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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Feb 1944, p. 4

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flgn Foui , , V - • • . < % « - ~ : . , , T V v . • ,> « • , : , . *-/ ' •. V , •' • - ' . Mo- *, • mi . - : . . , > r~ V ' - . ' ' v * 4^+u .V.v^»s «*,<* V*' „ . „ »„ v - - ,* - • MflHBflT PT. A THYME A T .TO * " y "' ^ - #/ Thursday, February 3,1944 THE M'HENRY PLAINOEALER Youth Gets Q Line Published every Thursday at Mc- j Lenry, 111., by Charles F. Renieh. | A. H. MOSHER Editor and Manager Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHonry, 111., under tiie act of May 8, 1879. •• Mi"» 1 ' i » „ ' . u'.i, J ;• Change In Subscription ^ . v-. Price of the McHenry Plaindealer. Ifow $2.50 per Year 3 ^ in Advance Vwiiis FOR SALS FOR SALE--One rubber tired wmgtm j With good tires; reasonable* Call "McHenry 667-R-l. *37 | 7 cerits On Sale at JPOR SALE--8 room house in the j block across the street from grade *qd high schools in City of McHenry. •'?. J- Cleary, W. McHenry, 111. *37-3 On His Girl Friend SEATTLE.--A 16-year-old boy was worried about his true love. So, Police Capt. George Kimball explained, he tapped her home telephone ^vith a portable set and asked a friend to call and ask her for a date. Was she true? He never found out. The police found* his connection first. ersotim Last Vermont Panther The last panther killed in Vermont was shot here in 1881 and it now is on view at the State houM m Montpelier. rower Units The U. S. army signal makes use of as many as 80 /Of power units for ground use fOR SALE--Bottled-gas range in fine condition. Call 636-J-l. *37 JF*OR SALE--Cash registerf v e r y v.**. ~ , good condition; reasonable. Homer News Stands, Drug Stores and i Fitzgerald, West McHenry, Phone -v Plaindealer Office j19- 37, NATIONAL €DITORIAL_* ASSOCIATION. FOR SALE--Coal , heating stove. Good condition. Maude Rothermel, ;107 N. Green St., McHenry *37; Pardon Lifer Who , Red 18 Years Ago Went Back on Wife's Advice •v:;;To Ease Conscience* -• PARCHMAN, MISS.--A governor's pardon opened for Milton Savell, 42 ^FQR SALE-Used Macomb brooder 5£™,h oli ^e _ penitentiary gates through which his conscience sent .stove m good, condition. Tel. 630-W-2 him a few weeks ago to serve out a 1HI £ti. life sentence. Savell voluntarily ended 18 years of a free, happy and respected life Store in Dry Room" I McHenry, 111. 87; as ^ack Canon, tire factory worker Be sure to store honey in a place : rrrr; • --• ' ' • - • | J ? w h e n h e s u r r e n d e r e d t o that is dry and fairly warm. Don't |F • SALE--Three one-man Farms | "Ov. Paul Johnson. At the goverpUt honey in the ice box. Low tern- . on which March 1st possesion -may! n®r ® suggestion he went alone to peratures may make the honey be had. Mornssey & Gilbert. Phone re-enter the state prison farm here. i FOR SALE--Upright piano, ivory | [ ctilor. Priced, $25. Tfei; 65&M-1, j 37 Released by Western Newapaper Union. LABOR AND CAPITAL CAN WORK TOGETHER V *• LABOR IS, and has beeBt a political football. No honest and,practical effort has been made to solve the labor, capital and management problem. Political parties have, for years, pronounced against considering labor as^a commodity^ but no effort has been made to put labor on any other basis thai! as a commodity ip our industrial production, Because labor represents votes its real problem has been ignored, it has been encouraged to run wild, and a very considerable portion of are beginning nurses' training. Miss Marjorie Duker of Cook county hospital, Chicago, visited at. the home of her parents, the C. fit Dukers, th^ last of the week. Miss Kay Bacon of Crystal Lake visited her grandmother, Mrs. Nellie Bacon, last weekend. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger. and daughter, Ruth, visited his mothit has wound up in the hands of er, Mrs. John Reihansperger, in West racketeers with whom the politicians { Chicago on Sunday. Mrs. Reihan- Mr. and Mrs. Michael Thill of Aurora spent the•weekend in the Jacob Diedrich home. Mrs. A. J. Wirtz spent TtaAsday in Mount Prospect, where she visited her sister, Mrs. Bert Christian. Miss Ethel Jones was a Chicago, Caller Tuesday and while there at«i * . tended the Gift show. .^nmPlqg Doctors Miss Clare Freund and Miss Es- doctors" of fte U. 8. ther Jean Orr left Tuesday for St i medlc*l corPs must be qualified Ann's hospital, Chicago, where they L / as ^ey JumP with the are be*innincr t €y .men and 8et «P aid stations in com- Equipped Each Month. I Producing Mica Army camps, posts and stations ! Colombia is joining the ranks at in continental United States are American nations producing mica supplied with approximately four for the United-States war effort billion pounds of varied military 'This strategic material, vital to raequipmeni every month. dio and,electrical equipment, is tteiiig mined on a small but growing scale in the republic. bat areas occupied by paratroops. crystallize and become cloudy. 1321, Elkhorn, Wis. Watering Boosts Yield It has been shown that watering cows twice daily produces 57 per cent more milk than watering once a day. One hundred heavy laying hens will drink 10 tons of water in 37 Savell was admitted to the peni- -- tentiary 20 yean ago sentenced to i FUK sALE--Year-round comfort and life imprisonment in the death of a | economy with fire-proof Johns-Man- youth from a neighboring county. He ville Rock Wool Home Insulation j said he discharged his gun accident- "Blownin" walls and ceilings. Call I ally in a brawl, when he was struck LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. j over the head, and that an unfriendly 36tf.! jury convicted him. Savell's conscience kept him from a year. A laying pullet has been SALE--Tavern-Restaurant, Es- j seizing one opportunity to win freeobserved dipping her beak in a pan tablished business, Bohemian Village, | dom soon after he was imprisoned. Fox Lake, Illinois. *36-2 j A model inmate, he became a trusty guard and saw one of his fellowof water 57 consecutive times after breakfast. And it takes 550 pounds of water to produce 100 pounds of pork. Row Fertilising On large plots whire the rows are widely spaced, it is more economical to apply plant food, to the row, rather than broadcast it over the entire garden area. Exhaustive placement tests indicate that the very best results are achieved when the plant food is placed in furrows two inches to each side of the seed row. The plant food furrows should be deep enough to allow the placing of the plant food 1 to 1% inches below the planted seed or seed piece. Plant food ' should be applied at the rate of one quart (two pounds) per 50 feet of row . . . that is, one pint (one pound) on each side of the 50 feef of row. Under this method of row fertilizing, the seed is planted first and covered while the string row marker is in place. The plant, food furrows are then made, the plant food distributed in them, and covered. HELP WANTED WANTED--Girl for soda fouriiain and general store work; steady. Bolger's Drug Store, McHenry. 35tf consort Tfs ^a means of securing j sperger is in a critical condition, at ^a" half a billion dollars is saved t* 'i- * jier j,ome there. I annually to American motorists be- #Ir. #nd Mrs. Joseph Glosson and cause °* the discovery that tetra- MT. and Mrs. William Staines visited i e*hyl lead added to gasoline con- Cant See Eyes Move try as hard asj .you may, ftm cannot by watching in a mirror see your own eyes move, according to the Better Vision institute. You wfll Animal Totals ! know that they are moving from It is expected that the total num- feeling of the £ye muscles in ber of grain-consuming animal units ! turning them, but you never can on farms on January 1, 1944, will be catch them in the act of turning 8 to 10 per cent greater than at the about. Another person, however, beginning of 1943. .can easily watch in the mirror your' - :------^ - j eyes in motion. From these and . , 4>ther facts some investigators have r concluded that the eye does not see when moving about ih its orbit-- . Saving to Motorists It has been estimated that more stock one evenng last week. AJr. and Mrs. Harry Lawrence "of Chicago spent the weekend visiting her mother, Mrs. Mollie Givens. Miss Kathleen Henn and Miss Winifred Winting, both of whom attend Rosary college at River Forest, were weekend guests in the home of the former's parents, the A. J. Henns. S^Frank Ensign of Palatine, a former McHenry resident, called prisoners trying to escape. If he , had shot him prison custom would j have demanded that he be released. "But I thought 'my God, I can't get out of here that way,' " he ex- WAJNTED--Painter's helper. Hunter "®° Vflled sharply to Boat Company. 13-tf! £ ,00^ ®nd ^he cfePt back " 1-- • *n 1924 Savell and another prisoner WANTED--Man for general work.; s^PPed away. Savell established Experience not necessary. Kramer j himself in Detroit, married and Boat Co. Fox Lake, 111., Phone Mc- f"ear.e?three daughters. But he said Henry 90-J. 35tf: e .11181 he could never be at ! 1 ease with t. prison escape on his WANTED--Maintenance iran. Hunter Boat ComDanv. 50-tf WANTED 1 Subscribe to The Plaindealer! The Beautiful larovA Jlii M CRYSTAL LAKE, ILC M£2?H3L!^?ii Leading Theatre Keeper of Lighthouse Is Given Service Medal FRIDAY & SATURDAY, Feb. 4-5 Bette Davis _ Pa.Hl Lukas in "WATCH ON THE RHINE" SUNDAY & MONDAY, Feb. 6-7 Sunday continuous from 2:45 pm. 28c to 6 p.m.; 33 after 6 p.m. JOAN CRAWFORD FRED MacMURRAY in "ABOVE SUSPICION" Also Charles Coburn in --, "MY KINGDOM FOft A COOK" 18c -- TUESDAY -- lfle tax 2c SPECIAL tax le Lloyd Nolan -- Carole Landis in "MANILA CALLING" WED. & THURS., FEB. 9-10 Humphrey Bogart &nd Ingrid Bergman 1* *CAflABLA NC A" mind. "The only difference between the way I'm living and being in prison is that I'm not behind stone walls," I he e*Plained. JOHNSON MOTOR LATE 16- HP, • 80 he told his wife his story. She D.S. MODEL WANTED--Spot cash! a8reed that he should give himself I paid. Address "ES," Care Plaindealer. up' .an,{* went with him to the state *37! caPlto1 at Jackson. -------- ; The governor gave Savell a full WANTED--Good used typewriters, pardon. Standard models preferred, but Will' ---- consider portables in good condition. Telephone Richmond 652 or write to Ringwood Chemical Corp., Ringwood, Illinois- 36-2 ; MISCOU ISLAND, N. B.-Twenty- TOURIST RESORT w * ^itpt> i ®^®ht years of service as a light- K£SORT WANTS)--Di- house keeper on barren Miscou isrect from owner, lake frontage on | land, the northeastern tip of New chain of lakes, reply in detail with Brunswick extending into the Gulf of picture would consider vacant that? St. Lawrence, have won the Imperial could be used W .N. Mars, 720 N.| Service medal for John Alexander Wabash Ave., Chicago, 111. 35-31 Ward. The king granted Ward the medal in recognition of his "meritorious (JTBAVPR eTftIIJW w • services" in keeping the light burn- STRAYED or STOLEN--Black and mg for nearly three decades to warn white toy terrier. Answers to name shipping of the presence of dangerot Toy. Any information would j ous reefs. Ward, 70 years old, has be appreciated by Jane and Patty lived on this island most of his lile Klein, Tel. 688-R-2. * LOST 37 ANIMALS WANTED Blindly a Pedestrian Follows Seeing Eye Man DENVER.--Farrington R. Carpen- DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE WAR -- Five dollars is the least we _ , pay for dead horses and cows in good j ter> Colorado collector of revenue, conditi Wheeling Rendering Co.; P^ked absent-mindedly at a pebble Phone -V reeling No. 3. Reverse the with his walking stick, waiting for charges. No help needed to load. 14-tf I the traffic to change. Finally ---- an elderly man took his arm and MISCELLANEOUS said gently: "It's all right now. The light's NOTICE--I have received word that i changed.' some parties are hauling railroad ties over the road owned by myself and Mrs. Williafri Frett. This is not allowed. Nobody has a right to give a permit or order of any kind on that road except the owners. Keep out. No hunting of any kind is allowed. MRS. ANNIE JUSTEN. 36-2 He led Carpenter across the street. "I didn't have the heart to tell him I wasn't blind," Carpenter said, "so I just tapped off down the walk." Colony McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY & SATURDAY Dorothy McGuire -- Robert Yoang Itya Claire Ptas: "CLAUDIA" . Cartoon, News and U. Service Band S. SUNDAY & MONDAY, Feb. 6-7 In Technicolor Roddy McDowatl -- Donald Crisp 'Lassie Gome Home' Also--Don Duck and World News TUESDAY (ONE DAY) Margo -- John Carradine it Gangway for Tomorrow" Plus--Short Subjects WEDNESDAY A THURSDAY ^"harU*# Coburn -- Isobel Elsom "My Kingdom for a Cook" 'Old Man of the River* Swims 6nly 7§ Hours BUENOS* AIRES.--Pedro SantTi- , oti, 55 years old, known as Argen- HAVE YOU HEARD about the new J tina's "old man of the river," failed reduced Auto Liability and Property | in an attempt to break his own rec- Damage ratfes ? They will surprise i ord of 81 hours of continuous swimyou. Ask us for -insurance rates. | ming when he gave up after 73 The Kent Co., McHenry. Phone 8. j hours 45 minutes. %. 27-tf j Be started from Rosari, Argentir iniHPr ' , * _ na's second largest city, on Febru- G ARB AGE COLLECTING -- Let us ary 26 and was attempting to swim dispose of your garbage each week, | all the way to Buenos Aires, but or ottener if desired. Reasonable 1 was forced by exhaustion to emerge rates. Regular year, round route, for-! at suburban San Isidro merly George MeyersK 1 Ben J. Smith, j : Phone 365. tf Army-Minded Boys Are Now Taking to Cooking COVIN A, CALIF.--At last, the high school faculty knows why the cooking classes became so popular with the male students. "I'm probably going into the army and I like to cook, so I might as well learn to do a good job of it and cook there," explained Football Captain Bill Bechtel, the 40th boy to enroll. votes. If that condition continues labor will kill American industry and when it does labor |vill have killed itself. There is a real solution for the labor, capital and management problem that can be' found if an honest and unprejudiced effort in that direction is made. Such an effort has been made with varying degrees of success in a number of industries. In all such experiments, labor has been considered on the basis of a partner in production, entitled to an equitable percentage of production income, with a definite knowledge of what that income amounts^to. The results have proven satisfactory to capital, to labor, to management and to the consuming public. These experiments can be the foundation upoa which to build a general policy, backed by basic, protective, laws under which the courts can render decisions in individual or collective cases without entailing interminable delays. Such an effort will not be made so long as political parties want to play to a labor gallery, want to use the labor probjem as a vote attractor. Labor today, in the aggregate, receives even more than a fair and equitable share of our productive revenue. Management and capital expect labor to be satisfied with a statement that such is a fact. Labor wants to be shown and as a partner in production would be in a position to know. It is easy to name reasons why a three-way partnership in production is impracticable or impossible, but if honest and capable men, with unprejudiced minds, attempt to find the way it can be done they will surmount all of the obstacles and produce a basis on which such a partnership can be built. When that is done, when there has been %nagted a basic law providing for the recognition and operation of such a partnership, the labor problem will have been solved, the day of strikes and production stoppages will be over, the place of the labor racketeers will be gone. * * * SERIOUS MISTAKE IN RICH FARM STATE IN THE EARLY SPRING of 1941 the government began building a large high explosive plant in a Mississippi valley state. As $ site many thousands of acres of good farm land was purchased. The farmers were moved off, the farm buildings razed and then, when the plant was laid out, it was found some 15,000 acres more land had been purchased than was needed. Some one had made a mistake. That mistake had caused something like 90 farm families giv- Ipg up their homes, being moved away to strange localities and among strange associates. It had cost the American people a sizable sum of money to pay for unneeded land. It had deprived the Federation of Music clubs held nation of the food product of 15^00 the home of Mrs. Winifred Atf£ ei8 ° C°™ VTd" l0T /kins at Elgin on Wednesday. the last three seasons that land has^ prggyced only a bountiful crop of toeeds. , - .. * in the Lee Whiting home in Wood- quer^ knock. The use of anti-knock fuel in high compression motors is said to have increased the power to our . civilization. that it is stone blind for an instant while changing its focus. **: ; 'Cans' Destroy Tanks ' / Containers that look like the rectangular varnish cans are now filled with high explosives and used as tank traps to destroy enemy tanks and as. "booby traps" to further confound the enemy. These *^>ooby friendrand"relatrve7hereV°oneU day! £fPs".are in the ground with last v/eek trip wires attached which explode Woodstock callers on Saturday ftfif"*"0 v badlydam; were Mrs. Edward Thennes, Mrs the treads of the tanks as to put Paul Brefeld and Mrs. George Stenger. - Anthony Schneider of Milwaukee, Wis., yisited his mother, Mrs. Catherine Schneider, one < day last week. Mrs. H. E. Buch visited Chicago relatives a few days last week. Mrs. James Orr and daughters, Mrs. Glenn Benson and Esther Jean, were Woodstock callers Saturday. Mrs. Rose Miller, Mrs. Ida Mlix, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Mueller, Mrs. Gilbert Howard and Mrs. Richard Cronin attended the funeral service for Mrs. Georgia Schiller a$. Woodstock on Monday. Sister Veronica of Visitation convent, Chicago, spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. John Bolger. Another sister, Mrs. Howard Ashton, of Evanston spent Sunday in the Bolger home., Edward Fleming of Kenosha, Wis., spent Sunday with relatives here. Mir. and Mrs. John Conway of Detroit, Mich., and Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Conway of Chicago spent a few days this week in McHenry. where they were called by the death of Mrs. Leo Conway. Father Walter Conway of Notre Dame has been visiting relatives here this week. -Mr. and Mrs. Nick Kennebeck spent the weekend with their daughter and husband, . Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Nester of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Fleming and son, Jack, visited in Cary on Sunday. Mrs. Millie Givens, son, Donald, Harold Phalin and Anne Frisby attended the funeral service for Mrs. Margaret DesLawrier ' in Chicago Tuesday. Richard Frett of Woodstock, who those land monsters out of action. Ships Named for Women v two more Liberty ships have been named for women, according to the Maritime commission. The latest of these is the Marie M. Meloney, named for the well-known woman Journalist and editor. The 57th ship named for a woman was christened the Mary Mapes Dodge, for an authoress well remembered for her juvenile books. Stroke In Time "When attended to at the first sign of need, paint jobs can be accomplished at comparatively little expense," says the Federal Housing administration. "When neglected, repairs can run into considerable sums. It is the duty of every American home owner to, Maintain his property in good sound caidrtien during these days of emergency. It is a duty which he owes to himself as well as to the whole national structure of the country." I (ostlv'olds nUT EGO PRODUCTtth 0 Fiw Mmmm COKM Poaltry MM SMb I Wb*a yo« sotiee w«t basks ar kfc (H bwy quickly « eon renin t, Ustad IN IM DRINK Vlor ooldt knd breathing trouble!. Help* T»t *prMd; relieves symptoms. Works frees the IniM* scsinst such daorden. Deed alone, or is serve esse* with VAPOSPRAY. SPFTAY WITH VAPO-SPRAY O'lM fcssili of the birds. Raptdin Mtosa, Uch in antiseptic and is> twlMtnlue. Oct VAPO-SPRAY w Lsawnlsiou NOW, and be prepared. Bolger's Drug Store Green Street McHenry Sea-Going Speedometer A sea-going version of-the speedometer now automatically and accurately records the speed and distance traveled by our hard-hitting battleships. In addition to indicating the ship's speed in knots, this robot totals in nautical miles the distance traveled by a ship from a given bearing. It also aids in the measuring of the draft and the trim of the ship and other factors that are important for navigation and gunfire control. Pan Spinack Another tasty and quick way to preox «~K, wno pare spinach is to pan it Tq prepare has been stationed at Great Lakes, 8ufficient for four servings, melt left this week for Rhode Island, two tablespoons of fat in a heavy where he has been transferred. On flat pan> add a quart of spinaclf Saturday Robert and his parents, Mr.1 •" • . .. ' and Mrs. George Frett, visited in the Ford Jackson home. Mrs. Ford Jackson and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Newkirk were Evanston callers on Thursday. Mrs. C. Wl Goodell and Miss Ethel Jones attended a board meeting of i *r?en!®i ana ine ,5®me save the M„*ir rl,,ha hpld I valuable. rat»on P0ln[s- Vary the preparation by using bits of leftover meat, or a little chopped onion, or slightly thickened milk or cream. cover the pan tightly to keep in the steam and cook until barely tender, stirring occasionally. The vegetable cooks in its own juices, so none of the valuable nutrients are lost. By using meat drippings as the fat, you can add good flavor to the panned greens, and at the same time save N Rough Handling Nearly all sweet potato storage diseases can be traced to rough handling at harvest time. Coll for Health Regular culling* to keep out all birds that are going out of production, will help to prevent possible spread of infection and thus keep the flock in better health. Shipping Losses From 1914 to 1918 the United States lost less than half a million tons of shipping, which is somewhat less than two weeks' present production of Liberty ships. England lost 11,493,000 deadweight tons, more than 20 times our losses. " Plumbers Find What They're Searching For SAN FRANCISCO.--Tony Lucchesi, 41 years old, a plumber, and his 17-year-old assistant, Clifford Hauchin, were hunting a gas leak yesterday. Their flashlight fell on the floor and went out. One of them lit a match to find the flashlight. Emergency hospital attendants said their burns were extensive but not serious. Destroys Parasites Phenothiazine, one of the outstanding discoveries in veterinary medicine of the past decade, destroys most internal parasites' that ' worSTofw^V25 mil!ion d0lIar8' i ' Plastle Insele ican farms PUP™81""13 °n Amer' I A plastic insole has been develmillione ;„y...ye*r: and cost j oped for U. S. jungle fighters, which «i keeps soldiers' feet dryer and can be washed with soap and water. millions more in weight loss. KEEP ON * • *• .» . ...... Wages Up Weekly wages of manufacturing workers, after deductions are made *> for living cost rises, have increased 28.9 per cent since January 1, 1941; and all nonfarm workers' wages have increased an average of 8.8 per'cent. I AM ONE of a favored few who once each month receive a copy of a small publication, "Washington Close Up," issued by the Citizens National committee. It is filled with factual information regarding the activities of government, "phe facts it contains should be in the hands, of all the American people, and if j thfey were, it would obviate all dan- I ger to our American form of gov- ' ernment, our American way of. life, f A way should be found to give such | non-partisan information a far wider circulation. ; • ; I HEAR "The Solaee of Nature" ! mentioned as the subject of a "paper" read at a woman's club. I do not know what the lady said but I 1 get mine by looking over the green ; lawns, the flowers, the palm trees and remembering the cold and snow and howling blizzards I encountered at this season for so many years, j • • * r. CLASS ROOM THEORIES are all right in the class room but for government, in times like the present, I there is needed sound horse sense rather than the trial and error testing of bureaucratic theories. Give us more men equipped with a prac- , tical "know-how" and less of those equipped only with untried theories and dreams. * . * * * THOSE WHO OFFER ALIBIS foi their own shortcomings should t willing to accept the alibis of otLcn but they seldom do. Plastic Plywood Pianos Army field pianos that require less than 37 pounds of metal are built chiefly of plastic plywood, painted olive drab. With a collapsi- THE HOME OF FINE #ENTERT AIN M ENT MILLER THEATRE WOODSTOCK, ILL. FRIDAY & SATURDAY, Feb. 4-5 2 Major Features 2 GENE AUTRY in - "SOUTH OF THE BOEDER" with Smiley Burnett Plus: "GIRL TROUBLE" with Don Ameche -- Joan Bennett SUNDAY & MONDAY, FEB. 6-7 Gaiety! Romance! Music! Betty Grable and Robert Young in "SWEET ROSIE 0 GRADY" in Vivid Technicolor TlIfiSDAY (ONLY), FEB. 8 Bargain Night 25c 2 FEATURES 2 THE BOOGIE MAtf WILL GET YOtf" with Boris KarloflT 'AFTER MIDNIGHT WITH BOSTON BLACKIE" Soutb American Airlines Total mileage of the Latin American airline network is 106,828 miles or 124 per cent greater than was the U. S. domestic network prior ble bench, the total weight is 393 to curtailment of services due to the pounds. ; war which was 47,703 miles. WED. & THURS., FEB. 9-1© Matinee Every Wednesday 2-SJH>W6-2--One at 12 No»»--The "7 " ' : ' other at 2 p.m. ----- .On Our Screen . "ABOVE SUSPICION" Starring v JOAN CRAWFORD FRED MacMURRAY Mulberry Trees Increase Mulberry trees, source of food for the silk worm, have multiplied from .10 million under cultivation in 1940 to more than 30 million in Brazil. Fly High Photographic reconnaissance/aircraft fly so high that they can seldom be seen and rarely heard, and cameras must be electrically heated to prevent frosting, yet the photographs are so clear that they can be enlarged up to 50 times. 4 I am planning to erect a new locker plant iri connection with my retail meat business, on Green Street, McHenry. • • I am required to get applications for lockers. If you are interested in my proposition, please leave name at the West McHenry State Bank and a representative will call upon you with full particulars. Do this at once and secure one of the choice lockeif* & P; Q: O

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