McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Sep 1947, p. 2

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iX'<m mma ttmday, September *r. 1M7 An »towfc%npB> TmiM start a storm under «e right conditions, according to a University of Caji fornia expert. GWOOD (By Mra. Georre Skaaid) Destructive Attacks fe.?:; Bata Garry Rats are reeponeible Car a variety \gf losses to the poultry industry, not pw least of tlieae being diseaae. One tiptrlnient shows that rats carry toccidiosis and are capable of Spreading It to chickens. About the •eme story goes for infections brtmttitii and fowl tuberculosis. SMm to travel as far as live miles a week, #ats can pick up and apread dia* ease over a pretty wide area. Carrot Leag Grown The carrot is mentioned by Pliny, a scientist of the £rst century, but Greek Writers told of the carrot in 300 B. C. Protective Ceath#^-^: Phenolic resins serve as interior «rotective coatings in metal flve-gal- >n containers and drums to protect the metal from attack by the contents of the package. Many kinds of Chemicals may be shipped in phen- •lie-lined containers. Frequently it It more important to keep the chemical free from contamination with iron than it is to keep the iron from oeing attacked by the chemical. These kit and drum linings are. DDT Sauka rattles Inaeots War-designed to provide smoke screens for troops, smoke generators have been adapted by the army chemical corps for protecting orchards and row crops against frost and insects. Fourteen department of agriculture stations across the country now are testing DDT mixed with smoke to exterminate insect pests on grain, tobaocp, fruit and vegetable crops. Regular #rmy volunteers selecting the chgppafc*l corps for their service are trained to When properly Gyred, resistant to 6r- die equipment useful ill both wta jjganic solvents. : and peace. Released by w«tm Xrnvcptr Cairn. • By INEZ GEIUBABD NOT content with their stellar rating as actors, Dennis O'Keefe and Randolph Scott have joined forces to coproduce as well as co-star in "Draw Sabres." It is all about the daring exploits of a U. S. cavalry regiment during the Indian wars of the ]87Qs, written by William Hanneman and O'Keefe; Eagle-Lion will probably release it. Pennis is an old hand at writing; he began his Hollywood' career1 as a gag man fof Hal Roach comedies". Maybe you have read some of his short stories, signed Jonathan Ricks. He is working no^ 6n &s Mrs. Lester Coir entertained the wpmen'a 800 dub "at her home, Wednesday. A 1 o'clock luncheon was served. Prises were awarded to ! Mrs. Bowman, high, and Mrs. E. E. Whiting, low. . I* . • S* C. S. was entertained in the hooM of Mrs. Wolf Shadle on Thursday afternoon. The good will bag will be Sent Oct. 1, Anyone who wishes to contribute can do so. The fruit jars a*e at B. T. Butlers feed store. They an to be filled and sent t° the Old People's home. Paul StepheAson left Wednesday for his home at Dorset, Vt., after a week's visit with his mother, Mrs. Luella Stephenson. Mr. and -Mrs. George Shepard spent Tuesday in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. John Shadle left, for: Champaign Thursday, where he will .^esume his studies at the university. Low «*d --" Timnl riBinlai Win their mother, VirgiSr%sonf R. V., has gone] to Lincoln, Neb., to work, .Mrs. l«na P»et and daughter, Alice, Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Ben WaUringtoa attended the ftnparty lor Mr. and Mrs. Joe °&** f* Qncnwood Friday evening. Mrs. Lena Peet spent Mondfy *3 Tuesday in the Edward Harrison home in Elgin. The Ringwood and Greenwood members of the. Youth Fellowship enjoyed a hayraok party Tlrarsdav evening. * Mr. and Mrs. S. W, Brown wini visitors at Janesville, ThursdayT^^ Mr. and Mrs. Robert' Van and daushter, Joan, Mr. and Curly Wilson, Barbara and fcrcssei Lawjence and Marie Ritzert spend Sunday in the Oliver Lawrence home, Mrs. Earl Young of Fox Lake was a visitor in the home of Rev? ano Mrs. Collins this past. week. Roger Collins of Elmhurst celled ^ " on his oarents. Rev. and Mrs. Collina on Friday. fack Leonard were visitors at Wau- j William at "TBS. Tttd w-kini * - Round ... . son; Lake, Sunday SHOP w u i ? H n i i a ™b i < , « « p ^ l M » r i o n Hawley~*prnt "w^dneidav "inRobcrt, th^^kend""1 with a Hollywood background, en- j ChicAgd. 1 "<-» » - ^ • -• na titled -- I and Mrs. F. Lowelf of Florida , / kitchen cabinets and cupboards made to order. J*\ full line'"of. lawn chairs, swings, pier benches, picnic table sets, children's play pens, sand boxes, trellises, picket fences, window boxes, bird houses, hand woven baskets, etc. „ :*r : Genuine leather men's and ladies' belts, purses, etc. f CLARENCE SMITH {obnsburg i/' ^ Chi'cAgd "Ladder of Ladies." • jg/F ! Mr. ai _ are visit mg her sister and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Whiting. Mrs. Bowman entertained a group of friends from Chicago Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. George Lowell of Bristol, Wis., were callers in the E. £. Whiting home Sunday afternoon. Jack L. Waftier has signed Lew Ayres to star opposite Jane Wyman in "Johnny Belinda"--it is Ayres' VISIBLE CELLULOID LABEL HEAVY RUBBER CUSHION RUBBER caiujftc°M®JU lC McHENRY P1AINDEALER not Green Street ttcHenry, Illinois LEW ATRE8 Mrs. Emma nnuenon aim son, Ted Kooistra home at~ Sharon,'"wis!* Mrs. John Hogan held a birthday party for her son, Harry, on Friday evening. It was his fifth birthday. J?eFe ei*ht«en children pre^ sent. Neeless to *ajf, the children hfid a wonderful ^njc ( 4JJ jfirig and Happy yiOV*^ 4H girls held a hot dog and! t ; - » - P°P ssttaanndd aatt tthee 44H auction afci i and daughter, Virginia Woodstock Saturday. The proceeds! * to go toward raising funds for the 4H town. & £*•'. Iftent Si few days the past .'-itn relatives in Evanston. Mrs. Lo'iis Winn, Mrs. Viola Low. Mrs. Loon Grorby and Mrs. Harold Weber attended a Sunday School meeting at the Methodist Church in Evanston on Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Don Smart and son, Mr. and Mrs. John Hogan held a birthday party for Miss Myrtle Biggers and Harry Hogan at their home Sunday. Those to attend were Mr. rnd Mrs. Gus Carlson, sons and daughters, and Mrs. Randall of Bill, and Mrs. Cahterin Tremaine i Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson, and children of Waukegan spent | Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frost and son Saturday evering in "the Fred Wied- of Wonder Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Alan SNNSMM \ MOTHS*Nr Smart people are having their garments mothproofed. ._. ^arofhaving a valuable garment ruined by destructive- MOHIS is now a thing off the past. Every ganwent doonod |py us b processed with the mirdtouleus U-SAN-O imwred iMhprooff deaning system which repels mollis. Your gar* |iinh are insured against moth damoge for six moiHhs ^ - >.) at no extra cost to you. Forget your cleaning and moA» ----proofing problems. Give us a try and youl forget your mothproofing problems. YoyH say, "Gee, my i beautiful... insured against moth damage, too." first assignment on the Burbank lot since he gave such an excellent performance in "The Unfaithful." Actor-producer Robert Young is sure he made the best horse purchase of the year when he bought "Boogie." "Boogie" may never win a race, but he's stealing all the scenes from Young and Marguerite Chapman in "Relentless." Vaug'in Monroe, of his own CBS show, will exhibit his model trains this fall during a toy merchants* convention in New York. To date he has built eight models of the nation's top flight "limiteds." But recently his best one, a powerful Diese^ engine model of the type used in scaling the Colorado Rockies, was stolen from h;i dressing room during an *Qut-of-town appearance. As President of the Hospitalised j Veterans Foundation, Sammy Kaye 1 has already started the ball rolling. I His aim in this campaign is to get radios for the vets and also install television receivers in veterans'! hospitals. -'miyji There was quite a reunion on the set of Samuel Goldwyn's "A Song Is Born" when pianist Mel Powell arrived for his featured stint. Mel was discovered by Benny Goodman, who has an important role in the film, when Mel was 16. rich Jr., home. Mrs. Harry Chaplin and.children of Plymouth," Wis., are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Betts. She flew her own plane down here. Mr. and Mrs. Burl Plnkenberger of El Paso, 111., spent the weekend here with Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Haw.cy. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Ainger and ... „i„„c iV«rv. aMU mrs. i * - j j * uu children of Hebron spent Sunday; Collins, Mrs. Wampool remained for | es^at.e on °.r before said date withwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. a few days' visit with her brother.! '^""jOSEPH^LAWRENCE Administrator.' (Pub. Sept. 25-Oct. 2-9.) nine in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr. home. Wagner arhd daughter, Leonard Ackerman, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Seebel and family, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and family, George, Archie and Myrtle Biggers, Annette and Grace Glauser. Mrs. Amey Wampool. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bochers, arid Mr. and Mrs. Crivel of Vandalia, Ohio, spent Sunof m proposals owning txotn high ptaess tirfintlf • of food deftnitely tniltnsta hysteria and are therefore believed to be unworthy of a nation whose fundamentals are baaed eft the system of tadlvldusl enterprlss. . . . Bitter attacks on the epssaUsBs of food trades, tndiiiMng producers, processors and dlstoHmtms, can be carried4e such a point of frensy that the endwould be complete disorganisation of a business structure which has been the envy of the entire world. / . _ Charges of aoanipulatlaa are heard from many souiess,... TMjk this is Sheer nonssnse Is.pointed out vividly In a New York Ttmss editorial vhidi declares: "If prices vers 'manipulated,' or artificial, we would have little to worry abqpt, because prices can be maintained at artificial levels only for a certain Mngth of time..'. unfortunately, the fact is that prices have been rising because the besle condltlBM affecting demand and supply have favored sucb a rise. ., . Oan^ sumptlan, present and potential. Is far out-running production, and the evidence imfrstn that In the absence of a complete change ef poUsy on the past of the government It will continue to do so we® Into the future. . . . This Is because, for one thlhg, unprecedented domestic and export demands are eon verging on a supply whidh tgr all practical purposes has now reached its limit." ' A partial remedy for the situation was a slowing down, aft least temporarily, la the movement of wheat abroad. . . . With free supplies moving to markets at a pace inadequate to take care of both domestic and foreign demands, prices rose so rapidly as to force a change in a c t i v i t i e s somewhere along the l i n e . . . . After the f i r s t ef. the year when wheat sales can be reported on 1948 income tax, the** ' should be a pick-up in the movement off farms to help take care «frequirements. • <na$ COLUMN IS SFONSORBD BY •'{<</. V'.V Co. FARMERS CO-OP. Am PHONE 29 VERNON J. KNO*. I^Wiryer NOTICE OF CLAIM DATE S2S Waakegaa Ri Deer Hunters ]"' A total of 233 deer were taken ; With bow and arrow in Wisconsin in i 1946, the highest bow hunter kill ever recorded in any state since the an- ; cient weapon was revived as a hunting instrument, the conservation de- Gtorpe Shepard. Mrs. Harold .Weber of Chicago spent the weekend with he? parents and son here. Estate of Barbara Lawrence, De-, partment said. Of the total kUL ceix?V-* • u u *11 128 deer were taken in the Necedab son, ftai' Mo'&'NovembS ?rd I »"dH" rdu<!e 1947, is the claim date in the estate 68 fcucks an<} 58 £ the other of Barbara Lawrence. Deceased,, open areas of the state 107 deer were pending in the County Court of Mc- • arrow-killed. A total of 39 of these Henry County, Illinois, and that were bucks and 68 does. It is esti- ^avVYn"theV^,omrWWnReV5Pan'd Mre" cl?Ts may be li]leJ a^n8 J t fhe a.f[d 1 mated that more th^n 5 000 bow and J arrow hunters were afield during the special bow hunting seasun, Septenjand wife. tar 28 to November 11. 'Mr. and Mrs. Ed Volbart of Keno-I sha spent Sunday afternoon and eve- Pear Out Tubes* Electrical manufacturers produce M"- ®ar] Kane, Sr., and! Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr. i., Need Rubber Stamps? Order at' each year more than 100,000,000 8,°" Ma™., of Mundelien were Sun-j and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Vogel left j The Plaindealer. ; electron tubes. day supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.! Tuesday for Kentucky to attend the Mithell Kane. j races. ^ Mrs. Nick Wegner and sons visited Mrs. Jessie Walsh and Norma relatives-in Indiana qVer the week-1 Whiting c% Grays'ake and IV1 HI-jorie f"1" . W'niiing of Crv3*al Lake spent Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Horry Hinze of day ir. jhe E. E. Waiting hom».. C'.ystal Lake spent Sun.Jay afterrc-on --;-- ••.v.th Mrs. Lena Peet at'v daughters. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilcox of| Order your ruDDer ^run.ps at the Woodstock and Mrs. and Mrs.. Walter j Plaindealer. McHenry Sand and Gravel Co. Excavating and Crane Service .• -r• •••. Black Dirt -- Sand and Gravel 4 Koad CNrading -tOOAU. McHXHKY «T-J S •• ,Sf ,• McHENRY CLEANERS f . Vftjr- i, -- Helen We^>er. Mgr Tel. foi-M "UnniititiiniiiituiiiiuiiiiuiiiiitMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiuiiuiiiiiitiiuiiiiiutiittiitiiiiiiiiit^ 306 Mm St. Cvke Correspondence Cards ^ appealing KITTENS W PUPPIES 2 different Boxes IK ^SUSICRtfT "^1 ANTONSON'S CANDIES McHenry Phone 235-M Speaking of gold mines--Gabriclle Canzona has one in his monkey, Josephine. In "Ever the Beginning" he received four checks each day. One for rental of his hand organ, one for Josephine, a third for himself as a member of the Screen Actors' Guild, and a fourth for himself as a handler of trained animals. Josephine has made about 200 pictures; whst s gold mine! --at Susan Reed, the ballad singer «he has been acclaimed in New York ! night clubs, will stag ive eM songs ! in CehunWa:s musleal, "Glamour Girl." Miss Baed b s» adOre the I usual aighl club entertainer that It ! will be interesting to sea haw she win impress meta picture audiences-- th*y are se mueh more critical than the average night club crewd. .. ..... : . „ Professor Albert Einstein is «ny» j thing but a wrvent movie goer. But ^ a special screening dl RKO's | "Crossfire" was arranged for h^jn I in Princeton, N. J., his home town j now, at which he was host to friends i and associates. Afterward he said I "It is a picture I should like people ; to see," an opinion shared by many | Americans the country over. Some 25 years ago Hudd Weatherwax wore wigs, '"which always fell off at the critical , moment," says he; as a 12-year-old he was a stunt dobble for leading ladies in silent movies, because he was an expert rider. Now, as trainer-owner of Lassie. the MGM dog star, he finds working with her in'pictures and on the ABC "Lassie r8hOw" an easier-- and more profitable--career. PODS AND 'ENm--'PrnU Cret#, *0i# getting b*r fitU ttg hrtsk in rndi» oppetit* Domglnt Wtmrhsnki Jr. in "Tb* it iht fvrnttr XKO ttock pUytr, Vitn Conl+y. . . . 20tk CtntnryJ1** pr»* dmttrs %»mntsd '$» i>rrw Larry Mi from CtlmmU* wto A# ttmld d» in "Dum to Emrtkf pmwimg As Mr "JnL m'Stwy click hw mnt imM pnrc Imck.... it in «wr» ftnt nf film in *Te A# 'Bndt mf th* Imur; k* sewtw d* J J > -• - rrL. RLW FUENH • « E DW ^^RHPWMMV VF I WW OmUimg light* km bmm iMif §ismm BT fTTw r; *• 1 f"- ~ ~ UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP Notice is hereby given to tfie people of McHenry ml surroundimr community that T have nnrrhfltifd the Riverside Barker Shop f (On &iverside Drive, McHenry, and invite the patronage of the general public. Opening date will be Saturday liept. 27,1947. - • ' AiJHii^ler Ship Tour Poultry To Chicago , VIA Krickl Motor Service TEL. McHENEY S69-J-1 We Furnish Coops, One Coop or a Trade \Wkst VROjzSZ. FOR SERVICE • PARTS • ACCESSORIES wmrnmmmmmmmm Qark Chevrolet Sales Herbs used In a quickly cooked dish or sauoe give mare deliciousness if moistened a little mUk or cooking oil and allowed to stand for half an hour before using. A new saw tooth Is a spiral, na* afag the length ef the bladf, for fig aawa and otter apptteattaa, and Ufa aaid to make the saw cut ii any direction inatead ef Just parallel to the tat aactfaa. PHONE 277 McHENRY, ILLINOIS ii !i P P !! ft4 Richard J ade r ^trs^r^SM ISiSs MY MOMMY ALWAYS SUYS AUOUR BAKERY 600KAT Riverside Bake Shop RKMARD JAGER f ;RCP j <1 her

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