McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 6 Nov 1947, p. 8

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ijr, ,* • -- darenee* Ac. *©». ef Weedalacfc was a visitor in the BmaimAndsrsmi borne, 8unday alter (By Mrs. Oeewe The W. 3. C. 8. oftwria «MT Thursday. $206 wta «*••*••• . The Community club held a HalhflWM P-TtJ i» •J""' * day evening Prlaae ^re awaroeo to Christine Broman, Jay Wdbng ton, of pre school age; Carol OMson and Freddie Bowman, lower room, Frank Smith and Mary Socan, upper room; Cora Flanders a^ WeWon Andreas, "grown ups; and Mrs. Oonk, grand prise. . The employees of the chemical plant enjoyed a Hall°w««n party in the recreation rooms at the plant Saturday evening. P™*** f°r J* best costumes were awarded to Miss Brevor, first; Miss I)o™tl*y second;' and' Lorraine Stall, Lonna Jones, thThe Youth Fellowship group held a Halloween party at the John Moand Mia* Circle wiH m*et at tin home of Mrs. C. L. Harriao© ad ThS*ay. Nov. 13. Roll call will be answered to by a verse of thanks. Mrs. Harry Everson and Mr*. Howard Fellows of Gem* City spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Dick Oldson. ' - " m Mrs. Viloa* Low cpant Wsdnesday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs" George Haberline and grand eon, Harold Weber, spent Wednesday in Chicago. Mrs. Maud Deffenbaugh of Chica- Bi spent the weekend with her sister, rs. Louis Hawley and family, Mrs l.uella Schneider of Wood- Stock spent Saturday afternoon with her sister, Mrs. Emma fieatty. XTB. Hawley and daughter of Elgin spent Friday in the Louis Hawley home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family of Catalonia and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiedrich and fbmily of Keystone spent Sunday with their " • " , Fred Wiedrich, it a birth- „ of tbdhr brother- Eieler, at their bone Jan Tiome"on Saturday evening, Oct. j£rent8' Mr and Mrs 25. Rev. George Marshall w their l Sr. leader. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Walkington entertained the young married peoples * V Five hundred club Saturday evening. KUPTUHED? CTi Bolger'^Pruc Store Green Street • . McHenry Irving Herbert of Twin Lakes called on his sister, Mrs. Gmna Beatty, Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Walter .Wilcox, of Woodstock, and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and family spent Sunday with their mother, Mrs. Viola Low. _ Mr. and Mrs. Eckstein and family of McHenry spent Friday evening with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Roy Dodd. Mr. and Mini. Dick Oldfc&n and family spent Sunday evening in the Harry Everaon home at Genoa City. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Abendroth of Elgin spent Tuesday evening with her mother, Mrs. Jennie Bacon. Mrs. John Blackman spent Monday and Tuesday with friends at Antioch. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jepson and family of Dundee spent Friday evening with his mother, Mrs. Rose Jepson. The children remained for the weekend. Mrs. Paul Collins and daughter, Mrs. Kenenth Wells, of Arlington Heights visited Rev. and Mrs. Collins. Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr..and Mrs. Charles Brennan were visitors at fiSkhom, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Nordgren and daughter, Nancy of Waukegan spent Roger Collins if Melrose Park catted en bis parents, Rev. and Mrs. CoUtae Priday morning. Mr. Mid Mr*. Photos Saunders of Sycamore spent Sunday evening in thefVed Wiedrich, Jr., borne. Janet Wfan spent Sunday with Dariene Andrsaa. She and the Wei don Andreas family spent Sunday at Ainmfa, Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Carr and fairay »eat Sunday with her me&ir, MrT Hnnter at Hartland. Mr. and Mra. Paul Collins of Arlington Heights were callers at the bonne of bis parents. Rev. and Mrs. Collins, Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Jack Lenard and Mrs. Louis Winn attended ih« Home Bureau local leader school at Wbodstock, Monday, Miss Annabel Wagner of Lake Geneva spent the weekend' in the home of ner brother, Alan Wagner, and family. Chailes Carr and son, Elmer attended a birthday party for their cousin, Ella WcdcOmb, at Racine, Friday. Mr, and Mra. Aldn Wagner enter- Marvin Araeneai eB. Millerjaod oldI Wtrcb of Rich ' with Mrs. eau and sons mond Bauer- -wit: of Wbodatodb Route 47 btem miles South and on • >- THURfiDAY . Commencing at 12 o'clock, sharp, the tallowing described property, to- Mrs. Alan Dimon and spent Sunday with Dick Oldson and Mr. ft ** and spent Sund and family. Mr. son of . Mr. and family. Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane and daughter 4pent the weekend with, her parents at-Springfield and attended the football game at Champaign on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Vera Malpch of Lake „ Geneva spent Thursday evening with cqwb an 0f which have recently her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison. Mrs. Ed Bauer visited her aunt, Mrs. Mary Freund, who is ill at the Charles May home near Spring Grove, this week. - , Mias Virginia Kmet of Chicago spent Sundry with her sister> Mrs. Mitchell Kane, and family. > ALLAN BROS. CONSTRUCTION 00. Building and Remodeling' « . ELEOTBICAL WORK Painting Phono McHenry 791-J 510 Main St. McHenry Route 12 and Oak St., Fox Lak*. MILL INN Formerly Barnard's Mill , Hath Xnd of Wonder Lake at the Bridge CLOSED ON TUESDAYS SUBIM WINTER MONTH* COCKTAILS - LIQUOR - WINES COMPLETE DINNERS SERVED Prom 6 to 9 p. m. Daily Kx*tpt Monday a«4 Tuesday Saturday 6 to 11 p. m.; Sunday 1 to 7 p. n^ FISH FRY EVERY FRIDATI WE CATER TQlFA&TIES Prank and Jerry Wiedeman. Pbone Richmond 312 lll/fliHIUIiNUIiUlM New--Easier than overt HOME PERMANENT ;#r-* CHARLES LEONARD. Auctioneer Having "decided to quit farming, the underaigned will sell at Public Auction on the Adams Farm, located two miles north of Jobnaburg, on the Jobnaburg-Wilm^t black top road, on MONDAY. NOVEMBER. 17 Commencing at 12 o'clock, sharp, the following described property. 52 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK Twenty-three head of cattle, can slating of seventeen cows, 16 Guam geys and 1 Holstein, moetly young eows; five Guernsey heifers, (all heifers and several cows vaccinated); Gaeraaey stack ball, IVz years old; Team of horses. , Tea feeder piga, 1#0 M>. average. 100 chiekeaa. FEED--1200 bales mixed hay; 800 bu. Vickland oats; 20 tons DeKalb hybrid in crib; 35 ft. silage in 14- ft. silo; baled straw. MACHINERY--Farmall "A* tratfor on rubber, with 16 in. plow and cultivator attachment; very good condition; McCormick mower; Rock Island side rake; McCormick-Deering hay loader; dump rake; Rock Island corn planter; Deering corn binder; Buckeye grain drill; Deering 7-ft. grain binder; 3-section John Dfeere arag; 2-section drag; spring tooth drag; walking plow; fanning mill: rubber-tired wagon; woog-wheel wagon; steel wagon; 7-ft. double tractor disc; bob sled; corn shelter; electric brooder; tank heater; cultipacker. Chicken coops; grapple fork; prime electric fence controller; Universal double unit milking machine with pipe line ajad 2 cylinder vacuua|g t pump. .. .* Water heater; 6 milk cans; pailfr and strainers; tanka; Firestone tractor tire. «ad tube#' 8*24. Net teafewufefe for accideaHt Terms: AU sauna of*$2S aad under that amount aaiife, over , that amount « credit of six monthp at 6 per cent wfp bo extended an notes approved by .the elt|k. Anyone desirfaig credit, kindly make arrangements before purebase ti made. No proparty M. be removed until settled for. CLEM ADAMS McHenry. State Bank. Clerking -unr r mr --n^r>ni^irv~i A U C T I O N On Hwy 68 (Dundee Rd.), west of Sanders rd., being mile east Wfceeling^ 4 mues northwest Northbrook, 4 miles southwest of | Deerfield, 3 mttss weat of HWy 42A iWaukegan r<l.> 11 aaUea south of libertyville, on " . SATURIkAY; l<OV. l|; at 12 o'clock K. & M Lunch Wagon Watch for Auction Arrow on hwy. 68 CATTLE--^Guernsey springe* 4m with %d ealf on Dee^ 21; i^raear family with ealf' at aide; HoL heifer, 20 nHM. old, bred; Guer. heier, 20 nua. old, HORSES bkin lbs leather flyaets. PIGS--Chester White sow with ( Pigs at side; Chester White sow, (brat);. Beitobire sow (brad); 4 Chester White gHts (bred), wt. 200 lbs. each.; 2 Chester White barrows (wt. 200 lbs. each); IS Chester White Cigs (av. wt. 60 lbs.); Cheater Whit* oar. POULTRY--60 mixed hens; S mated Rfese. MACHINERY--McD. F-20 tractor on iul>ter; 2-row tractor cultivator; ttstorlcal Food Milk 1a OQe of the oldest known foods. Records exist nt cows being milked in 9,000 B.C. The Bible contain many jfa/c-rences to milk: one of the beat remembered from Exodus 3:8--"milk and honey." Sanskrit writing! 6,000 years old tell how milk Ul Qne of the most essential of til foods. Hippocrates recommended milk as a medicine five centuries before Christ. In Ur of the Chaldees a frieze depicts a dairy scene in 3900' B.C. showing milk containers and strainers. Order your rubber stamps at The Plaindeater. OLAF JOHNSON A U C T I O N CHARLES LEONARD. Auctioneer Phone Woodstock «478 Because of poor health the undersigned will sell at public auction on the farm known as the Fred Ode Farm located 4 miles East aiid North 29 MEAD OF eonsieting 18 choice iMrtela 4MfIj <•***» One Holstein heifer, coming 2 yi old. 4 yearling Holstein betfera. 2 Holstein heifer calves, 6 months old. - One Holstein bull coming S yjrs. old. This is an outstanding dairy of ntly been Bangs tested and the yearling Holstein heifers arc/ all calf-hooa vaccinated. Team of good work horses. Grain and I arci Machinery 10W) bu. Vicland oati, quantity of silage, 1800 bu. good ear corn in crib. Gehl No. 41 10-in. hammermill with bagger, Appleton 4-roll corn husker, New Idea hay loader, McD. grain binder, McD. corn Under and elevator carrier, Osborn 5 ft. mower, dump rake, McCormick 14 in. 2-bottom tractor plow, John Deere side rake. McD. corn planter with fert. attach., 10 ft. tractor disc, 5 ft. horse disc, 8 walking plows, 2-sec. spring tooth drag, 3"-set. drag, McCormick 10-20 tractor, McD. F-12 tractor with cultivator McD. silo filler with 50 ft. pipe, 2-row cultivator, Tower surface QUICK RELIEF FROM SymptMra ef Dblim HiMn fcit, STOMACH ULCSRS OUIT* EXCESS ACID Mast Hslp erHWMCeotVonl Over three mtUkmbettlM of U*« WM*JUU» TWBATMMNT haw bfas sold for mUI( or gym^tonuofdljUei sristoa fromlhl** Pmt duetobMM AskLSotdon 15 dsn trial! Ask for »ailw r« aim»" which foUy explains this treatment--Im--at WATTLES DRUG STORll West McHenry ^ fMI'iy"- "P" Broadeaat sssdea, barb wire. Jimeswayoil tion chickeit ba electric wa chine, 10 mflk earnit tanks, pails and strainers, electric stirrer, eleetrie clippers, Coleman •rtirTiiitir lerM fanning «o ft, hay Alae«|any lliirae electrtc| SSItionV . Terms. All der tint amount a per posts, 120 rods nests, btejptoiehaae to be removed OLAF «Usk feeders, First National T' > HAVE YOUR CIWPOOLS ' f*?:,' aomnjnum CATCH BASIlft) . •_r x" : CJBTHtis Cleaned By SANITARY •DDn Hvrr, Prop TELEPHONE McHENRY 2905 PP#P 1 •'•'Kk-M >##• n:rrxy3j^ MjpNRY FREMJN0 : • Optometrist •» At 514 Main St., West Mo0eB9y #p* Steffan's Jewelry Store . ; (Olosed Thursday Afternooad) Eyes Examined -- Glasses Fitted , Visual Training -1 Visual RehabiHtatien Complete Vienal Analysis Hows DaQy: f. la 12 and 1 to 5--Saturday Evening: i ta PHONE McHENRT 452 1 m Sand and Gra?el Co. ExoSrVating and Crane Service Black Dirt -- Sand and Gravel , Road Grading . o"i' CALL McHENRY 97-J mtmm m Wp W THE OPENING OF j Modern Home Decorators AT 117 S. NORTHWEST HIGHWAY ' * ' Barrington, Illinois Making custom made upholstered furniture, attp; covers* drapea; also handling Venetian blinda, abades and carpets. Wide Selection of Fine Fabrics = v "• Also General Furniture Repaira Free Estimates , Proa^pt and Telephone Barrington 1S8-R-1 or Cayy $818 , sua. bred. tRSES AND^ HARNESS--Buck, n gelding, 10 yi««. ekd> wt. 1S0S .; breechfiig, hawisis atui eallaiav R*vad,..RIbM... t> usable New PtUixt KM McD. power mawor} new 2-sec. steel ' ag; 4-sec. spring tooth; new J. D. 6 ft. tractor disc.) new J. D. 999 I mem dr Ma up y***r hsdr hi half MM Masai Toni Plastic Carina 50% more curling ; aad they've ribbed all over, to •vatyHma yos » yawrToni Slaatic Curkaa. Fort sdVWNMls onfy $1.00- awj! iking bet curlers. ftm*uvKu with RjUlKit without atrkrt r !100 AKPrktfrfm-tm BOLGfiR'S DRUG STORE rr corn planter (with fert. attach, ch. wire and trartor hitch); new U. S. Goodhue 4-roll metal corn shredder; new J. D. side del. rake; New Idea manure spreader; U. B. 6 ft. grain drilH-Buekeye broadcast seeder; new J. D. 10-in. hammermill; Int. Kay leadM-; Deering 8 ft. grain bindernew J. D. rubber tired wagon and rack: J. D. auto-steer steel wheel wagon and triple box; J. D. corn J sheller. I | MISCELLANEOUS -- Table model] cream separator; 3 iron top benches; I chain hoist; 1£ hole hog feeder; 75 i ft.. 6-inch brit; 3 log chains; 100 ft. 1 MIOW fence; visa; 110 gal. gas tank; j 29 bbU.; scales; 9*12 ft tarpaulin; scraper. , gmi: 400 UlS"u|£Sd'h!y>(iS""r.S) j chlckTO! house (on skids); 12x20 ft. metal chicken bouse; 4x8 ft. farrowing nouKe; turkey house and wire pen- ; ssi1 (bottle gas or coal); coal heating! Stove; tablaa; 100 lb. ice box; couch; kero. lamps; rocking chairs; beds- «he»t «f^deepen; dMsseni; cocktail table; stands; crocks; dishes, pans, churn, etc. ' TACK -- Western saddle; 8 army m Hg priHtfag pmm kmtb*tn my 3Q yttrut ftnU tb* •/ k--kt, mugmximn tmd csuUgt tksi ptMisktn smd , n*il order Immut ttmd tv*rj jt*r H r»*d*rt *11 »vr tk* wtrld. Im my I've **** Ait udtt tie head im frimtimg. The emeemtrmtbm |f tJkMed Ubor end eqmipmemt m the graphic mr* mdmttrks ef this ', |tfgie* is tedmy unequalled anywhere im the wmrld. "Primtipg is tmy imtimett, *md I'm gUd I the mmd tvbere tfper im my lime, mfd mumy tibert, mre ThU prcssmao* is one ot 70,000 skilled ctalnmea who work ia trefflcodoai printing iodattry ia this ares. The graphic am p in this ares is the most mechanically complete aad widely ersiAed ia die United States. It raolu &rst in camber of employes. wtys paid, number Of establishments, aad is Highest ia Ocooomic value. Located here .are the three largest commerciel ptants in the world, as well as haadreds of smaller printspecialists with fine skills aad equipment to me« every con- |eivable requirement as to artistry, economy* aad lexibtlity of Sverythiag from aiatt dMsr camlets m ssdiatcal books Is »a off in the 3,100 prumag plaau la ibis region. Annually they prodace a greater what thaa aay eomperable area ia the »yrkl. Aad today, to meet the ever-increasing needs of industries here. Northern llliaois is rapidly expanding ia every Md of comawrcial priadag. The postal zoniag laws for secood-dass mailings passed in I91S ssade Northern llliaois Ac most economical aad strategic location for the printing of national publications. Within s radius of )00 miles are more thaa a third of the nation's readers aad buyers aad 39 per cent of die nation's laanuUrruriag concerns. Magatines and catalogs, as well ai products from manufacturers ia Ais «rea, reach their destinations quickly aad oo time becaase of the; eaexceUed shipping facilities of NoMiera Iliaois .. tie gremteM tnmifm Win center im the wertd. To industries seeking locations, skilled wockers aad strawgic locatioa are only two of the many advantages offered by the Northern Illinois territory. As aa aid to those considering reto Cation, our Territorial Informatios Department will supply £*COM1 dam concerning this area aad psnaaeat to year Miin This will eepply U **««d, 1 ^WbM^s em i^s^as^L mm ft . wHpvpi ihi -- - -r -- -- » >« Center • teeder kMaed Heel Mi»iti»*| • «ee* Ut GetMl U»he • Oeed Senkss tar Ite OsNe^i • Sead «er Mo I •dvaataoeei Cwtw ef SM UIM SIIIII •' WHM Akyel Q«n>inpMrnl Center of A 1 »oe>leS-- • Oraet ftaeacW CeMw • Ike XVMI CmSWI MednC • Ceel Imnfi •E INM MenaaHe< Wkk * Prvettch. AMbSn PabHc Anctioa Serv. Ca, Clerk U- •fWpf!"fW TERtflTOfMAL INFORMATION DEPARTMENT P U B L I C f K K V I C f C O M P A N Y O P N O R I N l R N I L L I N O I S W I I T I R N U N I T E D O A S A N D I L I C T R I C C O M P A N Y TMs aree fces power /esswx.i of 2,600,000 Uowat*, wMfc dOO^OO Ukmmm sat mkrndt, i ill mI il i III I er m WkkrA jig-#- ' ,• .

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