McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Aug 1949, p. 10

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Trasaffi* fy-- • '..-p^f p, : jr. * - -,*u ; : 'V ' F? It (M recent fim involving K.imiiHurl««, one of which atoe students and injured , Others, tbe National Board oI flit tJMNrwriters is making avail- •fetefttoriea ot lire prevention and prevention spot announceto ell college radio stations. The announcements tell students Imt to prevent fires in dormitories and college buildings, and also give Instructions on how to escape safely in case of fire. of Chicago and Mrs. t- B. Whiting of Richmond were dinner guests Wednesday in the George Shepard home. Mtb. Emma Beatty and Mrs- Alice VanEvery and Mrs- Allen VanEvery were visitors in the RINGWOOD »••>! n n ii i m n i i H H i (by M*s. George Shepard) Mr». George Sh*p.rd Otan 'Col. «d Wllm.r :NoMujr. ed the Women's tire hundred club at her home Wednesday- A 1 o'clock dessert luncheon was served. Prizes were awarded to MVs, homes at Huntley Saturday Mrs. Nellie Blackman was an Elgin visitor Friday. Miss Marian Peet of Elgin spent VaMtewVMiteftHMt 1m Mwrtfc' OhMW to Uakt Sore mouth or contagious ecthyma found in feedlot lambs can be prevented by use of vaccina, re- Read the Want Ads. DRIVE THE . Com* M IMl Mask MUM 4r BLAKE MOTOR SALES Do you Need H. T. Trauger r ZJ Slwle, Mrs, George <*« Haberline. Morris-1 Mr- and Mrs Mrs- Elma Hawley of Morris^ ^ ' Arthur Lau have! enjoylng a tr|p on a I horn"' Sunday and was buried at ducted tour through tlite west. "M orr,i stown 'o n Wwotrftnnepsaddaayv. MMrrs.s I. ^ Mrs* Antone Weiser was called ChicagQ by the death of her, Hawley. wife of the late d jf th Mr Welger and 8on went ley was a former Ringwood resi ^ Tuesday evening to attend fuir. | n_»flP Rprtr entertained the eral services on Wednesday. i Mrs. Osca g Thursdav i Mr- and Mrs- H®nry MJarlowe and Sr i Pri«. hw™e '.mny of Huntley and o.,„ W.t- ? M'»rch M" WM"Ch •°d gueata°in ,tHc".y KEV Mercnanu ' Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas1 ! entertained the five hundred club • * Sunday with her' at their home Thursday evening. Sf„8IS" i n fjfrt i Prizes were awarded to M!rs. B. T. ,n a"f,*ter' Mr8' J' C Pearson» and BUHlerMrDd hLnd Mr. and Mrs. Vern Malsch of and ^rs 8 p Lake Geneva called on her par- T h ^ W S C S w i l l m e e t w i t h e n t 8> M r " a n d M r s C " L - H a r r i " !MJrs . DB . Tt. LButlLer TthLursdSay, AI:u;son. Saturday evening. g| ^ Agneg Jenckg «nd Mr. and _ . , ' „ - - on w Mrs. Tom Pettise and children are The Round-up vflu # b h.a h n od^ ,spending a couple of weeks in the i cream social on the Methodist; Jr. 6 stev * ho_. at T_ke church lawn Friday evening. The 1«,,?« wia proceeds went towards the build- • Mra. Lonnie Smith and I tag fund of the new church base-; gQng Frank and Sam and lmThe Wonder Lake Women's club ^^f- Dorothy- a»d M™" rTuz^s^ ® a , "evrceu"uifKe 'rheM" w.'. l,"o« oS1^, Wk»ilbru,re. ,Bie n^o"y "a"nhd ,fMamr inly" dof, KEl,k"-' ; Mranand Mrs. Frank Collins of J?™ ,and Mr and Mrs- William i Wilmette called on his mother, Wurtzinger and family attended a Mrs. Mabel Collins, Tuesday. Pic°^ n l^e ^„omf "f ^r; Mr. and Mrs. George Haberline and ^rs. Charles Smith at Crystal : Lake Sunday. ------------ : , M r . a n d M r s . J o e C a r n e y o f B e l l - - wood, and Mrs. Bill Negri of Chii cago spent the weekend in the Roy Neal home. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard were dinner guests of Mrs. Clara Foster at the v Hunter golf club at ; Richmond Sunday- In the after- ; noon, with Mrs. E. E. Whiting, they visited at Walworth, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Ardin Frisbie of ; Greenwood visited her parents, ! Mr- and Mrs. Clayton Harrison, Sunday- Mr. and Mrs- Leo Newlin spent 'from Wednesday until Sunday with j their daughter, Marjorie, in Chii cago. j Mrs. Seiger of Waukegan spent | Sunday in the William Pagni | home. I Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman, Jr., and son of Antioch and Mrand Mrs- Thomas Redmond of | Kenosha spent Sunday with Mrs. ' Nellie Blackman. < ' Mr. and Mrs. Webster Blackjman and children, Joan, Jimmie .and Leo, of Chicago are spending the week with his mother, Mrs. Nellie Blackman. j Mr. and Mk-s. George Shepard I spent Saturday afternoon in the Alan Ainger home at Hebron. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brennan, Mr. and Mrs. Bud Winters and iJohn Sanders attended the races at Belvidere Sunday. j Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Walkup and | Mr. and Mrs- Harold Stanek and daughter of Ridgefield were here Friday evening and attended the lice cream social on the church ilawn! i Mrs. Nellie Blackman attended I the funeral of Mrs. Fox at An- | tioch Mbnday. I Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Jr., is visjiting in the Phelps Saunders home 'at Sycamore. Mrs. Harry Andersdn-^nd Mrs. ,Leo Karls of Richmond visited their grandmother, Mrs. Jennie ! Bacon, Wednesday evening. , ' Percy Lenard of Lake Geneva was a dinner guest in tbe Jack Lenard home Sunday. i Mr. and Mrs-, Robert Shuetze and daughter, Ruth, of Milwaukee are visiting her father, Dr. William Hepburn. Mrs. Dora Cole of Richmond was a supper guest Saturday in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr., home. ~~ Mr. and Mrs. man and family, Mr- and Mfra. Jbhn Blackman,, Jr., and son, Iby. N*llie Blackman and Mra. Motile Harm spent Saturday at Twin Lakes. Dr. Hepburn was an Elgin visitor Friday. i v-- ^ Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kiske of ports Dr. A. W. D«er"> Rockford spent Sunday evening in' pathology and bacteriology cwpaiTthe Weldon Andreas home. I ment of the veterinary division or Mr- and Mrs. Mitchell Kane and ' Colorado A it M college. daughter, Nancy, attended the j. if the vaccine is given before ex- Lake County Fair at Libertyville poSure it is almost 100 per cent ef- Sunday. ; *u Mr. and Mtrs- Ralph Smith and son, Dick, of Chicago visited his parents, Mr, and Mrs. S. W. Smith, Saturday afternoon. They also fective in preventing sore mouth» If a few cases are observed in the lots it would be advisable to vaccinate immediately. Deem says. called in the Lonnie Smith home. Lambs contact the jjj Mr. and Mrs. William Pagni call-. transit or it may come as a result ed on relatives at Lake Geneva' of holdover in feedlots from one Tuesday evening. : year to another, says Deem, rne Frank Walters of New London, disease is caused by a virus and Iowa, and Miss Cera Walters of usually most lambs in the feedcrystal Lake spent Tuesday in the lot are affected, but a great many Louis Hawley home. f may have the disease in mild form Mr. and Mrs. B. T- Butler spent, and are not always noticed by the the weekend in the Herbert Far- j er or feeder. nam hqme at Morton HI. i t noticed gymptoms are Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Ajadreas^.4V|„ iatT,K.(, nn. «t the spent Sunday afternoon h fte Al- bhstet* vri&h Umbert Ebel home at Marengo. corner of the mouth, wWch even Mr. and Mrs. Frank Merges of tually rupture and hard scabs Evanston spent Wednesday eve ning in the Mrs. Ed Bauer home; Anthony Merges, who has been visiting in the Bauer home, re*- turned home with them. ly-;' WINDOW SHADES or VENETAIN BLINDS See our new line of removable slat and Bauflex Original Blinds and Tapes. Bonderued and galvanised Acme metal. Direct from factory. Sterling Window Shade & Venetian Blind Co. 5640 W. Division Street - Chicago, Illinois Phone Columbus 1-8743 Phone McHenry 651-M-l Fri. Eve., Sat. and Sim. free Estimates All Work Guaranteed One and Two Weeks Service AWNINGS Tarpaulins > • ? Canvas Goods -Large Selection of Material ORDER EARLY Specialising in Store and Residence Awiiings McHENRY AWNING CO. Phone McHenry 571-W-2 Thos. Thonneson, Prop. Risk of Otath Soil tff With Ris« in Auto S|MH When you speed the needle of an ^automobile speedometer, you are gambling with much higher stakes than when you spin a roulette wheel--because you bet your life! The chances of death in a speeding "automobile are being emphasized by the National Safety council in a nationwide program to reduce traffic deaths. The adage that the faster you go the harder you hit is proved by figures of the council which show that fatalities increase enormously as speed increases. If you have an injury accident at 45 m.p.h., the chances of someone being killed are one in 16, according to the council. At 55-m.p.h. the chances are one in 12. And at 65 m.p.h., the odds are one in six that someone will be killed. To drive 400 miles, you can gain a little more than one hour by increasing your constant speed from 55 m.p.h to 65 m.p.h., the council said. But to gain that one hour, you double the chance of someone being killed II you have an injury accident! form. The involvement is sufficient- ' ly severe that lambs won't eat well for two or three weeks and, there- ' fore, won't gain normally. j The virus causing sore mouth, ' points out Deem, doesn't kill | lambs, but other organisms get : into the ^ulcers on the mouth and i may be drawn into the lungs and cause pneumonia or be swallowed, j Also, internal ulcers develop in the i digestive tract and lead to death ol the laipbs. . Qaectim Explained It an iron ring of three feet outside diameter and 2.5 feet Inside diameter is heated, does the inside diameter increase, decrease or remain the same7 -It will increase, according to G.E. research laboratory icientists. Imagine a solid cylinder, three feet in diameter. When heated, the inner 2.5 feet does not pull Inwards nor press outwards on the rest, but it all expands together. Hence, even if the inner 2.5 feet is not there, the hole will increase in sise. ^ -,y.w |r,^.. Reports from over the nation !q- | dicate that small-game populations | in most sections are oh the up* ; awing of their periodic cycles, ac- I cording to the Wildlife Manage- 1 ment institute. John Muir loved to tinker machinery and might have inventor, but his love of and, the great outdoors led be an authority on forests, tains fend glaciers. Symptoms ef Poll# j The following are symptoms of ; infantile paralysis: headache, nau-1 sea or upset stomach, muscle sore- j ness or stiffness, and unexplained j fever. Should , polio strike in your family, call a doctor immediately.! Early diagnosis and prompt treat- J ment by qualified medical person- ; nel often prevent serious crippling, j Fear and anxiety should be held to j a minimum. A calm, confident at- j titude is conducive to health and, recovery. Parents should remem- j ber that of aU those stricken, 50 per cent or more recover complete- j ly, while another 25 per cent are: left-with only slight after-effects. | Sidewalks Foundations J.- M. STANGARONE CEMENT WORK Emerald Park - Phone 661-J-l - McHenry, fit 2 Cement Mixer For Rent Driveways, • .n^.- ' * "'v. ^ t> Headers ef Law Seeks A total of 59,807 readers--an alltime high--made use al 183.197 books in the collections of the law library in the library of congress during the last fiscal year, it • is stated in the annual report of the librarian of congress. The increase in readers was 9 per cent over the total number in the year preceding, but because of the unusually large increase in the use of the law library during fiscal year 1947, it reflects dso a V7 per cent rise in the annual number of readers and inquirers since June 30, 1946. Explonrs »f Himalaya* Bat Ran Spiny Babbler A new ftiecimen of Nepal's rare spiny babbler, the first obtained for science in • 106 years, has reached the United States as a prize of an American expedition returning from an extensive safari of exploration in that remote Himalayan kingdom. The trophy is historic, for this is the first thne the babbler was ever taken by a non-native, reports the National Geographic society, sponsor of the expedition with Yale university and the Smithsonian insti** tution. The bird was bagged in the highlands of western Nepal, 5,000 feet above the steaming tropical' valley of Karnali. There are in existence only four other specimens of the spiny babbler (Acanthoptila nepalensis). The youngest is 106 years old. Three of the specimens are in the British museum. The fourth is in the New York museum of natural history, where it was received in an exchange with the British museum. The ravages of time have dealt harshly with those original specimens, reports Dr. Dillon Ripley. Yale zoologist, and expedition leader, who shot the bird. Visiting the British museum en route home to compare his new prize with those taken a century ago, he .found the originals so deteriorated that they looked as if they might belong to a different species. '•' •'*.«* "• ' Fattier Marquette Father Marquette, a trained Jesuit ^ missionary, departed the ancient home of his ancestors at Laon, France, at the age of 29. Sailing tot Canada, he reached Quebec in ' mid-September, 1666. Within three weeks, he moved farther along the St„ Lawrence to Three Rivers. There, until April, 1668, he studied Algonquin, Montagnais, and other key languages of the Indian tribes. famed^-'iacobse^^i^^^ Tfor free demonstration or in need of repair ; ' :'-'"'-1pHOHE 4134 Hettermann Sinclair v'/;' Johnsburg v;; £* 'V f . . Trend at Building Contracts In an analysis of building con- j tracts issued by the Alexander Hamilton institute, based on F. W. Dodge corporation figures, it was shown that total building contracts awarded during the first four months amounted to 215,137.000 square feet this year as compared with 262,532,000 last year, a decrease of 18.1 per cent. There was a curtailment of 23.1 per cent in residential building and 11.8 per cent in non-residential building. In view of the showing to date, and the fact that basic conditions give little promise of improvement in the near future, there seems to be a good possibility that the total volume of building in 1949 will be £» smallest since 1945, " Gathering of Eggs Eggs must be protected dturing the summer months to protect egg quality, according to M. E. Jackson, extension poultry specialist at Kansas state college in Manhattan. Producers should gather eggs at' least twice a day and three times a day when possible. A cool base* ment, fruit cellar, or storm cellar makes an ideal holding and cooling room for eggs on the farm. Proper gathering and cooling of eggs will increase the quality of eggs marketed. Improper handling of eggs is one of the most expensive programs in poultry profits/' fti - - -- Complete line of L<ee's poultry medies at Wattles Drug Store, Me- Henry. 8-$f ^ 2,4,5-T. - -- Poison ivy plants have met their match in a cfcernical weed killer with The formidable name of 2,4,5- Trichlorophenoxyacetic acid, called 0,4,5-T for Order your robber stamps at The Plaindeaier. for only . . . $6.87 per month (No .Money Down . . 36 Months to Pay) We "Will Deliver to Your Home 10 Average Size All Extrnded Aluminum Combination Storm Windows and Screens. LOW COST ALL PICTURES CNIAA6CD AT NO EXTRA CHAR6E! .. ** WAOM STYLE e CAtr TO CICAU » AU, EXTRUDED ALUMINUM • PftECmON PIT • EAST TO CHANGE OVfe* e BUROtAJl mOOf • ATTRACTIVE APPEARANCE • SAW UT TO M% ON PUEL TWtoi PREt iiMMiir . . NO OBLIGATION. «f MM! Feather-Lite Telephone McHenry 578-M-l PER ROLL MWMr«K«mcrNB. l2U.fJlM69*-/6£.168* WATTLES DRUG STORE 515 Maui Street W McHenry f Phone 450 Gosh, how PORDTIRSIS" : ate catcninq on! >PPLLEE SSUURREE DDOO RREEAALLIIZZEE UNOnWw FPAAQR . J $0Rt>'s our FRONTT IN rrs FIELD!) "I hi m'l mm amythmg McHENRY SIGN SERVICE TRUCK LETTERING & WINDOW LETTERING SHOW CARDS OUTDOOR SIGN& H. REESE Fox Street Phone 440-R -m AUGUST FUR SALE OF 1950 FUR FASHIONS We have obtained a fascinating selection of the latest fashions at substantial savings, which we are passing on to our early purchasers. -• Y "i y • 1 WE •" *** ; Purdy did it all by telephone, naturally^ ^ ^ As she says: "Telephone service is ig useful to me it's worth more than thtf nickels a day it costs." YIttFHONt CQMMIll We now carry a complete line of Cloth Coats OTTO HEINZ FURRIER 4540 North Western r III Chicago, HI -- Phone Loi^Beach 1-6749 -- 619 Crescent St. Country Club Sub. McHenry Phone McHenry 491-J'. . Please phone Sundays! mMA-COU' SprimgtT ford'i Bnf wih ih^f Miootfi 'MID SMT "fcari 'MAGIC AIM'* ComUUommg It Mm ofciodf Oiwf Ford hot mom 'MAGIC ACTION thai art hily MIf tncrgizkigT? big 'MCTtME WMDOWST* V-* 95 'fcoTM' Sijir the wheeL. ry the -fav # ^EEL ^-.at y°"r TiNfr DEALER^ BUSS MOTOR SAL 531 MAIN ST. MeHZNKY, ILLINOIS^ '"'['jf m rAsaoH Ktmr cou met# is tk TASRKMI UI OF ik rui" _i-- i .

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