CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. ^dcHenry Go's.- Leading Theatre FRI. & SAT., OCT. 15-16 Ann Miller, John Hubbard in "WHATS BUZZIPF, COUSIN" Also Richard Arlen, Wendy Barrie in "SUBMARINE ALERT" SUN. & MON., OCT. 17-18 Sjin.--Continuous from 2:45 p. ra. Betty Grable, Geo. Montgomery in "CONEY ISLAND" with c ' Cesar Romero, Chas. Winninger All this and Grahle too! 7 l«c TUESDAY SPECIAL 10c Tax 2c Tax lc Frank Craven, Biobby Readick In "HARRIGAN'S KID" WED. & THURS., OCT. 20-21 Henry Fonda, Mary Bet^ Hughes in "THE OX-BOX INCIDENT" That WED.-THURS. Event Ask a Hard One Stude--What kind of a bug has the legs of a grasshopper, the head of a spider and the body of a beetle? Prof--A humbug! OLD UNCLE JOHN NICHOLS always insisted that farming was "a way of life," not a business, as is storekeeping. "Farm profits," he said, "consist of something more than the difference between what you take in and what you pay out." Uncle John's greatest dividend was the pleasure of farming. IT IS NOT ONLY how far up the home from St. Therese hospital and j price of farm products may go, it if is spending some time with her daugh-j aiso how far down they may not go or oftener if desired. Reasortable rates. Regular year round route, formerly George Meyers'. Ben J.. Smith. Phone 365. tf no one knows how it ter, Mrs. Chancey Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gilkerson and daughter, Mrs. John Jones, -and the latter's son were recent visitors in FREE--If excess acid causes you pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indigestion, Heartburn/ Belching, Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, get free sample, Udga, j than others, at Bolger's Drug Store. *12-16 j sons:" in 1942 processes, works. Horticulturists feel" that severe , . D , • pruning of leaves, as in staking to- t'ie Charles Gilkerson home in Belvimato plants, or of roots, with deep dere. cultivation, make the leaf-curl Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cobb and Mrs. worse. Some varieties of tomatoes 'John Peterson and daughter, Terry are more apt to have the leaf-curl Lynp, of Chicago were Sunday dinner ; It also varies With sea- guests in the George Lindsay home. Under the ceiling there should be r floor. Wash stockists Wash rayon stockings before wearing them for the first time; this gives the rayon yarns more elasticity and makes the stockings fit better. One Before Meals Doctor--So you think that patient is a drinker? ^ Nurse--Well, he just tried! to blow the foam off his medicine, y Ration Joke 999 V Mr. Jones--I drink a cup of hot water every morning. !Mr. Smith--So. do I, but" my wife calls it coffee. • Sweet Charity Teacher--If I saw a man beating a donkey and I stopped him, what virtue would I be displaying? • Johnny--Brotherly love! Measured Steps Harry--Hey, somebody walked off with my ruler. Larry--How could they? Your ruler only has one foot. MILLER • Phone 32 Woodstock TH U R.-FRI.-SAT., Oct, 14-15 16 Never Before in One Picture So Much Entertainment 'STAGE DOOR CANTEEN' 80--- Famous Stars of Stage, Screen and Radio--also •Name Bands Scapa Flow Surrender Record • The greatest naval surrender of all time took place in 1918, when the German fleet surrendered at Sc«pa Flow. little leaf-curl appeared. This season it is widespread, with perhapa 75 to 85 per cent of the commercial as well as home garden plants showing at least some curling of the leaves. Castor Bean Not a Legume ! The castor bean plant, from which j we get castor oil, is not a legurne, i as many .suppose. The plant has | been grown in, this country fpr more than 100 years. ^ Control Potato Blight To control late blight of potatoes, the plants must be protected with a covering of Bordeaux spray or copper- lime dust from the time they are four to six inches tall until maturity. Order your Rubber Stamps at The Plaindealer. QUICK RELIEF FROM Symptoms of Distress Arising from STOMACH ULCERS DUE TO EXCESS ACID Free BookTellsof HomeT reatment that Must Help or it WIH Cost You Nothing Over two million bottloa of tho WILLAK1) TKEATM ENT have l«H<n sol^i for relief of niptotns of 1 listress arising from Stomaeti Duodenal Ulcers due to Eicess Acid- Poor Digestion, Sour or Up*ct Stomach, OisitiHti, Heartburn, Sleeplessness, etc., duo to Excess Acid. Sold on 15 days' trial! Ask for "Wlllard's Message" which fully explains (his ( n ai mcnt free at. BOLTERS DRUG STORE WATTLES DRUG STORE SUNDAY-MONDAY, OCT. 17-18 Enough Fun and Beauty To Last For Years! "DU BARRY WAS A LADY" In Glorious Technicolor With RED SKELTON Lucille Ball, Gene Kelly TUESDAY ONLY OCT. 19 Bargain Nite, 25c Also "Giant Social Activities" On Our Screen "BEHIND THE EIGHT BALL" With the Ritz Bros. Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.., Oct. 20-21-22 "THIS LAND IS MINE" -- With -- Charles Laughton, Manreea O'Hara McHenry, Illinois- : FRIDAY-SATURDAY John Wayne, John CarroiC Anna Lee "THE PLYING TIGERS" Plus--Musical--News and Cartoon SUN.-MON., OCT. 17-lg 80 Famous Stars--45 Name Bands 'STAGE DOOR CANTEEN' Plus--Cartoon and News TUESDAY (One Day) Bobby Readick, Frank Craven (1) "HARRIGAN'S KID" Ix>n Ohaney, Bela Logos! (2) "FRANKENSTEIN MEETS THE WOLF MAN' WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY Roy Rogers, John Carradine (1) "SILVER SPURS" Donald O'Connor, Gloria Jean (2) 'IT COMES UP LOVE' Merchant FREE Tickets .for -- J. B. Rotnour Players at the• McHENRY High School AUDITORIUM -- Every -- Tuesday Night Ask for them at any of the following busines firms: Jacob Just en Sons Regner's Grocery and Mafitet John J. Vycital Hdwe. McHenry 5 and 10 Store Smith Bros. McHenry Bakery Gladstone's Hoot's Tavern Mi Place Restaurant-Tavern Green Street Tavern McHenry Plaindealer Northland Greyhound Bus Depot \ -- Ayatha Shop Sip Snack Inn Pa's Tavern Holly's Service Station Worwick Studio Earbian Bros. Groc. and Mkt. McHenry Town Club Worts Sinclair Service Schwerman Chevrolet Sales Schaefer's Groc. and Market Schiessle & Weber Alexander Lumber Co. , i John Stoffel Fitzgerald's Men's Shop Nye Jewelry Shop Geo. P. Freund, Implements John Anderson, Tavern Matt B. Laures Tavern McHenry Co. Farmers Co-ep. * Assn. McHenry Flour Mills McGee's Store for Men Art Smith Groc. and Market--«' -- OPENING PLAY-- ^ "OURJJEW MINISTER" Tuesday, Oct. 19 ° % A 8-Act Comedy I>rama Doors Open 7:45 p. m. Curtain 8:30 With Merchant Ticket--* Admission 22c, including tax Children under 12 years, "lie, including tax.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy