McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Jan 1948, p. 9

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SPRING GROVE . . <bj Mn. Ctark. Fnandk fit* Firemen held their regular llmeeting at Town Hall on last Monday night. 'Plans were made for a ;,dance to be held in Town Hall on .^Saturday night, Jan. 24. Everybody - welcome. Refreshments , will be '^served. After the meeting cards were played and a luncm. was served . by the committee in chaife^. Mr. and Mrs. Pestka wen dinner guests in the home of Mr. atid Mrs. I^Geotge W. May last Sunday. Rev. John Daleiden and the ushers were entertained in the home of Jerry Miller on Wednesday night. A meeting was held and their was a • • • m i u m m m m i mi n m» m JUUZINSLV EASIEU ?!> wMb new, gtimi PLASTIC CURLERS an m § 0 Refill, no carina $|M AB+imUmm llOME PERMANENT THE CREWE COLD HAVE • Vr *** Bolger's Drug Store PHONE 4§ McHENRT II M 111 till IIIHIlllHIIll gonial evening at cards. Refreshments were served. On Sunday night of test week Mr. and Mn. Walter Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund visited in the- Al Schmeltzer home in Round Lake.' Mrs. Lucille Nelson, son, Bobby, and Mrs. George Mitchell of Sharon were visitors on Thursday in the Math Nimsgern home. Mrs. Bob Lent and daughter, Linda, returned with them in the evening to spend the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. William May < and family of Johnsburg were Sunday dinner guests in the Arthur Kattner home. The Firmen's water fighting team and their wives enjoyed a steak dinner at West lake's Tavern in Solon on Saturday night. After the dinner, cards were played. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kattner hft'ff somelo</y */***• A*V some ftfciilio* ~fo meL ~H ... that's not an appeal ... it's good, sound advice. Because, if you don't pay some attention to those worn-out shades they'll get even with you. They'll take the lustre from your drapes . . . they'll attract unfavorable attention from your neighbors. Why not do something about it today. ^:.ajr*U.A0TOER'& COMMENTS . «, Our annual allotment & 1Crrtte Swanson's sausage was enjoyed this past week. H« lives on May Day Farm-at the intersection of Rt. 176 and Rt. 47. A rooster recently got in our locker by way of the Paul Edwards' on Milky Way Farm north of Woodstock. Thanks folks. May 1048 bring you continued bounteous crops and personal happiness. The McHenry County Holstein club recently decided to have a 4-H Calf Day . in April. Each member is encouraged to bring a calf to the gathering that will make some club member a good purebred project. Club members and their fathers will be invited to come and pick out a calf and buy it. Prices will be limited not to exceed |100 for junior calves and $150 for senior calves. This is an excellent idea, because I have heard a number of 4-H fathers complain that the purebred breeders don't want to let go of calves and purebred breeders say the average 4-H father doesn't understand tne value of realty suitable animals for 4-H projects. A calf selection demonstration and a talk about the value of high producing purebred ancestory for 4-H project calves will be a part of the program. Breeders have volunteered to attend local 4-H club meetings and talk about care and feeding of animals as well as their selection and the importance of production records. When you consider purebred 4-H calf projects get to be the foundation of good herds, you see how important it is. Stocks of all principal grains on Illinois farms are sharply below last year and the ten-year average. Hay is only 5 per cent below last year and soybean stocks are one-third larger than a year ago. Milk production is off sharply from a year ago, but still above average. Hens are producing at a higher rate offsetting current reductions in number of layers. These statements came from the Illinois Crop Reporting Service. Now we know why the cow sticks hef dumb head through the fence to eat grass. It tastes better, of course. Usually fence rows are virgin soil with plenty of minerals present to make nutritious, palatable feed. Did you ever see a pasture with all the fence posts leaning out? The cows that did it aren't just hungry, they Niesn's Floor Covering Located at Peter Jsate* Furniture Coapaay -- Wert McHenry Phone S3 or 491-M FO R S A LE ^l^tJsad cleaned ladies' and girls* suits, dresses, skirts, sweater, formats, fur coats, fur jacket, shoes and cloth coats. Men's suits, overcoats, army shirts, pants and bathrobe. Ice skates, boxing gloves, slide rules and electric percolator. "^i^Gen and Is's Store TELEPHONE 276-M Third house on East River Road, going south from State Bridge. Mr. and Mrs. John Bbaeta, Mr. and Mrs. Iioander Lay, Mr.and Mrs. George Sanders, Mr. and lbs. Walter Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frennd. Mr. and Mrs. Wank Wagner, Mike Wagner and ton visited Mrs. Henry Heinle at the hospital in Janesville on Sunday. Mrs. Heinle Was in an auto accident on Chrfptmas morning while she and her husband were on their way to Elkhorn to have Christmas dinner with their sen, Edward, and his wife. She suffered lacerations on the head and a broken bone about the neck. She will have to remain in the hospital three more weeks. Mrs. Arthur ' Kattner attended a birthday party held in her honor at the home of Mrs. Coutney in Fox Lake Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Al Wirts and children of McHenry spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Brown. Due to the cold weather Christian Mother meeting will be cancelled for the month of January. The next meeting will be in February on the usual tfiird Thursday of the month. want something to eat that will stiek to their ribs. A new film V fbflMps Petroleum GIRLS WOMEN ADMIRAL CORPORATION > • offers you Ught/ Clein, Interesting Work '• $*$-' . at our ni*> , McHENRY PLANT - 507 ELM ST, McHENRY (Formerly Kaiser-Fr&zier Agency Bldg.) Co., coiled* "Over The ret vividly brings eu this story. Seventyeight veterans in our countywide agriculture class saw it last Wednesday night. Melvin Howe, our membership maintenance mail, is ^pending some 1 time in a hospital at Urbana. We! hope he will be bade with us by February 1. W. S. Lamb, In Bartland township, has a factory on his farm. They make air filters for airconditioning units and furnace fans. Workmen can shoot pheasant* (in season) from their position behind their dinner buckets during noon hour. r Farm and Home Day t|us week is for your benefit. You already paid i your admission as a taxpayer. Don't: throw your ticket away. { Farm and Home Week program for Ihe forty-seventh annual event at the college of agriculture, Urbana, Feb. 9-13, are available at the Farm Adviser's office. H I M I K I H4H Mimi lHH Ulymoor i t i t 1 1 1 i i i i i > > » i n m i H < • I .(By Sara Nade) j Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rogers! of iLilymoor announce the engage-; ment of their daughter, Sue, to { ' Skipper" Wirfs of McHenry. The j marriage will take place in the spring. She was presented with tne ring on her birthday. Congratulations also to Miss G. Pioretti of Lily Lake, who received an engagement ring from Louis Diedrich of McHenry. Rose Keller's mom and dad are going to celebrate their golden wedding anniversary Feb. 1. The folks recently purchased a new home in Chicago. Best wishes to you both and may you enjoy each other's company for another fifty years. Last spring Mrs. F. Weiler gave the .Whites an English coach dog named "Lucky." Richard and Barbara White grew very l'ond of the dog. To them he was a part of the family. Then one evening last week as the Whites were having supper they heard two shots. Shortly afterwards someone reported to Mr. White that their dog was killed by an automobile and was on the side of the road. He went out there and carried the dead dog home. Upon examining him he discovered the dog had been shot and draggedv across tbehifhway to make fc.. afrpcar as an aeddmit. This in%Wfnt dog around here that's been shot. Some people say it'a only a dog, but do they realise what i£ means to the children who grow so attached to the animals? Zf they did they wouldn't be ijsing them as targets. Miss Joyce Fioretta recently returned from a visit in St. Louis, Mo. She was a guest of the Crosby Sisters* who played a week's engagement at one of the city's popular theatres. Upon returning Miss Fioretto has engaged in a new business enterprise in Chicago. Your friends and neighbors from out this way send their sincere congratulations and *ish you1 a lot of luck in your new venture. Our weather out here has been quite on the chilly side. Result is Mrs. Summers and her daughters are Florida bound. Mrs. Hazel Flagler will also accompany them on their trip. The latter will join her son in Florida. Guest of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Johnson is Dorea McKinga of Riverside, Calif. She is continuing her schooling at McHenry High. She is contemplating on entering Northwestern after she graduates. Dr. Krieger's son, Les, is leaving in February to go to the Lake Forest College. v Mr. and Mrs. J. Meehan of Highland Park were recent guests 'of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Rogers. Assisting C. Krinn, Girl Scouts now meet at the schoolhouse every Monday night. Seven of the girls are second class Scouts* . 'aj.S-*/' Rediscovered ChlrSfrractfc Lost for centuries, the Drinciples at chiropractic were rediscovered by Dr. Daniel David Palmer in 1895, mid named chiropractic--a cotnposHe of the Greek word cheir and praktikos, meaning "dor.e by hand." , A U C T I O N U mile south of Hwy. No. 17S, 2 miles south of 'Russell, 2 miles east of Hwy. 41, 2 miles northeast of Wadaworth, «t 8ATURDAY, JANUARY SI • ^ at 12 o'clock K ft M LUNCH WAGON CATTLE -- 21 young Holstein and' Gnerasey cows, consisting of 4 cows i with ealf at side, 9 springers, balance; milking good; 1 Holstein heifer, 14, months old, open: Holsteia ball, 17 months old; 1 Holstein ball, 10 mee. •Id; Holstein ball ealf, 4 swaths old. T. B. and Bangs tested. F. F. MACHINERY--F. F. tractor on rubber, 6 speed transmission (like new); F. F. 2-bottom tractor plow; F. F. 6 ft. tractor disc; F. F. 2-row cultivator; F. F. slip scraper; F. F. power take off extension; F. F. belt pulley. MACHINERY--New M. H. hammer mill; new D. B. silo filler; new 75 ft. belt; new N. H. power corn sheller; rubber tired wagon and rack; 2-section drag; Rosepthal 4 roll shredder; New Idea manure spreader; side delivery rake; McD. 5 ft. mower; McD. corn-binder; M-M corn planter; garden hose; etc. FEED--400 bushel oats; 6 ton ear com; 16 ft. silage: 400 bales alfalfa and timothy hay, some loose hay. Mil KING EQUIPMENT--Rite-Way milking machine, 2 single units, complete; new Rite-Way electric water heater; 2 sterilizing tanks; 10 milk etc. Some household furniture including Norge oil burning tussling «toia; kerosene stove, etc. E. RICHARDSON/Owner Chandler and Elfers, Auctioneers Public Auction Service Co., Clerk WHY TRAVEL FARTHER, when you can secure employment at home? Take pride in your job! Join the vast throngs who build America's Finest Radio Sets! - Experience Not Necessary Stqp In and See Our Employee Counselor • f • Employment office will be open each day 9 a. rtt. to 4 p. m. ^ A U C T I O N On Grub Hill Rd., being 2% miles southwest of Lake Villa, 6 miles northwest of Grayslake, 3% miles northwest of Ingleside, 1 fhile south of Grand Ave., 2 miles west of Hwy, 21, 1 mile east of Hwy. 69, on THURSDAY. JANUARY 2| at 1 o'clock I I M LUNCH WAGON 25 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK H O L S T E I N , GUERNSEY AND SHORTHORN COWS AND HEIFERS-- 1 Holstein heifer, 1st calf, with calf at side; 1 Holstein heifer, 1st calf, fresh 4 weeks, with ci|f at side^ 1 Guernsey heifer, 1st ealf, fresh 4 weeks, with cslf at side; 2 Holstein cows, springer, due to freshen in Feb.; 1 Holstein cow, recently fresh; 2 Guernsey cows, springers; 1 Holstein heifer, due with 1st calf ia June; 1 choice Shorthorn heifer, beef type. dne Apr. 5th; 1 Holstein heifer, 10 months old, vaccinated, open; 3 Holstein heifer calves. T. B. and Baags tested. PONY--Black pony, 8 yrs. old, sound, gentle. PTGS -- Chester White sow with 4 choice pigs, Chester White sow, duel early April; weir bred IDuroc Jersey sow, bred to Duroc boar of the Elgin ! fair. j FRED--80 ton baled, first cutting1 alfalfa; 4 ton baled mixed horse hay.1 5E MACHINERY -- New Idea 2-wheel EjE tractor spreader on rubber, excellent S S I c o n d i t i o n ; n e w M c D . m a n u r e spreader; wood wheel wagon: Stewart electric clippers; 4 roll Appleton shredder; McD. 6 ft mower; McD. 7 ft tractor disc; M-H hammer mill (like new); M-H. power corn sheller (like new.) j TRUCKS--1941 Int: 1% ton truck (good condition); Model "A" Ford track with platform body. j JHHtT J. GXCKHPt. Pn* \ Chandler and Ejfdl, Public AQctton Auctioneers Gt, Clerk Oar War Oatpat At the peak of the war effort, jays a Twentieth Century fund survey, the Ujoited States accounted for nearly 4S per cent of the arma" m ent output at all belligerent na- Antral ef Osier* In MSS men's oxfords were shown lor the Apt time in Bingham ton. N. T. They were made of light calfskin aMf retailed for $2.50 a pair. The ttoK owner who purchased top, pat on thun x> Uwt thqr selL . * cles were Mtodt* if 1 opm rmS ^ i i _coogea»«d MMfes. •, Metse : which have eMail * < aMftMMl , |]|Q have cnaeisil*'ai'JtStfnr 'MHwA I faunae*. Other statel hftf* a» mas- I fan urn limit but do have a Httkfl of j about 25 m.p.h. as the I allowed oo open n i «tates frrests may be I reckless- driving- at any speed! from , 8 to 90 m.pJi. r Subscribe for The Plaindealer _ Order your ra|!$r Plaindealer. v., • r.. * : v: NAGVS RESTAURANT U a. m. until 8 p.m. daily, includinf GL08ED THUR8DATB BUSINESS LUNCH, 65c--S«Tved from 11 ajn. to 2 pan. Abo • ' ' ' t BARBECUED RIB8--STEAKS--CHOPS CHICKEN-IN-THE-BASKET -- Come in and try our delicious waffles. Located al • t* •».. > I9S W. &ITKK8IDE DBlVi, tkHZHSV •i eOMI IN TOMY AM STtOU TMHTTM ttOM .. YOWSIIF ALL TNI MOMY IAVNM HI IHIIMM TO MIH Alia MBJ YOW WIN im AMMAYKM "Of fCii AN» MUTt. BAI WML m VM PAMILY WILL UUOY TMI bCUCtOVf MOOC SO ANS LIT HS HSU* YOS. uwrs umptino NaM Nashts „Nx2i 2l9 TMDMra»CAUK>«NIA WHOUKMNIL SassvMt Prists ...toScllf TrsWs Strft ....tIM TANOY--HAVOftPUl Htisx KstslMp „ lONACtSAMSma %2tl MIsb Nra ANN PASK PUM SrsMisn ... IOHACUT ™ IrssalMNM • NO. 1 K LOVSLY AS A SWKTHiART SWEETHEART SOAP t^SI* - MAKB EXTRA LIGHT 16AKSS • SPRY 3 ™$|" GETS CLOTHES WHITER SUPER SUDS 39* FRESH Off THE CO! NIBLETS CORN WTRA«CNTlf IVORY FLAKES nca. 39* SO PURE IT FLOATS IVORY SOAP 2^25e FOR A LOVELY COMPLEXION CAMAY 2*^21' TASTY AN6ELUS IOOL CELLO BAS f 12 COLOR pica. 41 OXYDOL "»-39e •cr YOUR CONTEST MANX AT YOUR ASP DREFT 33® •ET YOUR CONTEST BLANK AT YOUR ASP A TREAT FOR CHILDREN 3 "* 13* •»AK«U!T AND ORANM wrniTriiu., VINK KlfC IONA lANOURCOOnO t SSa'm WWl nun WUW CI 111! FOOD JANIPASnt. LASMStZI VdtMtav 2iu>tt* ^ WISCONSIN MNCH-CUMD SHAM* MN« PAHCTS FMSM.CW thsMarStMi NtatolMps CHHSIFOOO--OUICK MILTINO I4AIVB. tNIICHB W CM-O-Mt ^|9c WMts IrtMl.... 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