wm Pact tlx THE McHENRY PLAINDEALXR 1 • r - * - lf Thursday, August 31, 1944 Gov. Green Sparks State War Effort As the second war Governor.of UlitIK> is in the present century, Dwight 'I!. Green has been responsible for ! placing the full force of his execu- (tive ability behind the state and national war effort. As Governor and las chairman of the Illinois War Council he has, since December 7, 1941, devoted a good share of his time to war activities on the home front. • In addition to serving as leader in i Various war bond, salvage and releriiiling campaigns he has directed I the state's Civilian Defense program and has been successful in speeding up war industries in the Prairie State. A veteran ef World War I, Governor Green was one of the first state executives in the nation to sponsor a state-tokie program to consider the problem of the returning GOV. DWIGHT H. GREEN soldier from the current global struggle. Developed by the Governor's Committee on Veterari Rehabilitation and Employment, this program has served as a model for other states and it bears the approval of the American Legion and other veti. «ran agencies. ; A l l t h i s e x t r a a c t i v i t y h a s n o t k e p t j the Governor away from his regular | job of directing the peacetime func- ! tions of the state. This is well evidenced by the fact that for the first time in history Illinois has, under his administration, built up a cash reserve or surplus of nearly one hundred million dollars. Even while this was being done the state sales tax was being reduced from three cents to two, and, at the dame time expenditures for education and public assistance were being increased. Often described as his outstanding trait is Dwight Green's ability to work harmoniously with all types of people. About this, an article recently published in a national party magazine states: "Getting along with people comes naturally to the Governor of the pivotal state of Illinois. No matter in Kanenburg, of Genoa Junction. She is a sister of Harvey Price. L. A. Horlick, proprietor of the* Riverside livery, has moved his household goods here from Chicago how belligerent a frame ^of mind , an<j js occupying the Nic A. Hueman n house on the corner of Elm i aU Court streets. THIRTY YEARS AGO some one might enter his office, nine times out. 6f ten, that belligerency thaws like a snow man in April in the face of the Governor's smiling willingness to woik things out in the fairest and most satisfactory possi- j ' ble way. And this gift he enjoys of . The old barn on the John Huemann being able to consider another's 1 property on Pearl street has been point of view as on a par with his razed, which not only improves the own has been the means toward the property, but adds beauty to Jthe enharmonious solution of so many of tire street. , the tangible situations which faced One of the most notable road imhim as governor." provements that has come to our no- This ability to get along with peo- tice of late is the new cement tunple coupled with a mind that func- nei bridge which is now under contions in a fair and truly judicial le- struction near the Spencer mill on gal manner has enabled him to weld 1 tj,e weat sjde. together the many elements that home 0f w> jy. Wentworth is made up his party when he became ^ beautified with a new coat of the nominee for governor back in Dajn^ 1940. He takes time always to listen The bricklayers win soon be carefully to both sides of an argu- • throu^ t the school building. In ment and weigh all the evidence- be- j f - days the strUcture will foi'e reaching his decision. be ready for the roof. Both in his state governmental j Burglars entered the Northwestern operations and in party councils this depot here early Sunday morning paid big dividends for all concerned. ; an% relieved the cash 'drawer of T h i s w a s m o s t r e c e n t l y i l l u s t r a t e d , • ° T TWENTY YEARS AGO recently when, during the national G. O. P. convention in Chicago he took his place with the party leaders of the country in helping shape the destiny ! ,->vL. ; .4..,, • of the 1944 ticket and platform. •!'18 having a»' neat Now serving in the fourth year of j comfortable four-room bungalow his administration, Governor Green | erected upon his property on Broad was inaugurated on January 13, 1941, as the thirtieth man to serve Illinois since it was admitted to statehood in 1818. He was born January 9, 1897, in Ligonier, Indiana. Attending grade street, near Riverside Drive The wind storm of last Friday morning did considerable damage to the front of the Alexander Lumber company's building on the west side. Most of the windows in the upper schools and high school there, he part of the structure were broken, later entered Wabash College in while some .of the front was blown 1915. When the World War came j in. along he left college, enlisted and j The automobile traffic through the served later as lieutenant in the i city on Sunday was the heaviest in United States Army Air Services, j weeks and kept our traffic officers After leaving the army in Janu- j quite busy throughout most of the ary, 1919, he attended Stanford Uni-. day. versity. He then entered the Uni-1 Plasterers, electric workers, carversity of Chicago, receiving his Ph. j penters and painters employed on B. degree in 1920 and graduating j new community high school from that institution s law school in , building are working at top speed 1922 with the degree of J.D. Ad- < jn their endeavor to have our beaumitted to the Iyinois Bar the same tiful new building ready for oecu- Twice To 1 d Tales year he began his practice in Chi cago. Mr. Green was married to Mabel Victoria Kingston of Washington on June 20, 1926. They have two daughters, Nancy, born in 1927 and Gloria, born in 1931. The girls attend public school in Springfield. Mr. Green served with the Bureau of Internal Revenue in Washington and Chicago and later was appointed a special assistant to the U. S. District Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois. It was while on this job that he achieved national eminence by the conviction of some of the country's most notorious gangsters. He served three years, from 1932 to 1935, as District Attorney, resigning from that post to resume private practice. # Winning the Republican primary nomination for governor in 1940 he was elected by a majority of approximately a quarter million votsfc i ble-barreled shotgun and his first shot was with both barrels r killing 17 birds. pancy by the beginning of the., fall term. FIFTY YEARS AfiO SIXTY YEARS AGO The Bank of McHenry took the entire issue of bonds for the new school house, $7,500. The bonds are drawing 5 per cent, and were taken at a premium. The residence of James B. Perry, in this village, which has been unr dergoing extensive changes, is now ready for the plasterers, after which finishing touches will be put on by the carpenters. Robert Howard, son of R. A. Howard, of the west side market, cut his foot quite severely with an ice chisel, on Friday last. Ben Bonseltt and Harry Blackman rode out from Chicago on their bi Interceptors Aid in Conserving Waste Grease The war with its tremendous need for grease has focused attention on the service performed by the thousands of grease interceptors in hotels, rAtaurants, schools, hospitals, and other, establishments where large quantities of food are served. The use of an interceptor offers the most convenient and effortless way to save the grease which is such an essential raw material for the manufacture of munitions, antiseptics and surgical dressings. Americans on an average use 56 pounds of grease and oil per person, per year, in preparing food. Another 28 pounds, per person, per year, is used in the manufacture of soap, cosmetics, and medicines. From 10 to 15 per cent of this total finds its way into the drain lines and sewer?. The use of interceptors permits the saving of virtu1 ally all the grease that goes down the drain because the best of modern grease interceptors are so efficient that they will trap and hold about 93 per cent of the grease in the drain water. We learn that E. Lamphere intends opening a new meat market in the new store of L. A. Parker, at j cycles Sunday morning last, coveran early date. '• ing the distance is just six hours, Mrs. E. W. Howe has moved heri millinery establishment into the brick' FORTY YEARS AGO etore of Henry Colby, where she will! • wait on her customers for the pres-: Block & Bethke have installed Clean Milk For production of clean milk here are a few brief suggestions: Have a good milk pail, preferably one which is seamless and has a small or hooded top; keep a strainer which is large enough and can be cleaned easily; clean and sterilize , all utensils just before milking to remove dust and bacteria and banish : odors. j Have a clean barnyard and • j clean, well-ventilated barn or milking shed; keep the cow clean and ! healthy. Brush the flank and udj der before milking, and wash the I udder, in front of the udder and the 1 flanks, with chlorine water. The ! milker should be healthy. He should I wear clean clothing, should wash his I hands and disinfect them before 1 milking, and milk with dry hands. | He should cool the milk immediately ; after milking, and keep it cool to prevent bacterial growth. ient, and until she can get other | Simplex Air iLight gas plant in their quarters. [ store, making it one of the best A. M. Frett has bought' from his j lighted business houses in McHenry. brother. J. J. Frett, the old and well' a gang of telephone men are here known meat market, near the bridge, thjg week and have commenced work and will hereafter run the same, and, on construction of a new local keep a supply of meats second to no , ijne between here and Genoa June- Quick Start market in this section. I tion Wis. Dissolve 1 pound of 5-7-5 or 5-10-5 Wm. Watts, who lives above Johns- , The Blackman house on Main fertilizer in 10 gallons of water to Irtirgh, did some big black bird 1 street, now occupied by John Kim-1 u*e * starter solution for young •hootinsr last week. He used a dou- ball, has been sold to Mrs. Alice \ Plants that have iust been set- Paratroopers Hit HSy Air Sickness . :i In Dizzy Flight _____ " • * 1 Ride Across Mediterranean Tivgher Than Conflict With Enemy. SLOCUM LAKE BATTLE CREEK. MICH.--"The first plane loads of American parachutists dropped on Sicily suffered more from air sickness during the rough ride across the Mediterranean than they did later at the hands of the enemy." Parachutist Lieut. Anthony Pappas, 22 years old, Chicago, grinned when he made the statement to a reporter at the army's huge Percy Jones general hospital at Battle Creek, Mich. And the treatment he is undergoing, as one of the Illinois casualties recently brought back from the Mediterranean war theater, is not for air sickness, however. "Talk about your high winds!" he exclaimed. "The gale we bucked flying to Sicily put our big transport plane through more fancy acrobatic stunts than a Hollywood htorse opera star pulls off. in a celluloid rodeo! \ , 'p;. ".Greener ne^'Greeni*^;:,- ?• " "It bucked, and heaved, and seemed to stand still for minutes at a time. And then it would drop, straight down! I could feel myself getting greener and greener. One of the boys wanted to know if we were sure we had a pilot. "Another said he hoped they'd shoot him quick and end his misery when he reached the objective. He spoke for all of us." There were laughs from adjoining beds. "How about the jump itself, when you finally arrived?" asked Major Lawrence T. Smith of Chicago. Major Smith, who was a military intelligence officer on the American general staff, was hit in the head by a fragment when German planes bombed American forces establishing a beachhead in the Sicilian invasion. He is a former engineer with the Chicago park board. Lieutenant Pappas grinned. "Whoosh! . . . That wlttfl sure slapped us around when we stepped off the plane," he said. "The enemy must have been waiting for us. It was dark, but they shot so many, tracer bullets at us it looked like the Fourth of July. "Hitting the ground knocked me out. When I came to, I started crawling 6n my stomach to find other members of our detachment. I must have crawled hours, when I met six of our men. One had a leg broken. We dragged him along, and then more men joined us. By this time it was daylight. They Start Shooting. "Ahead of us was a big barracks building. We started shooting at it and they blasted back at us. I was flat on my stomach when a burst of machine gun fire hit right in front of my face. Lead sprayed off rocks into my right eye. I plastered a bandage on it and aimed with my left eye. "After two hours they surrendered. Then, to our surprise, we found out that another detachment of American parachutists had been attacking the barracks at the same time from the other side." Lieut. Samuel O. Rice Jr. of Chicago, a concussion patient, asked if the enemy surrendered quietly. "Well," Lieutenant Pappas replied, "there were a few incidents. A German soldier ran out of the barracks and dived beneath a truck. One of the Americans threw a grenade beneath the truck and then jumped up on the running board, waiting for it to explode. The German dived out again, but our man caught him and killed him Then he investigated to find out why the grenade hadn't exploded." "A dud?" suggested Major Smith. "No," said Lieutenant Pappas. "In his excitement the American forgot to release the grenade pin." (By Mrs. Harry Matthews; n Mrs. C.( H. Hansen visited at the home of Mrs. ..Robert Luening afc' Roseville last Friday. Mr. .and Mrs. John Blomgren spent Sunday and Monday at the home of fir. and Mrs. S. Lagerlund in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Brooks and Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brooks of Libertyville and Mrs. Lee Larabee and son, Carroll, of Bristol, Wis., spent last Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. Mrs. Larabee and son remained for a few days' visit. Mr. jand Mrs. R. W. Lusk and daughter, Betty Lou, and Miss Fran^i ces Stubbs of Island Lake attended the State fair at Milwaukee last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis of Golden Bull farms recently spent four days attending a hog conference in Memphis, Tenn. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney, and guests, Mrs. Larabee and son, Carroll, spent last Thursday evening at the home of Mft. Ella Parks at Park Ridge; Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and' daughter, Dolores, and Mrs. Marlett V, - ,v ' CHURCH SERVICES St. Mary's Catholic ChSMft Masses: . Sunday: 7:00, 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. Thursday before First Friday-- After 8:00 Mass on Thursday; 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. S. Nix, Pastor. - ISt Patrick's Catholic Chare* Masses: Sunday: 8:00, 9:00,10:00 and 11:00 Weekdays: 7t80. " First Fridays: 7:80. On First Friday, Communion distributed at 6:30, 7:00 and before and durin* t&e 7:30 Mass. Confessions: f Saturdays: 4:00 to 5*00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p. a- , Thursday before First Friday: 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. and 7aW tr> 8:00 • 'Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, pastor. • Henry were callers at Elgin Mon- John's Catholic Charek, Joluufearg day. Masses: Mrs. Harry Raeburg and three! Sunday: , 7:00, 9:00, and 11:00. -jt\- children of Rockford spent Satur-i Holy Days: 7:00 and 9:00. * day and Sunday at the home of her; Weekdays: 8:00. mother, Mrs. Celia Dowell. , 1 Firs*. Friday: 8:00. „ » " Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Lusk enter- Confessions: / tained the following neighbors and Saturdays: 2:80 and 7JI. friends from Maple Park ,at a Sunday picnic dinner and supper: Mr. and Mrs. Swan Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Olsen and children, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Omaley, Miss Alice Needham and Miss Delores Miller. Mrs. Harry Matthews and" son, Lyle, enjoyed supper with Mrs. Wm. Fink last Wednesday evening while Mr. Matthews and Mr. Fink pnd A1 Thursday before First Friday: 2:t0 and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Church John St. East of Highway 31 West McHenry, 111. Herman C. Noll, pastor, Round Lake, Illinois. A cordial welcome is extended to _ all who lave no church affiliation vin Case attended a banquet spon-1 ^"hip with us. The message sored by the Lake Co. Farm Bureau *rom °ur Pulpit, we are sure, will fill your heart with hope and courage. Services 9 a.m. Sunday Schdol 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 p.m. Ht Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Arnesen and two chidlren of Round Lake were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews last Wednesday. Frederick Lind of Sparta, Wis., returned to his home recently after spending a month at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Davis at Golden Bull farm. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett and George Cook of Chicago were guests i last Monday at the home of Mr. and | Mrs. Lyle Litwiler at Round Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vycital and! children of McHenry were guests I Tuesday evening at the home of Mr.! and Mrs. C. H. Hansen. Mr. Vy- j cital will be inducted into the navy 1 Sept. 6 and will leave for Farragjit 'Field. ! Rev. Walter Hyle of Chieago, Mr.' and Mrs. H. Johnson and daughter. Confessions: Viola, from Cragin, 111., and Miss Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:18. Cora Hages of Libertyville were dinner guests last Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett. Mrs. C. H. Hansen was a guest last Thursday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. Dreyer at Island Lake. Golden Bull farms entered twenty Hampshire hogs at the State fair at Milwaukee and many blue ribbons were won, besides a reserve Grand Champion ribbon and the Premier ribbon. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett and; Sunday School: 10:30 a. m. George Cook were recent supper!Adult Service: 11:00 a. m. Ink Spirts Just soak that dirty ink spot on, four clean white cloth in pure yn- Ononis f<jr a few minutes and rinse m cold water. Need Rubber Stamps? Ondtr at The Plaindealer. . 1 • DR. R. DeROME -- Dentist -- 120 Green Street Phone 292-J. McHenry Office Honrs: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily except Wednesday. ..Tuesday and Friday nights to 8:30 p.M. Other hoars by appointment. Office Honrs--Daily Except Than. 10 to 12,1:30 to 4:30, Mon^ We<L, Fri. Nights: 7 to 8. Other Hours by Appointment H. S. VAN DENBURGH, BO, PhC Chiropractor f 120 Green St. TeL 292-R. McHenry Residence Phone Hebron 92C TEL. WONDER LAKE 418 j>*. 0. L. WATKIlfS .* Dentist . '??;•: - Office Hovrs - Tnesday ft Satardays: § a.st. to 8 p ft \ Evenings and Snnday Mornings by Appointment! i*ok»iit Point , Wander Lake. m. DR. H. S. FIKfe Veterinarian 80S Wankegan St. Phone 81 MCHENRY, ILL* Community Chnrch Sunday School: 10:00 a. m. Worship 3ervipe: 11:00 a. Sfc Junior League: 6:80 p.m. Epworth League: 8:00 p.m.\ . Rev. Mack Powell, pastor. St. Peter's Catholic Chweh* 8pring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8:00 snd 10:00. Holy Days: 6:80 sod 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Thursday before First Friday: t:80 *nd 7:lo. Rev. John L. Daleiden, Pastor. Wonder Lake Ev. Luth. Church (Missouri Synod) Sunday school--10:00 a. m. Divine services--3:00 p. m. H L. PFOTENHAUER, Pastor . '/ filief Lutheran Church Richmond McHENRY .FLORAL CO. -- Phone 608-R-] -- One Mile South of MoHenry on Routo 31. Flowers for all occasions! Phone ' : . Vernon J. Knox ATIORNEY AT LAW -- OFFICE HOURS -- Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment McHenry V - - , JOteefe John W. Gable, jjMSiter. Ringwood Chnrch Ringwood, 111. Snnday--Public worship, 9$t*. Church School, 10:30. Choir Rehearsals--Wednesday eve- TUP 5WEEre$T FRUITS ARe HAR0E5T To HOLD b SI Cadet Blinded in Air Lands His Plane Safely CHICO, CALIF.--Stricken blind suddenly while he was at the controls of a one-man training plane. Aviation Cadet R. D. Seale, 23, of Taft, Calif., landed the craft successfully yesterday under calm guidance from a radio control tower. Lieut. Col. C. W. Thaxton, in the army field control tower, heard ^Seale radio that he had gone blind. Thaxton talked to him calmly, I instilling confidence in Seale. Every I move of the plane was directed by Thaxton to Seale over the radio, even to a shaVp bank necessary to bring the plane to the ground safely. Physicians at the army hospital said Seale's blindness was of a temporary nature. Bandit Slain as Victim Acts to Save Draft Card MILWAUKEE. - A holdup man was shot and killed and three others captured today because their intended victim objected to losing his draft card. Police said the dead rhan was Anthony Scaffidi, 29 years old, a former convict, shot and killed by a patrolman attracted by cries and the sound of a scuffle. The intended victim, Eugne Reich man, 27. a bartender, said he "got mad and started swinging" when the four refused to return his wallet, containing $170 and the draft card. guests at the Rev. Walter Hyle's beautiful country home, near Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and son; Lyle, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping attended the State fair at Milwaukee l&st F^ridsy. Mrs. Daisy Davis of Crystal Lake' ring., Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, director, spent a few days last week at the' home of Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett1 *®,C"ENRY T LODGE A.F. & A.M. and callers last Saturday were Mr.! McHenry ko<i£e No. 158 meets the and Mrs. DeForest and Mrs. Robert | fi"iarld ^ird Tuesdays of e»ch month Tuxberry and son, Rome, of Chi. ! «t *he haU on Court st««t cago. j • , ' 1 - . , • . . Order your Rubber Stamps at The Subscribe for The Plaindealer Plaindealer. Soy Enrichment The addition of 10 per cent of soya flour to patent wheat flour triplea the biological efficiency of the protein of the wheat flour. Deer in Minnesota Minnesota Conservation department estimates place the deer population of that 3tate at 700,000. The high figure caused officials to fear that many would starve this winter, but lack of snow has so far kept the # nainimum. A. WORWICK PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture - Commercial - Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging . Copying - Framing Phone 275 -- Riverside Drive V McHENRY. ILI«i i FIRE AUTO INSURANCE P£S5 EARL R. WALSH Presenting Reliable Companies 4?hen yen need insurance of any Mnj Phone 48 or 118-M Green & Elm McHenry Telephone No. 800 Stoffel ft Reihanaperger Insurance agents for all classes at property in the best companies. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOI8 NIGHT AUCTION 7:30 p.m., sharp Wednesday, Sept 6 At Gaulke's Sale Barn--Route 47--Woodstock, Illinois Charles Leonard, Auctioneer 250 HEAD OF "LIVESTOCK 125 HEAD OF DAIRY COWS AND FIRST CALF HEIFERS, EITHER FRESH WITH CALF BY SIDE OR CLOSE SPRINGERS ONE LOAD OF JERSEYS BY MR. PAR|J» • * 100 HEAD OF FEEDER PIGS 25 DAIRY HEIFERS Don't fail to attend this auction, if you want herd fleplacements. You will find, the best buys offered in years at prices you can well afford to pay. ATTENTION FARMERS: BRING YOUR VEAL CALVES AND KILLER HORSES FOR HIGHEST market prices. Call Woodstock 572 or 499 if you have livestock to consign Ml consignors make arrangements to got your livestock In. either the day before the sale or bring same morning of sale. Terms: 25 per cent down, balance in monthly installments. .1 to 16 months time at % of 1 per cent interest. Woodstock Commission Sales Company WiTiTiIAM E. GAULKE, Owner Phone 572* EDWARD SCHMITT Roofing Contractor Asbestos and Insnl Brick Siding Estimates Furnished Phone 603-R-l McHenry, IB. Box 368 A.P.Freuitd Co Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Service. --Road Building-- Tel. 204-M McHenry, DL S. H. Freuod & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Your Service in Building Your Wants. Phone 56-W McHenry Phone McHenry 677-R-l -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND & GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Filling . . Black Dirt . . Power Leveling and Grading. J. E. NETT Johnsbnrg P. O.--McHenry WANTED TO BUY We pay $5 to 815 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing ^ or Down if Alive. Matt's Blink Ranch Johnsburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 659-J-2 GALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES A CATTUS We pay phone charges. ;§: