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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 14 Dec 1950, p. 11

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"'vi ' f#' /,%•>* igr W. •. Tuue» ,.. , •• <*• .. • • -• ®" -' •** • ' • ^. * J* > _t,« HLAfifDEALCR *W^iV:T mm / T 5 r* ; • - . % v " ' : •. '•••" • '• "•.• '• - • C? i<H» •wrt of tklng wont win any wars. Union tactics, he says. Is the real reason for the housing shortage and a major cause (or oar inflation. I found an old book in the office with a number of papers prepared by the U.S.D.A. in 1909 and 1910 Much emphasis put on hay production and the market grades of hay. Most hay was sold in those days for use in the cities. They were already lamenting the fact that farmers did' not blame their own poor results on their Last Sunday afternoon I w ies being -made. If anyons has Idea that morie actors have an own Inability to accept new ideas |sy Job. guess again. It's nerve eking and terrifically tedious. fTcan believe it now when I read or their stubborness about accepting them. :an reaa TTooddaayy iitt iiss nnoott ssoo mmuucehh tthhaatt Hit actors collapsing on the job. I afay more as it is the inability to Hubert and I started on our an- 'finance proper methods of farming. n^al report, which is supposed to in Dec. It. It's supposed to be 8 od for us to have to do it they I y. It kind of helps to r^riew i lat you have done and where j o a going Farmers have to file an income t x return which makes them do J biewhat of the same tiling- It's f od for anybody, but it's hard to 8 t at. Last week we had the annual h nquet for our Farm Bureau J irm Management service clients ii Too many start in on a shoe string when they should hire out to someone with the money. Many also spend all their money for a farm and then are unable to properly stock it and pay the cash cost of operating It, It takes sn investment of $100,- 000 or more today to own a farm and properly stock it, equip it, and pay the cost of operation. Such a set up in proper hands will make money. How can a fellow with less _ than $10,000 and limited ability exthe county 'These folks think P«<* to do it. Of course, there are many who will raise right up in their chair at this, but 1t still is the case. The recent tornado at Greenville came right across my garden MOTORISTS ASKED TO KEEP THEMSELVES. XMAS SPIRIT ALIVE s much of their records they hire a man to come around four times a year to help them with them. 1 ley not only have a chance to r• ', lewW tVhlleCiIrI ovw" n rI eCcvoVrl wdso and pr ro- * ^^ w *-* g »s, but the Farm Management. •P®1 according to a picture on the rflpnrt that comes out in June h lps them compare fhelr efficiency with other farmers of like Sice farms. ' New clients for 1951 include Henry Hartman, Woodstock: (Teorgf Rich. Alden: Melvin Moehlin*. Tlimtly: Howard Sparlln. Algonquin; ;?nd there seems to be two othorn whose names Don th«* fMdnian. has. This \nll inskr our total for the county about forty for 1951. Smith says his full roster of 211 clients in tlie counties covers is about full. As in snvlhlnc pIso n good man nmkes »lt the difference i" the world in ony urojoct. Smith is doinp an fxccl'ent job. which is shown by- the fact that, when he started two years a«ro the total meintHTship was 170. %t3|>enki»c of inflation, which wan th«* siihiect of Prof. H. C. M. Case of the Cullrgp of Agriculture at the ntpctinp: the otiic!* night, attended hv forty-six clients and their wives, one fa^mr-:- in thf» county bouirht a fa-iu for *10,000 in i«'nl '-milt an addition to the bpru 1" '"TiO. wb'c'i '-nst #10,000. Oiff P*'!.! lit" """ fflrm «>" about S4.000 nw* 1S40. tuint 1040 vs1n«»s IU* Raid falrn> JW)t- nre mounting at an nlnrm-* ing ri>tr. H" ?aid that f-oni 1037 onfor twelve years, the »*eeord of cereal rm» production was b-oken Seven tim«»K. 70 prr cent, of thin inerrapc, however, came from di« placement of horses by tractors (no oats or corn fed> and 30 per ce"nt from better se«d, fertilizers, etc. He sayp we iHll have, to tighten belt for a long time of war «ononiy. Iyonper hours and less, money. IK* said he has been watch* ing a building go up next to his office and what a sight to see. It costs 0 cents to set. a brick laid today and the brieve maker gets 2% cents for making them. This front of the Chicago Dally News. I came to Woodstock from there. OIRL KILLED A 15-year-old CMcago girl waa instantly killed and two companions seriously hurt when a car driven by Jack Weber. 15, Chicago, missed a curve near the Big Foot ffcach state park south of Lake fJeneya and crashed into a tree. The accident happened at 6:80 Sunday night of last week. The driver of the car suffered minor injuries and was held for Juvenile authorities in Qhlcago who have been looking for him on a truancy charge. Shirley Klatz. IB. daughter of M|r. and Mrs. Robert Klatz. 4304 N. CJentpal Parkway. Chicago, was instantly killed in the cranh when she was thrown clear of the car and ginned against a tree. Americans ••ere asked today to celebrate the year-end holidays by keeping themselves and the Christmas spirit alive this year. That plea launched the National Safety Council's Christinas safety campaign, in which ltl National organisations are cooperating. The campaign is aimed at reducing the increasing number of accidents throughout the nation. Special emphasis will be placed on traffic accidents, which have taken an upward swing this year. Traffic deaths for the first nine months of 1950 were up 11 per c^tat, and the council predicts that the traffic death toll for the year is virtually certain to reach 35,000, This would be the highest since 1941 and the only year since 1946 to show an Increase. "The Christmas - New Year's holiday season is the peak accident period of the year," said Ned H. Dearborn, president of the council,. "and traffic accidents present the most acute problem, Heavier travel and the festive spirit of the season always add to the normal Winter hazards of bad weather, slippery roads and added hours of darkness. "And more people will be traveling this year," he said. "Service men and women will be coming home on holiday leaves and some families will be traveling to military camps to spend the holidays with those who cannot come home. 'This Increased travel call# -tar extra caution on everybody's p4tt. If everyone will take a little tnlte time during the holiday Just enough to be careful driving on the highway or crusilhg streets, in recreational and hMhe activities--everyone Will be- assured of a much happier Christmas and New Year's. "l^on't let death take your holiday-- or anyone else's/' Mr. Dearborn urged. • Tire' chains will help prevent slay-rides when roads arin snowy and icy. the National Safety Council advises. Guard Christmas pleasure^ -by safety measures. • '• RELEASED Three Davenport, Iowa, men seised by state police on suspicion of plotting to hold up the Crystal Tip at Volo, were released after questioning by sheriffs police. Mrs. Rose Plehaty, owner of the tavern, said the men asked her questions which led her to believe they were planning to rob the place. The sheriffs office broadcast an alarm for the trio's apprehension. and they were nabbed by state police on Route 120 between Volo and McHenry. Turned over to the ^Lake county sheriff, the men were questioned and released when they proved they had no robbery motive. A giant land tortoise rambles freely about the grounds of Plantation house, resident* at the British governor of St Hetaaa, South Atlantic island of Napoleon's exile, 1815-1821. Said to be at least ITS years old. the tame turtle is called the only living link In the world with Nspoleon. f"«. . •W'---* Need rubber stamps7 Order • The Plalndealer. Subscribe for The Plalndealer Read the Want Adef LEO'S TAVERN ..'jr., •* % X- - ' • *»> . RINGWOOD, ILL FOHMEBLY M06EY DIN *! v, i Phone Richmond £HOP. -itfni Rain or shine, our taxi m*> vlee Is en call to the people of McHenry and snrroaadtnf commualty. We premise quick service la ceafartable Call a •Phone 723 . • • ' : BL Sicca WIWi xALlMARK dSRANDMA pom CardsB Come in end tee our llalww Grandma MODI Cards quaint whUsr wVilVI vTNSi rVCS^Vfl QIROnVSv MemoriM of Chmhuos. ftoxes of dtr HaKamrfc Cards to choose from in 4Mr fargor-lhon-ever w | l**J - n J >;• ' ^ I '$ f»r | Head tlr. Want Ads. BARNYARD PAVEMENTS * ore • Sanhary o Economical • O Labor Saving o Feed Swing 0 and o Latt a Ufotima Nth # t$ here tn 1 V y.*. vf %-i ., with READY-MIXED CONCRETE \bur first delighted glance tells you why the famed. * Society of Motion Picture Art Directors selected the new 1931 Packard as the^most benuiijul car of the year. And yet Packard's daring new beauty is only Chapter I in motordom's most exciting story? Breathtaking performance awaits you, too. The _ silent swiftness of new Packard Thunderbolt eamtm (Amcnea* highest-c^aapcessioo eights)- I with Packard's improved and still exclusive - Vltramatic Drive to give you America's mosf advanced traffic-and-highway responsiveness! ' Everywhere you look, this new 1951 Packard has the most of everything you'd like to have it! your next new car. Including precision-built quality that will keep it new for years to come! # Cook ia--see and drive this wonderful put£-- Jts more ihm TJOR dozens of otlier improvements aroohd the Cum, so * other material offers the servioe and economy of &re> safe, enduring concrete. If you are planning a new rat- £roof poultry house floor, sanitary dairy barn floor, a seeding floor or foundation--build it tht convenient, low cost way with Kio^ Minrf Concrete* ' Aak Your Contractor or Call Us. Amaritn'a Hp dtign-judging group-fhe focfefy of Motion Picture Art Directors--has ^fwardmd its coveted trophy to the new 1951 . Packard--"the car which embodies, the most advanced.concepts of automobile aytinffi , .Sm $* • • H fsdby # your Marts# Packard tMmrl •ss:w I^cHenry Scmd & Gravel Co. FkcnNcHMf |7j r ? •606 Fronl Stoat MCHMTT. I1L WEST McHENRY MOTORS • 1* ~ ; ASK TH€ MAN WHO OWNS ON6 - s , ^ j y.kk ROUTE 31 BOX $7 WEST McHENRY, ILLINOIS '<(^.11* .•»*!< ,if„ I I. II'-MHII' .. , ; wii.Him'i.1^ mi imii I,i i 'V- ~ t • . .f- . '. _ *a. ..... .. -i. . , .

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