McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 Oct 1946, p. 9

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tKJPII 5 04 si,*m t#»H IMIH Ml I I I Mil 11I I I Between Classes public Nov. in oM cartons, ^vw. |w must aWt ttapt In such condition the public library is not of orach me to the cftisenx of Me- Henry oer year towards It is obtioH flwt MeHenry is in a fVmif"' fsSiS l« 1,^ «j .^,1-. state of literary stagnation because ^ w of • pnbUc attitude which lata such M the Library prob- a condition leuwinfai existence. TWs • • n i n n n n i i m i inni» By Jacqne Hopkins | (This la the which examine lem that exists in MeHenry. l is a condition of w> ymt have written these articles in hope j ^ ^ ^ tohes on that some of the more civic-minded citizens will launch a campaign to create and 111 infer ammriantaly $799 its maintenaaee. importance when, one rseHses thai roch an attitude weald discour: i'SSTB Wflli der Lake, also R Las Krieger of the fame was over Marsh and After invited i i i n i n n i i e DcMm If Cooked Right Little heef end lamb are oaad hgr Imo tsmffica, and yet boto» ere delidooi if produced 'from young, wofl-flntahad animala. There is • wide prejudice' against lamb, as many dtalUring the tallowy flavor. To a leaser extent tUa prejudice pwwfla against haef. This dislike mutlly stems from the animal flavor at the product if eonaumed too sns will launch a campaign to m all cultural advancement in our; mgQ after and imnranar * * Mod bftk acfcod library I3t». It VMM dWeoukt* «*> ttrt.I SS^SLy*"*""' ""P"*" - l»•*»•» - « » . » . « » • V «»j ,XJ IM to h«b MB ». Henry could fed tike MeHenry public i Tee. I admit that in itself propw handling, and I*?'j**1.® ?***_ j*^ ibrart. Oh yea, there is hi existence I questional a public library is sniall, wi®1 ^ utu* of the tat Pjck it up. A few IF • jnftBc tthrafy as members of «w | tart neverthdesa ft Is a symbol of a I j ™J"2g 4o atlnd a party given at Ac Morri Park. (By Dick HyatU from Ireland and his American bride,; P°tent Mr. and Mrs. McFe school's journalism class could well cultural and civic interest Oat we I Both heef and lamb can be protell you. For occupying a g«odfar find fast disappearing in MeHenry. | duced largely, if not entirely, on ^portion of the journalism room ia the If such dvk interest were as; good pasture. i*»ny farmers iff*- [strong as it should^ b«^ for to Inhk the animala on grain. 1!^ rSSfm? ^ P**ture - produced beef may hf (merely eridenee of pride in ; ju« * £od quality u ttn r 'etridge lein, 111. On Sunday the WrUMearslds were guests at a barbeque dinner held at the Marsh home. Abo attending Were Mrs. Christensen and girls, Marty and Miss Swanson. Arriving a little later on in the day were Miss Lois Vogt, H. Heideman and R. Einspar. Congratulations to Marie Thenn, who celebrated her birthday last week. A little party was Held at of Munde-1 * little usual son home in Oak Fftrk. The Morrisons •te summer residents here at the lake. AU the boys had a grand Just a shorty this week, -for there! .• •v. w.n «- 0_* seems to be a lack of news, either i raw and this it's that or a lack of co-operation. 1 ?r y- •ft*rn°on was a RAP flyer --AA _ All reeidenta of the lake seem to enjoy reading the cdann. Well, then, why. not contribute something toward it. Its not that I'm asking for a million dollars, or for you to have thoee aching teeth pulled, all I want,4r to aee * little news left Stop Tavern, so I can people have been this, but what is! wronc with the remainder of the population ? UN OatfceBajr • I I I MM I HI MM I I I m MM You know, if this news doesn't begin to pick up soon, no I begins a one wiM believeThat there fc UFE ****£?_ on the Bay. ««- y°u ' doubt. Perhaps happen JS JSftJ L!ly V^ke the Betty Thorsell residence in Volo: never tell. BOLGER'S V DRUG STOKE product. ! ,club held a meeting.• to mark'the occasion. Among those! occurences are s'posed to take it i.nn i attending were her daughter, Mrs. --*nd the develish spirits <Vninfwi,°0™- ILwas Kiehl, Mrs. Wrublewski and Mrs. w«*n spin a web of excitement and; 1 the first time for the new officers \r>rak a It an - j Clifford _ mischief over .everyone. Especiallv myself, can do no more than »™n-iea proauct. and * good start it was. it was an-{ --cljg.ord - - " • * make thia plea fbr a pdblie library. Now is the time to organize meat nounced that 108 dinners were served home from a stay in the Liberty- extra neip. spirits or no, to get I can do no more than expose the rings, each member of which fur- |at th«_^"ner P**y. * .?ew ,week® ville hospital has improved consider-• trouble this night. library problem to you, ay leaders., nishee a fat beef or lamb. Thus ex- ; **?• . J1** '^rgest. ably in the pa8t few days. Maybe I -- I can, however, hope that this p ea client beef and lamb can be had i n£7 *«n? ThI?'« . «nr? fwl that's because, "there's no place will start a movement to establish thmuahnut the vear bv all mem- .eTent- .7,}". * 8 81S? the like home." _3l SUs^ciimesLS f £ P ?W%^^Ut hsf «*. H y*" < f "d both lamb and beef and aging tar has been stored for the winter. Ch£aJJ thJT didT a tte.mnt IW . few if ihOMld b. jwith th. «id of (}. T. Trucking Co., i J!?*? tath Lk. of Beans are said to have been firstcultivated by Captain Gosnold on the Elizabeth islands (off the Massachusetts coast) as early as 1602. made. If frozen food-locker serv- j and ice is available, it will serve the purpose well. But if not available, and the weather is warm, other arrangements should be made to chill and age the producta. • M I Mil MHHimilMIMMMMMMIHMMIMI I I I I I I I Gladstone'# Famine in India Is Result of Drouth A drouth of unprecedented sever- * « the car cn the way home I would 1 ^«^ake say weV didn't come home empty garage here at the^ lute. handed either. While there we man-! Mrs. Gilmore and Mrs. Risse! oi a?e(} to visit some of the family! the Lakeside Inn were.hostesses at friends and catch up on the local the PTA social last FHdiy. TTiis news. ,was held at the Lakeside Inn. j Mr. and Mrs. Provides were out to Tuesday night the Teen Age club their Lily Lake summer cottage over had its Halloween party. Wednesday! the weekend. Their time was occunight the Ladies League's pot-luck1 pied by planting bushes and trees dinner occurred. This evening the 1 in their yard. By-the-way, this PTA's party at the Club Lilymoor I seems to be the main job these days FOR A. ___V ** - » * i WEST BLANKETS * Plaid * Ckrtton * Single * Stitched Edge . I for the kiddies and grownups also. 1 doing the all planting. ny during the September, IMS* 1 Mrs. James Simmons is chairman of I Mr. and Mrs. Krein were honored March,. 1946, period ia the main |this affair. jwith a visit from Mr. Krein's father cause of famine in India. The result i Before going any further let me1 over the weekend. is a total deficit of more than 7 mil- | state that my reaignation has been j Remember if you like to see our lion tons of grain during the 1945-46 j handed in as president of the Teen' community have a column appear 1 crop year. The deficit fell about 1 Age club. Due to circumstances, 1 j weekly in the paper, why not conequally on the rice and millet crops ! &m not able to give the amount ol! tribute by leaving your news at -- • - * ' * " -- * - - -- t h e b e f o r e m e n t i o n e d p l a c e . A s o u r community grows larger it seems our column grows smaller--no cooperation-- COTTON BLANKETS * D ouble ; * 70x80 * All Cotton * Plaid ••iwavwwipi PART-WOOL BLANKETS * 72x84 * Double * Plaid (November, 1945-January, 1946) and I time needed to fill such a position, the wheat, chieh pas and barley ' *«« Milinac, the vice-preslcrops (March-May, 1946) . dent, will take over the remainder Aa cereals normally make up 19 ! o£ M?' ter™" ^ Ci ,! per cent of the Indian diet, the Those who went to Dyche Stadium sr»*2£i? * "w^ra-.roS: fessi.ws ccrt&l fSSfJS G«f C"'s »' W»" (oilseeds, .groundnuts, fruits, sugar and molasses, etc.) have been hit as hard as the grain crops. Most of the population of India normally lives directly off the land it cultivates, so even in normal years there ia but a relatively small marketable surplus. Furthermore, as a result of the drouth, there will be virtually no surpluses available from within the country to help meet the requirements of the deceit areas. The Punjab, for instance, which exported 500,000 tons of grain last year, is expected to have little or no surplus this year. In fact, some normally surplus areas will themselves need help. Order your Christmas cards now from our fine selection. MeHenry Plaindealer office. SINGLE BLANKET .25% Wo# Coknm * Cedar' * Green Color* * loae Rwral Health In rural counties the per capita expenditure for public heailth work ia hardly 50 cents annually, Dr. F. O. Mott, formerly a senior surgeon in the U. S. Public Health service and chief medical Officer of the Farm Security administration, has said. A minimum of $2 is necessary, he added. Total expenditures by local health agencies in our most rural states in 1942 were at only about half the rate of those in the most urban states, Mott asserted. A study of farm security borrower families in 1940 showed that only 37 per cent of children up to eight years of age had been vaccinated against smallpox either at public- health cjinicfc or by private practitioners. In contrast, 19 per cent of children in this age group <had been vaccinated^n 29 large cities studied in the national health survey. The same story holds true lor tuberculosis control, venereal disease control, health education, or almost any other accepted function <f a looal health Subecribe for The Plaindealer AUCTION CHARLES LEONARD and ED VOGEL, Auctioneers * 72x84 * Satin Bound Edge * Good Quality * Plain Colors 1 100% Wool, BLANKETS * 72x84 * FnD Sin * Plain Colorp * Satin Boon# * Fine Quality 10* Gladstone's Phoae 184 MeHenry State Bank, Clerking Having decided to quit farming, will sell at public auction on the Mrs. Josephine Esch farm, located 1 mile north of Solon Mills, 2 miles east on Route 173, and 1 mile south of Richmond, on TUESDAY, NOV 12, 1946 Commencing at 11:30 a.m., the following described personal property, to-wit: < 52 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK Consisting of 24 Head of Cattle 17 Holstein cowe, 13 of them first -Mid second calf heifers, 3 Bred heifers, 3 open heifers, 1 year old bull. 8 HORSES Chestnut team, 1 mare and 1 ! Gelding, 9 years old, wt. 2900, sorrel mare 8 years old, wt. 1^300. 25 pigs, wt. from 160 to 225 lbs. Hay, Grain and Machinery 40 tons mixed hay, some baled, 1200 bushels Vicland oats; 20 acres corn, may be picked by sale day;! Universal portable double unit milker J with motor and 50-ft_ cord; 8 8-gal. I milk cans; pail, strainer; one electric | water heater; one wash tank; 1 rinse -tank; 1 Gehl silo filler with 30-ft. 1 pipes; Mc-D. push type hay loader,! new; Mc-D. field cultivator, 7-ft.;l MC-D. mower, 5-ft.; Mc-D. sulky; cultivator; Mc-D. side delivery rake; \ Linsay 4-section drag with folding draw bar; Linsay rubber tired wagon and rack, with side boards, hard1 rubber tired wagon and rack, Oliver, corn planter witn fertilizer and bean ' attach., new; Hoosier grain drill with : grass seed attach.; New Idea manure spreader; set back pad harness; 1 50-ft. belt; corn shelter; snow fence; 1,000 lbs. platform scales; 5-ft. hog 'feeder; hog trough; bob sleigh; elec- 1 trie fence; 1 90-ft. rope; grapple : fork and carrier, gas barrels. I Terms: All sums of $25.00 and ; under that amount cash, over that j j amount a credit of six months at 6 per cent will be extended on notes approved by the clerk. Anyone de- I siring credit kindly make arrange- McHenry. ments before, purchasc,» ™.?de- ^^ * " . I property to be removed until settled; THEY ARE READY!!! NASHUA BLANKET Single * All Cotton • Plaid * Stitched Edge • Heavy 2 28 a* «l I I I MHHI HHHMM4M IMMMIIHtMM HMMItlMJ [ j MATH/W. SCHEttf support and order. If this fikf, keeps up too nraek a lot ef lawn-cutting to ie Jack Deroehe atiMnaj kb playing football at St. Patrick's Chicago. Seems he'd hart to it It a an old story now, but tally important. Save put them in tin tainers and deliver to who will give you four Every pound Of AHKOUNCING THS' ' • . A ; , SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 s Tavern lUH VAU * -IS' CRYSTAL LAKE PAINT STORE (POLITICAL ADVERTISING m REPUBLICAN For State Treasurer: RICHARD Y. ROWB For Superintendent of Public Instruction: VERNON L. NICKELL At-L»arge: M O. STRATTON For Con WILI For Trustees of the University of Illinois: JOHN R i^ORNOF |X>RIS S IM^KON HOLT 1%RK LI\ BUCKWHEAT FLOURS The old stone is again operating, grinding otit thoso famous MeHenry Flours. Old-FashiontHi Buckwheat. Self-Rising Buckwheat. Waffle and Pancake. Rye, Graham and Corn Meal. .Now available at your grocer or the mill. McHENRY MILLS, Inc. (Formerly MeHenry Flour Mills) You CAN Do ABOUT IT! Everybody's saying- "Let's Do Something About It." And you CAN! You can do a lot about it-- and do it in the American way, with ballots instead of bullets--if you go to the polls on November 5 and vote REPUBLICAN. With your Republican ballot, you can BOTH prc^ test against aU the things you DON'T like, as well as endorse all the things you DO like. Every candidate on the Republican ticket merits your public service of a. Have You Had Enough? VOTE :For" Representative in Congress, 11th District: „ CHAI NCEY W. REED For Representatives in the General bJv: ; ' NI CK KELLER HAROLD D. KEtiStlY For State's Attorney: DON A. WICKS For County Judge: HENRY L. COWLIN. For County Clerk: * • '» RAYMOND D. WOODS For County Sheriffs FRED C. BAU For County Treasurer: IIENRY A. Nl'LLE •For Countv Superintendent lof Schools: ROiiANjp MeCJANNON" *4 • REPUBLICAN on November 1 « ./'ft - Il" 'l "itCi"-4*=

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