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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Nov 1953, p. 12

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^ ^ ^ »0m * j v. •$?; 1 .f^,vl >ag« 1 1 v,'i liiiiiinii' f^"i ^ *- *' 2 <• ': iiliiiilli «K *ii)"BK ' f- *~mg* wdi series of contests wj hope wBt 1 | continue. Keep posted as to the j next schools to compete. J Another important date to re« | ---- ! member is Saturday, the twenty- j Congratulations to both the J first. That's this week. This will I winners and the participants in I be inttistkn <»y f»r" quite a few) our amateur hour and spelling; new members. Initiation will I bee held at the lodge over the | start at 8 p.m. and entertain-! Weekend. Saturday evening' saw merit for both the men and la-j A fine array of talent perforin- j (jy friends will start at approxilng. Selecting a winner was very i mately 9. If you have signed up j hard as all acts were, that geod. f and haven't as yet been initiated Lois May was th^^ first place j be sure to .show up for this winner, second rfrffi*' went to' night. Darlene Schaefer arid'third went J Sunday will be kiddos day ato Dennis and Ruth Reg-ner., The j g£jn at the lodge, when we have other performers were Dot Mil-1 a free movie. It-will start at 2 ler,. Jimmy Bykowski, Cai l Kazu-1 ,p ni The -movie is "The Milkb «l, Sandra ,Bykowski.--^heiyl I 1--featuring jtmmy Durante Vacula, Deanna Oonk. Margie j ' Donald O'Connor;j»lso car- Hafvlatka, Barbara Seeber «nd toon.' ^ersta<V .. •- Saturday.- the twenty-eighth, Melvin Lee Round. Lake; ig 0U1. social. and square Park pleased the ; audience.with Tm we kno>- will be iiorordion selections. The spelling bee saw St. Patrick school of McHenry win over ' the Ringwood school. This also was a very close contest. ,Ann Peschke, Carol Stritar, Kathleen diffeterit:'an^^pTenty of ftin,, :;,\ «. ,\V< >MEN OF THE MOOSE . Due to an error by the women of the Moose in their items last Hyatt. Sandra Nellis. Mike Low Thursday, ai correction should be and Lane Windheim represented j made in our initiation class as St. Patrick while, Larry Fezelj |follows: Marie Havlatka, Rita Alice Ortlieb, Mary Pari'. Dean-1 Nellis, Lorraine Nellis, Linda na Oonk, Jay Walkington and ! Emerson, Marjorie Hess. Berniee Patsy Hogan represented Ring- I Reid, Rose Frisa and Anne wood. This was the first in a Kuczkowski. Sony. FARM SERVICE WAY AUCTION HeMy Freeman and Eugene Frederick, Auctioneers Having decided to discontinue dairying, the undersigned will sell at Public Auction on the,farm located 2 miles Northeast of Hebron, 111.. o » * 4 m i l e E a s t o f H e b r o n o n H i g h w a y 1 7 3 t h e n N o r t h 1 m i l e s , second farm oh Blacktop Road, or 5 miles Southwest of Genoa City, Wis., on TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 24 -- 1958. Sale to start at l'I:SO p.m. * ,41 HEAD OF HOLSTEIN CATTLE irWilntliig of 20 Second ("alf Heifers, fresh or close spi'lBpfW; 14 to freshen before February; 1 First Calf lleifers, bred 22 months of age; 9 Heifers, open, 8 to 14 months of age; 8 Heifer Calves, 8 to 4 months; 1 Bull, 2!, years; 1 Bull, IS months; 2 Bull Calves, S to 4 months; 1 Holvtein Steer, weight 1000 lbs.; 2 Black Angus Steers, weight ISM lbs. j This is an exceptionally nice herd of heifers from very good breeding j ftUd of them are officially ealfhood vaccinated* ' GRAIN. HAY, FEED -- 1100 bales alfalfa and clover hay, first crop; I 700 bales clover and alfalfa hav, second crop; 200 bales straw, 1000 j bu. Clinton oats. 1200 bu. old 1952 ear corn. I FARM MACHINERY -- Smallev worm fed blower with 30 ft. pipe, osed only a few times; New Idea hay loader, excellent condition. SOME CHICKEN EQUIPMENT, including feeders, founts, and many >ther miscellaneous small items. Usual Farm Auction Service Terms. * ' W. T. BERGIN ' FABVI«.AUCTION SERVICE, Clertdftff FARM SERVICE WAY AUCTION Henry A. Freeman and Eugene Fredrick, Auctioneers The undersigned will sell at Public Auction on the farm known as fh* Dungan farm, located on Prairie Avenue in the Village of Hebron, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 27 1953. Sale to start at 12:30 p.m. L 25 HOLSTEIN CATTLE--- - Bl MjLK COWS -- 8 are Fresh, balance Springing and Milking. 2 First Calf Springing Heifers, 1 Heifer 8 months old, 1 Holstein Stork BulL MILK EQUIPMENT -- De Laval milking machine, 3 single units, compressor and motor; 9 new 8-gal. milk cans,' 1 milk pail, 1 milk, Strainer, 1 §urge hot water heater. -- POULTRY & EQI IPMENT -- 20 yearling hens. Steel nests, brooder, cap. 500; chick feeder, chick fount. GRAIN, HAY, FEED -- 400 bales alfalfa hay, 200 bales straw, 1000 bu. oats. 2400 bu. ear corn. :... -•-- u ' _ TRACTOR EQUIPMENT <--~McDeering 2-14 in. tractor gang plow, McDeering manure spreader, on rubber; McDeering hammer mill, with feed table: 50 ft. drive belt, John Deere power mower, new. FARM MACHINERY -- Oliver 8 ft. grain drill, high speed trailtf wagon, on rubber; Stewart cow clipper, wheelbarrow, John Deeie silage blower with 50 ft. of pipe: speed jack, oil heating unit, silo cart; Usual Farm Auction Service Terms. DON VOGEL FARM AUCTION* SERVICE, Clerking WALLPAPER IN STOCK Calorfasi. Washable Papers For Every Room 25* A ROLL & UfJ # » . FREE ESTIMATES GLADLY GIVEN in Paint Center 418 Main St. PHONE 1115 McHenry. I1L Everything for your Decorating Needs Bar •» Art Supplies ---Sundries - \ ^ Iwrtti fwfcWw r« iiw Mit Former's Question Corner! WHAT ABOUT BRUCELLOSIS? Q: Are swine brucellosis and cattle brucellosis earned by th« UiM germs? A: No, though the germs are closely related. Q: Can twine Jtgucellesis appear la human beinjt, tooT A: Yw, in humans It is called undulant fever. Farmers can get the disease when handling ihfected animals at farrowing time or by contact with infected meat at butchering time. .4): Hew does sWIne brucellosis act? • A: It may cause brood" sows to farrow stillborn or weak pigs. The germ may also cause damage to boars. Q: How can the owner be sure the trouble is brucellosis and not some other breeding disease? A: The only way is to have a veterinarian check thp herd end take blood samples for laboratory tests. Q: If brucellosis is found, what can be done? A: If the infected herd is a commercial one, infected breeding stock should be finished and sent to slaughter. In cases where the owner wants to preserve breeding lines, the pigs should be segregated at weaning time. Pigs ft*om intected sows can be kept on clean ground and given periodic blood tests to weed out diseased animals. Q: How ean pig raisers keep this disease out* of their herds? A". B r e e d 1 ng stock should be bought only from herds known to be free of brucellosis. If in doubt, owners should isolate newly purchased animals and have them blood tested. Q: Can brucellosis be cured? A: No known drug or combination of drugs will cure brucellosis in swine. NOTE--Due to space limitations, general questions cannot-. died by this column. Farmers' Outlook Income Believed To Be Stabalized USDA ^economists state that farm income in 1954 will be near 1953 levels. Reasons for this be* lief are: 1. Moat bf the temporary benefits of wartime inflation disappeared in 1952 and before, 2. 1954 is not expected to bring either a new inflation or a serious business recession. The uptrend in farm production may be reversed in 1954. Acreage restrictions on cotton and wheat < and probably on com) could bring about a decline^ in farm output. Demand for farm products will not benefit from increasing consumer incomes in 1954 as it did in 1953. Domestic demand will be sustained near recent high levels by large expenditures by federal, state and local governments and by American businessmen. Buyers outside the U.S. are expected to take as much as they did in the past year. BEEF. Record supplies of beef are being produced and consumed this year. Supplies and prtces for next year will average about the same as in 1953. Lower costs for feed and feeder cattle will give the cattle feeder a chance to make average profits. HOGS. This has been a good year for hog producers. Market supplies will probably run under year-before levels until next summer .The 1954 spring pig crop is expected to be 5 to 10 per cent above 1953 figures. - DAIRY. This industry is burdened by bif stock* (equal to 8 billion pounds of milk) largely acquired in pi-Ice support operations. More products will probably be piled up in 1954 unless price supports are reduced. Total milk production is about 118 billion pounds for 1953 and will probably be a bit larger in 1904. Reduced prices and costs may permit profits to remain near 1953 levels. POULTRY. 1953 was a food year for poultrymen. Itecord production of eggs and broijers went at encouraging prices. Next year will probably bring still larger output and lower prices and production costs. CORN. The supply totals near* ly 4.0 billion bushels, a little more than last year. The carryover is expected to rise from 764 million bushels on Oct. 1, 1953, to around 900 million bushels a year later. Prices may work up to near loan level by next year. SOYBEANS. There is no excess supply on hand, but price support for a completing product, cottonseed^ has caused an accumulation of cottonseed oil. Best chance for a price increase is through a rise in the value of soybean oil. Longer time problem: How much of the land taken out of wheat, cotton and corn will be planted to soybeans? ~ toiKOIS SfATtS At his press conference last week Governor William G. Stratum said "our entire traffic safety program is being exceptionally well enforced. This is evident when you consider that congested traffic at the last three University of Illinois football games resulted in only two minor accidents in the thirty counties surrounding Champaign-Urbana." In answer to a query about gambling In Illinois the governor said: "The honest public official welcomes all the help he can get. We will not stand by and let flagrant violations go unpunished." Asked about his attitude toward toorMscd- tltiaaelkl ait for schooti, the governor r*> plied: "A school is like a family You do everything you can and everyone would like to'do more.'- In regard to what he called "good housekeeping" at state institutions, the governor said; "It is logical that a doctor la charge is more concerned with his patients than with the rnUlio« and one details of business maty agement. We will strive for goo| business administration." WHEAT. Price supports have built yp another big surplus. Supplies^ total 1,700 million bu* shels, about 3 times as much a|. is required for food in the U.S.- Acreage allotments and marketing quotas may cut production in 1954, but prices will be held; down by supplies from previpua ciopss ' Dehorn native calves betort' cold weather sets in to preven| horn bruises that may lower th| selling price * aei ON.THf MOBSt li I LIKE MAM THAT/ TMf PICTUM CfTHt H0MC MIT WHCtt'S THI WMCONt 3 BRAND NEW SPINET PIANOS - Full 88 Note Keyboard to Mahogany *46900 USED SPINETS FROM $37500 USED GRANDS FROM $34500 ALSO BIG SAVINGS ON FLOOR SAMPLES SAVE UP TO $200°° Large Selection To Choose From SIMONSON'S S Established 1919 H?6 N. Grove Ave., Elgin, Ill.l S Open Mon. A Fri. Evenings --locsssiin1 lonoi WW Our Whitman's refrigerator gives you kitchen-fresk candy all year 'round.. Get some today! CHOCOLATES BOLGER'S DRUG STORE 103 S. GREEN STREET PHONE 40 McHENRY« JUm Wor wick's McHenry Camera Center Cameras Bought, Sold and Exchanged Photo Supplies VIEW MASTERS and REELS •. --'- See Us Before You Buy Classified Ads bring regnlts, ] Worwick's Studio Plaice yours with the Plalndealer today! 117 N. Riverside Drive PHONE McHENRY 278 SALE! NEW 10W PRICES! FAMOUS iouse lAUNDRONAT^-^ CLOTHES DRVR .. . court*, H'» u h c t r l t l & C*mpl*t«ly Automatic, Pull Sii«, Asl-Twmbl* Action „ s New! Ix>w-prieed! Loaded ^ ' v^ -. ' with features that male* i ' ^ ' w a s h d a y s a u t o m a t i c . Laundromat $19995 Normally S6llX Fo^249®5 Dryer Normally Sells r" »199®s. junEttM) Slanting Front, Fully Automatic, Foster Drying It ends all the hard work of line drying--and it dries your clot hen as you want them, dry or damp-dry. sicnas 169" 4 VMI CAN •« SURE... if rr'sWfesti n^lOUSC on a ^modern REGULARLY *236°° 36-2CZNN Food at its best cooked with GAS Carey Electric UNIVERSAL (modal S003) CIOWN (imM 307-3S) FLORlNCi (model 4S050) MAGIC CHEF (m«M 79-L) llpfierly $209.75 mw$189J5 t*t»larly $209.00 m«$1S9J5 «»f»lorly $249.95 -«r $199.91 R«|«l«rly $29150 ^w$IS9.50 <jgp these and other newest models new at eur nearest stere or your dealer's. p i i r i ir COMPANY ~ 10 IW fc GBUEN STREET rHONK r'ii i -mi r- n TtrtOfi I - mm -rtr * °McMENRY, ELUNdlA,

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