McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Feb 1945, p. 4

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W5W \«s v -„t'™*>-f •• "* * * • , -:'• *f ' * ,* p> rwtfi THE HffEKTY fUMWEALEP tm y Ttandii , 0L, bf Charte® P. •I person Ju l. MOOTER Eitw ui Catered u second-class the postoffkc at McHenry, I1L, under Ike act of May 8, 1879. On* Year --•-- fBfia callers on Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Kapp and ! daughter, Carol, of Arlington | Heights, Bob Bacon of Chicago and ! Mrs. Carl Hiatt and daughter, Eo- Rev. Qimn Th«.n«, bf St.! >>"«•• «' .. ^ Charles visited relatives and friends £ueste in *** home here the first of the week., i Bacon. . . Mrs. Fred Krohn. Sr.. spent the ,*?"• Ed" Holle of Oak Fkrk visitweek in Chicago, where she visited *>f parent^ the Martin Conways, the last of the week. WHITEfSTM AIDED TO MKTNAVY raODUCDOII FUG OF THE WlilAM M. TENCH COMPANY 04 January 27 the William M. and the loaded foxes Miss Bertha Freund, cadet nurse at I Fencil Company received notification their plant today as faat t .'ATIONAL €DITORIAL_ " " ' UJOOATIOM her daughters. Mrs. Francis Carulewski and Miss Charlene Krohn. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Miller and daughter. Terry, and Mrs. Tena Lay were Sunday dinner guests in the -Peter Freund home in Crystal Lake. Mrs. Paul Brefeld, Mrs. Ray Mcl- Gee and Mrs. Hugh Murphy attended a meeting of the Mario la club fin Woodstock on Tuesday evening. Mr. and Ifrs. A. Thompson of Chicago visited in the William Jua- ; ten home on Sunday. Rollin Jus ten, accompanied by his liride, the former Kathryn Thompson 1^-- ! of Chicago, returned to San Diego, FOR SALE -- Alfalfa $16.50, Clover Calif., recently after enjoying a $17.40, Blue Tag Hybrid Seed Corn thirty-day leave with home folks. He $3.75, all per busheL Also many will attend school in San Diego for other bargains. Postal card us to- an indefinite period of time. day for catalogue and samples. Hall Mrs. Harold Phannenstill and Mrs. Roberts' Son, Postville, Iowa. 40-4 anT'MreJW^^nda visited relatives here' on | the 4.2-in. chenakal nrortar^fuxe^ un- eqinpped eqiiaMo that^of any in this la • MMOHiiit at «| ' luliiMlIm alloy known aa Ibis alloy it vaty hard and aav~ -- fusting. ;--; ^ "VT"-1 LaflMOmr ( Ladino clover. although a fahnc, hie crop, is an exacting and tricky, because it different FOE SALE St. Therese hospital, Waukegan, and friend. Miss Percy, visited the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Freund, last weekend. Mrs. Zena Bacon returned last Thursday after spending three weeks in the home of her daughter and family, the Harvey Damns, in Kenosha, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. George Adams of Elgin visited relatives and friends in ifcHenry last weekend. Frank Lowe of Great Lakes spent the weekend in the Robert ItManpson home. On Saturday evening Miss Granger and Mr. and Mrs. Thompson attended the wedding ofa relative in LaGrange. Mrs. G^neyieve Swenson of Lafrom Honorable Robert Patterson, are shipped to them. Under Secretary-of-War, that their It was six months ago that the employes at the Fuse Loading Di- William M. Fencil Company was vision had been awarded for the sec- awarded the Army-Navy flag. Since ond time the Army-Navy Production • that time' the plant has nearly Award for meritorious services on doubled in number of employes and the piwjpction front. The White in production. Hie company is Star, now added to their Army-Navy headed by William M. Fencil, pres- Production flag is a symbol of ap- ident. The company, originally a preciatien from the armed forces for' Chicago concern, moved to HtmUey, continued and determined production , its present location, in 1941. The on the home front. | chief product haa been and will be The formal award of the flag itself j the manufacturers of aatoanobile and will be made to the company on Sat-! industrial gaskets. Hie company is urday, February 24, at 10:45 a. m.' making rapid progress in taking its There will be no invited guests or place among the leading raanufacvisitors for this occasion. turers in McHenry comity. Improve- The William M. Fencil Company, ments in the plant site and property in conjunction with its regular gas- are progressing rapidly. Within the alfalfa and othet clovers .growth habits. it must be Grange and Mrs. Kenneth Murray of ket business, started the loading of, next few months a machine shop, John John Phannenstill on Sunday, con-, Mrs. Thomas Kane, Mrs. George FOR SALE -- Two lots on Street, West McHenry. Will sider best cash offer before March Scheubert and Mrs. Lee Larson were 8. Full information can be secured Woodstock callers on . Monday afterby contacting James Sayler. Hugh noon. / ( I ^ Deneen, Admr. of Estate of Florence Mrs. EleanWrNye, Miss Rose Hue- A. Sayler, Dec'd. 40-2 mann and Arthur Martin visited in the Eugene Nye home in Woodstock --FOR SALE' -- Kitchen sink with faucets. Drain in left. Kitchen cabinet and kitchen cupboard. Telephone 136-W. *40 Sunday. Mr. and Mies. Stanley Hill of Chicago were McHenry visitors on Sunday, when Mr. Hill attended a meetnig of the McHenry Country club. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Jolley of Crystal Lake spent Sunday in the Frank Spurling home here, r retained der a direct contract with the Chem- 1 part of the country, will be installed ical. Warfare Service in the fall of/for maintenance and repair work. 1942. A separate plant, distinct j Employes of the William M. Fenfrom the gasket plant, was erected cil Company are drawn from all in the country with small buildings j parts of the country. The recent bus spaced widely apart. Since that, service from Johnsburg, McHenry time many additions have been made. and Crystal Lake has enabled workas the program has been increased.! ers without cars, in these locations, The 4.2-in. chemical mortar gun j to do their bit in the war effort. is Mrs. Paul Yanda returned on Fri- Mr 27 Mr^ CWl,, Martin .nd d»y evening- after .pending tW h« foond wife torn other l^.Uon* _ j * o • /-. •_ Tir«nW vacation visitine her parents, the armed forces. Its mobile nature , planned in the near future. ited irT^Woodstock th^^firat of the'the Robert Ritchies, in Winnebago, plus tremendous accuracy and firing Varied jobs are Wrform«! at a itea in Woodstock e |Minn. power have recommended it highly fuse loading plant. In addition to FOR SALE--Year-round comfort and w^k- Mrs Charles Weingart' Mrs. Thomas Kane visited her aunt' to all -fijErhting branches of the ser- the explosive operators, themselves, visitors economy with fire-proof Johns-Man- Mr- j Citv Wis. one day re- vices. Due to the wide acceptance a large number of general workers : tille Rock Woo! Home Insulation «« *•»',«*' !«nd demand for the gun and ito are employed in pa«Wn», shippin*, '"Blownin" walls and ceilings. Call?"01116 in Woodstock on Monday ai er- t paQj jgarjg jg again back at work trained crews, the William M. Fen- warehousing, jaintors and guards. LEO J. STILLING, McHenry 18. J-ftoOn. j j „ , i after having been' confined for cil Company has been under in- A large staff is necessary to pre- , 36tf. Mrs Jacob Diedrich and daughter, week^ in Hines hospital. creased demands to turn --~-- , ^rs" n"f ?° " Mr. and Mrs. Alfons Adams visit- fuzes for these shells. ®ABY CHICKS Try Foxdale s stock calle[s the first of the week. the Ray Walsh home in Fox been working two nine-hour shifts ! safety of the workers concerned. "EAKLYBIRDS" this year for Mrs. William Nye and Mrs. Rich- ea In ine TTa,°" B ' out the serve the quality and performance They have of the finished fuze as well as the earlier feathering, (earlier market ard Overton spent the weekend visit-' f one evenin& ^ size, eaVlier eggs and earlier profits,! ing the f<MTner's parents, Mr. ( and weelc« ROP SIRED, trapnested White Leg- Mrs. Raymond Whiting, in Lake horns, White Rocks, New Hamp- Geneva. Mrs. Nye remained for a shires, and hybrid "EARLYCROSS" lo^grer visit. for fryers. Limited supply from our Mr. and Mrs. Lowell Nye and famown flock only. Telephone Fox Lake ily of Harvard spent the weekend 2318 FQ^DALE POULTRY in the A. E. Nye home." Mrs. .Paul Schwerman was a Woodstock caller on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Newman spent Monday afternoon in Woodstock. Mrs. Joseph May, Miss Laura Weber and Mrs. Helen JTei(ser and ...... ,-eO calacres. Stock and tools jer;; on Saturday, where MrsfchMay. proval from povernment war agencies. Inquire G. J. Carey, West an(f Mrg Heuser donated to-tRelblood The club voted also to increase the Zdio or write r ual*ai*£« ^ ^ j. FARM & Tj^fcH^RY, INGLESIDE, ILL. 39-tf INTERESTING NEARBY NEWS FOR SALE Oft LEASE-- Dairy .farm; /Very productive soil and good house and buildings. Close to progressive .community .and stores. Hauphtei1. Dorothy, were Chi About 100 if wanted. The voted HOLD JULV RACES Harvard Sportsman's . club r^centlv to hold its annual RdMaad bj Western Mcwapapcr Cnfcm. HAS *A WAY OF LIFE' ••H'SSSTlS The late Frank O. Lowden, one ,du™* h.-Jji Ume governor of W**, . torn- , £ farmer. cto-u, whkk Fourth of July races, pending ap- 1- McHenry State Bank. 40 WANTED - » harness -race" purses from $400 to - Miss Betty Kildav spent Saturday $500.. All purses:.are^^jMrease(l in Chicapo and donated blood at the twenty percent. j ^ Kenneth Lowe and WANTED TO BUY -- Poultry of all kinds. Wm> Staines, West Mct . . „ •Henry, 111. Tel. 638-R-l. *39-2 children-, of- Freeport. IU„ were visi "hirod bank. . ]V\r. and Mrs the E. B. WANTED TO BUY--Car, any make, Sunday. - from 1936 to 1942 model. D. Connor. Mrs. Clarlnce Regner and_son, Phone Woodstock 611-J. *39-2 John, of Pistakee Bay'enjoyed a few -- -- " : days' visit with Mrs. Repner's moth- ^ ANTED -- Late model 1941 or '42~er? Mrs. Zenk, in Chicago during the ;eiir; will pay cash. -Call McHenry paPt week. 185. 3<-tf Mrs. Eleanor Foley, , son, Maurice^, : PARMS WANTED - We have cash a™1 Anthony Sibil;. of Cleveland; O ^Buy;e rs f-o r Mn* ciHt enry county farms ,w ho h,as bee„n _vi s,i tin*g in th, e Foley Q KILLED IN BELGIUM Lieutenant Edward A. Mitchell, Jr., Ward home on 23, of 140 North itager avenuei Barrington, was killed in action in Belgium on January 14. The lieutenant entered France on D-day, June 6, and his various exploits include participation in the parachute attack in Holland. He received a presidential citation for his deed§ and on June 30, 1944, was promoted to' first lieutenant. H"e took part in the ret on + ono , home for the past two weeks, w£re cent bij? drive with the 101st Divirar. gmg from .80 to 200 acres. Pre- ; \ :-- sion near Bastogne, • Belgium. The fer some with stock and tools; If last messages, from the soldier are price is right, can' pay all c&Sh. LOST ' two letters written January 8-. Give acreage, price, section and town- --; ; _ ship^iium^r when answering. . , t0ST -- Pair of nearly new half kid Now is the time to renew your farm ^lack woman's gloves, on Riverside land loan. Five to ten years with Driv£ Qr near Green gt^ McHenry; y ^ * 3 ; F i n d e r p l e a s e r e t u r n t o P l a i n d e a l e r ; a v e n u e , B a r r i n g t o n , n a r r o w l y e s c a p e d ttively no commissions paid. /. joffice. .Reward. - 40 T. J. Stahl Co., Realtors, 1(5 N. i - . ^. County street, Waukegan, 111. 38-4 -• HELP WANTED ESCAPES INJURIES Miss Beth Sears, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Sears of Grove' serious jnjury recently when she fell from a platform of a train at the Barrington station. According to | . . • -- reports, Miss Sears was standing on I ATCH AND JEWELRY REPAIR- t^e platform, ready to get off the i WANTED --- Newsboy. Albert i Z~n^r) wor^ guaranteed, train when a lurch of the car caused | Krause News Agency. Tel. 379. j „ o y _ ™se' Elm St., Mc- her to strike her head on the frame j 88-tf JHenry< <679. 34-tf Qf coach. Apparently she mo- ------ ;--: --!--.' : j mentarily lost consciousness from the WANTED -- Part time cook and, GARBAGE COLLECTING -- Let us impact and fell off the train ontothe steady waitress. Mi Place ftestaii'*^1 dispose of your earbage each r week, cement walk. The accident l^ftTher MISCELLANEOUS You can personally furnish the Nazis and Japs with some more bad news, by applying for war work at the Fencil plant. If you are ndt engaged in essential war production now, get on the job at Fencil at once. In the view above is the fuse assembly section. Here women are employed exclusively,' thus. making that many men available for heavier, workJLight, airy surroundings, all mod em safety features, ample rest periods and all employe benefit s combined with easy-to-do , and interest ing work, make a Fencil w ar .production) ' job much desired.This is top priority rating work. ^Green St., McHenry. 90-J 37-tf or oftener if desired. Reasonable; severly shocked and bruised , . „ rates. Regular vear round route, for- A2NTp-Man to work m Kramer mer1y George Meyers': t Ben J. Smith, at plant, Fox L&ke. Call McHenry j pjj0ne 355 t NEWS ABOUT OUR European theatre, winning the DFC and the - Air Medal with three clusters. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert E. Rodig, Route 1, McHenry. $3,000 FIRE LOSS Fire, , said to. have started in a defective chimney, completely raxed HAVE YOU nEARD about, the new the house on the old Courtney farm reduced Auto Liability and Property in Cuba township recently. Damage rates ? They will surprise , The Wauconda fire department re- 38-4 vou. Ask us for insurance rates, ceived a call about 12:30 noon o*. e Kent Co., McHenry. t'hone 8. the day of the fire and hurried to * 27-tf the farm, but extreme difficulty was WANTED -- Girls'for store work. -- , -- encountered when the truck turned Bolger's Drug Store. . 35-tf DEATrANIMAL'S WILL WIN THE into the lane leading from the main ^ ' WAR -- Five dollars is the least we road to the farm buildings. From W A N T E D -- D r i v e r s , m e c h a n i c s , dock man. Essential, critical .industry. Downs Motor Express, McHenry, 111. |Jh« i WANTED--Draft war work. ' " **v Phone 195, from overseas to . „ , pay for dead horses and cows in good that, point .the road was completely ! "Camp Atterbury, mart for pon^ifon. Wheeling Rendering Co. blocked with snow. Loss on building Ind., where he is confined to Wake- Apply Miller Products^ phone Wheeling No. 3. Reverse the and contents was estimated at about ma General Hospitals' The latter re MmccHneennrryy sbooliud iers and sailors have 'uu*'^ "c 10 u,an^ f 1 for the paper, which «he says is been transferred. recently as IOL *L * AN.:II .J. ' lows: Harold Michels from Camp Blanding, Fla., to San Francisco; William J. Hay f r o r n ^ M y r t l e rtTm n^Ptaedale 1 a,j<fc#,r8- E.'R. Sutton have rer l'f and t n' j ceived word that their son," Charles. Verne Harrison h&* bee.n ^nfined to a hospital somewhere in the Pacific. t'aul Shadle arrived home on F«hniary 6 for, « fifteen-day furlough. H^ tstejppTO in to thank uss: ' ich she a real treat. Whip on 'maneuveis recently, the .postman delivered to him an issue of the Plaindealer in which his picture and that of his brother appeared. He will report back to Fort Sill, Oklahoma, dh February 1» 39-tf-charges. No help needed to load. W-tf $3,000. vFOR RENT FOR RENT -- House, with garage, "chicken house and acre of land, located 3 miles south of McHenry on Route 31. Telephone 60-M." John „M. Phaiitf; McHenry. , 40-.-^- Mrs. Betty Gende received a /tele phone call this yreek from her/hfbscen 11 y returned * to *theT itates^after ' Lmnd' Frank- who recently returned l»any months of service overseas. from ?ve™?as duty with the third 1 army in France. He has been in a _ _ ... .. New servicemen on our -list in-'"1®?.1"*8* ®n ~Custey, Mich., but NEW ROOF, seie Bob Frisby, Peo-1 received Tuesday, revealed that Staff- elude"'Nelson Cristy, serving in Mem-. . ,11°^ spend a month's furlough pie's Insulation Co., 104 S. Riverside Sgt. Clifford York was killed in phis, Tenn., Paul R. Bonslett and W1^tn nra-family here. FOR ANY TYPE 0"F HOME INSULATION, ASBESTOS SIDING OR A KILLED IN GERMANY The war department in a message Drive, McHenry* III., Phone McHenry action tn Germany, January 26. The Robert Blake at Great Lakes. 2J1-J. Woodstok, 210 E. Jackson son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl , York, . • • -- Phone Woodstock 817. 20-tf Howard St., Sgt. York is the twelfth William John Gerlach has ' i ROOMS--Riverside" Hotel, McHenry; clean, light, warm; maid service; 6'i; rooms., with 2 double beds; daily, weekly, or monthly. Come in,k-or piione for rates. McHenry 348. 32tf ' FOR^-RENT--Gas station and garage. Mrs. Helen Hetterman, 640-W-2 ' " 29'tf- Subscribe for The Plaindealer DilfYiiniH-ifUNN CfotmMrtl PBtMANOT WAVE III Complete witfecurlan, A * m«»pleo looirn rirl eMryW trMp»I oi IW . For amulug result*--b* mm to Mk • • toe Obtrm-Kurl. 0*« 6 mlUloo sold. THOMAS P. BOLGER, DRUGS* man, to be reported killed from the Sian .Francisco, Calif., address. Harvard area. Sgt. York wa* a . „ member of the 407th infantry with Lieut. George Johnson has been | the 9th army. He had been in war transferred from Lubbock, Texas, to [service twenty-six months and over- Dodge City, Kas. seas since last September. _ Arthur Smith, Jr., arrived home duty this week. He the country -almost two years INJURED IN FALL As'Mrs. Ffed -Bosler was putting a price card in the window of the • on Edwin Stoffel of the merchant marines,. stationed at Sheepshead Bay, New York, arrived home on Saturshort leave. He is spend- A» & P- store at Harvard, last week, this week with his parents, the where she is employed, she caught Martjn stoffels, of John street, her heel in the hem ot her dress ana. • GOOD CLOTHES GOOD CARE u 103 Htm Street Phone McHenry 104.M -11," breaking . her left - arm above the, wrist. Several months ago Mrs. Bosler. fell, from a ladder in her home, breaking,, her right arm. Ln BUSINESS MAN DIES Tribute to Sidney Herbert Lyle Franzen, who has been stationed with the signal corps at Boca Raton, Fla., upon return to duty will ; moss, be transferred to Harvard;"Nebraska. Fire Lighter Made Natives on the Samoa island have their own idea of fire lighters, a model for Boy Scouts. They carefully fit a wooden plunger to a hollow section of bamboo which is closed at one end. Tb,en they put ar piece of dried moss on one end of the plunger and place in the hollow section. By striking th$ ether end ol the plunger sharply with the hand it compresses the air in the cylinder, and the heat in the air will ignite Soap Cleaning to Sidnev Herbert! Albert F. Rodig, 20 has Walls and woodwork can be tm» Reeves, 86, wj1,„tAiS retirement ^ O7N^ in"Em"',By ° T" ond three vears a«ro was the dean of on ,btatlon 2 ,n Mlaml Beach, lng that any homemaker can give three years ago was tne ae?n oi Fla for reassi?nment processing them. Make a thin soap jelly from Antioch busmessmen. mercantile e - after completing a tour of duty out- the left-over soap scraps by melting tabhshments and offices throughout sidte thfi. continentai United . States. L the scraps in about tep parts of waif i V12 We-re c!ose^. : Medical examinations and classifi- j ter to one ^>art soap. Dilute the jelly uh,le final services Jor him were be- j catjon interviews at thi8 post> pioneer ing held in the Strang funeral home, j severaj redistribution ^stations op- .r ^ ' erated by the AAF Personnel Distri- Add to Fat i bution Command for AAF returnee cess was the could pay on the investments he had in his hundreds of acres and the building* and equipment of the farm plant. That measuring stick of cash dividends is also used in measuring the success of the Pullman Car company, the cash dividends it can pay ttt its stockholders. Frank Lowden win first of all a businessman, and to him tanning was a business venture. He was typical of the Jaffa farm operators throughout the nation. > They, too, farm as s business and count caah dividends as fhcir measure of success. Not far removed from the Low* den acres fat northern Illinois is the modest 160-acre farm of George Wermact. He farms, not as a business, hot as a way of life. He farms because he likes the farm way of living. He derives a pleasure from helping to make things grow. He likes the gamble offered by each season's weather conditions, and solving the problems such conditions offer. He likes being his own master, the architect and engineer of his own career. He especially appreciates the insurance his acres provide for himself and family, an insurance of food, shelter and fuel. He knows there will be potatoes in the cellar bin, meat on the hoof whenever it is needed, milk and butter to be had for the taking, eggs in the henhouse, and trees in the wood lot that will,provide fuel. He looks at all of those things, not at cash dividends, as his measure of success. He farms because Tie likes farming a§ a way of life. { George Wermact, far more than was Governor Lowden, is the typical American farmer, , and may he continue to be all of that as an exponent of an American way of ! life. He is to agriculture what the I. small one-man owned and operated j plant is to industry. _ . : jrirt- iniiri" ' 'j ii MODEL FAMILY ~~ FOR AMERICA * --\ If Theodore Roosevelt were still alive he would point to the family of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Bourgoyne^ of Philadelphia as among i'..e models for America. At the time*of the rccent celebration of their golden wedding, the family was enumerated as: Mr. and Mrs. Bourpoyne, two daughters, nine sons, two sons^n-law, eight daughters-in-law, 22 grandchildren and one great gr&ndchild. Sidney Bourgoyne is known in the big cities and the small towns from coast-to-coast as the "helpful smile man." 'He has reason to smile. U. S. BUREAUS HAVE MANY DIFFICULT RULES WHEN I WAS A BOY some qf the farmers around the village in which I lived raised sugar cane They sold their product to a small plant in the village engaged in making cane syrup. Those farmers would probably have stopped raising sugar r cane had they had to interpret and comply with present bureaucratic OPA rules in' determining the price they wefe to charge. After several pages of preamble the OPA rule as to price gets down to this:* "The producer (the farmer) is therefore entitled to only that part of 4.5 cents which is equal to the portion that the net contents of the case, 312 ounces, bears to 5 gallons, 640 ounces." In the end : the farmer is given this problem : "Multiply .4875 by 4.5 (.4875 x ! 4.5 « 2.19375) and get the sum of j 2.1938. I have not yet disoov- i ered whether or not that 2.1938 told j the farmer what he is to charge, or j for how much 6f his sugar cane. ! It all represents one of the countless funny rules the bureaucrat? i make for our guidance., • • • * I AMERICA FURNISHES MANPOWER IN THIS WAR IN THE FIGHT TO BREAK the , Sigfried line in Germany there were I in the Alliel forces one Canadian, I one British, one French and five American armies, including the air borne force. The claim was made ' by our Allies in World War I that I America did not do a full share of j the fighting, that we provided I funds more than men. In World War j II we certainly provided funds, but i it is also quite evident tl|ftfc.\ve have provided a full share of battle] front man power. America and Ru* sia did the heavy work of the past three years. We -will also dcP the I major part in the rehabilitation of Europe. • • • WE OF THE OLDER generation will remember the terrific national howl we set up over the first "billion dollar congress." We considered such expenditures outrageous. Today the interest charge on the national debt amounts each year to more than seven times the appropriations of that "billion dollar congress," and that is a small item today. Now we would welcome a "ONE billion dollar congress." * * * " THE PROBLEMS OF peace will not bf easily solved^. -- --;-r--" little white clover gets in permar nent pastures. TAdino demands rotation with ample periods of recovery bai° tween grazings. Above all. It five or six inch-- Ot topg go into the winter. Dry summer and fall restrict the growtlt ot the crop, resulting in grazing at that period World's Het Hie hottest day ever recorded warf: at Azizia in Libya when the tenn perature went to 136 degrees enheit in the shade and Mn shade as American soldiers can attest. But some ot the aame aokfiew know that Axisia is not the hottestplace on earth, that "honor" muat go to America's Heath Valley in Gal* ifornia. Official records kept fca Death Valley show an average max* ima of M in June, 108 degrees in July, and 98.9 in August The higfr* est recorded in Death Valley was 194 degrees, two points below that ot Azizia. Other hot spots include In-Salah in the French Sahara where a record of 133 was established. Jo» cobabadk in Upper India has a record of 120 degrees. Bagdad in Iraq wins honors over Bagdad, -Calif., with a high temperature of- 123 degrees. The best that the Cali* fomia Bagdad can show is 119 de» grees in the shade. Fahis, *•- HM. sV in aft»- • High Peaks ^ ^ Forty-three mountain peaks in North Carolina reach an elevation of over 6,000 feet; 82 others exceed-- 6,000 fett. ^ . 1 MILLER •WOODSTOCK. ILLINOIS SATURDAY dNLY Feb. 24 Gene Autry in ^LD MONTEREY* Plus , •MY BUDDY" with Don (Red) Barry Also Chap. No. 2 (Serial) "ZORRO'S BLACK WHIP" SUNDAY-MONDAY Feb. 25-26 IRISH .EYF>5 ARE SMILING*| In Gorgeous Color With Dick Haynes, Monty Wooley June Haver TUESDAY 6NLY Feb. 27 •LOUISIANA ,PURCHASE" In Color With BOB HOPE and ZOEINA WM>NESD A Y -THURSDAY FRIDAY Feb. 28-29-80 , ALAN LATID JU>RETTA YOUNG -- i n "AND NOW TOMORROW" with some warm water if still too thick, and apply it to painted walls and woodwork with a sponge or soft cloth. Rinse thoroughly with cloths wrung out in cool clear water and! wipe dry. Start at the bottom of a McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY-SATURDAY Bonita Granville Kent Smith 1. 'Youth RunsiWild' Richard Travis. Elfanor Parker 2. "The Last Ride" Vanilla and other extracts give a [officers and enlisted men,'will determore even and lasting flavor to i mine his new assignment. He will cakes and cookies if tfley are added remain at the redistribution station i wall and-work up, always overlap* to the fat when it is being creamed, about two weeks, much of which will j PIN8 ®. little to avoid streaks Most flavoring extracts are essential ; be devoted to rest and recreation. IThSe ld in by the fat. T Rubber missions as a B-17 gunner in the j The Plaindealer. Cultivators Available The War Production board has lifted all restrictions on purchase of ihand sprayers and* dusters and wheel-type hand cultivators, to enable gardeners to get them easily. 8a vo the Ropf ~ I -For easy operation and long wear of the hay rope, it should be run ! over pulleys 8 times tbe diameter of ! the rope. Thus a %-inch rope- needs : vf-incH pu!!^st ^-i»e^rope ncedg j *t"8-inch pulleys. SUNDAY, MONDAY, TUESDAY February 25 to 27 "Since You , o ' ^ • Went Away" Owing to the length of this picture. there will be only two shows Sunday ..and one ..show nightly Monday and Tuesday. SUNDAY SCHEDULE -- Afteroon. Doors Open at 2:15 p. m: Program Starts at 3 p. m. First Show Will BeOver at 6:13 p. m. Evening Program' Starts at 7 :S0 p. n. You may buy a ticket for the Sunday evening performance any time Sunday afternoon, as you must be in the theatre at the time the picture starts. Monday and Tuesday -- Doors Open It 6:45 p. nf.; Program Starts at 7 :3® , p. m. WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY Wallace Beery Kimie Barnes 'Barbary Coast Gent' Also Cartoon and World X»wa

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