McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Dec 1943, p. 3

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l§ll • T--;V r » ' ^ "••*" • "'t SlffiSSi ins ; jMi" »^. '_jr' v.'-/' *•< Thursday, December % 1943 THE McHEN&| PLAINDEALER Page Three Ground Personnel every 1,000 soldiers in the army forces, SO are airplane armorers I IS are sheet metal workers. Million Dollar Highway A so-called "Million Dollar Highway" built by army engineers in Dutch New Guinea has a corduroy hase of mahogany logs and is surfaced with aluminum ore, both materials being the cheapest and most readily available for road-building jk one district. AUCTION MARTIN BOHL, Auctioneer. Invasion Cash To Get Wide Use V- } s - . Pipe Is Best for - j Barter Wifli Natives (SEATTLE.--Glenn E. Battson, wfth the Seabees on Guadalcanal, wrote that pipes were^the best articles for trading with the natives. "They'll trade a wife for a pipe," he said. Mrs. Battson sent him six< pipes. But also included the notation that they were not to be used for that particular purpose. Lights of New York by L. L. STEVENSON J" Boys Blaze Trail In Australia "Bush SUNDAY, DEC 5 . ^4>mmencing at 1:00 p.m. sharp* . ' • ' ^ . on J. Croak farm, % mile north ,• of Burtdn's Bridge;, west side of ':riv»T • ^.4 x. Slc't-- ^ Henry. „ ,10 cows; 3 heifers; 4 sows; lf /.^par,- weight abopt 260 lbsr; sfiof.ts; 20 pigs. " j * j.tx>ut 100 shocks of corn;^about;8; ^tbns^of mixed hay; about 100 boj vfitfej and farm machinery. • ;.| "^eTm-M: ' Cash. "J CLAUDE WOOD j <"ary State Bank, Clerking Bills Circulating it Sicily flow to Be Adapted to . Other Areas Also. WASHINGTON. -- The elaborate secret preparations for printing the military lira notes used as currency ir. Sicily were revealed by the Treasui- y department recently. - The lira bills carry a design of • mutral nature that will allow them to be used in other invaded lands merely by changing the currency designations and the name of the country. The currency was arranged, designed, the treasury said, "so that it might be adapted to! the needs of troops in further assaults upon Hitler's European fortress merely by overprinting the J traha is at least 900 miles from proper currency denominations and | somewhere else." moaned Pfc.> names of the country on*4he basic j Frank de Marco of Niagara Falls, stock" The treasury said that, in! De Marco is a driver in the truck addition to the lira notes, a com- , company which has been rattling parable series of postage stamps j .tfround Australia since early in 1942 "would soon be introduced into .areas ; They call themselves the ...forgotten t under military administration;**' '"»***« '«* *rmv '«Nwfc- (By Mrs. Lloyd Fisher) Mr. and Mrs. Frank King visited accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Roland i Ltieder to the St. John's Military | Academy at Delfield, Wis., Thanks- j giving Day." They enjoyed a turkey! dinner. First Aid: When the crossword J Mr. and Mrs. Lee Van Rasdale at puzzle craze was at its height New j Des Plaines Thanksgiving Day. York's public libraries were .. . M _ . swamped with seekers after words, ! , l an<* j the rush being so great that it be- ^a™m' attend,ed ,^e In; came dictionaries be made in regard to telephone ;lr>B" 7. calls. After a long period of com- | Arvilla and Lilah Mae Fisher were JOHNSBURG (By Mrs. Arthur Klein) ame necessary to limit the use of ^ ^ f the, Llberty\ The Community club will have' ictionaries while restrictions had to C apter 0 E- S- Saturday even- \ather Neidert nig-ht, Tuesday, Dec. Klein home were Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Klein, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Nett and son, Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. Leo Michels and daughter, Judy, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Nett, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Diedrich and daugh ter, Vicky, Mrs. Tena Lay, Miss Thtlma Lay and Second Class Petty Officer Kenneths Hampsher of Great Lakes. » v Pfc. Paul Fuchs of Camp Howze,* Texas, is visiting with •, hfar. brother and sisters. 4g - $ : vjfi; '311! Don't forget the date! parative calm, the librarians now , fruests of Miss Grace Balaz at Wau- 'fi^ j have another headache. For some ' conda Sunday. gathered in the hall Wednesday n^ht reason for which no explanation has Mrs. Anna Freund and daughter fci k"?]! . Harold Freund and b~ found. br„d.„,w fa.hers .^ph™. «,I £, XP> c°»£fTS"' Call TT.em.elve. F«««lten : Men of Army. - offspring. It seems that ordinary . , r" an. , • Horace Grabbe of in St. Louis, Mo., Thanksgiving Day. _____ ' ' 1 names have become parse. Virile. a"hoe onjo-ve<l a birthday dinner S/Sgt. Freund is stationed at Scot SO^TEWHERE IN AUSTR'ALIA -- ' topical and significant cognomens :aV. ^^r- and Mrs. William Field, 111. "ifs^ ifk^every S^Jn Aus- have become « frantic "mu.r-and | ^nor of Mrs Grabbe Miss Mr... and Mrs. Peter M, Freund an J »-•« - -» 1---- ma --' librarians are looked on as sources. ^^ and Jackie VN irtz s birthdays, family, Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Miller That holds true to such ar; extent, Miss Miriam King of Waukegan | and dauprht^r, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. L according to one o#v this' • column's • ' Thanksgri-ving ' Day . here with Freund and family, Mrs. Donald sentinels, that cne of the depart--'. '">r; -parents, • Mr . arid Mrs., Frank Freund, and Staff Sergeant and Mr« ments aV the main public "library! Harold Freund ^were TKanksgivihi has been dubBed. the/New Arrivals? : and Mrs. Roy Ullrith, Mrs.;M. euests in the Hubert Freund home/ Room ". :"•» •. Luisich and Mrs. Slavin of Tower McHerirv. >. V > * • * : jl.ake visited Mi/ and Mi>.' Walter Vasey Wtdnesdav. " Prevent Swine Ailments Many swine ailments can be pt*, •tnted by good management. Keeping hogs comfortable as well as healthy ,means fewer losses and greaatt4 f gaww for the; feed consumed. Cook cheese dishes with care, goteg easy on the heat. In that way this nutritious foqd melts completely and spreads good cheese flavor and protein through the whole dish. Cooked too quickly, cheese gets tough and stringy and settles in gbe Spot instead of spreading. a , forms the basts of every Allied move^ SStirreeeett Sscceennet-: aAit sEiiggrhntnh aavveefniuuee \v aasseeyy vv ,<inesaay.: ; ^club'1 1 - - * • j/ >T»d 49th s€reet, 8i ^axi?ab>.*fto6|tt-|,.-M?..':and' Mix.: Pht!ip,;T^iehne8•^rkl.j•K^^K, ^^efnoon. Rr- . /ayer a horst-drawn laundry wagon; daughter, lr^ne». visited Mr! ah^ ^hnienth ere served and prizes itseUi" . ."^witti ,20 scfambles^ ife at' McHenry/^gin- John M PU^er. M^ M Sch"1 men of the army., but their work An Amazing Story "The preparation of this iitiHtai^ i §|[ainst tlie./Japanese. inv northern currency and postage in advance' Australia./ // v , /• ,. . ,, .... of the invasion of Italy is in itself .: , Tiie outfit started with/ 20 thre^ :; • - The horse scrambles to its rMis. Harold, Ju^ten an amazing chapter in the istory of ! ton Ford trucks-'Vrhich,-^ according W• - i.'Jeet,.frees itself from trie wagon and day. Cathprino * the frantic and mihutely detailed Lieiit. 6. H. Glass, Greehsboro. N.. C'!, *, dashes east on 4*)th st/eet, miratu: Mr, and Mrs. William Wirtz at-/ *-atn?'!ne-.pmithv- ,.y planning that preceded' the expedi- "should be classified l-A for the louslv escaping bi?ing hit by vehiclos (end^d tho lnstallation of the Soro- ,r' an<i1 ^rs- John Sohmitt .son tion, a story that must, for the most scrap heap." They blasted trails- Oh,Broadway .. . At Seventh ave- sj.s t'hiipter G. E. S. -at Grayslake ^ra^" ;a,n^ anc^ Mrs. Miath Lay part, remain untold until after the ' through the Australian bush ahead nue, two Free French sailors make Tuesday evening/ / of Sprine Grove, were guests of AUCTION/ /, CHAJtJ.ES LE<>XAKD, Auft'oneer * '«* AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer !/: :-i'/'-/ • -• V Having decided to quit fanning1 will sell at Public Auction of tht Albert PadJock farm located 6 miles wept of Grayslake, 2 miles east of Xoio, of state route 120, on THURSDAY, DECEMBER 16 commencine at 10:30 o'clock sharp: small tools and some machinery' will be sold before noon--This is a big sale and the days are now short/ 90 HEAD LIVESTOCK 40 head Holstein Dairy cows; 27 head milkers consisting mostly of 1st 2nd and 3rd calf cows; 12 head jttst freshed recently; 5 with calves by side. Several close sprihgers. Tliis is a very choice herd of Hol- •tein cows, all home raised and now producing over 860 lbs. milk daily. 6 two year pld Holstein heifers; 5 head yearling Holstein heifers; Puiv bred Holstein bull--14 months old. 1 I GOOD HORSES--Team Sorrell .GeWings, 4 years old, weight 1350' /lbs. each, well broke; Black Gelding, 9 years old, weight 1500 lbs.; Gray Mare, 10 years old, weight 1300 lbs.-; f stt breeching harness. V-fS HEAD HOGS--16 shoats, weight I25 lbs; 6 shoats, weight 160 lbs; 3 brood sows with 20 pigs seven weeks eld. HAY, GRAIN and MACHINERY y.r> ton DsKalb hy-brid ear corn in crib; 400 bu. Columbia oats; 12 ft. v silage in 16 ft. silo; 10 ton second Jerop alfalfa baled; 12 ton mixed alf# lfa and timothy, baled; 18 ton mixed alfalfa and broom grass, baled; 3 ton timothy baled; some corn fodder; 5; ton straw, baled; f> ton loose alfalfa. Mc-D. 10-20 tractor, with set extra rims; Mc-D. 8 ft. tandem disc, like new; Mc-D. 2 bottom tractor plow; 'Case 2 bottom tractor plow; . Mc-D. grain binder; Mc-D. Com binder; Mc-D. 5 ft. oil driven mower, Hew; Mc-D. corn planter with fertili- *cr attachment, check wire, like new; New Idea manure spreader; Appleton •4-roll corn husker, completely overhauled; case, 22 in., all steel roller /faring threshing machine, equiped with special feedt-r; Easy Way hay loader; Gale corn planter with check wire; Mc-D. side delivery rake; 2 Single row cultivators, one new; 10 Kentucky grain drill with grass seeder attachment; Mc-Deering 16 irsch Silo Filler; Sulky plow; culti- ,/ packer, 8 ft.; 8 ft. steel drum land roller; two section spring tooth har- . row; three section drag; two section iirag; hay tedder; dump rake; steel wheel wagon with hay rack; wagon triple box; two wheel trailer with hog1 rack; corn sheller with electric motor; pump jack; 2% H.P. electric motor; 800 pound platform •rale;, grind stone; fanning mill; buzz saw on chassis; hand grass seeder; peering bundle loader; drap cart; bob fleigh; one set wood wagon wh<tIs; 175 ft. new hay rope; 160 ft. h»»y rope; grapple fork and pulleys; 30 grain bags; 75 ft. endless drive belt; oil pump and drums; 50 gal. kerosene drum; several large windows; 30 ft. 1 U in. shaft with boxes; . 35 steel f«'nc.' posts. 4 ft.; DeLaval 5-unit magnetic milking machine with pipss to milk 34 cows, complete and :-/.V",/i#---Per^®c^ condition, used little over /-'^'o years; 14 milk cans; wash tanks, pails and strainers, forks, shovels, and many other tools and equipment too numerous to mention. |*OULTRY--1"0 Lephom pullets, laying; M white Wyandotte pullets; 125 /."'/•.•'jjiparling Leghorn and Ancona hens; si'veral feeders, drinkers, an.i other poultrv (quipment. .....• \ _.J?U RN ITU R E--Liv ing---xaom~~ . davenport and chair, very good condition ; kitchen table and chfirs;, rug; -laundry stove; 2 burner kerosene /^ove; beds and dressers; entmeled with back; jars, etc I.CN'CH WA(;«N ON GROUNDS ALL DAY ~ I'ERMS: AH sums of $25.00 and_ onder that amount cash. .Over that amount a credit of six mctnhs at 6 / |jer cent will be extended on notes approved by the clerk. Anyone de- .giring credit kindly make arrangewents before purchase is made. No / property to be removed until settled for. Settlement must be made cn date of sale. ' EARL PADDOCK West McHenry State Bank, Clerking war," the treasury said. ' of engineers and surveyors. In a job unprecedented from a ; "We started hauling long before physical standpoint, the presses of • there were any roads around here." the bureau of printing and engrav- ; Private De Marco said. "It was ing worked 24 hours to have the i pretty rugged. Lots of the boys had notes and stamps ready for the final kidney trouble because of the conoverprinting when the invasion ac stant jolting." tually began. Four months ago high First Sergt. Joe Copeland. Dade officials of the treasury, war, navy City. Fla., Sergt. Eoyd Barksdale, and state departments laid the Tampa, Fla., and Sergt J D Terrel, groundwork in a series of super- ! Vera Beach, Fla., have been assemsecret conferences. bling the outfit's official history. "No iRkling of the project was V- "Our boys sometimes trucked 24 ever puf^lp writing, no word of it hours a day, hauling oil to airwas spoken over a telephone and dromes. They know every road from no discussions of it carried outside Darwin to Melbourne." Copeland the conference room," it was stated, said. The designs for the notes and The trucks carry food supplies, stamps had to be completed under/ gasoline, oil for surfacing runways, equally secret conditions and stocks , machinery for surface units and water for remote out- Wrong Way • A newspar er man. idecidedlv the worse for wear after sometimes posts. ' Mos.t of the truck company comes from New York. Corp. E/D. Jacobs, of distinctive paper and huge amounts of inks of various colors had to be accumulated. In none of this preliminary work, however, was there any identification of the coun- . . . try for which the notes Were irP"^ End. Kids jaf Australia.*' tended. : Show 'Four Freedoms.' "On the basic designs under consideration, where now the words 'Issued in Italy' appear, the words 'United States' Were placed fictitiousa lot of piib crawling, discovered while in a Sixth avenue booze spot that his wallet was missing. In a loud and forceful voice he exa dive for the horse and bring it Mrs. Sarah Fisher ' Mr and Mrs ^ an4 Mrs- Frank Freund ThankVto a stop . . An American soldier |.,0V(i Fislm. an., famliy' enjoyed, K'™* Da>- jumps on its buck, turns the animal Thanksgi\ing. -Day at the home of Thanksgiving guests, of Mrs! Jos. around and rules it toward Jushth y,,-.. aml Mj-h. "George' ScheM. Jr., B. Hettermann were Mr. and Mrs; avenue . At 59th street and t 'Uh Waueonda. Ed Hatcrmann and son. Mrs. lack rstft Mr/ and Mrs. Bin Miller and fam- Keenan and chihlret,. Tommy and o t oil,or «m*r t'l* Mr' »"*' Mra- <*»• Brtt>' Uu- Mr- »"d British tar reroenizin" Cec 1 Brown Rossmann and s0n of Barreville, rich and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence guvn'ner!' . . Brown swings ! rysta' ®P^t Satorday even- tennan. - /:/ around to acknowledge the greeting !"^u at ^he. home .of.•Mr,. And ,**. Sunday fruests m the Frank Cos^; ... So does the other man-former'"alter Vasey* •' man/home were John Cossman and Governor Alfred'E.. Smith. and Mrs. Harry Chambers and family, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond" Cos's- . « ' t / .. .'.family spent Sunday in Chicago with man and family. Mr. and Mrs. Otto relatives. Kutzler and family, Mr. .and Mrs. Miss Bern ice Thenues ,s|)en.t Sun- Mike Pavlick and family i>n<l Miss • lav at Wootlstock, . Ther'OSe Jaronits all of Waukotr-ui. Vernon Ehredt, son of Mr.and Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Miller and fuift- Mrs. Frank Ehredt, had the mis- ily have moved from their home to fortune to injure his hand 111 a com the Wagner farm north of town, pressed his feelings in regard to l1'c'ter Wednesday. Vernon is a' Mr. and Mrs. Leo F. Smith and the establishment and all connected patient at the. St. Therest> hospital Mr. and ^Mrs. ?Ios. E. Freund were with it. The lesult was that a cou- iwt Waukegan, his many friends here weekend "'guests of. Mr. and Mrs. Brooklyn. says: "We are the Dead---pie of strong arm men appeared and hojie for a speedy recovery Fx!ward Frett in Chicago. after pushing hirn around no little. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey and ' Louis Huff of Chicago, Mrs. Jos. tossed him into the street. Back family enjoyed Thanksgiving Day Adams and Clarence Schaefer were went the reporter only to rcceive a the home of Mr. and Ms. Hrr- Thanksgiving guests in the Jos^ shellacking so severe that when he man Duriker at Capron. Schaefer home. finally broke free, he was well down Mrs. Phil Thenes and son, Leonard, Mr. and Mrs- John Jung of Spring the street. Still not satisfied, he daughter, Irene, were Waukegan cal- Grove were Thanksgiving callers in went back and kicked a hole in the i lorfc Monday. the Wm. Freund home. plate glass wi{&syw. Results were Volo residents were liowed in grief Mr. and Mrs. Jos. G. Freund enprinfed were such unrevealing terms ; senteeism, inferior output, high sick- dire, so dire thaTSj^hen police finally upon learning of the death of one of tertained their club Sunday evening, as 'Dollars' or 'Shillings,' " the treas- < ness rate, and a large labor turn- arrived he Wa* hardly in one piece our lifelong leading citizens, S. J. Refreshments were served and cards ury said. | over, two Cincinnati psychiatrists, And when he had tcld his story at Jthe. j Russell who passed away at his furnished the evening's entertainment. The currency introduced into Sic/ warned in Detroit recently station, he discovered that he had ) home here Saturday evening. Mi . Prizes were .-w on by Mrs. Peter F. ily is in eight denominations, from Pointing out that most of^^ the ef '••"•returned to the wrong gin mill. / j Russell has been in poor health for Freund, Mrs; Jos. King and Mrs. * * * some time. Funeral services were Drlla Miller. Random Notes: Frank Crumit, held Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock Mrs. Dena May entertained her who was graduated from Ohio uni-lai the Jacob Juten funeral home at club Thanksgiving Day. versify, wrote the now famous! McHenry with Rev. Arthur Jevre Mrs. Catherine Smith. Mrs. Tena "Buckeye Battle Cry for the rival officiating. This community extends I^ay and Mrs. Mamie Kinc were Ohio State university . . Seems (heir heartfelt sympathy to the Ik1- Thanksgiving Day callers in the Nick that his brother-in-law, director of , j^gyed family. Miller home, Richmond. athletics at the tatter school, decid- 1 Arvilla Ann and Lilah Mae Fisher Thanksgiving guests in the Arthur ed Frank was the man to create a much-needed "fight" song Crumit banged it out in 10 minutes and now it's sung at everything from ! a football rally to afternoon tea : dances . . . The 44th street station ery store which now advertises Christmas cards . . . The proprietor of that big-as-a-min jte Times square delicatessen who has taught his parrot to give unliked customers the l Bronx cheer . . . Texans in uniform, j on their first visit to the metropolis, j spending the greater part of their j furloughs with Snyder, rated one of | the most intelligent horses in the 4 Mental Conflicts Blamed As Cause of Absenteeism DETROIT --Emotional conflicts of war workers--relatively ignored by ly, and where the 'lira' designation is ! industrial medicine.---wav cause ab one to 1,000 lire. The signaller de- forts of war plant doctors have been nominations are half the silte of L'nit- ; directed toward the safety and physed States currency and the larger I ical health of workers, ihe di>ctors denominations the same size. It is emphasized that recognition of emo made by a lithograph process, since j tiona! troubles is of greatest im the time element and the size of portance today because of intense the undertaking did not permit steel j production schedules and the man engraving. Except for the "lira" designation, all the legend on the bills is in English. The "four freedoms" appear prominently on the reverse of all the notes. . " power shortage. The medical men. Drs. John Romano and Milton Rosenbaum of the University of Cincinnati and Cincinnati General hospital, ad dressed a group of the nation's psychiatrists who met in Detroit. 1 Price of Toy Books Is Noise in war plants, the huge size I * *• J \11 • C no K ot man>' Plants, rivalry be- L,? mi ted, Warning or A tween the sexes, sleeping difficulties WASHINGTON.--Toy books are of workers on the night shift, and defined as "toys," or juvenile pl3y- conflicts caused by racial problems things, and are under strict price are among the psychological headcontrol, the Office of Price Admin- aches for war plant officials, the docistration declared tonight. tors said. OPA said they should not be con- In addition many emotional prob fused with "children's books," which lems peculiar to women have eninclude study exercises: story and tered the pict ire with the rush of mounted police division picture books designed to be stud- : this sex to the asembly lines, they • * * • ied, looked at or read, and which i said. •* . Menus: Speaking of Australia, at are exempt from price regulation, j Litt-le understood, said the doctors;v Loew's State theater the other aft- According to the OPA interpreta j is the fact that emotional distress , ernoon. Virginia Weidler and Al tion. "toy books" are those especial 1 may be expressed in the form of im- Rosen were discussing the care tak ly /designed to be enjoyed in some ! personal or somatic symptoms--fa- en by Hollywood directors in the J form of active play. They include j tigue, listlessness, phobia, hysterical making of pictures. As an example, j cut-out books, coloring books, tracing | behavior, and feelings of discrimina- a scene deleted from MGM's "The i books, pasting books, model books j tion or depreciation toward fellow Man Down Uncler." was cited. The | and pop-up books, which when I workers. - sequence was cut by Lon Jones, lec- j opened cause folded objects to^sfcirwf^ r •-••-//turer an£j Australian newspaper cor- I up. ! w Tiresome! Store Is respondent in this country, because j j _ . . it showed a pitcher of cream on ! : / ' Robbea Third Thursday the table. Cream cannot be ob- I , , [ .CHICAGO- When Thursday rolls tained in Australia without a doc- LOSt oy European AXIS 1 around. Martin Epsteen, 4041 Ellis tor's prescription-it s reserved for . LONDON.--During the first 36 ! avenue, knows just what U* expect at , babies, hospitals and the armed j months of the war, up to June 30, j his second-hand clothing store, 3609. forces. Also it was stated that i 9.045,683 gross t(Bisi of German and j Cottage Grove avenue. He'll be canned goods are not rationed in ! Italian shipping have been captured, j robbed. Australia for the reason that there sunk or damaged by surface ships, j Rpcentjy he caUed the* Stanton are no canned «ood3 to be obtained ' submarines, planes and m-nes, the , avenue police to tell them that his , * * * admiralty announced recently. 1 was robbed for the third sue- End Piece: Peter Donald tells of : The announcement did not saj'j cessive Thursday. Two weeks be-, the English soldier and the German whether the credit belonged to the ! fore the back door was pried open prisoner who were sitting together British navy or to the navies of tjbe i anc| $400 worth of clothing was tak ,'in the desert. The Tommy asked: ; United States and others of the Unit* . en The next week $16 worth of "What will you do when the war is ed Nations. It explained, however, i shoes were stolen after a front plate ended? that the figures did not include losses ; glass window had been broken. This , "I plan," returned the Nazi, "to • inflicted on Japanese shipping or i week the iron grating on the front take a bicycle trip all around Gersuccesses by the Russian naval ' ^oor was torn off, the door was forces. No estimate of enemy ton- forced open, and $200 worth of clotH nage immobilized by Britain's block- ,. ing was taken. ade in the ports of countries>ot at V >Ho, hum." commented Epstee* war with Germany was given, / • "Monotonous, isn't it'" Having rented jny 'farm for, , cas^ / rent I wiir adl at Public Auctlon^ cnmy farni no^*- terianteil l>y -Gustay / Spitzb?irt. located 2 rpiles north ja^V , cf 6reenwoo<l, 4 nViles -.vest of Rir.ewood ard 1 mile w< st of Wonder Lak 0. on the Greenwood- Ringwoo^l Road, on WEDNESDAY. DEC. 15 Commencing ;>.t 12o'clock sharp' the following- d*serib»*d pr< p^rty. tOi- ' wit': 29 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK (^onsisfinir of 22 Head of Holstein Milch Cows All good your.gr cows, mostly first and second cilf heifers. 9 fresh mHk- ^ ers. sevoral close siirinu^rs. an.l th/ balance now milkinp good. 7 head Holstein heifers, ages from 3 months to 18 months. / ' Hay. Grain and Machinery 17 tons of clover hay in l»arn;/200 , bales timothy hay in barn; 500 bu. DeKalb Hybrid i ai corn, in crib, sfco I hard corn; 500 bu. Columbia oats; 2-y bu. wheat;' 12 ft. silage in 12 ft. silo. Mc-D. ir rain binder; 5-ft. Mc-D. mower; 7 ft. tn'ctor disc; grain shoe drill; Emerson sulky • pkw; 7 milk cans; DeLaval cream separator. Poultrv 5ft AAA White Leghorn pullets, 8 months old; 45 AAA White Leghorn/ hens, 1 year old. TERMS: All sums of $25.00" and' under that amount cash, over that amount a credit of six months at C per cent will be extended on not s approved by the clerk. Anyone desiring credit, kindly make arrangements before purchase is made. No property to be removed until settled for and settlement must be .made on day of sale. MRS. L. D. LOWELL Owner: ' West McHenry State Batik.^^CleiluJHE/ 9,045 683 Shipping Tons many. "Yes," commented the English- j man, "but what will you dQ in the I afternoon?" . Bell Syndicate-- WNU feature!. Rat on Book Provides Prisoner With Revenge SALEM. ORE --Oregon State prison inmates were helping address ration books. One prisoner stopped suddenly and tore up a book, hurling the pieces to the floor. He reflected a moment, then repented/ picked up the fragments and put them carefully together again explaining: "This belongs to the guy what sent wst. life"-'// JJurglar Isn't Husband^ Wife Learns . HOLLYWOOD. CALIF - When > Mrs. Raymond Hammond, asleep. | heard a man moving about the I room, she asked: "Is that you, Ray- ! mond?" "Yes. dear," the man re- [ plied. "Where is the money?" "In f the usual place in the bureau," Mrs. - Hammond sleepily replied. - But it j didn't happen to be Raymond and the money was gone when Mrs. , Hammond finally awoke. Finds Jap Prisoners _ An Unhealthy Lot CARLISLE BARRACKS, PA - Practically al! Japanese prisoners in the Pacific are suffering from malaria, starvation, malnutrition and anemia or beri beri, according to Lieut. Col. A. H. Thompsoft, who recently returned from the South Pacific theater of operations. Most of them were happy and grateful for their medical care, he added. , ,r V Fend of UqaMs - Common crickets are fond of liquids such as beer and sweetened vinegar. 5*^ *>2 WITH WAR BONDS , Save Crof Crop Corps volunteers in a Texas county saved a 6.000-acre berry i patch that brought growers /million dollars. ' Name Chocolate Mexican Indians gave the :. '"chocolatl" (from "choco," ing foam, and "atl." water) to the beverage they made by grinding co- ! coa seeds, mixing them ^ith water, • and beating the mixture" to a froth, t From them we get the word "choco- i j l a t e . " - _ • " • . three namemean- Develop Woodworking The 19th century's greatest contribution to furniture was the development of woodworking machinery and the introduction of machinegaade furniture. Invest in Bonds Funds held for the protection of policyholders and im^ested in United States government bonds by 346 capital stock fire insurance companies amount to mope than 740 BBSlion dollars. DELAY COSTS MONEY BE SURE OF Did you jpow that APEXOrade "A" Rockwool blowing- fibre can be porchaaed oii the budget plan. Tour savings pay the bill. Winter and summer comfort, fireproof, rot proof, A permanent improvement and safe investment in your home. INSTALLED BY AETNA INSULATION Owned and operated by the same personnel who have served the # Fox Valley for the past 12 years. Phone or write for free estimate 20 N. Grove Ave. WM. GREEN ^ Elgin 111. Elgin 4999 McHenry Hl-R McHenry, IE T. P. WALSH Grayslake 2332 220 Washington St. Waukegan. 111. Ont. 3399 REMEMBER your savings pay for insulation whether you enjoy its comforts or not. N

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