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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Mar 1944, p. 4

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11 • >r-v ' •!-*r THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at Mc- 111., by Charles F. Renich. MOSHER Editor and Manager , Entered as second-class matter at ,.vilio postoffice at McHcnry, 111., under act of May 8, 1879. _ l. i )i i iir M' ,i'i'iiiii'iijiimiijiin|i'i'i)i.i.!iii|i^iii|r Year :?*• •$2.50 FOR SALE TOMMY TFT IS ACCUSE**-;-: -411 mmv UP! NAT'CflAL €DITOR!AI •" V.f ASSOCIATION IT^.- -htovt fi FOR SALE--Cow and 800 bushel Vangard seed, rust resisting; from yield of 80 bushel per acre last season. Re^dy for storage. Jersey and Guernsey cows, good family cows. ; 10-20 International tractor, good shape. Tel. Round Lake 2223. ; . . 42-2 FOR SALE---Chowe of 6 well-matched teams. Young and \fcell broke. Leo- Regner, McHenry, Ilh--Lily Lake < •• 42 ersonals OF BOASTING TT ISN'T safe to say anything fce- A fore Chatterer the Red Squirrel, unless you are ready and willing to prove that what you say is so. Chatterer never forgets, and if he thinks he has caught you bragging you never will hear the end of it. Tommy Tit the Chickadee had said that he was not in the least afraid of Farmei Brown's Boy and woyld just as soon FOR SALE--Baled straw Elmer1 eat out of his hand. Of course, Chat- Heidemann. Sunset Knoll Farm. Call; )Lerer didn>t bel'ieve that- He bought ' Round Lake 2416. *42 ' Tommy was boasting a little, and he I ; made nn his mind that he would : FOR SALE--Registered C h e i t e r' have some fun with Tommy, „ at white . Boars. Howard-. B. • Harrtsori/' So when Sammy Jay came along St. Ann's hospital, Chicago,, visited in Ringwt)od> 111., Phone Richmond 648.; Chatterer told him what Tommy Tit the home of her parents last week- . -. t < *42 r had said, and Sammy told Pet<;r -v;-t :^nd. - • •?:' - "--V ,;v -- 1 'Rabbit,' and Peter teld Billy Mink, • Mr. -«nd Mrs. Nick B. Freund were FOR SALE--Field- seeds, fertilizers, [.and Billy Mink told little Joe Otter, f^Ycfiunday.- guest's -mjth'e Geo<i>e Scheid,: Furr; lowealih, and Wisconsin .Hy-i and so the story spread all through ' '. Jr.; home in Wauconda. Mr. .Scheidy K-rid'sefed corn, everything in poultry! the Green Foiest, and everywhere recovering cicely from a vecerit feed, baby chicks, from the Nesjt Tommy Tit went someone was • ."operation. " .* ' 'hatcheries. " Jsteffent-y .Flour Mills. sure to ask him if he had eaten. - V -K Conway and dftughter left;- j ' 1 . ' ; ^ ,V 41-^ from the hand of Farmer Brown's ; v • •••' lohn ness lots. Income property, stony tie eyes would twinkle merrily and Hattie Reikowof Chicago'spentatt*C*ed- Goodin- he would say. few days last week in -the Robert ^stment' ]«cated m McHenry About acres, 7-room, modern-all msula- * , ' '* -* V ^ ' - .- - • • . ' - •' H ) B e t t y R e g n e r , s t u d e n t - n u r s e "Dee, dee, dee! You'll see!" v->r<Tnrv«n L_m„ ' t "*r* "'ra, i-iuum, muucin .»ii msuia- No, Tommy Tit the Chickadee is Mrs Irvin Hart Sr and MfC Ed ted home- 2~car %***&> poultry! Such 1 a very little fellow--a very lit- McCormick of Chicago spent a few house. 75 assorted fruit, 100 large tie fellow, indeed-and the more the ^^ hTre th^ past w^k and attend- °aks ®.nd Hiekory trees 100 feet -- -- ed the William Bishop funeral. Fox R>ve' Montage w!th sea wall, Mir. and Mrs. Vincent Wirfs and nea[ McHenry. W.ll confer in family cf Rockford visited in the Part' s"?a11 . Tf !f , °^T; A£Z" *Ge~<re Wirf* home last weekend. °r n no + rtheast„ Glettdale Calif. Ben Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Smoak of D*tz> McHenry. Phone McHenry Antioch spent the weekend visiting " ' relatives in McHenry. FOR SALE--Ford-Ferguson tractors Mr. and Mrs. Bill Chapelo of Har- --\ye are taking orders and making same way with most of the other vard were callers in McHenry Sat- deliveries on new tractors and equipurday evening. ment. Ford-Ford Ferguson Services Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sebo of Rich- and Sa]eS; 248 Throop St., Phone 851 roond called in the George Wirfs Woodstock, 111. -- , 40tf home Saturday night, where they atother little forest and meadow people thought of it, the funnier it seemed that Tommy should boast that he was not afraid of Farmer Brown's Boy. Why, Tommy isn't big enough to make one good bite for Reddy Fox, and yet everyone knows that Reddy doesn't dare go near Farmer Brown's Boy. It is the ndt?d a farewell party for Edmund FOR SALE -- North Dakota Red \Virfs, who will soon enter service. River Triumph early seed and eating Mrs. Agnes Lewis of Kenosha, Wis., potatoes. Dave Segel. Tel. 92-J. «nd Mrs. Alma Riggs of Salem, Wis.. *39-4 Visited their parents, Mr. and Mrs. , _ ~ ; ; --•-- William Tesch, Sundav and Monday. SALE--Year- round comfort aild George Williams was a caller in economy with fire-proof Johns-Man- CF^tal Lake on Sunday afternoon. ^e--Rc*,k W°ol Home Insulation MTS. Chester Wegener of Crystal; walls and ceilings. ^CaJI X»ake spent a day this week visiting^^ LEO STILLING, McHenry 18. he*- eister, Mrs. George Williams. 36tf. A letter arriving at the Plaindealer WANTED office this week tells us that the George W. Hess family, former resi- ] WANTE1D TO BUY--Poultry of all 4lert*. are back in their home state kinds Wm. Staines, West McHenry. of Illinois and are now located at Te[ McHenry 638-R-l. 421 Mattoon, 111. For several years after : 1 leaving McHenry they resided in' WANT TO BUY--Baby bed, high j Jsioux Falls. S. Dakota. chair also small gas range---Phoi^e 42 Jumper the Hare vms afraid to leave the Green iForest. little forest and meadow people. So, everyone thought that Tommy had just boasted, and no one believed that he really had meant it. Of course, Chatterer the Red Squirrel was one of those who teased Miss Kathleen Henn of Rosary Col- 206-R McHenry. lege, River Forest, 111., spent the weekend with her parents here. «ANTED^--Individual seeks cash u Mrs. Charles Carso of Chicago vis- ye?" ^or 1*0,000.00 first mortgage Tommy most and yet if the truth ited in the Henry Kinsala home last 120 acre farm in MoHtenry County.; must be told 'right doWn in his heart weekend. Wr te Box R., McHenry Plain- Chatterer wondered if perhaps, after Mr. and, Mrs. Ralph Schroeder and,aealer- 42 all, it might not be true. You see, (children, Tommy and Annette, of j WANTED TO RF\T--TTnfnmioVioH' Chatterer had a wholly changed Palatine visited in the home of her 5_? room ho^e °Pinio" ot u Brown's Boy parents the Jacob Steffes , on Sunday. Hen Running water, garage. ^j since he had been a prisoner and Pvt. George Freund Jr and Miss references. Mrs. E Sundt Vol | then had been allowed to go free. Louella Smith spent Sunday in Chi- jjpj) Round Lake 111 42 ' admit that Farmer capo. ' ' Brown's Boy had been very good to Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hart and son WANTED--Custom hatching. Bring - and, somehow, he wafen't very of Chicago spent the weekend with your eggs now. Hatching chickens,! much afraid of him any more. In her parents, the Jacob Justens. ducks and. turkey eggs. Prices un- *ac*> he sometimes thought that he Mrs. Vernon J. Kramer of Chicago changed. Lehmann Hatcheries J almost^ dared^ to eat out of Farmer and Mass Nora Clark were visitors Highway 14, 3 miles southeast of! Brown's Boy's j,hard himself. You in the George Kramer home here one Woodstock 39-4 ?ee' every day he found two or three fat nuts hidden in the old stone wall HELP WANTED Von the edge of the old orchard nearest Farmer Brown's dooryard, and dp" last " eek. Mr. and Mrs. George Kramer of this city, accompanied by Mr. and -- . . , .. . , , , - Mrs. George Meyers of Woodstock,! WANTED--Draft exempt man for j ^ ^^ ^^hey had been put there visited the latters' son and family, war work. Apply Miller Products. I R , .^ imV. .. , ,. Mr and Mrs. R»y M.y.„ in Mar-. Pb«e 195. 39-tt ! ^ '•'site^ the Seneca ship yards, where ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ j ed to be so he dared Tommv to Roy Meyers is employed. Many of I women---Hunter Boat C O m -! prove it.' f "Dee, dee, dee! You'll see! You'll see!" laughed Tommy ift his merry way, and straightway flew through the Green Forest and over the Green Meadows--green no longer, for they were covered with snow--to invite everybody to visit Farmer Uncle Sam's large ships of war are; panv. built there. * ' Miss Hlelen Mintter of Maywood spent a few days the past week in the E. R. Sutton home 41tf ( ANIMALS WANTED DEAD ANIMALS WILL WIN THE The Harold Frett family of Chi- WAR -- Five dollars is the least we cago visited relatives and friends pay for dead horses and cows in good here on Sunday. condition. Wheeling Rendering Co.! Brown's doftryard the next morn- Mrs. Mary Powers of Long Lake Phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the ~ ' " * ' ' * visited Miss Etta Powers on Monday j charges. No help needed to load. 14-tf afternoon. _ ; ~-- Frank Gende left Monday for Fort j MISCELLANEOUS Bragg, N. Carolina, after spending a furlough with his wife here /•'" - :- V - ; , i teach unless he or she likes children. .A teacher should have a good incite ' 4*ito knowledge and discipline. In closing let us give you the ught of every speaker in telling how great the organization of the tional P. T. A. really is. They all that as members jve should be ery proud to be a part of an organifation that is nation-wide contributes« •o much to the welfare of youth. This conference was attended by • ,'ifche Lily Lake P. T; A. officers and |he past president: Mrs. Florence Svaboda, president;- Mrs. John Mili- Hac, vice president; Mrs. Hattie Ein- •par, secretary; and Mrs. F. E. Weiler, past president. LILY LAKE P. T. A. 1 !' Eat Seaweed Indians, thousands of years believing that salt was a man's dish which turned his gtay and hastened death, gathered the "sea lettuce" and ate it to supply the salt they would not otherwise use on their food. Hawaiian* chopped it up and ate it raw as m salad or baked it with jqneats. Th» Japanese have cultivated and eaten it for years,but the Hawaiians of more varieties. At least 75 kinds of seaweed grow in the around Hawaii. * WAR BONDS are "American Preferred. Here hangs Hitler! Too damp in spirits to heil, eV«;n for himself. We hope before he pays in full for the hell he's visited upon the earth that he'll be able to realize what a lesson he's taught the world. And we hope that all the little wooden-soldier imitators he may have "inspired" here, there and everywhere, will realize that the Superman is just a comic strip: and that the reality is the triumph of democracy and the spirit, of true brotherhood! " •••• - •, . . ' I " -:I Iin.tf •If.'jj.'i Jiij • i i ^iijViijr ' • ' : r .i: fi "••• -- MEMBERS OF LILY LAKE P. T. A. ATTEND CHICAGO CONFERENCE a 31 The conference of the Illinois P. T. A. was held in the grand ballroom of the Stevens hotel recently and was attended, among others, by members of the Lily Lake P. T. A. The meeting opened with the pledge of Allegiance to the Flag, which was a most beautiful and impressive sight. Following this prayer was said by1 Dr. Herold W. Ruopp, vice president of the church federation. I The theme of the conference iwas protection of youth and child Vdedelinquency. According to the speak-/ ers, a delinquent is not bom bun made through invironment, lack of parental interest, disinterested teach- i ers, lack of discipline, unnecessary J and irregular attendance, poor schools,: illegal employment (meaning the children under .16 years old who are working for big wages which lead them into many temptations) and many others. The contributing facspeakers, is the removal of the mothers from the home to defense work and leave these under-age children who need daily guidance. The time is now to listen and heed these statistics that were given at the conference from men that make child delinquency and education their life work. According to these statistics 55 per cent are boys but there hais beeh "a per cent "increase in the number of girl delinquents. . Youth is our great resource. The home is the primary institution of a child's life and one night of the week should be a family night, a get-together for the .parents and child. No teacher should be allowed to ,» ".y -- y- : FRIDAY & SATURDAY Ann Sothero . -- James Craig "Swing Shift Maisie" Special in color 'Caribbean Romance' ^Also--Nfewg. A Cartoon m • Help chicks and young birds grow and develop. Give them TONAX in their mash. Especially after an attack of any disease. And as a tonic and conditioner. Contains mild astringents to help relieve Enteritis; also blood building elements. Tonax helps control intestinal parasites. It provides trace minerals and reliable stimulants. Fo^ layers too. Inexpensive and convenient. 2-lb. can enough for 400 chicks for a month, 73c Bolger's Drug Store Green Street ; McHenry McHenry, Illinois SUNDAY & MONDAY, Mar. 12-13 In Color Kathryn Grayson -- Gene Kelly "Thousands Cheer" Plus--Cartoon & Wiorid. News TUESDAY (ONE DAY) Bob Haymes -- Lynn Merrick 1. "Swing Out the Blues" Chester Morris -- Jeanne Bates 2. "Chance of a Lifetime" WEDNESDAY & THURSDAY Robert Paige -- Louise Allbritten "FIRED WIFE" MILLER WOODSTOCK, ILL. SATURDAY ONLY MARCH 11 "GILDERSLEEVE ON BROADS With Harold Peary- 5 Plus: ' "RIDERS OF THE RIO GRANDE" with the 3 Mesquiteers • & SUNDAY & MONDAY • March 12-13 Canadian Mounted Polices-Op m Nazi man hunt! Starring ERROL FLYNN in " NORTHERN^PURSUIT' • with Julie Bishop TUESDAY ONLY MARCjH 14 Brought Back By POPULAR DEMAND! "BEYOND THE BLUE HORIZOfef" with ' DOROTHY LAMOUR RICHARD DENNING WED.-THURS., March 15-16 Matinee Wed., March 15 2 Shows--12 Noon and 2 pjL JOHN GARFIELD MAUREEN O'HARA in THE FALLEN SPARROW 1J f u;p.;y; 9 ' "'ri: i'*!'®-.7 - s . ' - • v-'V'A- '.-vv 9 ing and see him prove that he had not boasted. And whenever he delivered the invitation he chuckled, for he knew that most of those whom he had invited would not dare to Alfalfa $15.60, Clover $18.30, Blue come. Reddy Fox was sorry, but Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Sutton and son. Ta& Hybrid Seed Corn $3.5«, all per he had an engagement the next Corp. William Sutton, the latter of bushel- AIso many other bargains, i morning. Old Man Coyote had im- Indiantown Gap, Pa., Mrs. Eleanor P08*** card us today for catalogue' Portant business up in the Old Pas- Nye and Arthur Martin were dinneT an^ samples. Hall Roberts' Son, | Mink had promised Little guests one recent evening in the P°stville, Iowa. 41-5 „oe to go fishing. Jumper the home of the William Martins in Wau- HAVF YOIT HP A pn k . .x. ' • ^ ^ ^'d ^ he ?'3S kegan. -- . t iUU HEARD about the new- to leave the Green Forest, and be- Taecin Wouu i i reduced Auto Liability and Property cause he was so honest about it TomsnenV". • Damae« They will 5urpri.^ m, Tit didn't chuckle as he did at - - y ln? you. Agk us for insurance rates.' the excuses of the others. Roughleg [ The Kent Go.» McHenry. Phone 8. the Hawk begged to be excused, be- 27-tf cause hunting was best at that time „ ...... „rr~zr- . of day and he didn't want to lose his Y^""^GE COLLECTING -- Let us breakfast. But Chatterer the Rsd Delphin Freund and son,; dispose of your garbage each week, Squirrel and Happy Jack the Gray n< ^ -* 1 Reasonable Squirrel and Peter Rabbit promised to be there, for they knew there were good hiding places in the "old stone wall. And, of.course, Sammy Jay said that he would be there. Mrs. M. J. Walsh. Mrs. Anna Christiensen of Chi-1 cago spent Sunday visiting friends! here. Mrs. Denny, and Mrs. Irvin Freund visit- j or oftener if desired. ed in the home of Mr. and Mrs.! rates. 'Regular year round route, for- Anton P. Freund on Sunday Arthur Tonyan and Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Freund visited Julaine Tonyari at St. Therese hospital on Wednesday evening. merly George Meyers'. Ben J. Smith. Phone 365. t£ Kansas City Conducts Traffic Safety School Voftpre than 10,000 motorists in Kansas City, Mo., have attended the traffic school established three years ago by the traffic and safety divisions'^ the police department, the municipal court and the safety council, the International City Managers association reports. Though most of the students are those required to attend classes for violating traffic regulations, anyone may attend vol- Tunisian Imports This country paid more than $500,- 000 for Tunisia's olive oil in 1939. This small French colony was also second in bulk salt exports to the United States and first in cuttlefish bone. Powdered cuttlefish bone is used as a polishing agent, a dentifrice and a fertilizer. Soya Fat Content Soya products may have either a high or low fat content. Flours and grits of low fat content have the highest protein, value, and most untarilv of them will be of the low fat tvpev ;e in to attend the school. ^Sessions are held one night a week from 7:30 until 9 in the municipal court. Causes of' accidents, basic factors in safe driving, gpqd driving practices, traffic regulrft'.ons and rules oflhe road and other problems of traffic safety are covered in the curricula, a complete revision of which is in progwhich they come will give some indication of the fat content. Industrial Center Before the German invasion, Moscow could claim one-seventh of Russians industrial production. Specialties were machine toqjs. automotive vehicles, electrical equipment, and precision instruments. Terminus of II railways, the capital was the cenof European Russia's transpor- -- network. ./ Next Question, Please Investigator -- When were yc>u born? Washington Jr.--Ah wuz never borned. Ah's an orphan. Investigatof--V^ho was your mother? Washington Jr.--Ain't had . none. Ah has a stepmuvver^ f No Mind Reader Mrs. Smith--Is there any hope for my husband? Doctor--Oh, 1 don't know. What ans you hoping for? Checks Colds Anyone who has many colds may find that, with more vitamin'A, colds will be less severe and ^ill not lest as long. -' - v Some tips on the a gas range /• You can brown foods •voniy --by preheating,oven for 10 minutes, allowing space between pans for free circulation, and by not placing pans directly over each other. To avoid browning food too much on bottom, use rightsize, bright pans with heat reflecting qualities. To prevent foods from drying out before browning, avoid opening oven. BROILING Broil foods for better flavor. Broiled foods are tastier, healthier, more vitamin-full. Broiling in a modern gas range is smokeless -- showing the cleanliness of gas cooking. For slow broiling, place meat about 3" from tip of flame. For quick searing (rare broil) place I" from flame. Watch closely. To prevent food from burning -- Preheat oven and avoid over-high temperature. Pies and cakes burn around edges if your;'/, roll crusts too thin, over-fill oven,*- or place pans too close to ovett sides. To keep cookie-bottoms from burning, use shallow pan • or cookie sheet so heat reaches tops. Be sure cookie sheet is not too la*$e. To mokesure e«ke* rise emd stay risen--see that range and oven racks are properly leveled. Straighten or replace warped baking pans. Spread batter evenly-. And don't peek during ^baking period. ROASTING Slowly for tastefulness. Meat, poultry and fish should be roasted slowly. The following is the low temperature roasting method: Place roast in uncovered pari,, fat side up. Lay strips of fat over lean meat, fish or poultry, of brush over with fat. Do not add water. Basting is not necessaty at low temperatures. learn to feed yoitt family right, buy\ only what you need, give points for all you buy. Pay no more tha% ceiling prices. Avoid waste. Aviation's Start Montgolfier Roared aloft in his hot air balloon in 1783; the Dolphin, first of rigid airships, appeared in 1852; in 1903, Wilbur Wright flew at Kitty Hawk--and modern aviation was bora. . <v i-- ' . '"I- - - V: WESTERN UNITED 6A ¥AN D ELECTRIC COMPANY •V? i •V

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