Tftflfsd'ayv January 12^ 19881 «.r^> THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER SAVE TIME „ Sho^ NSy /Ar. CLASSIFIED REAL ESTATE FOR SALE -- HOKES -- FARMS CHOICE LOTS -- BUSINESSES RESORT PROPERTY Knox Real Estate 405 Richmond Road McHeifty, QL Phone: McHenry 421-1 24-tf ^FOR SALE -- .Wonder Lake, 8 room frame house, full English basement, 3 bedrooms, recreation , room, attached garage, automatic forced air <fl heat, landscaped wooded lot, 50x150, public water paved road ,beach, $12,000. Phon« Wonder Lake 2481. 33-tf FOR SALE -- Meat Market and Grocery, well stocked and well ^.equipped. Excellent all year round '^'business plus 5 room apt. Phone Wonder Lake 5681. . 36-tf FOR SALE -- Will sell, or trade, a large lot in Palos Park, approximately 12Oxg0^fpr inboard motor boat. Phone 137&-R-1. *36 FOR SALE -- 4 % room year round home at West Shore Beach. Fully insulated; large lot; nicely landscaped. Priced to sell by own- £er. Phone 534-R-l. «36 FOR SALE -- SJorepSuitaible for any business, with 5 rrom living - • quarters. North of Jo^nsburg. Krause, Rt. 5. Box 688, 36-2 , LISTINGS NEEDED -- To satisfy our prospects. We need listings in residential moderate priced homes. Also river and bay property. --Prompt, courteous' and efficient *servifce. McHenry Realty, 582 Main St. Phone 268 or Mr. Plumb 1046-J. 36 SITUATION WANTED SITUATION WANTED -- Will" do ba'by sitting, washing and ironing in my own home. Call 2044. 36 ^ SITUATION WANTED -- Young man willing to. work at any kind of job. Store, office or what have you. Phone McHenry 1336. •SB SITUATION WANTED -- Hardware clerk with 15 years experience wants work in McHenry area. Can furnish A-l references. Write Chester Griffith, Box 52A, Rt. 2, Prairie View, HI. *36 ' SITUATION WANTED -- Will "Ocare for children in my home 5 days a week. Phone 426-M. 36 SITUATION WANTED -- Will care for children in my home hourly, daily or weekly; day or night. Transportation furnished. Phone Richmond 3157. 36-2 SITUATION WANTED -- Experienced salesman desires work as representative. Full or part time. £ Car, references. Reply care of ,T4Plaindealer, Box 112. *36 HARDEST ^ BUSIEST CHEAPEST WORKERS IN TOWN PLAINDEALER WANT AOS WANTED Wanted INSURED SAVINGS * Savings invested In Crystal Lake Savings and Loan Association are insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corp., and earn 2%% plus . y±% extra. 33-tf WANTED -- Property within range of $2500 to $8,000. Give details. Write, HiJmer, Rt. 1, Ringwood or call Wonder Lake 2894. •36 WANTED TO BUY WANTED TO BUY -- Top price paid for iron, metals" and junk cars. Ed Marsh, phone Woodstock 1610-M-U. 43-tf WANTED TO BUY -- We pay highest prices for . old cars, Iron metals, paper and rags. Prompt pick ups. Also for sale, good used tires, 15 or 16 in«fa rims. Call Roy Grooms, 1368-M-l or Staines 53-J. 32-tf MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE -- This is to inform .the public of McHenry and vicinity, that I am J:O longer associated Ith Family Album Plan, as of 1, 1955. Worwick Studio. A. Worwick. 35-2 Has your drinking become i problem? Men, women, if so, write Alcoholics Anonymous, Rt. 5, Box 508, McHenry, 111. Meetings every Monday 8:30 p.m.. 12-tf LOSE UGLY FAT IN TEN DAYS OR MONEY BACK If you are overweight, here is the first really thrilling n#ws to come along in years. A new & convenient way to get ricj/6f^extra pounds easier than ever,;^sp> you can be as slim and trim as you want. This new product called DIATRON curbs both hunger & appetite. No drugs, no diet, no exercise. Absolutely harmless. When you take DIATRON, you still enjoy your meals, still eat the foods you like but you simply don't have the urge for extra portions and automatically your weight must come down, because, as your own doctor will tell you, when you eat less, you weigh less. Excess weight endangers your heart, kidneys. So no matter what you have tried before, get DIATRON and prove to yourself what it can do. DIATRON is sold on this GUARANTEE: You must lose weight with the first package you use or the package costs you nothing. Just return the bottle to your druggist and get your money back. DIATRON costs $3.00 and is sold with this strict money, back guar amtee by: BOLGER'S Drug Store McHenry, HI. Mail orders filled. I'llMWIWW The Farmers Tradiig Post McHENRY COUNTY FARMERS CO-OP ASSN. Ful-O-Pep Super Greens Pellets Extra Vitamin Boost V'" For Your Layers. Sprinkle On Top Of Regular Mash. 2 to 4 Lbs. Per Day Per 100 Birds. PHONE McHENRY 729 523 Wankegan Road Dead Animal Removal WHEELING RENDERING WORKS ^Be Legal, Keep a Clear Conscience ™ Prompt Service, Day or Night Sundays and Holidays No help needed to load. Operating under State Inspection Made by Dept. of Agriculture. Highest cash prices paid. Phone Wheeling 3, collect 45-tf GEO. P. FREUND Authorized Dealer fpr SALES & SERVICE PHONE McHENRY 430 S01 Crystal Lake Road ^FOR SALE -- Wilson Bulk Milk Coolers. Disston and Homelitt chain saws sold with service by Laurence E. Anderson, Dairyman's Supply Co., McHenry 475. 23-tf WANTED -- Down and crippled cattle at better cash prices. Orville Krohn, Woodstock. Phone 1651-R-l, collect. *15-tf HOGS WANTED -- All classes and weight for highest net return. Monday through Friday 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Marengo. Daily rfCe,* Market, phone Marengo 262. 50-tf R. M. FLEMING & SON |JVULI£ NEW IDEA PAPEC DEALER TRACTORS SALES A SERVICE A Complete Farm Implement Service. PHONE McHENRY SS 522 Waukegan Road Blumhorst Trucking and Grain Service. Corn shelling, grain buying. Livestock. Local and long distance hauling. McHenry R.R. 4. Phone 777-W. 16-tf McHENRY EQUIPMENT CO. SALF,S & SERVICE GUS FREUND PHONE McHENRY 185 SOS W. Elm St. (Basement) ATTENTION FARMERS Don't let your equipment depreciate this winter. Can build you immediately a 30x60 Doane designed tool shed for $3,000, no money down, 36 months to pay. Need a 12 sow hog house, $850, no money down! Arnoid N. May Builders, Inc. Richmond, Illinois. Phone office 4381, Res. 4681. 35-tf MISCELLANEOUS NOTICE -- Choose your new rugs or carpeting, at your convenience, right in your own home. A phone call will bring one of our carpeting experts with scores of samples of , -- those heavenly carpets by LEES. Tidy Floor Coverings, 604 Washington St. (Route 14 NorthJ Woodstock, 111. Phone 888. 36 PERSONAL PERSONAL -- Will "TEE-DEE" please identify, themselves to me. E.C. *36 FABM NEWS P«g» 9e»«* ^ ^ FARMERS LOSE THEIR MARKETS TO COMPETITORS PBRSONA L -- I know where Sally gets all her gossip. She never misses McHenry County DATE BOOK at 9:45 a.m. Mon.- Sat. on Waiikegan Radio. "Sear gossip aplenty by dialing 1220". 36 We hear a lot about promoting file sale and use of farm products. SUch promotions are important and helpful. But if we had paid more attention to keeping the markets we once had, we would not now be so hard pressed, to get them back or to find new ones. And if we make an effort to keep, the markets we have' now, we will not have to work so hard to find new ones in the future. To avoid « repeating old mistakes, "it may be worth while to review some of these lost markets for farm products and see how we lost them. .. For many years before World War DL, butter consumption in the United States averaged around 17 pounds per person per year. Now it is only 9 pounds. If consumption could be restored to 17 pounds, it would make an additional market for 26 billion pounds of milk, or 17 per cent more than is noto being produced. How was the butter market lost? It was lost during World War 3 AUCTION On account of barn being destroyed by fire and having decided to discontinue farming the undersigned, will offer the following personal property for sale at public auction on the farm located 5 miles East of Lake Zurich, 111., 5 miles West of Mtuidelein, 3 miles North of Route 83, miles South of Route 63 on the Volo-Gitmer Road, on TUESDAY. JANUARY 17 Commencing at 1:00 o'clock OTTO'S LUNCH WAGON ON GROUNDS DAIRY EQUIPMENT -- 10 can milk cooler with new unit; 20 milk cans; electric hot water heater. r PRODUCE -- 400 bushel oats; 100 bushel corn. TRACTOR & FARM MACHINERY (This is a very good line Of machinery - less than two years old.) -- John Deere Model 70 tractor on rubber with starter and lights; John Deere Model A tractor with cultivator; John Deere 3-16 mounted plow; John Deere 3-14 plow on rubber; John Deere Model 227 mounted corn picker; John Deere 10 ft. grain dri'll with grass seed and fertilizer attach.; John Deere corn chopper with Wisconsin motor; John Deere Blower; Massey Harris 7 ft. combine with motor and .pick-up attachment; New Holland baler with Wisconsin motor; 2 John Deere rubber-tired wagons; New Idea rubber-tired wagon; rubber-tired wagon and rack; and a very complete line of farm machinery and tools. consumers to try substitute products. ttfany consumers soon became accustomed to the other products andJhave not been willing to change back to butter.' Before 1930, consumers spent about 3 per cent of their incomes for pork. Now they spend^ only 2 per cent, a reduction of onethird. If consumers would spend the ^ame share of Cheir incomes for pork, as they did twenty-five years ago, we could sell one-fifth more hogs at one-fourth higher prices. How was the pork market lost? Here are two important factors; (lj production control and price support for corn has made for reduced ahd irregular supplies of pork; (2) the swing in consumers' preference to leanr er cuts has not been matched by a corresponding improvement in pork qualify. Until about ten years ago, annual consumption of lamb and mutton averaged around seven pounds per person. Now it is only 4 H pounds. If consumption were restored to pre-1947 levels, we would have a market for nearly one-half more lamb and mutton than we are now selling. The lam/b market was lost after flocks were greatly reduced during the war years. Now supplies are so small that, many markets I seldom handle lamb. As fewer j markets offer lamb, fewer con- j sumers are moved to bu.v^it,. ! Twenty-five years ago We had i foreign markets for seven to nine j million bales of cotton each; year, i l*he United States had 60 per ! cent of the world export market. Now world trade is as large as ever, but our exports average only about 3^2 million bales and the United States share of the world export' market is only 20 per cent. Price supports for United States cotton ^encouraged producers in other countries to boost their output' and exports. Last year Mexico exported more than one million bales, ten times more than in 1930. Brazil showed a similar increase in tne; 1930s and now exports about one million bales a year. Syria and Turkey now average over half a million bales, 10 times as much as twenty-five years ago. Russia exported about 1.4 million bales last year, also about ten -times as much as twenty-five years ago. If the United States had retained its share of the world market for cotton, we would have markets for the cotton grown on nine million more acres -- and the acreage planted to feed grains would be reduced accordingly. Each of these examples of lost markets for farm product? differs from the others in sonie respects. But they are all alike in one important way: the markets were lost when producers failed to offer an adequate supply of highquality products at competitive prices. OTTO SCHUMACHER, Owner ROBERS & BEHM, Auctioneers WISCONSIN SALES CORP., Clerk Union Grove, Wis. AUCTION The following machinery and merchandise will be offered for sale at public auction at the Antioch Sales & Commission Sales Barn located Yz mile Northeast of Antioch, 111., ^ mile East o? Route 83, on North Avenue and State Line Road, on THURSDAY, JANUARY I9ih Commencing at 1:00 o'clock OTTO S LUNCH WAGON ON GROUNDS 5 TRACTORS, COMBINE, BALER & FARM MACHINERY -- 1951 Ford tractor in excellent condition; Ford-Ferguson tractor with Davis loader;* Ford-Ferguson tractor with Wagner manure loader; MoC-D F20 tractor on rubber; McCjD F12 tractor on rubber; Massey Harris PTO 6 ft. combine; Ne^ Holland 76 Baler with motor; implement trailer with winch, tilting top and new tires; McC-D 10 ft. disc; Massey Harris 2/16 plow on rubber; McC-D 2/14 plow; and many other pieces of farm machinery. MOTOR VEHICLES - Large selects MISCELLANEOUS -- Several new tarpaulins/ Bolen Garden tractor; quantity new and used hand tools; drirkpress; rge amount of poultry equipment; large amount of hog equipment, feeders, waterers, etc.; 2 power lawn mowers; and many other items. HOUSEHOLD GOODS -- Refrigerators, stoves, ^washing machines, beds, sewing machine and large mangel; some lawn equipment. (Anyone having ahy machinery or equipment they would like to sell at auction, please conjtact Antioich Sales & Commission at Antioch, 111., Telephone 41.) FARMERS II you have something tc Buf. Sell or Trade ADVERTISE in the PLAINDEALER ifr iji >fli ifli iji i|i »*i «^» ijujl'iji »}i iji ifr EDDIE the EDUCATOR says Qr»p*» He»viJ Tiflht Budget citizcn* CMMIWlitiB My books for the year aro bat-, anted. Satisfactions exceed dissatisfactions. I will continue to work for0 and with Children. More gtsd teachers are'needed to help me.. Illinois Education Association I teu< ,raen ANTIOCH SALES & COMMISSION ROBERS & BEHM, Auctioneers WISCONSIN SALES CORP., Clerk Phone 196 j Union Grove, Wis. Phone 196 McCANNON AUCTION . WILLIAM RUSSELL, Auctioneer The farm having been sold, I have fully decided to quit farming, and will sell at Public Auction on the farm located one mile Northeast «f Woodstock on Raffel Road, one half mile East of Route 47 or one half mile North of Peacock's Corner on Route 120, on MONDAY, JANUARY 16, 1956 Starting at 12:00 sharp, the following described property to wit: CATTLE 1' Black Angus, 17 months, open.; -12 Holsteins, 17 months, ope&; 1 Guernsey, 17 months, open. vaccinated. y « ANE iters are TB. tested fond catfhood OATS AND STRAW 100 bu. Nehaneah oats; 200 "bales oat straw; 200 bales wheat straw. MACHINERY 1 tractor McCormick Deering M & cultivator; 1 tractor McOormick Deering B; New John Deere field chopper with hay and corn attachments; International 42-R combine; Forage Master self-unloading box on rubber tired wagon; Smailey blower 50 ft. pipe; 3 bottom plow McCormick Deering Little Genius; 2 row corn planter McCormick Deering with checkwire and tractor hitch; John Deere Model H tractor spreader on rubber; Hoosier 6 ft. grain drill; McCormick Deering 6 ft. mower; McCormick Deering 10 ft. heavy tractor discL-John Deere 7 ft. tractor disc; side delivery hay rake; McCormick Deering- 10 ft. field cultivator; hammer mill John Deere 10 ft.; 6 ft. binder for winrowing; 8 ft. clod crusher; 2-row rotary hoe; hayrack^-oti^on wheels; hayrack on rubber; 2 wheeled trailer on rubber; grain elevator; 3 section drag and hitch; 75 ft. drive belt; hay fork - grapple; Stewart cow clippers; 2 electric motors; hay rope; Fairbanks 1000 lbs. scale; tarpaulin; corn saver or stalk lifter. You are welcome to inspect this machinery at anytime. Household goods and miscellaneous small tools. Earthen jars 9 legations, 2 5-gallons, 1 8-gallons, 1 10-gallons, 1 15-gallons. 400 pound combination safe suitable for office or home. Not Responsible* For Accidents ' LOYD McCANNON, Owner THE STATE BANK OF WOODSTOCK, Clerking THOSE WERE THE DAYS By ART BEEMAN NOTHING BUT THE TRUTH by Russ Arnold WHAT ? AAY WIPE WORK IN A. stone ? I FORBID DOM'T vVOKRYI'LL GET YOUR 6IFT6 AT A DISCOUNT AT SOME OTHER STORE J YOUe RI6HT XMAS UNTIL. CHRISTMAS w THAt SAMED A City/ p® Nfegft <up OLD DAD USED TO FLIP HIS LID WHEN WOMENFOLK SUGGESTED WORKING -- The people of FREI8UR6, 0ERMANY, % statue to $ Duck who saved thorn M WORLD WAR 1 / HOSSFACE HANK By FRANK THOMAS mSSFACB "V«HYD0N7 % AST FEU PART) HE SPEA dP THE PAPER, f UP?-HE FRED.1 KNOWS MY mm's a ql BROUCNf! FRED, KIN I HAVE THE BACK HALF OF THE FRED'S GETTIN' TO BE A RECVLAR OL' GROUCH > HE QUACKED SO LOUD AFTER. NMDNiTE ON MOV. 17, iq«H THW THE POPULACE RAN TO THEIR AIR RAID SHELTERS - g mmtis teber allied . „ tomtirs flattened ihe iottn : j (IKE DUCK WA$ KILLED W THE RAID) iL RtltiwDdf mbf f'ft N I TM Rtg. US Ht SONNY SOUTH By AL COURTSON THERE IS MORE 5ALT m THE ATLANTIC THAM M THE PACIFIC OCEAN / m last tuba "TOMATOES ta/a been qrown on sqntkebic 4ooA -frosw a .flower .. dsirached -froiri tfo plant.'/ HOW DO Vtf KNOW ITS ALL CRAZY AN' MIXED UP IF YCVE HAD IT SUCH A SHORT TIME ? PAPA BOUGHT US A NEW CLOCK YESTERDAY BUT IT'S NO GOOD IT'S SUCH ACRA1V MIXED UP THING I'M 60NNA RETURN! IT TODAY ST &0RSTS M0!HO! W CAN'TJ FOOL ME WITH i THAT OL' TRICK! THAR AIN'T A BAR WITHIN MILES OF HERE' RURAL DELIVERY By AL SMITH HE HAD A TICKET.' V HE SAID HE READ THE BOOK AND WANTED SEE THE PICTURE/ I'M TELLING VOU.THATS A BEAR SITTING IN (T^HARD FRONT OF ME' X THOUGHT THAT WAS A BEAR / SURE IT IS / PID. YOU LET A ROMEOS GOT A JOB AS BEAR COME IN ? TICKET TAKER AT THE MOVIES/ THINK I'LL TAKE IN A MOV/IE/ BR-VESSlR'