McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

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

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«L » l**- -: ' +r & / * *e%£ *• ^ ^ *,' 5r£r *V^*V 4.^^,/ ", » •T7^r v, ' Wy WUcfe tlM f0l- -•"-', PtffUC NOTICE Notice of fOfaur Abdication for Cartlffeaftc tf Pfle CoBwatenec mi Hinwltf M a flfeMeUffiaad Carrier under tM provisions of The minote Trade Act. To Whom It May Concern: The undarngned applicant hereby rives notice to t£s puHe ttfl there has bean filed with the Division of Motor Carriers of The Department of Public Works and BuiMin*s of the State of Illinois an application for a Certificate of Public Convenience and Necessity as a Specialised Carrier with base point at Mc- Henry, Illinois, and authority to lowinc com Foal Oil. , - ^ All parties mtmmb* i» this ap- Elkation and the pnUfe^fceufaMr to e held thereon »»? obtain Information relative thereto, hy addressin* Che C&kf Clerk, Division of Motor Carriers, Rfclcely BuikHnfc, Springfield. Illinois. Dated this 10th day of November, A. D., 1947. ARTHUK V. JACKSON, Applicant. Address: 106 Main Street, McHeniy, Illinois. . *« Subscribe for rhe Piaindealer Kathleen Norris Those Who Leap Without Looking Ben Syndicate.--WMU mtura. RESORT --- Js» * J Si.' **«ftt ' • \ - PISTAKEE LAKE Open all year 'round--Rooms rented byday «f week. DIKING EOCMH -- BAR ; , HUNTING -- FISHING Prices Reasonable RFFTER and SOU, Prope. Tel Pistakee 624-M-l* ffe-- . % m (anditi tar Geasfsrt Economical a n d c o m f o r t a b l e heating in winter and, to some extent, keeping the house cool in summer depend largely on retarding the flow of heat between the inside and the outside of the building. Inmisting the house tn keep the heat in also helps to prevent the entrance of heat from the sun through ! the roof and walls in hot weather. | As long ar there' is a difference -in temperature between the inside and , the outside of the house, there is a ' flow of heat from* the warm side to the cooler side. To determine the | amount of heat lost in winter, and to decide what steps should be taken to restrict it, the loss through windows and doors, the lost through infiltration and the loss through walls, roofs and floors must be considered to reduce the loss through each. _Ne®£ Rubber Stamps? Orderv at The Plaindealer, Eia Before VltariM Lon^ 'before anybody ever heard Of vitamins, sailors found that the i cranberry helped ward off scurvy. 1 Old-time windjammers, sailing the i seven seas out of New England ports, stocked their galleys with I barrels of cranberries from which mariners were encouraged to eat handfula of the raw fruit. No prodnet of the soil is more truly North American than the cranberry. Indian medicine men deserve credit for having introduced it to the PiJ. , grims. Modern science deserves more credit for improving the quality and increasing the harvest of this bright-red, tart-tasting berry. Much of its vitamin C is retained in cooking by the cranberry's high add content. / A Net AB Sen Tobacee There are estimated to be about , 80,000 auctioneers in the United States. Most cities and. states re auire that thev be registered. Generally when a dock needs cleaning anoiling. Ijjfc and oil a clock, yon need to take it apart. Take a feather and strip II down until there is a tiny bit of 1M material on the small end, %n dip this in gasoline or mm brush the bearings of the clock sligjlHy, being careful at all times not to damage the hair spring and balance wheel. By "«fr>g care there is little danger of doing damage to your clock. Never touch the »nt«i parts of your clock with your hand if you can avoid it. If you do so, it means tarnish afterwards. After the benzine, gasoline or naphtha has evaporated use a very light fine oil or mineral oil thinned with kerosene. Moisten the feather with •this oil and brush lightly on the ^bearings. j . Pretectiea Against Rabbits j Best protection a gardener has I against rabbits is a wire fence. Rom where I sit...£y Joe Marsh; % Got a Maul (Maybe) 'PO O id Yeiterday Sis mpt brariaa, found an article cat froai their file copy of the Clarion. When ahe compared it with another copy that I gave her she found it was my colnaut on *Hew~to Keep a Aw* band Happy." Nothing unusual about that. Except the last person seen reading the paper was Prissy Hoskins (our town's proverbial Old Maid)! _ Well, if Prissy has family got a man, more power to her. And more tolerance to both of them ... b|». ' cause that's what my column w#-;: tf a iuu&anffs old hats, eld pipes, old friends, knd mellow beer. And tolerance obi the hnsband's part of a wife's tastes and habits.* From where I sit, pobody begrudges Prissy taking that dip* ping from the Clarion. But I'd like to hint that if she'd just tvbtcribe, she'd get my thoughts on tolerance firsthand. And in return 111 treat her to a glass of beer. Copyright, 1947, United Sflttst Brewers Foundation LOUS'PLACE FOX RIVER GROVE, ILL PHONE CARY 3051 Dining Room and Cocktail Lounge ENTERTAINMENT NIGHTLY Served From Noon 'til 2 a.m. - FROM OUR MEN# CHICKEN-IN-BASKET T-BONE STEAK ..... FROG LEGS J*1.25 £3*2.00 ^$1.50 Ma •There was s qusrrel in m night club, tmd htr bmtbmmd knocked down afeicimattngyotmg Latin with whom Anne had been carrying on." v.HV-:- Cold weather taBs for extra motor protection. Without it, yonp car's a dead pigeon! Start protecting your car TODAY with fresh winter-weight SKELLY Fortified Tagolene ...the motor oil that helps make motors perform better and last longer. Special additives, crocs1'blended with top lubricating oils, ofler faster starts, By KATHLEEN NORRIS MANY of us Wreck our ves before we have any idea of what we are doing, and then spend years trying to straighten things out! We are warned, as children. We are scolded by good mothers and fathers in our adolescent years--all that does no good. We go straight on into trouble, and then are innocently surprised as the nets tighten about us, and the inevitable results of what we have done spread and ramify and darken all the world. Phyllis is a case in point, Phyllis who married at 17, and married the •wrong man at tjiat--the wrong boy, rather, for Harry was only 18. They eloped, Harry all trembling pride, Phyllis kittenish and lovely. Ten months later Phyllis had a delicate girl baby who needed infinite care, in another 11 months there was "a great heavy baby boy/^who made all the trouble possible with teething, milk rash, nutrition problems. He was only about three months old when Phyllis in desperation divorced Harry; she hadn't anything special against Harry, but fatigue, money shortness, cramped quarters, nerves, all conspired to make the situation completely unendurable, and Phyllis and the babies went home* to I Mother. But meanwhile, Mother had been widowed, and married again, and j not too happily. The addition to her | household of a spoiled girl of 19 and two fretful babies is no help to Mother. Harry doesn't send alimony regularly, and altogether Phyllis is worse off than ever. " The Handsome Carlos. Then there's Anna, quite a different type. Anna was married ten years ago, at 24, beautiful, sophisticated, possessed of everything that travel and culture can do for a woman. Anna married, as might have been expected, an extremely rich man. Four years later there was a quarrel in a night club, and Ben, her husband, knocked down a fascinating, dancing, flirting young Latin with whom Anna, not to mince matters, had been carrying on. Anna and Ben were now divorced, the little son went to Ben's mother, and Anna compromised for an immense alimony, and was seen everywhere with the fascinating Carlos. This all went off in a glory of newspaper publicity, wheh Anna was the center of attraction for all society, everyone talking of the lovely Mrs. Ben. Anna went everywhere in mink and pearls, dramatically renouncing her boy "because Ben's mother is such an old sweet, and Jimmy loves her." That was four years ago; here is part of Anna's letter to me this week. "I find myself in a difficult position," writes Anna. "My boy has il-~~4-been taken completely out of my Care, for Ben's mother has moved to Santa Barbara, two thousand miles away. They didn't consult me about this. But that isn't what I'm writing about. You see, Carlos Wants to marry me. And, poor darling!-- his salary has been cut. and is only about half what Ben pays -fine as alimony. If I marry, I lose iny alimony, and somehow I don't isee myself trying to get along on what foreign consulates consider good pay. "The death of Carlos' wife in an accident was bad news for me. .They had been living apart for years, yet her existence was my excuse for never considering marrying him. It engines, less wear and tear on mo *" chwper in the long rai x oil... and this is IT! top-onaltty oeanet It IS motor vina parts* ise die best WELLY TAOOLENC • MOTOR on ;* J FREUND OIL CO. PHONE 202 McBSNR?, IFCL. ...THE SIGN OF /J t-u - itee T*«a mm * grt* btvy baby boy.' IRREPARABLE MISTAKES... "Marry im baste, repent * leisure" is an old saw, bu* a true one, in most cases. This is especially true of those u/bo marry very young, as Phyllis did, in the case Miss Norris recounts in today's column. Phyllis was 17, Harry 18. Tbe? eloped before they bad finished high school. Within two years Phyllis was tired of it all, and, was seeking a divorce. The care of two babies, the cramped quarters, lack of money and the realization that she had thrown away all the normal pleasures of youth, all mounted into an unbearable burden for this headstrong girl. Another girl, Anna, married for money. She had beauty and charm, and she used it to best advantage. Eventually, however, she wanted something more than luxury; she wanted the excitement and thrill of "real love. Then she met Carlos, a handsome diplomat from a South American country. In time there came the inevitable disclosure, a stormy scene in a night club, and then divorce. Ben, the wealthy husband, gave Anna a generous alimony allowance. Now Carlos is free to marry, as bis wife has died, but Anna realizes now that the really doesn't want him. She would like to have her son back. The boy is living with Ben's mother. Anna, m her ways, points out Miss Norris, wai quite as foolish, willful and mmfortmnate at Phyllis. would have ruined his diplomatic career. Now if4s different, and Car. los confident}/, ixpects that after a decent period of mourning, we will be married. Realises She Was Wrong. "If I had it all to live over again 1 would act very differently," the letter goes on. "I know now that I did tease and goad Ben, and that he was really generous -in all the divorce arrangements. I think more and more of my boy, although in giving him to his grandmother I only did what he himself begged for. The prospect of losing my good income staggers me, and yet in all honesty I ought to marry Carlos. Ben, by the way, is married again. "But the awful thixig is' that 1 don't want to marry Carlos. We have loved each other for six years, but it isn't the real love, at least on my side, on which marriage is baaed. I look back a few years and think that I must have been crazy. "Because, you see, in these years I've grown up, somehow. I've got religion, I suppose you'd call it that. I metui I've found prayer. I'm not going into details, but I know now that I had in my hands the delicate material of everything that is valuable in life, love and home, husband and son, and that I tore it to shreds. To marry now, with the feeling that the love between Carlos and me was burned out long ago, is utterly distasteful. Do you think it my duty to marry the man--he is a good and honest man enough-- for whom I threw everything away when first we were in love?" There's Anna's problem, or rather predicament. There are lots of rules and examples and codes for such women as Phyllis and Anna. But it takes a wise girl to see their value when she is young and headstrong and pretty. U. 8. BUYS DRIED FRUIT The government is buying up some 133,000 Urns of dried fruit to prevent a glut on the market, Clinton P. Anderson, secretary of agriculture, announced recently. "The purchase will assist the industry in disposing of this expected surplus of supplies and provide an excellent food item for foreign relief feeding and school lunches," he said The government is purchasing 2,250 tons of dried apples, 3,760 tons of dried peaches, 61,000 tons of raisins and 66,000 tons of dried prunes. . Physicians Are Active Thre#-fourths of the 200,000 physicians in the United States are enaged in active practice, according the Bureau of Medical Economic esearch. Average Egg Prodactioa The average hen In the United States laid 120 eggs in 1936; last year the average was 153 eggs. Bowling Green Popnlar -- &T- early American days,- -the bowling green was popular as a recreation and community center ie pins in diamond setup were Keep Eyes Longer That eyes stay young longer and 4 the keen hearing associated with youth is retained for a longer time when an ample supply of milk is a part of the daily diet, recently was reported by Dr. Statie Erikson of University of gsntiwhy. "SPEEDY" by NICK MILLER'S McHENRY GARAGE IT* Au. (M6HX BUBITS ALU CtoHT! IT* COVERED BY INSURANCE WRTTM NDUR BATKES, *0UU. Be COVERED wrm F-aer or ABOUMD, P1PST THINKS YOWLl. FRONT STRKET ROUTE IF POLKS MOULD 1AWE AUTDMOBLES -TD NICK MILLER'S JPHENRYGAKMt AND HAVE THEM CHECKED CveRJROR DEFECTIVE BMKES; AKID THEN? A HEAP OP PHONE 108-R YOU ALWAYS SAVE AT YOUR A&P! tor over 88 years, A&P has always kept their folicy of selling the highest quality foods at the lowest possible cost! y: ' •* •' " HEW LOW PRICE! DROMEDARY CRANBERRY SAUCE....'^ » NEW LOW PRICE - • HMATOMATOES.... 2^29* NEW LOW PRICEI SLICED OR HALVED HNIA PEACHES... ..ir 81* NEW LOW PRICEI HEINZ KETCHUP.*.., .'^22* NEW LOW PRICEI LIBBY'S FRUIT COCKTAIL ^37* NEW LOW PRICE. IONA HALVED OR SLICED PEACHES ....2^47* •FOR BABYI LIBBY'S BABY FOODS 3tf27e FOR YOUR BAKING RED STAR YEAST CAKE 3e Mickelberry's SKINLESS FRANKS Armour's Star PICNIC HAMS Mickelberry's LARGE BALOGNA SAUSAGE CATTO SALAMI PICKLE AND PIMENTO LOAP 63c 4fic per lb. LIVER SAUSAGE 59c PER LB. FOR DAINTY THINGS IVORY FLAKES PK«. 37e FOR LOVELY SKIN CAMAY SOAP 2*** 21* »£2tc STRIKES ANYWHERB Diamtitf MatilMS FOR SNACKS N.B.C. CHMM Rltz ANN PACE Maeartiii&Spaf htttlpK^ISc SULTANA IW BUBS 10c OUR OWN Tta Balls RICH AS CREAM KKPS HANDS SOFt DREFT PKG. 33* ti IN PKC. 13c WMUHrauMllk Sum SSt DESSERTS OR SALADS. ANN PAGE Sparkl* Qelatia 3PKGS/ BISCUITS IN A HURRY 7 •illicit" ^ AUNT JFCMIMA Pancal AIRY FAIR A&P BAKEI JANE PARKER {ICED ALL OVER) IO-OZ. Mil 27 California ORANGES .. ... 71b. bag 49c Texas Seedless. . GRAPE FRUIT .... / - 10 for 59c Texas Juice OKANGRES .. . 288 sixe, ^02. 19c California •• L "' •* BRUSSEL SPROUTS • 1 lb. carton 19c ^\hite Mirhiean POTATOES . 49 lb. bag $1.89 * FEATURES FULL OF VITAMINS Hbhocolate FUDGE LAYER ^ 69* frune Filled COFFEE CAKE - 35* JANE PARKER HONEY RA!SIN[OR OATMEAL COOKIES^'.**. 19* JANE PARKER . •milllTC PLAIN. SUGARED RjCa IHInUlv OR CINNAMON • • • • • PKG. IV tieusa msffirs Ida Spfiach ECONOMICALLY PRICED A DOG'S DELIGHT^ laia Tanataas 2 CANS 27c Luach Taagva 28c Daily Dag Faad 3 CANS 25c ARMOUR'S *91. HORMEL ChULwithBMM 2tC SERVE WITH PORK AiPApplaaavaa 2 CANS 27c A PIE IN A HUMY Plaqalak ... A BETTER FLANKING IbrtM'iSalt. THANK-YOU BRAND Cit Asparafvt LORD MOT! FRENCH STYU Craaa Baait JV&47C .V* lie *^2ic %M7c (PACKAGI - OF4) • • PKG. SACRAMENTO ftari DEL MONTE SLICTT Haaappla WILSON'S Mar-Baaf WILSON'S Mar-Vaal fNTIONS.1 I!?e341« ..l&itB* He MTIILN II, SULTANA HALVED UN PEEL ED Apriaats ASP ROYAL AMNI Charriaa COLDSTREAM* Hak SalaMfl FOR SOUPS OR RAKING B..M GREAT LB. •AAAA NORTHERN PKG. FOR CHOP SUIT Malta Maa *£M4r FOR LIGHTER CAKES. SUNNYFTELD Ma Flaar !&327c ......wTINl 4c FOR GREASY HANDS BORAXO ^29* RICH IN LATHER PALMOLIVR SOAP BATH SIZE CAKE 15 NNSO WHITE--RINSO BRIGHT 4 SWELL SOAFS IN ONB SWAN SOAP 2--23*

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