McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Feb 1947, p. 9

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iiniiv vis to the sad ch""^t to canter* at Memel, Palanto be made into chain*, bits, and great variety. Down the greatest deamber Has come from lands eastward from the Mediter- 1$ ACTUALLY UyuQ^ Laundry equ&nent should be planned and arranged as oarefoUj and conveniently as any kMdm. A table wad for sotting soiled clothes will eliminate stooping and getting clotbes more dirty on the floor. A tub tor rinsing near the wash tub or washing machine and a basket or a laundry cart to hold the elbthes wOl permit a continuous working arrangement Correct working height increases efficiency. Tubs should be high enough to permit bending from hips only. The top edges of the fah« should be about five inches higher than the table top. For the average height person this will he 41 inches. Plaifdealei. FOR SALE iVe have several used Electric Refrigeiv ators for sale* ; • -y • -m - - : C , , • , Also one used Electric Bottle Cooler. 312 ELM STREET Ha Ntktos Ma - Oast ltd «MM> ' PHILADELPHIA.--WMf7 at last of the game he never has seemed able to beat, a pale, 46-year-old prisoner handed a note to Judge Joseph Tumolillo in Municipal court that bore one of the strangest pleas ever made in that court. William Oaburn Stratton, alias James R. Hoffman, who has spent SB yeara of his life in New Jersey prisons and had just been found guilty of passing a worthless $75 check, looked up in hopeful silence as the jurist slowly read his petition to be allowed to "forget the outside world fbrever." . Jndge Reads Plea. The note read: • •i . . Because I have no friends or anyone who cares if I live or not--and an ex-convict today has no chance to make good without the help of someone on the outside . . . I have always had a good record in prisops, but to come out with only $10 and try to get a job is impossible. Therefore, I'd appreciate a life sentence, for I have no one to miss me, and I oijly have a few years more to go anyway, having been shut up so loitg behind bars that what little sunshine I get is the Order your robber stamps at the few days' liberty I get before I start' drinking and cashing checks." Judge Tumolillo looked down compassionately at the slight man tor a moment and resumed read tag: "I have tried--and I mean tried-pto get honest work in New Jersey, but couldn't. That is why I came to Philadelphia, where I got a job under my own name the same day But was forced to leave the job because of my checks cashed in New. York, having met a man from Newt; York who said, 'Bill, you better leave Philadelphia, as New York knows you are here some place... .* Sanity Test Ordered. "So I think It's best to take a life sentence and forget the outside^ world forever. The only friend I ever had I met her in Philadelphia, but I wasn't even on the level with' her, because I didn't know she was a real true friend, thinking she was like everyone else, out to trick me So I even hurt her by not telling her my past life ... I don't want to be free any more, so do the best you can, as I won't be sore, and I'll be good wherever you send me." Sincere as the man's plea seemed. Judge Tumolillo withheld decision until Stratton could be given a mental examination, since his note mentioned he had twice been in insane asylums. He was first arrested in 1911 as an incorrigible and sent to; a New Jersey reformatory, and ' since -then has been sentenced in -New Jersey 21 times on charges ranging from burglary to impersonating a government officer. river. In the entire region west of the Mississippi river. Including the Pacific coast area, then were fewer people than there are today in the city of Richmond, Va. In the entire country, there were then only five citiea of more than 15,000 inhabitants -- New York, Philadelohia, Baltimore, Boston and New Orleans --all located on or near the seacoasts. Subscribe for The Flafndeaier A bcneficial characteristic of wool is its ability to abaorb and hold moisture to a greater degree than any other fiber. Wool can absorb up to 50 per cent of its weight of moisture and to SO per cent without feeling damp and cold. Wool fabrics will not stick to the skin, and when drying they give off excess moisture very slowly. This prevents chilling the body and is important to health and comfort. in a mechanical washer, for fear, that the violent motion of the ma-' chine might break some of the wires. Order your raooer stamps at the Plaindealer.? and ramping about in the wttd H is not easy to catch them abfVltj? They have been often aeon from tilt jV railway which runs from Dar ei';'-"- Salaam to Lake Tanganyika and / casiqnaHy a rhinoceros has charged an engine.' firvy^ifriiiiiyyyiTi^dn^ 1 -- ^'nhn-irAiyyinnnn ~n nnnr Specials Friday Only eration PHONE 439-W 1M atari. CHOICE VIAL -- LIVER ' 69c lb. ROLLED MO BO RIB LAMB WE WILL HAVE A VAXXETT or ALL THEOUOH TBI LISTEN SEASON •fj Take advaatage ef thle ffUegylr^r " ran* 'Grey Grammar Hafriagb-- year social plsa!- sare to yea as weD aa year friends. ORDER BLANK white hsrrlagbme HAIJBUF WH1TT1HQ PEKOH SALMON GOD OYSTMH5 SHRIMP FROG LEGS 1 lb. juiil 1 lb. pkff. K-9 Spedals Saturdajr ! TENDER FANCY POT ROAST 39c lb. FRESH OKOUNB. BEEF • lb# CF7STRAI ^ 1 V R H f 1 * • Rom where I sit Joe Marsh That Ring Around the Bathtub y J Jeb Crowell blew Ms top the ftther (day. Seems that for weeks ^ke's been trying to get his youag- ,'iyters to aerab oat the bathtub after tuiag tt. And this night he sees trie riags around it--one where ||roaag Soaay left of, and another abeat Pihky*a level. He raves and rants--and takes It out on the missus for her lack Of discipline. And later that evening he sees her quietly polishing the hardwood table thafa right •by his chair. She's i rings he's left there with his ning glass of beer! mmmmm--t. From now on, Jeb's carefal te pat his glass down on the table cover--like the missus does. And I hear he's a little arare forgfriag aboat riags aroand the bathtub. Just keeps en patiently reminding. \ From where I sit, there are little mnnoyanoes in every family---conflicting habits and opinions in every community. A little patience --a little more "forgive and le$ live" is the only antidote. Copyright, 1947, United States Brewers Foundation Thitff 8M|hs Up tfco $50 Cab ftssiifir Missotf CHICAGO.--Joseph Burgess, 21, of Carleton, Mich., was searched in side>and out for the evidence that convicted him of charges of larcen; from the person. Charles Avery, 2S, also of Carle> ton, took a cab from Flat Rock to Detroit with his friend Burgess. On nthe way, he dropped his billfold on Ithe floor of the cab. When he re-f trieved it, a $50 bill was missing. Avery immediately accused his friend Burgess of taking it, and ordered the driver to take them to p»> lice headquarters. Police searched Burgess with no result. "Look in his mouth," Avery advised. Police ordered Burgess to "open wide" and Burgees did so Not, however, before gulping strongly. Another search, at Receiving hospital with the aid of a stomach pump and hot water and mustard, brought the $50 bill to light. Recorder's Judge George Murphy gave Burgess the choice of a $25 fine or 10 days.. He paid the fine. Give Yourself a T Just as easy as pott&g your Mir up m cudm --but die WAV* STAYS IN! And your Tom Vne is lovely--right 6om the Mart! So give yourself a Toni Creme Odd Wave -feryoMdKCooight. It lasts foe mottbst The Toni kit is fompktt-gwiint evajr- Ihtng you HOME PERMANENT THE CREME COLD WAVE fc> $ phusm W,':' •A? r. BOLGER'S DHUG l'< »V.O'f NB ; - ir*m * -»•" -v *• \: Sv*. n 1 • 3' * 1 ft"'" ' iS. v ' <" i1 5:-;" ;:i » • IIMS Malt's TiMbtttM In Csnmitttag Saislrft YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO. - Mrs Ruth Allen Barber, 60, disconsolate •since the death of her husbands .Homer, four years ago, committed! suicide by toppling a tombstone dowij on her heed at h§r husband's: grave, Coroner *Dr. David A. Belinky said. Dr. Belinky said an examination indicated that Mrs. Barber tried twice before she crushed her head He seid a compound fractured skul) caused death. 11 <Bqr Kllh tMar fm tai Hal Vnat LMM CHIGOPKX, MA8S. - Eight-year old June MrLane was shot and killed by her brother, Albert, 11. ^during a game of "cops and rob bera." Police said the youngsters were; - playing near a farm in Chicopee Falls when Albert found a pistol in a truck. The police said he shot his sister in the back when he aimed at her, not knowing the weapon was loaded. ecaai The McHenry Plaindealer EASY "OVCN MEALS SAVE ON TIMf AMD FUEL.' * Poind ShrfW Chof" Bok*J Sw--t Potato* Buttfd Steamed Vogotobks Bokod Appl^*""* #ap«lar Flavor • Candy makers say cherry is the i tnost popular native American fls* ' vm use. V. s. Helium, useful the world around, has been a United States government monopoly. Despite constant ffonrrh, other countries have found no sources that begin to compare with natural gases of the American inidwest containing l to 7 per *UH CAS m KM ZUO tATtl Wor fcom d»loyt in HM «XnWawnllrMflaMnI aVlI fllIaIm^P iIsRaHftWaaWfaIl odl mako it nxtnory to Nmpowrily raalvict n«w spaii liMtino and industrial usw •.. to protact the supply to liomos and ossontial n--dfc It's no wonder oven <£nners Mtt to popaltf with 1MMM> makers these busy days! With a menu like this oae, all yom need do is slide the entire meal into the oven at die time. •. you'll have an hour or more £ree f*wnkitdx«<arc* and you'll be saving on liiel costs, tool Because it takes very little more fuel to cook several foods in an oven than it does to cook one, it's good housekeeping to plan easy-to-prepare oven meals. Use a tightly coveted pan when cooking the vegetables (lima beans, small hosts, carrots, or onions ate delicious when steamed) and try to select foods which cook best at corresponding temperatures. Cooking with gas is ser* cooking. Your oven is insulated to prevent heat from escaping and temperatures are accurately controlled. Use your gas range wisely and economically by planning your meals to conserve both time and kd WESTERN UNITED OAS AND ELECTRIC COMPANY •r • • • ..•v. vir.- .vj\. :-Mi. r-::.-

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