' :r Prsral) The Firemen held tkeir mwti^ •• Mr. nd Mrs. (XCard fldnlti. Altar all the ware present. Cards were C°arlcs Freund. ring the meeting and rewere served. died down the pn| te aad enjoyable erasing. - _ •were served. Mr. and Mr*. Schults weie the hjray recipients of a beautiful floor lamp. Those present were Meeeri. and Mesdames Joseph P. Freund* Arthar Kattner, George W. May, Michael J. Freund and Sunday evening guests In the I Danny Miller home were Mr. and _ _ , „ _ „ . . . . i M r s . A l l e n P i e r c e , M r . f i n d M r s . R o b - 1 ^fff- *pd Mrs. Walter Browin visited j ert s^t. Lawrence Nimsgern, || tlM home of Mr. M"d Mrs. Clar- Arthur Nimsgern and Mrs. Lucille fnee Freund near Ringwood on Wed-1 Nelgon •••day night. j Mrs. Henry Heinle of Janesville ' The Christian Mothers and Young!was a weekend visitor in the Frank Sodalei*ty held thOeiarM drtet guIIAlaIIr ' Wagn"Le r home. Visitors in the Ray II ••• • a_ __ •••••• EDITOR'S NOTE: through special arranguntm milk the Wathinglon Bureau of WotMm Newspaper iting at St. Peter's Parish hall May home Thursday night were Mr. on Thursday n__ iwg ht... Rev. John Dalei- ; and Mrs. Arthur Kattner and Mr. den pive a brief interesting talk, and Mrs. Walter Brown, after which cards and bunco were Prises went to Mrs. George Mrs. Fred Meyer and Mrs. Slilnad PentkNN. W % _ A new air-conditioned giaSS-eft- Sattner in five hundred while, ciose(j penthouse for postwar trav- .. nes were won by Mrs^John, jg to gjve railway passengers an fef. unobstructed view of passing sceny The raised compartment is * A party of friends gathered at built into the roof of the car, the the John Sanborn home on Sunday top and sides of which are of lamifcight to charivari the newly-weds, ^nated, heat-resisting glass. FOR YOUR v LIVESTOCK HAULING «CALL VIC. & AL. MILLER ft:*;: PHONE 261 McHENRY HELD AND BARN LIME •&V' : •I. "MOSEY INN" TAVERN Located in the Welter Building RINGWOOD, ILL. f-t-- Fish Fry Every Friday Night ---- ------" ATLAS PRAGER BEER --r-- fred Bowman, Prop. 5. £ ' • „.o: Expert Truck IF your living depends on a truck you must keep it in top notch operating condition. Winter plays havoc with motor vehicles. At the first sign ctf trouble drive your truck in here. Bave time and money. Our expert mechanics will locate the disorder and repair it in a minimum amount of time for a minimum amount of money. Don't wait until you have to be hauled. Drive in today! f'f V- "^r 'J* ' i ' < . V> ',' . ' i.« . :, CENTRAL GARAGE ; g|;1FRlD Tawing TU» nontpal urim • is able to bring wiihri this Union mt 1616 Eye Street, N. W, Washing ton, D. Cn it «ib n weekly column on problnmu oS tkm and serviceman and hi* family. Questions may ho addressed to the above Bureau and they will bo answered a subsequent column. No replios em bo mode diroct by moil, but only in the column which will appear in this newspaper regularly. New G.I. Bill of Rights Principal provisions of the new amendments to the G.L Bill of Rights which became law over the Christmas holidays include: 1. Increase in the amount of guaranteed loans forjpurchase of a home, a farm, or for entering business, from $2,000 to $4,000; 2. Elimination of the provision that all benefits of the G.L Bill are to be deducted from any future bonus for veterans; 3. Increase of subsistence allowance for single men going to school or taking on-the-job training from $50 to $65 a month, and for married men from $75 to $90 per month; 4. Extends time an educational course may be initiated from two- to four years after end of the war and also extends the time for completing a course from seven to nine years; 5. Removes all age limitations; 6. Permits taking of short courses up to $500 with a proportionate reduction in the veteran's period of eligibility; 7. Permits veterans to take correspondence courses at government expense; , 8. Permits approval of a loan by accredited lending institution and permits purchase of stock for small businesses. Under Public Law 16, which provides for education for disabled veterans, disability pension payments are increased from a minimum of $92 to $105 a month for single men and from $105 to $115 for married men, plus $10 per month for one child and $7 for each additional child, and $15 for any dependent parent. ehaimm of licity chalrnu Mrs. Geo. (By Mrs, Georsre SbepardJ Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison visitors at Greenwood, Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. George £hepard spent Wednesday afternoon in the Alan Ainger home and attended a party honoring the fourth birthday of their grandson George Ainger.. Mrs. Herbert Northrup and son of Harvard spent Thursday with hor parents Mr. and Mrs. Matt Welter Mrs. Emma Anderson returned home Wednesday after a months visit with her daughter, Mrs. Ted Kooistra and family at Harvard. Her son, Sgt Robert Anderson who has been in Germany is enjoying a 30- day furlough with her. Mr. and Mrs. George Haberlein spent Thursday night in Qhiqsgo and attended a party in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Harold Weber. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison received the glad news that their Son James Harrison, received his honorable discharge from Camp McCoy last Thursday. Lenard Brown of Palatine spent Saturday with hip father S. W. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. BL T. Butler enter- n »• . T11 tained Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens Ba^! U1 of Sycamore, Mr. and Mrs. Vivian Austin of Genoa City, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley and Mr. and Mrs. William Hoffman Sunday in honor of B. T. Butlers birthday. Shepard, publicity chairman. Tlie W. S. O. & will serve a dinner or Thwwliy, Jan. U. Miss Marion Hawley and Donald Bchaefer -attended the ski jump at Cary, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane spent Sunday in the Harvey Bauer home at Gilmer, 111. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Martin of West Allis, Wis., spent Sunday afternoon in the H. M. Stephenson home. Miss Marion Hawley spent Monday in Chicago. Lt. and Mrs. RoUrnd McCannon and children of Wobdstock spent Sunday with Mrs. Roslt Jepson. Pvt. Charles Aokerman, Jr., of Camp Robertson, Ark., is enjoying a 19-day furlough With his sister, Mrs. John Hogan and family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ackerman and daughters, Darlene and Kathleen and sons, Leonard and Marvin of Issquah, Wash., came Wednesday to the home of their daughter, Mrs. John Hogan and family. A group of relatives pleasantly surprised Mrs. Mitchell Kahe Tuesday evening in honor of her birthday. Those to attend were Mrs. Earl Kahe Sr., Melvin and Sar^th, and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Kane, Jr., of Mundelein, and Mr. and Mrs. Harvy rinse of year, the settlement comprised 90 bark-covered dwellings with a popuof about 300. gov^iument mostly for military ; poeig by-more than 40 agencies aad bunjpig in their own laboratories or tbMHgn contracts with private organizations and educational '*****1*Tttons. Read the Want Ads Subscribe for The Plaindealer The Keystone |fome Burepra unit held a social evening in the Richmond hall Saturday evening, Jan. 19. Ten tables played cards. Those to receive prizes in Euchre were Roy Mr. and Mr.. FeWey D.vi. .nd j J? daughter of Crystal Lake spent Sun-1 ^ J d.» i" Ih. 3r.< Emm. Andenon J ^ s"r rnho°LMSx?! c i " e n ^a.rs„. v"entine daughter, Mr>. J. C. Pearson .nd - Doherty in company with family. I Joseph Regner of McHenry left COST LESS TO USB CALL McHENRY 465-R OIL CO. 505 8. Green St. McHenry COMPLETE OIL BURNER SERVICE mmi JOHN TAILOR Cleaning, Alterations, RejMMrinf Pressing Same Dajp Satisfaction Guaranteed PHONE 123-R 416 Main Street West McHenry mm Mr. and Mrs. Ted Kooistra and So^n mT' nf Cm ns of Harvard, Mr. and Mrs. Stan-1T ? f°™V D Jltrty, Carlson and daughters of Wood- j ££*• 'Bpe"t r th« stock and Mr. and Mrs. Felvey Davis Thomas SSdJ^th t^ESa^ndS1 Mr- Weld0" Andreas and and soyn Robert Anderson .family spent Sunday with the lat- Mrs. Rose Jepson is spending a %s r few days in the Roland McCannon1 1® E- KoP^ a"d home at Woodstock. i 1^? ^' Mr o?/ m p"? Miss Mae Wiedrich was a Mc- ' nn P f q Henry visitor Saturday afternoon. |^"d C<?1lC^0 Q s^t v,Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Carr find fam- day evemn* ,n the S' W- Srmtil Questions and Answers - Q. t am an honorably discharged veteran who spent three years and three months in the army and was wounded in action. I found a good farm for sale and borrowed the money from our local bank on the basis that I could repay it with 4he $2,000 to which I am entitled under the G.I. bill. How can I go about getting this loan started through? 1 bave been to see the representative of the farm security and he keeps putting me off and tells me to come back in 60 days.--G. W. S., Statesville, N. C. A. "You probably should have completed your G.I. loan before you bought the farm, but the first thing to do is to make application to your nearest veterans' administration regional office and they will issue a certificate of eligibility. Then complete the deal through your local bank. Under the new amendments you can borrow up to $4,000 instead of $2,000. Q. My husband has been in the service 22 months and he is overseas about 14 months and we have five children and he is needed at home. I need him this winter. Will he be discharged?--Mrs. E. Q. B., Norris, S. D. A. Your husband is certainly eligible to apply for a discharge, if hewants it, because all men in service are eligible for discharge if they have three or more children. Q. Why have young men in the army air corps been discharged with less than a year of service when other men, 18 or 19 years old with two years or more, haven't enough points?--R. Z., Canton, Ohio. A. The war department says they have no need for more flyers so in many instances cadets are being released. Under army regulations men may be discharged if they are of no further use or if there is no place for them, whether they have sufficient points or not, Q. I am t veteran of World War I and drawing a pension. Am I entitled to government dental treatment regardless of whether the dental condition is dne to sendee connection. Does this alter the case any?--E. L. B., Tamarack, Minn. A. The Veterans' administration says you are not entitled to dental treatment unless it is service connected or unless such treatment is required for service connected disability. •• . -- Q. My son went to Japan with 17 points. Will he receive any more points or Is that the final count?-- A mother, Martin, S. D. A. He will continue to earn points so long as he is in the service.' ' Q. My husband works nights every other week and would like to take a high sehool course but cannot because of his present job. Under the G.I. Bill of Rights, would it be possible to take a correspondence course and would the government pay the tuition on such a course? -- Mrs. R. V. B„ St. Paul. Minn. A. Yes, under the new amendment to the G.I. bill your husband could take a correspondence course and the government would pay tuition up to $500 but he would receive ae subsistence allowance. inaay witn her mother, Mrs. Hunter at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake were Sunday dinner guests in the Harrison-Peet home. Mrs. Viola Low spent Tuesday and Wednesday in the Charles Prey home at Blue Island. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and daughter, Patricia, spent Sunday with her parents,' Mr. and Mrs. Dale Thomas at McHenry.- Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Treon of Crystal Lake spent Sunday evening J in the Harrison-Peet home. Mesdames H. M. Stephenson, Louis Hawley, Rose Jepson and Helen Johnson spent Tuesday in Chicago and attended the Ice Review in Chi- Cjago Tuesday. Mrs. Viola Low and daughter, Hudson Tunnel Start The tunnel, which provides access to Pennsylvania station, New York, was placed in operation November 28, 1910. •\ * . • . ' : : Alice Mae and son, Robert, and Mrs. Emma Beatty spent Sunday in the Elmer Olsen home near Richmond. Mrs. Ed Bauer and Mrs. Joe Miller of Richmond were Elgin shoppers Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger and children of Greenwood spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bauer spent Tuesday evening in the' Ray Freund bome at Spring Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Don Smart of Waukegan, Mr. and Mrs. Phelps Saunders of Sycamore and Mrs. Bertha Saunders of Harvard spent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bpuer were visitors in the Gregory Kattner home at Spring Grove Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brennan spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman at Zion City. Dick Kelley has received his honorable discharge from the army. Miss Alice Peet of Elgin spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peet. The „W. S. C. S. was entertained in the home of Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., Friday. A pot-luck dinner was served at noon. In the afternoon the usual business meeting was held and the new officers were installed for the coming year. They are Mrs. F. N. Muzzy, president: Mrs. Rose Jepson, vice-president; Clara Cristy, corresponding secretary; Voila Low, recording secretary; Mrs. Collins^ chairman of Missionary education AUCTION On Hwy. 21, being 2 miles northwest of Libertyville, 8 miles north of Mundelein, 4 miles southeast of Grayslake, on J^DNESDAY, JAN. M, at 1 o'clock CATTLE--1 Guernsey family cew, 1 Guernsey yearling heifer. HOGS--10 bred Chester .White brood sows, farrow late in March; 1 Chester White boar. POULTRY--150 Leghorn pullets; 160 Leghorn yearling hens. MACHINERY--J. D. Model "A" trac tor on rubber; new J. D. 2-row power lift tractor cultivator; J. D. Model "iD" tractor on rubber; J. D, 2-bottom 16-inch tractor plow (on rubber); new Mc-D. 3-bot. 14-in. tractor plow on rubber; J. D. 8-ffc. tractor disc; J. D. Hi Speed 2-row power lift tractor corn planter oil rubber (with fertilizer attachment and tractor check wire); Blue Streak 10-inch hammermill; 3-section wood drag; 8-ft. International grain drill, FEED--300 bushels oats; 80 bushels soy beans. BUILDINGS^--5 8x8-ft. hog houses, on skids; 1 8x8-ft. insulated brooder house; 1 8xl4-ft. insulated brooder house. Hiking Protection In tramping through the woods, high boots pffer good protection. If it is too hot for high boots, wear your socks over- the lower part of your trousers, thereby protecting the ankles. Make it a habit to wash thoroughly after each trr.mp through the woods, whether you think you've rubbed against a poisonous plant or not. Make a thick lather of yellow kitchen soap and hot water, wash five or six times. Then apply rubbing alcohol, rinse with cold water and dry. In drying be.sure to use a soft fabric. .V?' v Mr-*--^ \'.v i-MB. HZKCHAirt-t ' , Modem showcards made with sound merchandising iiralu«-Individual ••rvice a keynote. " PROMPT DELIVERY , t. - Dnauvfi REASONABLE PRICES SPECIALIZED ; SERVICE |N ^ALL SIGNWORK | ^ f " Orders taken at Thom$*&i's Bar-B-Q McHENRY, ILL. H. REESE, Ex-Serviceman nWrv IR9 rwwffwwm WImWNS Mi Vllv MOCw All Pupose JUT Curtain Dy* h OUAKAMMD todysM cwtafa Mrfc* PStFECTir . ;:the ftierf dym that money em bvyl Use it for Gelanese, acetate Rayon, Nylon and Mixtures as well as for cotton, silk, linen. Four new "decorator" shades--Champagne, Peachglow, Desert Tan, Sunny Ecru. They'll bring the sunshine right into your home, and perk up an entire room just as they perk up your old contains. Definitely gomtm teed-- so you know yoult have no dye failures. IN THE BIO BOW Thomas P. Bolger "The McHenry Druggist" GrawMed. MAN i^mmm INDUSTRIAL METAL FLASHLIGHT OUR REG. LOW PRICE 69c SALE PRICE 9 portion TIRE PUMP REG. LOW PRICE $1.65 SALE PRICE 2 - ROY BLUE FLASHLIGHT. BATTERY OUR REG. LOW PRICrfc < FOR 5 No. S Size, wa fit all standard llaihligMi, IK x 20 in. bairel; 24 in. hose -HATCHET TypE BUMPER JACK OUR REG. LOW PRICE <2.59 *|49 8 OZ. GLASS MEASURING CUP S4 3p6wring lip*. Ovhcn and cup fractions shown. Cross the Atlantle W»e Savannah, which sailed from Savannah, Ga., in May, 1819, is generally credited with being the first steamship to cross the Atlantic, but •a she used sails, instead of steam, most ot the time, her voyage can •carcely be *et down aa a croea ing under Mewn. She did not seek to repeat her voyage In steam, for year her engines Ptddhwindi were rree mmo ved, an Imohm SI Alp. and die TRUCK BODIES 8xl8-ft. trudc body, with sides; 7V&xl2-ft. truck body with sides. MISCELLANEOUS--2 electric fence controllers; 1 new 12 hole nest: 2 10-hole nest; 30- bushel steel hog feeder; 2 10xl4-ft. truck tarpaulins: 1 12x16 ft. truck tarpaulin; W steel posts; roll new 80 inch woven wire; roll barb wire: roll S-ft. poultry netting; S rolls 8-ft. poultry nemnf. BAY Chandler OWNER 4 Elfers, Auctioneers KITCHEN STOOi Our Res. Low Price $3.10 Foldinst Red ot blue FELT BACK FLOOR MAT Our Reg. Low Price $^79 PRICE Univcnal 38 x 44 x 36 in. rubber auto mate. Front 'cCVMlHCtf T T BEAU GESTE PLAYING CARDS OUR REG. LOW PRICE 35c w* SALE PRICE 19c Good q--lily card* for Ml IviPIBQr wf Dealer \ r - ' *