P«ge Six I v . JV*" ^ ' ' Jj . i - ' THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER ¥?•:•>-i'V ' / " •" ' f ' ^ ' : \ " -f i ; Thursday, April 6, 1944 f;|v : • •••'Vv 'V Twice T o l d Tales ,Y t mmm « »• riiM of rf T( Tak«« RED GROSS NOTES ••K-'.-i W4£N WAR WO i, '1 ._>• V * Bricker Fights Philosophy of Scarcity Colvmbus, O. <S|»1.)--"We muft bury forever the philosophy of scarcity. We must, fight to restore the dam^je done by the bureaucratic belief that-the forces of nature, yes, even human nature, can ,be controlled by a directive. We must replace regimentation with reliable information an i advice. We must help the farmer to help hirriself father than continue to tell him What G BT A. %:P AVT .E RS ON Released by Western Newspaper Union. Our Surgical dressings chairman. Mrs. Rteihansperger, wishes to thank ihe goodi women who answered the iircent appeal for added inte rest in ,, j-J, must do. getting1 o«jt'our unusual allotment of This is the message that Gover SIXtY YEARS AGO work for this month. However, our nor John-W. Bricker of Ohio is car goal of 1600 dressing's per week is The ice-broke up anJ floated 'dowri"-still short. Last week 1425 dressings campaign ,fof the presidential noip the river on- Friday lastr and wgnt were made. In order to ' have the Ination at. the Republican conven- 80 Quietlv that few'knew it until the March .quota up, we must reach at tion. ;. viv^r wnV clear S»rinff has indeed least 1600 a week. This week. Holy VThe farmer Wants and is entitled 2 " ; : v . ' / * ) : - • . : ' - w « ? W w e h a v e p u r c h u r c h s e r v i c e s t g , . . b u r f a i t h , " G o v . B r i c k e r s a y s . W«» ^cChllom aftd preparations for Easter. That . ' Given , this faith and this , advice, been qvrite 4ick the past M&k: .He \U important, and We hope that ;our I am cohvihCe^hat he will neither 5 now Wh ^ extra lprayers will .result." in -Peace go bankrupt, -gouge usv nar let us tirt sW him aroiirid -rfffain soon, sooner than \ve anticipate*, Aftpr down. ; : ^uhSrA#^ *• ."ask-, that_-^Th.e .agricultural program of the percentage that was manv'dueks^thefo days* We "saw at the surgical dressings'workers the depot, on Monday about" one. return j,nd bring serve of- - " hundred in rhe'l'U. V. .This, is the last week. ' ing rink, the proprietors - ; - ; . • ciaed ,o ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ - • remembered for . the girls Of the Hospital Recreation corps. Another party , was held at Camp Grant. Mrs. LABOR'S SHARE V IN INDUSTRY -r SOME SIX YEARS AGO, in a hotel ih Wilmington, Del., I picked up a printed annual financial statement of the DuPont company. It was unusual in its statements of the operations of the company. It gave the total amount of the year's sales, and rying to American farmers 4n his j showed in amounts and percentages the disposition and distribution of that total. The larger amount and the largest percentage went to labor; "materials and taxes took considerable portions; it showed the amount and percentage that went to sales ancj. office employees; the small amount and percentage .that went to management and the small will Republican Party will be drafted at their; the' National convention, f expect to to the stockhotdefs. As I studied that r itSffank •r reared on ah Ohio, farni. Six generations of Brickcrs haye been farmers before him. • • • * ' - In Governor Bricker*, Ohio agriculture has found understanding and help. When he bsCame governor, all of the state's agricultural institutions and organizations began to operate in unison for the first time. They are all represented in his Ohio War Agricultural Committee F, K. Granger bought and shipped £>urian(] accompanied the*young girls 99 hogs from this station on Monday hospital where they helped to last, for which he paid' the uniform maj£e day for a McHenry serviceprice of $4.25 per hundred. man a pleasant one. Pvt. George Henry Poile is getting the founda- was a patient for a cold,..' and tiOn 'ready for his new residence. g-s were glad to he able to ^,wi^ When completed it will bfc one of the hgip forget his little troubles.J named on the day after Pearl Harhandsomest cottages -in town. Dorothy Heusgr. a faithful Red Cross' bor to assist farmers to get the ma- Burglars paid a visit to the saloon was.again honored. She was terials, labor and supplies needed to of Robert Schiessle. on Tuesday night winner-of a special prize awarded for of last week, securing a small amount sjx month's service. The prize Was ,©f money, some cigars, etc. _ i a. lovely compact. The yovjng iadies T, Bacon having rented his farm who journeyed to camp this time will move into the village occupying, ^.ere Virginia Miller, Maiv Lou Stof- able for emergency plowing, plantthe bMcfc house owned by, Mrs. Hui'- £eli Lorraine Schmitt. Juanita Willets, ing and marketing. The Ohio farm relle. . • - ' Jean Schmitt, Lenore Frisby, Ethel lA'oor recruiting program has be : Freund, Louise Walsh, Grace Kunz 1 and Dorothy Heuser. ' meet the tremendous food demand. Other states have followed Ohio's lead in making the state's own tractors, trucks and operators avail- FORTY YEARS AGO ! Butter remains firm at 24% cents On the Elgin board of trade Monday. Come in and. see the ready made sample clothing for men and boys. Men's suits $7.00, boys', $1.75. E. Lawlus. » Frank Hutson and family of Ridgefield, have moved to McHenry and are Letters from servicemen are still coming in. The last one read as follows: "Please continue your good work in the Red Cross. You can't imagine what a feeling comes over us when we disembark in some Gcd_- for-saken spot, and find a welcome American Red Cross, the only thing occupying the Parks house on Wauke- that smacks of the States. We can't, gan street, near the pond. say enough in praise for these won-1 Collector Niesen turned in his derful men and women who have books yesterday* having coHectetT~>olunteered for foreign service."; ; I $19,081.95. The amount levied was ------- " * I $20,232.85, leaving a delinquent list amounting to $1,150.95. Mr. Niesen's commission amounts to ,$381.64. fHIRTY YEARS AGO The following excerpt from th£i Woodstbck Daily Sentinel is of interest. "So often, when using the phrase, 'The Red Cross, Mother of Jthem all,' we are apt to think in ! terms of women, and forget men The Plaindealer is now locatcd in iserving in various branches. Perhaps its new7 home in the new addition to there is no more vital and more apthe bank of McHenry, building. * predated than the home service Butter was declared firm, at 24%^chairman, which is the contact the cents on the Elgin board of trade service uses between the serviceman Monday. and his home." William Cairns is The Schneider building on the West home service chairman, of McHenry side is once more undergoing repairs. come a national model. Governor Bricker approaches the agricultural problem convinced that "without freedom of price and freedom of movement of goods to market in recognition of the laws of supply and demandr we cannot hope to escape confusion, directive upon directive and control upon control, until the whole system breaks down of its own weight. There can be no total managed economy for the simple reason that there can be no total management of the forces of nature." 4 McCULLOM LAKE (By Marie McKim) Con McDonald, father of""~Hugh, was 81 years young on Tuesday, April 4. Congratulations, dad, and many more birthdays. Guests at the Nimtz home on Saturday were Mr. and Mrs. E. Whiteman of Indiana, parents of Does this mean another saloon for McHenry? The Hanly house, located just west of the railroad tracks, now owned by George Wirfs of Johnsburg, has been raised and otherwise improved1 o'clock, held in tory, were so loyal and entlmsiastic in their praise of the company, as, many had expressed themselves to me. That report showed the oiv.ee and factory workers were receiving as their dividend a fair and juct proportion of the returns from their, work. I thought of what the result might be to American industry should all corporations issue the same kind of reports, and iivsuch a way as to make them unquestionable. I have received a somewhat similar .statement from the Pullman Manufacturing company. The company is typical of those engaged throughout 1943 in the production of war equipment for the government. This report dqes not. show, as did the.earlier one issued by DuPont, the total sales and the amounts and percentages of distribution. It does show how each dollar of sales was distributed. The larger part, 62.32 cents of each dollar, was paid for materials. Of . that a large proportion would have been paid for labor in the production and transportation of the materials. For the fabrication of those materials in the Pullman shops, factory labor received 21.92 cents of each dollar of sales; taxes, federal, state and local, 8.73 cents "of each dollar; fuel, supplies and factory repairs cost 3.66 of each dollar; office employees and sales force received .64 of a cent and to pay for management took only .12 of a cent from each dollar. There were some other small items of cost and it left as profit for the stockholders, those whose money provided the buildings; tools and operating capital, much less than 2 cents of each dollar. In all probability that showing is typical of most corporations engaged in the production of war supplies and it demonstrates the fairness of American business and the practicability of the American system. Such reports demonstrate that the dividend paid to labor is a fair share your TWENTY YEARS AGO The interior of the C. Unti store has been newly decoratedrepainted and is otherwise being improved in anticipation of a busy spring and summer season.- The new altars and communion railing for St. Mary's church of this city arrived the first of the week and are now being installed. Charles Kuhnert moved his household effects out from Chicago this week and since then has taken up his abode in the Mathias Schaeler house in the north end of town. There are four candidates in the race for the postmastership of- McHenry, an office which becomes vacant with the expiration of Postmaster T. J. Walsh's term in June. The four candidates are, John E. Freund. Albert Krause, James N. Sayler and N. F. Steilen. > gBunty. McHenry branch joins others P'c.^' ^'so ^r" ^rs* in. saluting Mr. Cairns for his* ex- Sm J lt^L pa5®nt T s T ?,f ph^s' ar,d Mrcellent and untiring services. anc* ^rs' Halley. v I Sunday the Whitemans and April 19 is a date to mark"oii 'Nimtz family were dinner guests at| of the receipts of industry, calendar. On that date, at 2 the Syd Smith home. Dick Nimtz j • • • i county meeting will be leaves for the navy April 10. ! QPA FIXED CEILINGS Woodstock. Mary Dahnke Walter Scharf, who injured his AND PRICE OF WOOD Will be guest speaker. Her talk will foot some time ago, while he was in ; THE QpA be "Menu Peppej- Uppers." Helpful the U. S. army, received, a; medical hints on meal planning. Plan to be discharge recently. He li now at present. ' home. - MRS. HUGH MURPHY, Scribe, j gill Reid, of the Army M. P., had ~ i the opportunity to visit his sailor Make Soil Friable Other things than humus are useful in making clay soil friable. Pulverized limestone, wood ashes, hard coal ashes, sand and even cinder will serve. Much is accomplished by tillage. Silver Has Many Uses Silver is indispensable for the making of photographic films, for surgical instruments and other hospital equipment. ' Zinc Pigments Zinc yellow pigment has witnessed phenomenal growth during the war period, due to its almost universal adoption for non-ferrous metal prim- j ers and its increasing use in ferrous metal primers, as in the navy bureau of ships practice. The improvement^ which have been made ' in this pigment, its lower cost and wide availability, together with the expected large demand for metal priming paints, will doubtless lead to its widespread adoption. ^ WAR BONDS vital investments for a future Free World. brother, George, again recently, when he was returning a prisoner not far from where George is stationed. Sailor Robert Wetle left Monday evening, after a nine-day leave at home. Visitors at the Halley home on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Fredricks and daughter, Mrs. Ball, of Villa Park. Mrs. , Ball returned last week from California, where her husband was stationed. He left a short time ago for overseas. . Strawberry Mulch Gardeners who have a strawberry bed will do well to plan for straw, leaves, cornstalks or other mulch covering for the plants for winter. Gardeners may wish to rake up fall -leaves or keep cornstalks for this purpose, instead of tramping them firmly intc the compost pile. B. pA LOT QJr THING* CAM MPPfcN (NAMAROi PAV SUNSHINE: WIND -4 tells us price ceilings are fixed to prevent an increase in the cost of living, especially for people of the cities and towns, and to prevent inflation. I recently had an illustration of how it works. Two years ago I bought wood for a fire place at a cost of $12 a cord. This year, when needing a new supply, a man offering the same kind of wood I had bought at $12 quoted a price of $23. I did not buy then but a few days later the price had gone up to $28t a cord. The $23 price had been 'fixed by, and was satisfactory to, the purveyors of wood. Then OPA put a ceiling of $28 on wood and the price immediately went up that extra $5. Both the price and I hit the ceiling, but I paid the $28. That, I found, is how the cost of living reduced by OPA ceilings. •UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER* MEANS JUST THAT UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER means the surrender of everything ; with no questions asked. The one j individual in Germany who can say J the word fer such a surrender is f Hitler. To say that word means signing his own death warrant. It is doubtful if he will do that. The alternative is for the German army to remove the Austrian paperhanger, take over the government and then surrender. For that to happen there must be a revolt in the German army. That such a revolt will come is fairly evident. It may be in the immediate future, and it may be a year hence. There must be no let- , down on the part of the Allies until it does happen and there will not be. • * • ITALY SURRENDERED UNCONDITIONALLY and many of the Italian people are eating and smiling again. They are now suffering only from the Germans. It is an example of what unconditional surrender can mean to the people ot other satellite nations. • •. ' IF ANY of the Allied people, at home or abroad, go hungry, it will not be because of a strike on the part of the American farmers. They have stayed on the job regardless of provocation. - > Fuel Saving A mere 1 per cent saving in fuel would amount to 1,720,000 barrel* of oil and 1,800,000 tons of coal. 4 Yanks Defeat Sharks, Hunger, v Jungle and J t on Raft for 16 Days And Travel Through Swamps for i4. - GTON.--Four navy fliers related the story of their rescue a*fter 16 harrowing days and^nights on a rubber raft in shark-infested waters of the South Pacific and 14 days of tortuous travel through Japanese occupied jungles, swamps and mountains. All four were injured when their plane was forced down because* of lack of fuel. They are Lieut*. Marion De Witt Trewitt, 28 years old, of Santa Barbara, Calif.; Ensign Edward Anthony Colon, 20, of Sharon, Pa.; Carl" D; Saunders, aviation machinist's rriate, 18, of Logansport, Ind., and Carl Schaffer. aviation prdn«Uiqer man, 20, of Portland, Ore. v Little Food Saved. : After a crash landing, the fliers managed to save a life raft, a gunner's mit, two cans of water, three cans of pemmican, a. package of chocolate, and a bottle of malted ::milk tablets. ' . K.' -• Islands were visible the third, fourth and fifth days but because of the current the fliers were unable to reach them. Soon there was no water and only one malted milk tablet for each man daily. The fliers began repeating the Lord's prayer together--morning and evening. . Rain fell on the sixth day and several gallons of. water was caught in a sail. More islands were spotted bu^; the current carried the raft past them. Schaffer caught a small fish, which was eaten raw. By the tenth day the raft had again drifted out cf sight of land. Despite strict ratiqjning, only enough malted milk t^bleVs remained for three days^ Hands were black, swollen, and peeling from sunburn. Hear and See Battle. Schaffer caught another fish on the 13th day and it was eaten raw. , On the 14th day,, all food was gone but that night Trewitt shot another fish. Sharks followed the raft, and a battle could be heard to the soutH. It continued during the night', the fliers watching the flashes. Morning found the men close to an island. They began to pick up wreckage from Japanese ships and coconuts, whose milk and meat gave them strength to row toward shore. They rowed all during the day and night of^ their 16th day at sea and finally reached shore. The four found an abandoned Japanese barge which produced food, medicine, cigarettes, soap, and candy-- the fliers' first real meal in 16 days. A score of Japanese approached their hut the next day and the airmen fled into the jungle. They were found by a native who took them to his chief. Later they were guided through swamps, jungles and mountains to the beach, from which a rescue party returned them to their base. Absent-Minded Traffic Violator Pays for Walk MERIDIAN, MISS.--J. T. Simms,. a garage employee, said he absentmindedly walked through a red light; on Main street the other day and when he reached the other side a man accosted him roughly and told him to "come along to the police station." "You've violated the law," the man informed Simms, who meekly agreed. As Simms and the stranger approached the jail, the stranger stopped abruptly and said Simms could pay a $5.50 fine and have the matter dropped. Simms paid it, thinking he was in the hands of a plainclothes policeman. Later, he checked at the police station, and found ^that there was no such officer. . * CHURCH SERVICES St. Mary's Catholic Chutcli Sunday: 7:C0, 8:30, 10:00 and 11:30 Holy Days: 6:00; 8:00; 10:00. Week Days: 6:45 and 8:00/ First Friday: 6:30 and 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 3:00 p. m. and 7.00 p. m. y before First Friday-- ter 8:00 Mass on Thursday; :00 m. and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. S. Nix. Pastor. . -rJ" St. Patrick's Catholic Ctwrdi :'^:DR. R: 129 Green 292-J. McHenry Office Hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Wednesday. ..Tuesday arid Friday nights to 8:30 p.m. Other hours by appointment. Office Hours--Daily Except Thnrs. , 10 to 12, 1:30 to 4:30, Mon„ We«L, Fri. Nights: 7 to 8. r Other Hours by Appointment H. S. VAN DEN BURGH. DC., PhC Chiropractor 120 Green St. Tel. 292-R. McHenry Residence Phone Hebron 926 One-Man Arsenal Gives The Judge a Bad Time WASHINGTON.--Gentlo Ramson, 34, was arrested in a saloon here with a gun in his hand, a knife in his pocket and a shoe box under his arm. Sunday: 8:00 and' Weekdays: 7:80. . First Fridays: 7:30. Oh First Friday, Co'mmunion distributed at 6 :"0, 7:00 and before and during trie 7:30 Mass. Confessions: Saturdays: 4:00 to 5:00 p. m, and 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. Ahwbumiay before First Friday. 4:00 ; to 5:00 p.m. and 7:0fi U 8:00 ; Kev. Wm. A. O RourVe, pastor. St. John's Catholic Chorch, Masses: Sunday: 8:00 and 10:00 Holy Days: 7:00 an0 9:90. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:S0. Thursday before First and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. Zipn Evangelical Lutheran Church John St. East of Highway 31 West McHenry, 111. R. T. Eissfeldt, Pastor, Round Lake, Illinois. | A cordial welcome is extended to all who have no' chuftih affiliation to worship with us. The message i heard from our pulpit, we are sure,! will fill your heart with hope and i courage. Services 9 a.m. Sunday School 10 a.m. "Christ Our Only Talking Point!" W E L C O M E Listen to the International Lutheran Hour Sundays--W. G. N., 2:30 pjni " TEL. WONDER LAKE 418 V DB- C. L. WATKHHS . ' Dentist . • p Office Hours -' ' ' Tuesday & Saturdays: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Evenings and Sunday Mornings byAppoifltment! Lookout Point, . Wonder Lake, HL PR. H. S. FIKE • Veterinarian * 305 Waukegan St. 31 McHENRY, ILL. McHENRY FLORA!. CO. -- Phone 608-11-1 ~ One Mile South of McHenry . on Route 31. Flowers for all occasions! . Community Church Sunday School: 10:00 a. m. Worship Service: 11:00 a.m. Junior League: 6:30 p.m. Epworth League: 8:00 p. nt. Rev. Mack Powell, pasit&- St. Peter's Catholic Church, Spring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8:00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9:00. " v Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:15. Thursday before First Friday: 2:80 and 7:15. Bev. John L. Daleirfen, Pastor. Wonder Lake Ev. Luth. Church (Missouri Synod) Sunday school--10:00 a. m. Divine services--3:00 p. in. . . H. L. PFOTENHAUER, Pastor Grace Lutheran Church Richmond Sunday School: 10:30 a. m. Adult Service: 11:00 a, m. John W. Gable, pastor.' Ringwood Church Ringwood, 111. Sunday--Public worship, 9:30. Church School, 10:30. Choir Rehearsals--Wednesday evening. Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, director. Phone 48 Vernon J. Knox ATI ORNEY AT LAW -- OFFICE HOURS -- Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment McHenry . . - Illinois A. WORWICK PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture - Commercial Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying - Framing Phone. 275 -- Riverside Drive McHENRY, ILU FIRE AUTO INSURANCE "l a,r fS . EARL R. WALSH : Presenting Reliable Companies When yon need insurance of any kind Phone 43 or |1#*M Green & Elm McHenry Telephone No. 300 ^ , Stoffel & Reihansperger r Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS McHENRY LODGE A. F. & A. M. McHenry Lodge No. 15S meets the first and third Tuesdays of each month atthe hall on Court street. , : Shrewd Er¥or According to the folklore of the little coastal town of Kittery, Maine, the Portsmouth, N. H., Navy yard was placed there through an error. A shtewd Yankee sea captain, carrying lumber for the original construction of the yard, sailed his ship into Kittery harbor by mistake. When he demanded an extra fee for EDWARD SCHMITT Roofing Contractor Aabesios and Insul Brick Siding Estimates Furnished Phone 603-R-l Box 368 McHenry, HL The judge in court had a nervous moment when, after hauling forth ! transferring the cargo across the four bottles of brandy from the box, i 'bay to---Portsmouth, equally "Gentlo" pulled out a sweet pea talcum powder box--filled with dynamite powder and complete with fuse and cap. 'Gentlo's attorney, Wesley Williams, said he only carried the home-made bomb around to blow up tree stumps; he carried the gun because of the neighbors, "and besides he's going in the army." "The ordnance department, I presume," remarked the judge. o New Products So great are the advances in the scientific laboratories that almost half of the gross sales of a big company for the year 1942--46 per cent to be exact--consisted of products which either did not exist in 1928 or were not then manufactured in large commercial quantities. Leg Rtin Over, He Has No Need of Doctor's Help AKRON, OHIO--Onlookers thought it pretty fortunate that it was a doctor driving the car which knocked down a pedestrian and ran over his leg. But when Dr. Roy A. Knisley jumped from his car to offer thi man his professional services he found the victim beyond a doctor's care. "But," said Knisley, "I ran over your leg." "That's all right," the man an- •weriitf **it was only my wooden" one.'*';-1 the shrewd Yankees switched their plans and built the yard at Kittery. That's folklore, not history. Nevertheless, the Portsmouth Navy yard is located at4. Kittery 'cross the bay, and its immense expansion in recent months furnishes a problem typical of that facing many New England communities in war time. Until -war came this particular town was going along in its quiet way with a population Qf about 6,000. Suddenly the navy yard qua#*' rupled its employment roll. ; . Horses Wanted I B U Y and Disabled Horses. : Pay from $5 to $14 -- ARTHUR W. WERRBACK Phone 844 439 E. Calhoun St. Woodstock, IIL U. S. Turbines ; *Fwb-thirds of all America's ale©- trie power is produced by steam turbines. Cuts Threads ./j;// ;•••, Keep clothing clean--take ewre of stains and spots. Dirt cuts threads and will shorten the life of your garment. If clothes have constant care, they'll wear. Follow cleaning instructions carefullv. A. P. Freund Co. Excavating Contractor Trucking. Hydraulic and Crane Service. --Road Building-- Tel. 234-M McHenry, III S. H. Freuod & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Your Service in Building Your Wants. Phone 56-W McHenry O Gas Important in War $o important is the transport of gasoline--the lifeblood of motorized warfare--that on occasion, as for example for use in Labrador, tank trucks have been cut in half, flown out of this country, and welded to- Paint for Black Eyes Concealment of black eyes and bruises may be accomplished by use of a paint consisting of two parts bismuth subcarbonate and one parts gether again at their destination, talc, mixed with carmine or calamine to match the skin tint, the ap* plication to be made after washing the blackened or bruised skin with a mixture of one part glycerine and five parts water. Phonfe McHenry 677-R-l -- Basemept Excavating -- NETT'S SAND & GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Fillirg . . Black Dirt . . Power Leveling and Grading. J. E. JiETT Johnsburg P. O.--McHenry WAR BONDS will help to back the Wacs, Waves and Spars. insmSI WAR BONDS WANTED TO BUY We pay $5 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt s Mink Ranch Johnsburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 659-J-2 CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES & CATTLE ^__WVpay phone charges.