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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Jan 1944, p. 2

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S&-"i ' Page Two THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER 1 . " "i-"" if,. XH JX.'* M< 1 * .. V -« x *, ' ' - "w r „ • * ) t * - -» - , Thursday, January 27,194| SPRING GROVE i Antioch were callers in the Charley ' Freund home Sunday afternoon, i Sunday dinner quests of Mr. and -j- | Mrs. Arthur Kattner were Mr. and 1 Mrs. John Doetsch of Wilmette and <By Mrs. Charles Freundl | the Raymond May family. Members of her club met at the I Pvt. Arthur Nimsgern of the army home, of Mrs.^Nick Freund on Tues-1 air force returned to Maxwell Field, day evening: to spend an evening Alabama, on Saturday, having enjoyfclayini? cards. Games of five hun-1 ed a furlough with home folks. *lrcd were played and prize winners Mrs. Grace Wilson visited Mrs. Vere Mrs. J.* J. Freund and Mrs. Bertha Esh Sunday afternoon. 'Shell Shock9 Now Called €Anxiety* New Method of Treatment Mends Broken Nerves. Mrs. Math Nimsgern and Miss Bernice Nimsgern are visiting relatives in Chicago several days this week. Guests in the home of Mr. and and Mrs. Paul Weber and daughter Mrs. Roy Nelson, son, Bobby, visited in the Harry Ober home in Crys- Frank May. Lunch was4 served following cards. Mrs. Charles Freund and -Mrs. George W. May spent Tuesday afternoon in Waukegan. Tommy Britz, small son of Mr. «nd Mrs. Albert Britz, is confined to his home 'with chicken p6x. ^ ^ Mr. and Mrs. Nick Jung • of Ring-J j^e one dav last week. wood were Friday afternoon visitors; * in the Math-Nimsgern home. _ ; D * •' Set. Victor Blink, who is enjoying-jrM* *>CStone OltftRI. oMI. ' • * •• 'B furiQugh, was entertained in the i ;§eed Cluster; Saves Lator Aibf-rt ?£? home one night last^ Bemuse science "put its nose to " •- 4 *f^k , Those present were Mr. and' ^ grinGstone/. sUSar beet grow- • • J^ecrge -jnders. Mr. and Mrs. ers of the United Staves saved more ^ Oxto,y, Mr. and_Mts. Leander ^an thr-ee• pillion man-hours. of la- ^ . bot in 1943--and even more signifii - A" . ^ ^ T h f c A l t ^ r a m i R o s a r y ? p c i e t > ' - 9 * - c a n t g a m s l i e a h e a d - , St. Peters parish held ;i*s: tegular The problerri arcse from the faci •: routing-at the parish hall on^Thurs- -that the seed Qf the sugar beet is • day' night. -Following a meeting, at p^.a single cell, but rather a group ' • • . -which t:me a bingo party was .plan- cells, held together in a cluster. - • • • r.t.f' to ^, held in the near future, The seed cluster is a hard, tight ' cards were played. Prize winners in.^]^ difficult to handle because it • five ,hundred were Mrs. F^ed Meyer, jg smaller tHan a pea in size. Mrs. Nick Freund. Mrs. Elmer Smith w~hen beet seed clusters are plantand Mrs. Math Nimsgern while in ^ they may send up a number of bunco winners were Mrs. Stev& sprouts, and sine? the beet needs Engels and Mrs. John B. Freund. "elbow room" to grow and mature Sandwiches and coffee were served jt is necessary to go along the rows by the committee in charge. - and th;n the stand so that only A party of friends gathered at single plants remain. Thinning has the home of Mrs. Ernest Peacock* always required hand work, and Thursday afternoon in honor of her there sremed no method of elimibirthday. Cards furnished the en- nating it unless the seed itself could tertainment and prize? were merited be changed. bv Mrs. Frank Sanders, Mrs. I^lla Then came Professor Roy Bainer AN AMERICAN HOSPITAL IN AFRICA.--In the first World war the doctors called it "shell shock." Today it has a new name. It's called "anxiety." But it's the same old battle disease. It results from too much shell fire, too much noise, too Mrs. Charles Freund on Sunday were many big percussions, too little rest, the George W. May family and Mr. an(j that other thing all men feel in^ battle whether they admit it or not ... fear. In the first World war the victims were returned to psychopathic wards as soon as their nerves broke, and sorne recovered and some did not. Now a new method of treatment on the battlefield itse'f is saving thousands of men with broken nerves. Army doctors state that 20 per e^nt of the battle casualties in the Tunisian campaign were "anxiety" cases. Had they been returned to base hospitals «t once they would have been' out of the war for all time and many would not have recovered. The army medical corps now gives these cases a three-day treatment RINGWOOD (Mrs. George Shepard) Mfcs. Louis Hawley and Mrs. Hickey of McHenry, spent Tue«#ay in Chicago. Mrs. Matt Blake and Mrs. Irvin Smith called on Mrs. Helen Young, Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Charles Brennan and Helen Johnson spent Thursday and Friday with relatives in Zion and Waukegan. Mrs. Rose Jepson spent Tuesday night and Wednesday visiting in Wauconda. Mrs. Ben Miller of Spring Grove, spent several days last week with Mrs. Joe Miller. „ Mr. and Mrs. Lou Abendroth of Elgin and Mir; and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch, spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Jenie Bacon. guests in the Clarence Harrison home at Keystone. Mrs. Wilmer Montayne and children of Woodstock^ Mrs. Emma Beatty and Mrs. Roland Jackson spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Glen Jackson of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Collins and Lynn Mary of Chicago, Mrs. Frank Collins and daughter, Mrs. Koop of Wilmette', spent Monday with Rey. and Mrs. Collins. s Mrs. Charles Brennan spent Wednesday with Mrs. John Pierce of Richmond. Mrs. William Engels and Mrs. Charles Smith-of Spring Grove called on Mrs. Joseph Kattner, Monday afternoon. Thanks to St. Jude Thaddeaus, and the Blessed Virgin for favors receiv- VOLO ed. CARD OF THANKS We wish to thank our relatives and neighbors for their floral, offer- MRS. H. J. ' "Lloyd Fisher Sunday. George Martin has returned to j ings arid many acts of kindness ex- Janesville, Ohio, after , spending a I tended us in our bereavement--Also week with Mrs. Martin and Tommy. Rev. Dickson for his words of cojm- Mrs. Emma Beatty and Viola Low fort and the ladies who sang. spent Wednesday afternoon in Wood- MR^and MRS. ROY WIEDRICH stock. Mrs. & W. Brown spent Tuesday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Ted Palaski of Antioch and Mrs. Alice Bell,and Rodney Anderson of Richmond called on Mt. in the forward areas, directly behind and Mrs> Jameg BelI Wednesday evethe lines. They are put to Ded, they ; nj!n_ are fed well, and psychiatrists watch their progress. Between 60 and 70 per cent of the cases are able to return to their units after three days, and one out of ten who does return breaks down a second time. This, according to many medical authorities, is one of the ,most important developments in army medicine in a decade. Keeping the patients within sound of shellfire, let- Mrs. Mike Freund of McHenry spent Wednesday in the Ed Bauer home. Freddy^ the infant son of Mr. jand Mrs. Roy'Wiedrich passed away Friday-- funeral services were held from the Ehorn funeral home at Richmond and FAMILY, , _ ting them see life going on normally ! Virginia Jepson, of Evanston, and Siegkr, Mrs. Nick Freund. Mrs.'-'i; of" the "department of agricultural around them, giving them plenty of Mr. and Mrs: Lee Huson of Liberty- J. Freund and Mrs. Frank May re- engineering of the University of Calceived consolation. Refreshments were ifornia with a novel idea. He rigged served to. complete the party. up a device in which a grindstone The firenun were called out Satur- thrusts the seed against a shearing day afternoon and Sundav afternoon bar, and under the pressure thus to keep grass fires und'er control, created the cluster splits into single- The flames were quicklv extinguish- unit seeda. These single seeds can ed and no damage was'done. h* Panted at regular intervals in Gueste in the home of Mrs. J. J. the rOW and the thinning can be sleep, plenty of good food . . . these are the new and sirhple cures. Shell shock is not the grave problem now that it was in the other war. Freund on Sunday were the Charles done with a long handled hoe, or Hundreds Take Oath at Citizens Outside IX S. WASHINGTON.-Hundreds of men and women in the armed forces to- Mav family, Mr. and MTs. Anton + va"et* of J"**?1^al ^ day hold American citizenship after wju i j . w ' ri„„n„0 which reouire no hand labor what- unique naturalization ceremonies ; Widhalm and sons and Mrs. Clarence ever 0m. o{ these toois is an adap- aboard ship, in wind-swept Iceland I Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiedireund. (aug er u y nne. tation c f the recently developed cot- and on the shores of the Mediter- I rich. y Odd Fellows tQn ch,,pperj which consists-essen- ranean. - | Mr. and Mrs. James Bell spent with A1 Schmeltzer as guest of honor - tially of revolving knives. ' t The justice department has re- i Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Charles was . held at Wilmot Friday night. •• - ; | ceived an interim report from Hen- j Clifford at Zion. Mr. Schmeltzer enters the L. S. army -'[..fy B. Hazard, immigration and nat- ! Mr. and Mrs. George Haberlien of on February 7. Early Landing Mrs. Peter Freund arid children of Early forerunner Modern Roads Planned For Rebuilt London London is not waiting for the war to end before making reconstruction plans, according to advices received from British engineers by the American Road Builders' association. One plan prepared by the London County council for study is centered around construction of three modern "ring" roads, highways which in the United States are called belt . , , . , . i lines. These ring roads would en- Sunday afternoon, with burial m | circle the London area> at conven. the Richmond cemetery. jent intervals, with radial roads Mr. and Mrs. Paul^ Norman and | serving as connectors to facilitate travel in and out of any section. The inner ring road would surround central London, co-ordinating the railroad termini. This project would include a tunnel under Hyde Park and the Thames river, east of London Tower. The second ring road would facilitate the circulation of dock traffic and industrial traffic. The third ring road would be several miles farther out. Nine major radial arteries, connecting the second and third ring roads, would extend well into the country. " ville were guests of Mrs. Rose Jepson for supper Sunday evening. Mrs. Roy Harrison, Mrs. Chancey Harcison, * Mrs. John Hogan, Mrs. Ed Peet, Mrs. ,. Lloyd -Berjwell, Mrs. Ed Carr and Mrs. Eva Eppell of the Richmond Hbme Bureau unit attended the Farm Home Bureau meeting at Janes ville, Wis., Saturday. Mr- and Mrs. Arthur Laney- of Chicago, Heights spent Saturday and (By Mrs. Lloyd Fisher) Mr. and Mrs! Walter Vasey and | Sunday, family spent Thursday evening at the home of Mrs. F!orence~€Trabbe at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. John Freund and daughter, ifrary Ann, of Johnsburg, Mr. and Mrs. Matt Brown and son Mrs. Harvey Brown; Secretary, Mrs. Walter Cook; Treasurer, Mrs." Williamwirtz. Mr. and Mrs. B. Kacan and IKr. and Mrs. H. Kacan of Chicago visited Mr. and Mrs. Philip ThrntHj City Council Proceedings Janaury 17th, 1944 In the absence of Mayor Overton, Gerald, were Sunday evening visitors'! ^ opene<* Wltl? Alderman at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Philip? Freunf chosen and acting in the Thennes. \ m&y°r 8 capacity. Alderman presvr_ ' , M , J ent: Buss, Ferwerda, Nye, Regiwr. Mr. and Mrs. James Valenta of Tonyan. ' Chicago visited Mr. and Mlrs. Frank St. George Saturday Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Mr. and Mrs. James Williams of T"on7yan2, ,th7at the ™minuetess of tlie r> * i t i ,ast regular meeting be approved Crystal Lake visited Mr. and Mrs.; read. Motion carried. I .IrtV/1 rl 1C not* Qnn/ln«» Miss Miriam King spent the weekend in Waukegan at the home of Mr. -and Mrs. John Wallace. Mayor Overton conducted the meet* ing from this point. Police Chief Cairns and Assistant Chief Wirfs reported and were ad- ^r" J?n<!i ^ranlt George t vised to make any necessary arrests way in5rei' *,V8£Lat. the to curtail speeding,and reckless driyhome of Mr. and Mrs. D. Krowin at: ing. ' RR V. , . I M. M." Niesen, Superintendent . and MB. Horace Grabbe of Waterworks, reported on delinquent- Jvanhoe were Sunday visitors at the disposaI piant. home of Mr. and Mrs. William Wirtz., w. C. Feltz reported on conditions a ^ra j atiof streets and alleys and was ade home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Helgr-1 vised to conjbact the chairman, of the 8°m j4 lle n tv v o , Streets and Alleys Committee je- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Parson, Sr., i garding placing cinders at various and daughter of Chicago spent Fri- points in the city for use on icy day evening at the home of Mr. and; streets. Mrs. Glenn Bacon. - | Mayor Overton appointed Alder- Mr. and Mrs. William Wirtz were j man Freund, Regner and Nye, mem- Waukegan caller's Thursday. bers Gf the Streets and Alleys Com- Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thennes and i mittee to act with him in contacting daughter, Bemice, were callers at the County Road and Bridge Com- Berwyn Saturday. j mittee regarding improvements and Robert Dunker of Capron, 111., was j maintenance of the old river bridge a Sunday dinner guest at the home i which crosses Fox River at the east of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey. i end of Pearl Street. ' Mr. and Mrs. Frank King were Mc- | Henry callers Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thennes visited the latter's mother, Mrs. Anna Freund, at Johnsburg Sunday. The Friendly Neighbors society met at the hom£: of; Mrs. Kenneth Peterson near McHenry Wednesday. This was an all-day meeting with a pot luck dinner. Officers were elected for the coming year: President, Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Freund, to adjourn. Motion carrkA R. I. OVERTON, MAYOR. EARL R. WALSH, City Clerk. ^ Noaular Worms Kodular worms live in the latgfc intestines of sheep. Nodules mad* by the immature worms render tha intestine unlit for use as surgical sutures and sausage casings. Use Native Spellings The U* S. Hydrographic office and the U. S. Coast and Geodetic Surrine landing barges were the boats in rtf **ar^CS uralization service official, who left ! Chicago spent Saturday, and Sunday ! spellings on l°L rle.rn..n!f: continental UniUd States ta the ! at thfir hVme here. ' * spring to conduct naturalization pro- AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Aucl Phone 478, Woodstoc^t tioneer 1 of the mosquito fleet used by the ceedjngS for members of the armed* Leathernecks in FJorida against hos» forces at distant battle stations. tile Seminole Indians (1835). The only prevjous naturalization of military personnel outside the country was conducted in the Caribbean area early this year. Having sold my farm, I will^sefT at public auction on the farm known as the Durkee farm, 3Vz miles S. E. of Alden, 4 miles S. W. AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD, Auctioneer Yankee Soldiers' Dream of Marble Halls True IN , ,, TT , especially those for the air forces, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stephenson 0bServe national spellings so that flicalled on Mr. and Mrs. James Ramey ers may quickly identify towns of Genoa City, Tuesday afternoon. | whether or not they know the Eng- Mr. and Mrs. William Martinec lish equivalents of their names, and family have moved from the1 Hepburn house to Janesville. Earle Harrison entertained the Greenwood Okay club Thursday evening. Small Grain Pasture Cotton fields are ideal for small grain for pasture because there usu- IU1„ The undersigned will sell at^puWic, ALLIED HEADQUARTERS w. of Hebron, 8 ^cti.on on the farm knoWn as the NORTH AFRICA. -- A group of miles east of Harvard and 10 miles £hflr'es Stake farm, 1 mile East of American soldiers who fell asleep north of Woodstock , ^ranklinville, 5 miles southwest of and dreamed they dwelt in marble TUESDAY FEBRUARY 8 ; Woodstock, on Commencing at 12:00 o'clock sharp,1 „ FRIDAY,' FEBRU, A, R, Y , 4 the following described property, to- H|00 o'clock sharp, v^t: ^ following described property, to- 36 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK Consisting of -- z±: 7 New Milkers wit: 3 first calf springers; 1 yearling; 2 55 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK IIZ - Consisting of 21 Milch Cows 21 kails woke up and found out that it was true, the army newspaper, Stars and Stripes, revealed. The weary soldiers were assigned to a billet outside Palermo, Sicily, during the night. They entered and flopped wearily. When they awoke they found they were sleeping on a fine grained marble floor. Seventeenth century paintings looked Mrs. Wilmer Montayne and chUd-! ]?• about three inches of loose ren of WV>odstock called on Mrs.. *°P dirt, which mak«i preparation Emtaut Beatty Saturday afternoon. I ^ 5"! Mr. and Mr., Arnold Kattner P.'Sker" *'5 Spr.i ng G*r ove, cal„le d, on „M re. JTo sep,h i drill. The drill will not hurt un- cotton ^ wm ^ wheat> oats or barley interfere with later nesday evening. 4 Mr. and Mlrs. G. Harrigan of Chicago were Sunday callers in the Fred Wiedrich, Sr., home. Clarence and Loren Harrison spent Friday at Morton Grove. The W.S.C.S. met with Mrs. George Shepard Friday. Cadet Audrey Merchant of Elgin picking, or late picking injure the grain. YOUR MOTOR going to be dfftr&i f6r some time on account of the war. Therefore, the better care you give it, the longer you keep going. Drive in and lc& us make a checkup. Our truck safety lane awaits your visit. CENTRAL GARAGE Phone 200-J • Towing Johiulnirg , j 1 n - . . o I . rv . . , _ ICC11UI LC1UU1 V UduniUKS 1UURCU f VjttUCV AUU1 XZy lUClVUOIlV Vi year--pure bred bull of record pedi- | 8 fresh in December balance close down on gilded furniture. The house j and Rita Mae Merchant of Woodstock 2--8 months old bull calves. j springers; 2 stock Holstem bulis; 1, belonged to Prince Lanzo di Scale®, j spent Saturday night and Sunday ^ Th,i s . herd tests .o ve. r t4-l "p er cent B.. 2 years ol<f; 1,j 1n6 months old. rj Jwuivth, their parents, MMrr. a«nndd MMrrss. RRonyv Black tea, Com-ndo, Are r ;;«-- Harrj50n 0f EWn 8pent over 30 years of culling for milk and gray horses, wt. 2«00; blue roan j Bows, Arrows, Is Belief Sunday his mother, Mrs. George 1 rec°rds. horse, wt. 1500. I LONDON.--The Sunday Dispatch j Harrison. 2 Horses: Bay pelding 7 yrs. old; Sheep--25 head of sheep, some: said that British Commandos prob- j Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Kattner of) ewes will lamb in March; purebred ably were using bows and arrows in j sprjn'K Grove, were callers in the Ed Bauer home, Friday evening, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., entertained Sunday in honor of her niece, •bav mare 5 yrs. old. 20 feeder pigs from 50 to 100 lbs. Sheniate buck. ' operations on enemy shores Chickens and Equipment Chickens--60 White Leghorn pnllr! The newspaper said a current film 25C Berry's famous deluxe mating ets; 100 Buff Leghorn hens. ! -^-presumably used to instruct Com- I eghorns. high producers and large Hay, Grain and Machinery "-j mandos--shews enemy sentries fall- p^c Vogel an "aerial photo- Fize pullets, wt. from 5 to 6 lbs.; 20 tons clover and timothy hay; 18 ing one after another, silently and craDher of Randolph Field Texas-- clec. brooder; 2 new oil brooders;;ft. silage in 12-ft. silo; 300 bu. Col-' mysteriously. P Dresent were- Mrs Katherine heated water founts; large assortment umbia oats; 30 tons good hard. corn i "Authorities naturally will not say v . nmi Tpnn R.1(i Mrs of feeders and waterers. in crib; 5 tiSfis Baled straw; stack of ^ whether the Commandos are carry- ; d!?Laurent and Susan Mrs' Geo' Bees--Some colonies of bees and cut stalks. , ing bows and arrows on real raids J;an , ^ ,7 bee. equipment. , 10-20 McCormick Deering tractor but u is certain ^ey haye been used i >^el an(d Phillip aliof Elkhorn Hay. Grain and Machinery i in good shape; McCormick Deering at some time during the war," the | and Mrs. Phelps Saunders of • 15 tons of clover and timothy mix-r I tractor disc; 2-bot. 14-in. tractor newsPaPer £>aid. ed; 5 tons of 2nd. cutting clover and plow; 10-ft. cultipacker; Mc-D. corn; .... - ZT_ . timothy mixed; choice quality baled planter, with fertilizer attachment Allied Prisoners l&ken ifwta'ri'i0 ft; va7 and. 96/°f5 •' wi«i 14 disc^e Bjr Japanese Total 370",00(f : zion'apent Wedne'sday evening with silage in 14-lt. silo; 600 bu. of Vick- irrain dnll; Mq-D. 3.,eet,on drag; LONDON^--Approximately 370.000 : Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brennan. Mr» and Mrs. W\ard Kattner of j 40,000 American troops, have b&en \ Middletown and Mrs. Jake Freund of Spring Grove* spent Saturday in the Ed. Bauer home. Miae Wiedrich was a Genoa City caller Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Harrison, Edyth and Loren--and Mrs. William Glawe of Woodstock were Sunday dinner Sycamore. Edyth Harrison of Chicago was home for the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman of - lund seed oats; 400 bu. of Columbia Mc-D. corn binder; Mc-D. 5-ft. grain A11. , • , ,• n„„ . . ,8feed oats; 150 bu. Wise. No. 38 seed binder; Mc-D. 7-ft..Crain binder; Mc Alhed prisoners' mcludin8 3J)'000 t0 1 barley; 45 tons of hand picked sound D. mower. , . j u *u i ,, eorn in erib; 3 tons of baled choice t,t>. ***, \ icklund oat straw; 100 lbs. of Sudan draw; Mc-D. single row cultivator; figure does not inc]ude Chinese caDgrass seed; 3 bu. of seed com. Mc-D. manure spreader; Mc-D. side " Chmese Cap 20-50iMassey Harris tractor; 3 bot. -Jelivery rake, nearly new; Mc-D. Among the prisoners are 100,000 Oliver tractor plow; 8-ft. David Brad- dump rake; hay loader; 20-disc horse British, Canadian and Australian |(y tracior disc; 2 sec. spring tooth disc; 6-roll Appleton corn husker, in soldiers, between 70,000 and 80.000 narrow; 3 sec. drag; New Idea spread- good shape; 2 iron wheel wagons, 1 Indian troops, 100,000 Dutch soldiers er; rubber tired wagon with Master as good as new; triple grain box; and civilians, and about 50,000 Brit- , Built box 16x7; Mc-D. corn binder; new hay rack; walking plow; grapple ish civilians. Mfc-D. mower; Massey Hams corn fork;a % H. P. elec. motor, pumpt ---- planter; Mc:D. Broadcast seeder with jack; corn sheller; bob sleigh; De- . Girdled for War grass attach.; 1-row cult,; dump Laval cream separator; Stewart elec-1 GENESEO, ILL.--Add wartime rfikp; s de delivery rake; power corn trie clippers. make-it-do devices; Ira Wert, filling sheller; syckle and tool grinder;.gar/ New electric Usco fence cont. with' station attendant, vulcanized a girden tools; sprayer; milk cart insulators,' 50 posts; 40' steel posts;' die to the satisfaction of his custom- Sulky plow; walking plow; low 3 spools heavy new barb wife; 90 er* * wheel wagon and rack; wagon and rods 24-in. new woven wire; 200 ft. » ' * Sw" iM*ft 2S"ft- *™anila r°pe' ,like ^®ncing» 28 new 12-in. boards,, G>oked Fish Is Clllft " n , 100 ft. %-in trip rope, new; 4- 14-ft. long; 2 cross cut saws; grind- t \r I M time hay fork; new lumber; Mc-D. stone; Cowboy tank heater; 200-ft. Volcano in IVlexiCO double unit milking machine with hay rope, hay forks, and pulleys; 500 i MEXICO CITY.--Dispatches from pump, pipe line for 32 cows; new lb. Fairbank scales; 2 sets of breech- j- Colima report subterranean rumrubber tired wheelbarrow; electric ing harness and extra collars; fly j blings heard there and that the wafencer, with several hundred insula- nets; 2 sets woolen horse blankets. • ters of nearby El Jabali lake have tors, steel posts, wire; set of harness. Brooder house, 8X101; chicken feed- i become hot. 12 milk cans, pails, strainers; Dairy ers and 8-gal. elec. water fountains;! The reP°rts state that "cooked scales; test, equipment; forks, shov-, quantity of neck yolctes and eveners' fish" have be€h found on the shore 'and numerous other articles. 20 grain sacks; 40^gal. gas barrel' the lake> Residents fear that Co- Household .Equipment j grindstone; milk house equipment; 9-i lima volcano, near the city of the New electric sewing machine; new milk cans; pails, strainers and stirr-1 same name 150 miles west of Thor washing machine; new deluxe ers; 2 wash tanks; heater. | the active Paricutin volcano, may kitchen range; small stove; 5-burner 1 Tackles, post mauls, forks, shovels j ^rup^' kerosene stove; chairs, beds^ dress-I and many other articles too numerous ers, rugs; Underwood typewriter; i to mention. pressure cooker; tables, radios, dress1 TERMS: All sums of. $25.00 and . under that amount cash. Over that TERMS: All sums of $25.00 and amount a credit of six months at 6 tmder that amount cash. Over that; per cent will be extended on notes ap- •mount a credit of six months at 6; proved by the clerk. Anyone desiring per cent will be extended on notes ap- credit, kindly make arrangements beproved by the clerk. Anyone desiring j fore purchase is made. No property Credit, kindly make arrangements be- : fore purchase is made. No property to be removed until settled for Y PETER P. LACKOWSKI Rough Handling Nearly all sweet potato storage diseases can be traced to rough handling at harvest time. Harvard State Bank, Clerking ' . ' • v... to lie temoved until settled tot. LOUIE STIEG First • National' Bank of Woodstock - Clerking * mmm BACKmmACK To 1he People cf thrs Community VOL ARE IMPORTANT There is no such thing as a "little" investment in the Fourth W'ar Loan Your $25 or $50 or $100 Extra War Bond may not have great imapMMWMMiMw p o r t a n c e in y o u r mind i n . HPHr m making up d 5^ billion dollar to- J tal for individu- IL M als-But multiply I I I I J . f f l X B l y o u r s e l f by I V / l i n T n l 1 3 0 . 0 0 0 . 0 0 0 and then you see in real perspective how truly great each citizen becomes in massing national strength against the Nazis and the Japs. Capt. Maurice Witherspoon, Navy chaplain aboard the Carrier Wasp when she sank, tells of a rescued woimd«d sailor, who, as he refarned consciousness, asked: "Did do my best?" That's the only question you, too, have to ask yourself when you decide the extent of your personal Earticipation in the Fourth. War oan. There undoubtedly will be larjje single purchases of War Bonds in this community, but yours--if it is "your best" will deserve equally the red, white and blue shield you are privileged to display in the window of your home. So "Let't AU Back the Attack." THE EDITOR. I T's IN THE AIR. You can feel it, every turned with interest But it to essential time the Axis is struck. This is the to complete victory. climax year, the year of decision. In history, 1944 will be the big year of the war--every stroke for victory counts, more now. That's why it's vitally important for every American to be at his post, doing his part right now. « You, personally, have an important job in winning the war --buying War Bonds. It's not glamorous--no, not even a sacrifice, really, because you are only •ending your money, to be re- , VE BOUGH! fXIRfl ttA! 4 WAR 10 Your part in this year of decision is at teast one extra $100 Bond, above your regular Bond buying. Thatisyourminimum tn- (Uvidual quota. But don't stop there. Remember wars are won only by all-out effort. So buy $200, $300, $500 worth--buy more than you can afford. Andbuy your Bonds where you work --at the plant or at the office. Your country is counting on you--let's make the year of decision OUR year! IM» ilicktr In jrtw wf*4«w (mom yoa hav* bw|kt M Wm tow nc»rlH«i. MM BACK THE ATTACK! Bead the Want Am m *> Public Service Company of Northern Illinois <D

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