THE M'HENRY PLA1H0EALER Publ ®enry Published every Thursday at Mc- 111., by A. Howard Mosher. the day spent in interesting reminiscence. Relatives and friends attended from Amboy, DeKalb, Mundelein, and Kenosha and from the state of Minnesota. , Editor--Adele Froehlich (the postoffice at McHenry, 111., act of May 8, 1879. t)ne" Year .$2.50 Location Of tratk demonstration **Mch €DITORIAI Change Plastic The plastic the Ladies' Aid of Zion Luthevan church is sponsoring will be held on Aug. 23 in the church basement. There, will be entertainment and re- McNEIL-TAYLOR VOWS EXdHANOED ^ LAST SATURDAY J J Of interest to her many friends in this community was the marrihge last Saturday of Miss Doris McNeil, { daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James T. I McNeil of "Shady Oaks Farm," between McHenry and Woodstock, and I Mr. John T. Taylor, son of Mr. and StHvhtf For Class ASK OOISXOTIOH 07 XXOKSSIVX SPKKD ONKIVKBKOAD v; -• •ir i f : : •y .there is no - . , i Mrs. George Taylor of Country Club freshments. The public ^smyited and j Road Woodstock. Rev. Fr. Joseph ! i Egan officiated at the service, which was performed in the rectory of St. Mary's church.. The attractive bride was lovely in ! a gown of white slipper satin, with Stilling Infant Christened Sunday The infant daughter of Mr. and charge. | Lady Foresters I To Visit Conveii- St. Clara's Court, "Catholic Order ^ ^ ^ ^ of Foresters, will visit the convent in j bodice and sweeper trttin. Milwaukee, Wis., on August j deep neckline of net was edged in a1 Those desiring to>take the trip sjquld , shirred coilar of satin with a long I m or before , j row of satin covered buttons in back. The group will leave at 10.45 Her fingertip veil was held in place on Thursday. ^ ^ # j by a satin, cap topped with patin _ . | loops, and she carried a bouquet of Kernice Hiller . I white roses centered with an orchid. Guest at bnower 1 Attending Miss McNeil was a close Several items of interest came up for discussion at the last meeting of the McHenry County board of supervisors. .. ^ A statement from the Oakmount i®rAB8ENAULTPheasant Guild that the speed law ' jis being abused on the- river road VIM BISHOP flipped the coin at1 southeast of McHenry was made, J the newsboy and got the same j ai°"£ w.^ .* re<*SSlfor correction reply he always got. "Thanks a lot, Mister. of the situation. The board voted I erect speed limit signs and to re m7.._Aithe matter to the sheriff's office : £ sure looking good tonight. Must,further actjon have had a good day at the office.") The board approved the request A good day at the office! Jim 0f the McHenry county Home 'Bureau reflected that it had been a long , for an appropriation for next year of time since it had j $600. That bureau's report disclosed been a good day at; that there were forty-two 4-H clubs his office. He with 483" members last year, six knew he was on i Rural Youth clubs with 75 members, the ropes, that the,You«* Married groups with hoss was onlv s,xty members and thirty-one Home . . , # ® J*®® (Bureau units with 963 members. The looking for a. good excuse to fire report sh0wed that 1,680 people took ' rTc^Ml"riunSliTuai tSe Rinsed hall, «ith|! wore a large picture hat and carried V?. •« ** . 5 T - » * « » Evilyn Diedrich and Leo J. Stilling ' in-ooTA^ed as "est man?' acting as sponsors. * ! Pinocklt Club close of the evening tasty refresh- 1 ments were served.,, Miss Hiller was [the recipient of a variety of lovely ••A-. At Huemann Home*.',' .. . »jfts • Miss Rose Huemanft ^l^itlned g Gn Wednesday, Aug. 25, she will •members of the East River - become the bride of Harold Freund of Pinochle club at her _ home McHenry, the wedding to take place -Thursday afternoon. Prizes were ii at Johnsburg. merited by Mrs. Albert Vales, Mrs. B Juergens, Miss Huemann and Br#thers. ; - • Mrs. George Bohr. Mrs. Diet* Sunday will be hostess to thfe club when it The infants 0f two brothers were meets on Aug. - 26. christened last Sunday at St. John's '• going eli right most of tb* time, end even when they eren't, I know they'll be getting better in e dsy or i«. Ever since I got this comer, I've Unostly bed The bride's mother was attired in winterberry red, with black accessor, and her corsage was of white gladioli. The groom's mother chose peacock blue, with black accessories, her corsage being of white fc^rnAtions. ^ A wedding breakfast was served at ' good dJys, to I figure I ought to be nice the Villa Hotel Resort at Pistakee j to the people that moke them thst wsy." Bay for the wedding party and for, ,tWhy ig thi8 a good corner 80n?" Fr. Egan and Fr. Eipers. In the <. „ii ^.^i. ' »r^:r,„ afternoon between 2 and 5 o'clock! , a" ^ ^P1* ^0rTVn« a reception was held at "Shady Oaks" out of thes,e buildings mostly buy , . T , , . A T for 125 guests, and in the evening ai POP®*"*. «nd when you buy papers, church, Johnsburg, by Rev Fr. A. J. buffet su p€r wag gerved to the 1 make money. But even if you peyu were Yvonne Marie, I recePtion guests from a Uble decosame cheerful thank you every Henry county alone'last year. time he bought a paper at this spot. | It was announced that work on "Hey, son. What are you always (the Alden-Woodstock road, one of so cheerful about?" j the most important farm roads in the "Why not be cheerfnl, MisterP* i county, is progressing nicely, the road boy esked seriously. "Seems like things - being almost completed. Kimanis Sp e a k e r . . . . 't h e l ittle daughter of Mr. and Mrsr.) r e .c 5e p t i .o n g.u e.s t s^ i r uam « w uhka xiutwif nul- Roland McCannon, McHenry county 1 Vincent Tonyan, and Bernard John, i ™J?. ^ superintendent of schools, was guest so„ of Mr and Mrs. Clarence Ton- hHHp nnH speaker before members of the Ki- van Sponsors for Yvonne were Paul .. . . .... f .. wanis club at their meetine on Tues- Wnrt?inirar whi1»; .ea .re8 of the attractive table, didn't buy papers, I still like to look at all of you because you look ersonah Mr. and MrB. Lyle Anderson and family visited relatives in Nebraska last week. Mrs. Frank Kempfer and son of Medford, Okla., are spending a few weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vales. Sister Maria Gratia (Marion Conlike class. I want to be class some way) and a companion, Sister Cleday and come out of a building (mentine, having returned to Chicago ir meeting Toiivan^'and Nancy Wurtzinger, while1„tn*. "^*£"1? "-If' ,IiIIkTeA that* TTkhnait"as cause enough t4oA , allffft eArT vVilfslilftliHnOg rVeAllaatiiiUvAesa iimn itkhii«s •v«i! - day evening^ Aug. 17.^ Well versed Bernard's sponsor^were Jerome Ton-j^^h'i <T ^r-™ ^ cinity. During their visit a family IY MATTERS YOUR MONf, FIRST QN PAY v{ '•( - * if Z o s 0 • •> 1 EVERY dollar you put in your bank account today will buy more ot the things you'll want when prices drop again. Start your account here and keep it growing. McHENRY STATE BANK Member Federal Reserve Syste* VI -Member Federal Deposit Insarar.ee Corporation < * iY MATTERS . YOUR MON** RETURN FROM TOUR Mr. and Mrs. Frank Diedrich on school affairs in the county, his yan an(j Barbara Diedrich. talk on "Federal and State Aid for Following the christening, The "bride and groom departed on honevmoon trin intn Northern' to be clan?' 'I guess you're right, kid,' said Kindness to Pets Means f j , Safety During "Dog Days" I daughter, Patsy, returned . gathering was held at the James! When a dog ceases to be man's (from a motor trip to various Doherty home, with the following in best friend he s crazy with the heat.: throughout the West. A very "Slower Honors- -Week's Bride Mr anA Mrs uPon their return they will reside at! again of his own situation. Things 1 highli^hta Mrs. Clarence Whiting 'o? Elgin!that summer days are "dog days",of the tour. Miss Adeline Becker . . . - . | h ® d n t been too good since the new spAennft 1l oaosft twireAenlkr visiting VM* c_THT enry aQ«"ld/I khaeoaft.-/ctr*aaz*ead^ vptieitfsa may suddenly 1 comp--a niedJ it.h1 e TDl!i e_ Jd..r?i c_1h s on Mice TW,r<f MrNpil who last Satur- Mr and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and son, ^ lhe bride a graduate of-,Mam supervisor took over. Jim had relatives. land viciously turn on their masters, vacation. dav Lb ecame .tLhe. Ub_ri:dje' of JToAVhnIII TTaoy„lionrr Sam, and Catherine FPrroenunnHd , MMrr . aann/d1 T*o"w^n"sh'Pip ,™hig»hn school in Des Plames,i1 tthhoouugghhtt hhee wwaass iinn lliinnee ffoorr tthhaatt jjoobb.. II MMrr. aanndd MMrrss.. MMiilleess PPeennkkaavvaa aanndd __ »®vv wwaayy oof/ ssuuggggeessttiioonn,, tthhee AAcccciiddeenntt * of Woodstock was guest of honor Mrs. Vincent Tonyan and Wanda I^e,; J^e Umvemty of Texas when he hadn't been promoted, it daughter, Barbara, of Fox River j Prevention Department. Association; SEPTEMBER GARDEN SHOW • aOt T.a pre-nuptial shower vh. eld on Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Tonyain», nMmr. .oufufltwe oVf1 T^h e°o dorr^H amer TWroomjJ i ahbaodu t hhuirst ' johba.d mad# him bitter1 'Albvert TVales ?hoUmned.a y «ue8t8 in the points ou^t fthwat the kindest DetiurT hje_ a. Bd1-U •V_ alley Garden club o%f Thursday evening at the home of and Mrs. William Kreutzer, an aunt bride-to-be was the manv lovely gifts, * Frisby Family Held RennioB ..X n..u Mrs. Bernard Tonyan, Jerome 'rf St^ M arv'/^hl about his job. Albert Vales home. ;points out.that the kindest pet Wood8tock U holding its second of and Paul, all of Ringwood; Mr. and ®f. st n *fary s high ripHEN h# thought of the news- Howard of Chicago ownei; the safest The man who annual flower sh * t th ?t. Mrs. William Wurtzinger and] SfeJ' tp' 1l lSv on the corner WonderTf and Mr8' Paul. ?*sper 01 Woodstock sees to it that his dog or cat has s 0n Bull VaSJ o,^ Western Illinois Teachers college. He Doy on tne corner, wonder if were recent visitors in the home of P,enty of fresh water and air, and RoadSaturciav Sent 11 from Ita he was ever bitter. He couldn't be Mrs. Edith Hayes. jWho keeps the animal's heavy fur 18 d m Miw Jaw Oufcbi ^resido^L 1"! Wa/ h* al^y8l >«. Anna Legal of Crystal Lake ?Tpe,l ^urin?. ?e is not; an5' M„. Go S r S do J n ^ acted cheerful towards everybody, visited her aunt Mn Fr«»H Kam only being a kind master but is pre- /.Kaivtvum «n «rw» • • • * What did he have to be cheerful hoTz on ThursdaV ™'he form f V n en"ng disast?r^ ^ about? Just a youngster and sell- anxiously awaiting the arrival of her y and nelghbors" tiie groom, on north Green street. and Western Twenty-five guests were present to! daughters, Nancy, Roxy Ann and • V pnirii0vpH hv enjov bunco, with a tasty lunch Mary Ellen, of Woodstock; and Mr. unjte<i Gas comDanv served at the close of the^ Pfrty.^ The: ajd^rs. Raymond Freund and family Out-of-town guests' present at the lieg Wee stern recipient of of Spring Grove. reception were Mr. and Mrs. James BLUE RIBBQN WINNER ! Bdie and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Tapp Miss Betty Ann Stilling of the | ^ Madison, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. eut k Mn win Johnsburg J's 4-H club was a blue, Arthur Walsh, Miss Edna Cassidy, iForty-eigfct members, of the Frisby [ibbo"„win"®r for her u SP?^ skirt at Sloan oV B^loit Wis Thnm««a v? family from Rockford Mareniro the 4"H sty,e revue held last wee* £l0.an of Beloit, Wis., Thomas Mc- •Elgin; Park Ridge FSx 'Lake Wa^ i" .Woodstock Her name was not s Juw of j™™"*. Wis. Mr and conda, Crystal Lake and McHenry at- i Lnc,uded in the lists turned into the Kra.me.r' Mr. and Mrs. A. D. tended the reunion held last Sunday (Wamdealer office, at the Harold 'Bacon home at Crystal Lake. Dinner and supper were (served on the lawn, with the interim .spent in swimming, boating and visiting. Mrs. Mollie Givens of McHenry was the oldest member of the family present, and little Mary Lou Courier, 5 weeks old, of Marengo, the youngest. Those from here who attended be- Irtah WolfhotHM! Irish' wolfhounds are the dogs that can be found. They are said to have li :ked elephants. Making Farms Safer Piles of trash, discarded machinery Dabbertt and daughter, Althea, Mr. ; and Mn. Ray Veitch, and Fred Zie- ! man of Park Ridge, Mr. and Mrs. . „ . [ Edward Crofoot Sr., and Mr. and tallest Mrs. Edward Crofoot Jr., of Arlington Heights; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Busse of Mt. Prospect; Mi*, and Mrs. William Jett of Lombard; Mn and Mrs. George Edi and family; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Kosrnan, Mr* and Mrs. Eric Moe, Gene Blume, and PF?":chairman, urge all who are interested nimseil, nis • jn gardens and flowers to exhibit. mg papers on a corner. Frorp the son, Robert, and his bride from looks of his clothes, he wasn't from Berlin, German, where he has been even a middle class family. What serving with the army. was that he said, all the people that Mrs. Walter Carey and daughter, bought his papers look like class. ^®ncy> Anna PJialin, Mrs. He wants-to be class himself some- Thomas Doherty and Miss Evelyn day. "Just wanting to be class is Ca«„y J ir" BIRTHS Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Buchert IN MEMORIAM in loving memory of my beloved wile, Margaret and children. *14 JOHN E. FREUND. CARD OF THANKS In this manner we wish to express enough to make vou cheerful" Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kamholtz and announce the birth of a daughter lour sincere thanks to friends* and When h. ,0, home. hi. wif. met Do"^, S ThlS "SLMllI:' * b°»,>iUI » Au* • neighbors for floral offerings, spirit* him at the door. Frank sides Mrs Givens were Mrs Nellie °r ***** ot machlne8 and cluttered Miss Faye Jordon, of Chicago; Mi Bacon, Miss Ann Frisby/the" Harold buI1^f «e all potential causes of and Mrs James McGuire, Mr. and Phalin and Alfons Adams families. accldents that mav ^"ouslv mmre Mrs guests, Mrs. 10. j ual bouquets, cards of spympathy and ,,T. .., , . „ Kempfer and son, Albert,! A son was born on Aug. 14 at the 1 the many other kindnesses offered Mt Jim, its good to see you. How were Chicago visitors on (Friday. 1 Woodstock hospital to Mr. and Mrs. owr-bereavement. - ~ 1MR. & MRS. BEN FREUND AND FAMILY. blSL & MRS. RALPH JUSTEN k AND FAMILY. . w day. did things go at the office today?" son, BobbyT of Chicago visited his Edward Hogan' "Just so-so" parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kam- Mr. and Mrs. Edmund May of "Again? 'Well, they'll improve, holtz, one day last week. ,West McHenry are the parents of a Joe W iser Family Reunion ~ Mr. and Mrs. and members of their large family met twice last week at family re- i unions, the first held in two years.4 The get-togethers marked the third such reunion in the forty-five years of married life for the Wisers accidents that may seriously injure ;Mrs- Francis McGuire, Miss Hazefc a member of the family or a farm • Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wagner worker. (Jetting rid of these accident ?, "*r- Mrs. Eugene Shepard ot hazards will make the farm both saf- n ^rvard; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mcer and a more efficient place to work. ? .... e r®n» an„ man/ friends and relatives from Woodstock, McHenry and Wonder Lake. Australian Dingo •Hie dingo--a dog that does not Trestic-Walsh Nuptials bark-lives in the forests of Austral- In Harrington on Aug. 7 ia. The dingo, however, howls like a Mr. and Mrs. Wiser are the proud wolf. This dog preys on sheep and parents of eleven living children, one other animals. After it has been cap- *uAnnoui?cement has been made of being deceased. The eleven who met tured and tamed, the dingo often ^ J « St' ^"m,8 b - ' r k c t h e r ^ iPark, Sister Edinia, Princeton, Wis., bec<>me• a moBt Frank TVestik of that city, and Mr. Helen Brown, Tuscon, Ariz., Sister • i iam^8 Walsh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lucas, West Allis, Wis., Laura Phan-j * •" ?a^rtley Walsh of McHenry. The "nenstill, McHenry, Joseph Wiser, Jr.,| Use el Oil Stains jj . Thane performed the Volo, Edward Wiser, Wauconda. I #*n a».hi. mm nr.--a Af m <wtin» ni_ double ring service. James Wiser, Volo, Rosemary Justen,! m t H d 0ii^!^Lntinii or bowl# .Mij8 ?a^y Phitt o{ °ak Park, a Fort Benning, Ga., and Lorraine ^ _ I fnend of the bride, acted as maid of Bradley Volo? i alne, are considered the easiest to ap- honon while Frank Trestik, Jr., On Tuesday evening of last week and are highly satisfactory tor I servea 'as best man. dinner was served at the Wiser home furniture finishing. They are trans* A wedding reception' and luncheon at which only the parents and eleven parent, clear and bright. The wood' for thirty-five guests followed the children were present. On Sun-; should first be sanded with the grain, 1 ceremony at the Trestik home. The <!ay, Aug, 15, the entire family; not across. The brush Is dipped about £0UPle ,eft later in the day for a gathered at the home, with buffet an inch deep In* the stain, then wip- honeymoon trip in Wisconsin. e_d .o n the edge. of th.e conta,i ner. The,' poJsJitfifo;„nn fin™ ea»nn ;in'9s8u raJrnecset iko ffihcaes ina stain is spread evenly. Wiping, soon Chicai?0, her husband, who is an after application of the stain, makes army veteran with service in the a lighter color and shows more of. the i African campaign, is an electrician grain. ., ! at Marshall Shield's in Chicago. MANY FROM MCHKNRY luncheon being served at noon and How did you get along with the supervisor?" "Same as usual." The next night Jim stopped at the Mrs. LeRoy Wingate and family of daughter, born on Aug. 14 at the. If Crystal Lake spent a recent day with j Woodstock hospital.. ^ her sister, Mrs. Holland Ensign. j___ j Henry Buch attended, the AFT same corner to pick up his paper. American Soap Box Derby held in A new boy was there. Jim flipped Ar£°n' Sl0'Jast PARISH OUTING Rev. Fr. A. J. Neidert of St. John's! Contour Fanning Contour farming permits water to , - u t u u - i i x u x i . s i n k i n t o t h e s o i l a t , o r v e r y n e a r , Mr. and Mrs. Walter Patzke of Pf"8" «£C«L« «fS th« "P01 where it falls, for enp use. Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur a[tar **>?* and |,rl sogers of the Patzke of Elgin were weekend visitors ch"rch °n Jhu"f,ay' ^'3 ^ a"! in the home of Mrs. Augusta Patzke. b® held at Sacred He»rt _ Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lawrence of i Mission Seminary, Geneva. Park Ridge spent the weekend with her motheV, Mrs^MoUie Givens Mr" BfcHenry Veterans' Blood , Harold Phalin and daughters accom- Type List Soon Available panied them home on Sunday even-1 | in^the"Lawence^home" * feW dayS Recently a member of a veteran's Fred Svoboda, Jr. ' has returned V®?t "wSd hM.U=ty^rIilin0',• Wh«re S«ddrP° W. "LSSt he took a summer course. were holdin^ their regular meeting j Complete line of remedies at Wattles I Henry. sbe livestock g Store, Me- 8-tf GARDEN and Mr. and Mrs. Jack ^ Phelan and and several volunteered donations, I If^DDV CI family of Chicago visited her parents, an act which was largely responsible MVyDD T »• L f"!., Althoffs, on Sunday, for the recovery of the party who. FRIDAY, AUGUST 90 The newsboy: "Why net be cheerfnl, Mister?'* *»u j «7 j , v *•«. Richard Ward, who has been at- wa8 j|i. i tend summer school at Purdue Uni-; This little incident has resulted in | versity, Ind., returned home last a listing which will soon be available! week until the opening of the fall in the V.F.W. clubhouse of the types | te"P- . of blood of each of that organisa-j Thursday visitors in the -Albert; tion's members. In emergency, do- Vales home were Mr. and Mrs. nations will be available to any; MeHENRY GRADE SCHOOL Fred Simon and daughters, Kathleen veteran or to any member of Mil GYMNASIUM » and Barbara, and Mr. and Mrs.1 familv. William Vales of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Svoboda, Sr., at •m111 i i i i i i u n i i mn i t 1•: A UW Cv. Tx Ix O l "" ILLmoAI8R ES TAATTTEEM rDjIuHEO Henry A. Freeman and Eugene Fredrick, Auctioneers Many folks in McHenry and the surroudning area have already at- TK- A , . . . .. , . or ar« planning to attend, the The undersigned having decided to Illinois State Fair at Springfield discontinue farming and attend which opened last Friday. Premiums .. school, will sell at Public Auction totaling more than $297,000 will be •' x,n.the^farm known as the Wayne awarded to winners among 50.000 .. Nolan farm, located 5 miles East of entries in the largest state fair in Harvard, 111., or 1 mile West of {Illinois history. J Alden, 111., on Highway 173, on 1 FRIDAY, AUGUST 27 1948, commencing at 1 P. M., Daylight Saving Time 26 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK * 21 MILK COWS--6 Springers, 7 fresh, balance milking good. 1 Stock Bull, 2 Heifer calves, S mum. old. Team of Sorrel Work Horses, 8 and 9 years old. FARM MACHINERY -- Oliver 60 tractor, with cultivator, 1946 model; [ F-20 'Farmall tractor, with cultivator; McCormick 12 inch tractor plow, 7 ft. j McCormick tractor disc, McCormick , four section steel beam, new; Lindsay j four section steel beam, 8 ft. grain I drill with grass seeder, corn planter jWith fertilizer attachment^ John j Deere side delivery rake, John Deere | 7 ft. mower with extra sickles, horse ! cultivator, grain binder, McCormick corn-grain binder, Gehl C-40 silo fil UNEXCELLED !: SERVICE «. Depend on our unexcelled 11 service to bring you the j; greatest measure of con- ? s o l a t i o n • ' in t i m e of trouble. The confidence placed in our service is the result of professional ^ competence, years of experience, and a devoted I' attention to your problems. When a loved one ? Iler' n®w' 40 P'Pet rubber tired A; i• s tJ.a 1k en, lIeXt ue ma1k e ?th, e •A•l'w agon W-•it h •r ack, 2 st-eel wheel 11 road easier for you. : Jacob Justen Sons FUNERAL DIRECTORS Fanerial Home McHenry 103-R Cor. Ila^ McHenry • -»• • i n m i n i i i m i f I H 3 wagons, wheelbarrow, and all small tools on farm. 1934 Chevrolet Tddoor Sedan, good condition. Usual Illinois Farm Auction Terms. RICHARD BRADY FARM AUCTION SERVICE, Inc. "Auctions That Pay Are Managed the Farm Service Way** Henry A. Freeman, District Representative, Phone 122, Hcfcroo, 111. R. D. Keefe, Lake Geneva, Wk., Phone 977, Cashier. Ten new cattle bams have been erected and sidewalks have been completed to take care of the crowds of people and record^number of exhibits this year, according to Arnold Benson, state director of agriculture. Horse racing, automobile races, concessions and other attractions will help amuse spectators. More than a million dollars has been spent to ready the fair grounds for the event, which will continue through August An estimated 8,000 entries in the poultry show will make it the Biggest in the history of the state/ fair. Spectators will be able to enjoy the cattle exhibits and munch their hamburgers in comfort for the grounds have been sprayed thoroughly with DDT to eliminate flies and other insect pests. Among other entries there will be 641 beef cattle, 174 dual purpose cattle, 695 dairy cattle, 164 goats, 282 heavy draft horses and 681 light horses. There will also be 1,196 sheep and 3,424 hogs in the contest for top honors. Effective Weed Killer Chemical known as 2, 4-D has become our most Important chemical herbicide. It haa already changed the farmer's method of dealing with 2 to S p. wk. 7 to 19 p. a. FLOWER AND STYLE SHOW 4 and 8 p. m. the coin and the boy snapped out 'spent last week in St. Louis, Mo., with "Watch it. Mister. I got an where they saw Capt. Menke's Sh6w armful of papers here." wLfi.iT"™ home they VI8lted m •w..r.-, the other toff ^ , Sr m'.4t R«i., O. P.. of F.irasked. . bault, Minn., and Sister Alcium of weeds. It is highly selective; doe* ' Aw, I don't know. Hes got him- ;Anaconda, Mont., have been spend-' not kill all plants, and is most efself another job, says he's getting 1 ing a few days with the former's' fective, generally on broad-leaf ones. class somewhere. He was a jerk. • sister, Mrs. LeRoy Conway. I This enables one to kill weeds in anyway." | Edward, Dorothy and Anna Kno* ( lawns or pastures, also in certain Refreshments -- A jerk," thoesgbt Jim, "s hoy' tbst, and Mrs. Mary McCabe pf Chicago ^fold arops without hurting grass or • • __ _ m I . > i m I U inn If _ O.. * WW No admission charge Entertainment wanted cists. Ho own thought I bod | visited Miss Genevieve Knox on Sun class. He figured you could he cheerful < ^ay. Later in the day they called * mmt -h.-A In the Ray McCarthy home in ^'iyo^^'^*togHnshesd.lCtyBt&l ^ Edward Knox re- Now he's gone up smother runl- mained here for a longer visit. As he opened the door when he j Miss Martha Stoffel has returned got home, he noticed for the first to Washington, D. C., after spending time that his wife had a worried a few weeks with her parents, Mr. Mgi Galvaai (1787-17M) Lulgl Galvani was an Italian physician who experimented with frog legs in 1780. He discovered what he termed animal electricity. Some thought he had discovered the mystery of life. What he actually discovered waa the revelation that electricity Is a current, that It flows. look when she came to greet him. He looked at her anxious face. "Things went fine today, honey, Just fine," he said firmly. "You know, I think that new supervisor is all right. Maybe he and I are going to get along. There's a new position coming up in tho metropolitan department, and a recommendation from him would help mo a lot towards getting it." "Jim, thafs good news, I'm ao happy, dear. I knew you'd keep trying to get ahead." "It isn't getting ahead, darling, it's trying to bo daisy. That's the thing that makes you cheerfnl, ]ust wanting to bo classy," and he grinned down at the startled eyes of his wife. s«i--«i is CMe of The kingdoms of Ugnrtt--whleh was destroyed by fin and disappeared some 13 mutinies bafbre the beginning of the Christian era--produced the oldest known Semitic literature from the Mediterranean segion of the Near Bast, preceding about 1,000 years the floarlsh of the Old Testament writings. It was located adjacent to Palestine and Phoenicia, in what Is now northern Syria, on the ooast of the Mediterranean opposite Cyprus. Toni Permanent Wave Kits, $1.26 and $2.00. Wattles Drug Store. 36-tf and Mrs. John Stoffel. Ilene Bassett has returned a£|er a vacation spent with tier coubin, Carol Lee Vogel, in Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mitchell and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hiatt of Waukegan visited Mrs. Zena Bacon on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Bauer have returned to their home in New York after spending a vacation at Woodlawn Park, McHenry. Miss Bea Burghler has returned from a trip which she took into upper Michigan with her brother and sister from Indiana. . Miss Burghler is office manager for McHenry, Mills. Mrs. Robert Anderson and daughters, Chrystal, Karen and Pam, of Chicago are visiting this week in the home of her father, Robert Vogt. Molasses Vs. Buttermilk Poultry rations containing 10 or 19 per cent blackstrap molasses should not have a high buttermilk content. Such rations are too laxative for poultry. However, finishing rations containing 8 per cent dried buttermilk and 7 per cent cottonseed meal and molasses produce good results, according to T-^iislana State university. Battery grown leghorn broilers made gains ranging from 26 per cent to' 47 per cent in .twp weeks when fed such rations. crops. Subscribe for The Plaindealer Bake Sale Need Rubber Stamps ? Order at The Plaindealer. ICE CREAM FLAVORS FOR AUGUST REAL PEACH TOASTED HAZELNUT * COCOA NUT-PINEAPPLE VANILLA NEAPOLITAN BOLGER'S DRUG STORE PHONE W McHKNRY « * . ^J.„ !