PG. 10 - PLAINDEALER-WED. APRIL 16, 1969 THE McHENRY PLAINDEALER NOTICES NOTICES SMITTY'S SINCLAIR SERVICE UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT MECHANIC ON DUTY 8 AM. T6 4:30 P.M. * George's Sinclair Service 3602 W. Elm McHenry, 111. \ 385-9894 4-16-69 NOTICE FORECAST '69 Fashion Show puncheon April 30 at Martinotti's. Benefit for McHenry Hospital Auxiliary. Styles from Hein's, Waukegan. All seats reserved. Tables seat up to 8. To order tickets, send name, address; phone number "and $5 per ticket to Forecast '69| Box 66, McHenry. Reservations close April 23. 4-11/4-23-69 Wani*d To Rnl ELDERLY LADY with excellent references needs a 3 or 4 room apartment. Unfurnished or partially. Call 385-0801 after 5 p.m, 4-9/4-16-69 2 OR 3 BEDROOM house or apartment. Immediate occupancy. Call 459-7792. 4-9/4-18-69 SUPER stuff, sure nuf! That's Blue Lustre for cleaning rugs and upholstery. Rent electric shampooer $1. Ace Hardware. 4-16-69 SMITTY'S Sinclair Service under new management. George D. Haines will be responsible only for his debts after April 1, 1969, 385-9894 4-16-69 IT PAYS TO USE THE CLASSIFIEDS WANTED PUPPIES, litters only. Up to 7 weeks old. Will pick up if brought to McHenry area. Good homes guaranteed. Call 385-7897. 4-2-69TF1-2 2 OR 3 BEDROOM unfurnished apartment or house for one of our new research scientist. Occupancy for June' 1. Morton International, Inc., Research Center, Woodstock, 111., Call 338-1800 between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 4-11/4-23-69 FOR FAST RESULTS PHONE 385-0170 AUCTION AUCTION Farm Service Way Insured AUCTION LOCATION: 5V2 miles West of Woodstock, 111., or 3 mile's East of Route 23 on Kishwaukee Valley Road (Fox Farm Road) WATCH FOR ARROWS. LUNCH ON GROUNDS. SALE TO START AT 12:00 NOON Saturday, April 19 BILL WILLIAMS, Owner WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS COMMUNITY ROUNDUP AUCTION TRACTORS -- Farmall M; MD; H 300; Super M-TA; C with leader; 450 LP Gas; B with mounted planter; A.C. • WD; AC. HD-5 Crawler with loader; A.C. - WD45; Massey 44; J.D. 60; J.D. - A; Ford with loader; Case SC; Case DC; Oliver 70; DISC: Kewanee 13*72 ft. (sealed bearings); Kewanee 10 ft.; A.C. 10 ft.; I.H. 10 ft.; Ford mounted; PLOWS: Oliver 4-16 trip; I.H. 5-16 Trip; A.C. 4-16 Trip; J.D. 6 Bottom Trip; J.D. 4 Bottom Trip; Oliver 3-16 with cover boards; Oliver 3 Bottom Trip; Ford 2 Bottom; J.D. 2 Bottom; M.M. 3-16; IH. 2-16; J.D. 3 Bottom; 1 Bottom Slough Plow. CULTIVATORS: J.D. 4 row; A.C. 4 row; I.H. No. 455 4 row; J.D. 2 row; I.H, No. 46l 4 row. PLANTERS: J.D. 494; I.H 450; J.D. 490. MOWERS: N.I. (late model); N.H., mounted with crimper hitch; J.D.; Oliver semi-mounted; DRAGS: Lindsay, 4 section; Lindsay, 3 section; J.D. 4 section. OTHER EQUIPMENT: J.D. 10 ft. Grain Drill,I.H. 8 ft. Grain Drill with grass seed and fert. (like new); J.D. 40 ft. Elevator; Mayrath 40 ft. Elevator; 2 9-row Pull Type Sprayers; 12 ft. Field Cultivator; M.M. 10 ft. Field Culivator; 10 ft. Ezee Flow Spreader; Running Gear with barge box and hoist; J.D. Running Gear; Duals; Clod Buster; 12 ft. Grain Truck Box; I.H 2-row Rotary Hoe; Gehl Green Chopper; 200 Gal. Bulk- Tank; N.H. No. 68 Baler; 2 Plow Packers 10 ft. Corragated Roller; A.C. No. 66 Combine; Case Roll Bar Side Rake; Chev. W2 Ton Truck; Quantity of Wheel Weights; Large Amount of Small Tools; Riding Mower; Several Trucks. NOTE: Items offered for sale will follow this listing as closely as possible, but some changes may be made by sale time. If you don't see what you are looking for listed. Phone (815 ) 568-8768 we may have it.. LIBERAL TERMS:. ^ Auctioneers: WM. SULLIVAN, Marengo, 111. EUGENE FREDERICKS, Harvard, 111. WILLIAM RUSSEL, Woodstock, HI. Cashier: W. E. VAN EGMOND, Clinton, Wis. Clerk: RONNIE LIPINSKY, Union, Illinois Farm Auction Service, Inc. Lake Geneva, Wis. SHOP IN MCHENRY HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED HELP WANTED G OOD'fYEAR Is Making The Rounds Looking For * Production Workers * Production Supervisors. * Maintenance Mechanics Visit ^ Our Mobile | Employment Center am TIRE I RUBBER CO while we are ai McHenry Market Place 4400 RTE. 120, McHENRY FRIDAY, APRIL 18th -- 1 P M. to 8 P.M. SATURDAY, APRIL 19th -- 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. AUCTION AUCTION L A R G E AUCTION v - : 3 * Above Average Wages * Excellent Benefits * Easily Accessible Plant | * Adjacent Parking Also Interviewing at Plant Site Daily Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. P.O. Box 133, North Chicago, 111. 60064 Skokie Hwy. 1 mile South of Buckley Rd. "an equal opportunity employer" Location of Mobile Employment Center H 0 R N i e . I l 1--IT -- -- I-- T----nn-nmifTnr nn-rm -M , nr-n- Mii.wni^r-l-rlTt||--liTT .V ... :-7"-- -- ^ LOCATED 4 miles east of Wauconda, 111. or 3 miles West of Mundelein on Rte. 176, then North V* mile on Fremont Center Rd. This is our annual Spring Sale and includes the equipment from 2 area farms discontinuing farming. Also included will be many pieces of machinery consigned by our customers who purchased larger or newer equipment at auction this past sale season, all is here to be sold. We will accept no furniture, poultry equipment or junk items as our time will be very limited. Sunday, April 20 at 10:00 ajn. LIVESTOCK: 10 Choice Hereford Feeder Calves, approx. 350 lbs.; 10 ewes and lambs; 250 lb. boar; some feeder pigs; other young stock. TRACTORS: 2 Farmall "M" tractors; Oliver 66 with live PTO; Case DC tractor with new engine & New Idea loader; AC WD tractor with loader; M-M U Propane; Case 300 with 3-14 3- point plow, sharp; Allis D19 Diesel tractor with duals, good cond. - S TRUCKS: 1966 dPjVIC % ton pick-up; Int. tandem dump, for Marts; 3 other farm trucks & pick-ups; 8x12'grain body; 1942 Ford COE with stake body. COMBINE, PLOWS, DISCS, PLANTERS, HARROWS; Combine - late model J.D. self-propelled #45 with 234 corn head, 10 ft. grain platform with hume reel & header control & cab, in good cond.; Oliver 5-14 pull plow with trip bottoms; J.D. 1-16 pull plow with trip bottoms; Allis 6x16 steerable 3- noint plow with slat bottoms & Tth beam; AC #72 PTO •combine, like new; 2 and 3 bottom plows; 2, 3 & 4 section harrows; 13'4" Kewaunee wheel disc; 12 ..ft. McC. wheel disc; TO ft. McC. disc; McC 5-section harrow on wheel carrier; 10 ft. Ford wheel disc; J.D. #290 & #490 planters; McC #450 l-row planter; 4-row Allis planters; McC. 3-16 plow with plow- Chief bottoms; J.D. 3-14 with trip bottoms. ^ MISCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT: Gehl „ mixer-mill, in good rond.; Gehl self-unloading wagon on, I^ew Idea gear; Case #210 ensilage chopper; Farmhand side delivery rake; Case rake; 3 New Idea rakes; Case trail mower; New Holland trail mower; 8 & 10 ft. J.D. field cult, on RT; Glencoe 12 ft. field cult; 12 ft. McC. field cult; New Holland #69 baler; like new; New Holland hay conditioner; McC. 2 M.H. picker; 2 ..running ^cars with grain boxes & hoists; 2 wagons & hay racks; New Idea mower; DB side rake; Ottowa sheller for behind picker; Mayrath 48 ft. elevator; M-M picker-sheller; fert. spreader; Colby manure spreader; Case & Allis rear mount 4-row cult.;McC. 4-row & 2-row front cult.; 3 section soil surgeon; 12x38 duals for McC. tractor; Woods rotary chopper; AC 10 ft. snap coupler field cult.; miscellaneous manure spreaders; Servis rotary choppers, 3-point hitch; 2-row stalk choppers; 40 ft. elevators; 2 New Idea mounted pickers; M-M PTO corn sheller, in good cond.; new 8 ft. meeker harrow; 300 gal. overhead fuel tank; set McC. front weights; 5 ft. x 8 ft. Butcher Boy cooler or freezer door with frame and inner steel doors; Jamesway barn cleaner shuttle bars; Gravely garden tractor & snow blade; 4-row rotary hoe; New Holland #68 PTO baler; hog feeders; pig brooders; lawn mowers; tjres; cylinders; hundreds of small items. Auctioneers: Gordon Stade, Gray slake, 111. • 312-223-5155 ^ Wm. Stade, Jr., Mundelein, 111. - 312-566 8555 Terms: Cash. Nothing removed until settled for. Settlement on day of sale. Not responsible for accidents. Louie's Lunch on Grounds. 4-16-69 * Pets Hurt Need A OR ARE Looking For Their Master As a public service of. the McHenry Plaindealer all ads run under "Pets That Need A Home" are Free. The only requirements are: Tbe animate are to be given away to good boxnes without charge or yon are trying to find the owner of a pet that hat strayed into your possession. TO BE GIVEN AW AT TO BE GIVEN AWAY 2 MALE mixed breed and 1 pure bred female German Shepherd, 7 months. Call 385-3983. ° 4-16-^9 SHELTI TYPE 8 month old male, golden brown. Good disposition, very gentle. Call 338-0486. ' 4-16-69 SELL IT... KfeMCNO* Sit sfca cswav. $.UT •4 WAVT. PW* AWsS <•£ C-irjx:* THRU THE WANT ADS S CALL 385-0170 FOR INSTANT ACTION I From The Farm Adviser's Desk I % CARE OF EASTER LILY As each bloom opens, pluck out the powdery yellow anthers. This will prevent a yellow stain on the flower. It will also prevent pollination and thus extend the life of the bloom. With proper care, the lily will stay healthy and blooming for a long time. All it needs is careful regular watering, a moderately cool^ temperature, and a draft-free location. In addition, the lily appreciates plenty of light for the development of any buds that remain unopened. Remember, too, that after the last flower has faded the lily can be saved for planting in the garden. You will find its blooms are a .spectacular addition to the August garden. For garden use, prepare the potted plant by gradually withholding water ais the foliage starts to dry and turn brown. Finally, stop watering completely and let the entire plant dry down. Then in late May snap off the dried stalk and remove the bulb from the pot. Plant the top of the bulb six inches deep in well-drained, fertile soil in a sunny location. 3-PHASE ELECTRIC FOR FARMERS A colored-slide presentation and discussion on three-phase electric power for McHenry county farmers was presented recently at the Farm Bureau auditorium in Woodstock. Owen A. Fordham, district power service supervisor of Commonwealth Edison company, presented data on how three-phase line extensions could be made to serve modern farm power requirements. These would be grain handling and drying systems, manure handling and feed distribution systems. Fordham stated that threephase extensions on public highways can be made without cost if the farm customer has a minimum of a 10 horse power three-phase motor or an aggregate of motors that total more than 20 horse power. No threephase motor should be larger than 30 horse power. Advantages of the 3-phase power are a better balanced load, smaller wire sizes to motors and circuits, lower cost of motors, little maintenance and an opportunity to use larger motors for greater power requirements. , - A panel of farmers^who have 3-phase electric power for their corn dryers and other power equipment explained how to use- 3-phase electrical service. The panel consisted of Lawrence Johnson, Tom Nichols, Robert Nichols and Irwin Walters of Hebron and Robert Stoxen of Harvard. The McHenry County Cooperative Extension service was host for the program. PREEMERGENCE HERBICIDES In 1969, preemergence hericides are likely to «be used on more than half of the corn acreage in Illinois. Although present herbicides are not totally effective, farmers have been quick to realize the benefits these chemicals offer. Herbicides heip control weeds in the row, allow faster cultivation, and can control weeds during wet weather when cultivation is impossible. AATREX (atrazine) is one of the most popular herbicides"for corn. It controls both broadleaved and grass weeds. It is particularly effective on many broadleaves like smartweed. Corn has very good tolerance to preemergence applications. Aatrex is most effective on light soils that are relatively low in organic matter, but it is also effective on soils with more organic matter if the rate is increased. RAMROD (propachlor) has given very good control of annual grass weeds, often providing better initial control and usually for slightly longer than Randox. Ramrod has also controlled pigweed and given fair control of lambsquarter. It performs better on the darker soils of the state than on lighter ones. Corn has good tolerance to Ramrod. RANDOX (CDAA) is adapted primarily to the darker soils that contain a moderate to high amount of organic matter. Do not use Randox on sandy soils. It controls annual grass weeds and pigweed for about four weeks. A preemergence application of Randox can be followed with an early postemergence application of 2,4-D, in order to improve broadleaved weed control. LASSO has been tested in research trials for several years and has been cleared for use on corn and soybeans in 1969. The tolerance by both to Lasso appears to be good. Lasso is similar to Ramrod in some respects. Lasso has given good control of annual grass weeds and may give some control of pigweed and lanbsquarter. THE LAW SERVES YOU Illinois Law Is Tough On Drinking Driver* The number of II line _ motorists convicted on charges of driving while under th6 influence of alcohol or dangerous drugs set a new high of 10,- 770 in 1968, the Illinois State Bar association reported. The association said the number of drivers convicted each year of having had "one too many for the road" has climbed steadily during the past decade, according to records kept by the Secretary of State's office in Springfield. There have been only a very few convictions for driving under the influence of dangerous drugs, a relatively new charge, the ISBA said. Under state law, conviction on a "D.W.I." (driving while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or dangerous drugs) results in the automatic revocation of the person's license by the Secretary of State. Normally, the bar group stated, the person whose license is revoked must wait one year before applying for another driver's license. In 1967, there were 1,296 "D.W.I." convictions, the previous high. There were 10,215 convictions in 1966 and 9,582 in 1965. The sharpest increase in the conviction rate in recent years was in 1964 when there were 8,094 convictions compared to 5,595 the previous year. In hardship cases, the ISBA said, the person whose license is revoked may qualify for a restricted pernvt which would allow him to operate a motor vehicle between his residence and place of employment. The ISBA added there is no guarantee that a new license will be issued upon application after the one-year waiting period, since the applicant may be rejected if his trustworthiness in the driver's seat is still a matter of doubt. By law, a person is presumed to be under the influence of alcohol if he has 0.10 percent or more by weight of alcohol in his blood. A person of average weight will normally reach that level after consuming two strong alcoholic drinks or three not-so-strong drinks during a one-hour period. A thin person will reach the "influence" level sooner. The percentage of alcohol in a person's blood can be determined by chemical analysis of his blood, breath, urine or saliva. Under current law, a test for blood alcohol content may not be given without a per son's consent. If a driver refuses to take the test, neither the fact of his refusal nor results of any test taken over his objection can be used as evidence against him in court. If a person consents to a chemical test, the results m ist be made available to him or his attorney. If a test shows that a person had less than 0.05 percent by weight of alcohol in his blood, he is presumed to be sober. If the level is between 0.05 and 0.10 percent, there is no presumption one way or the other. However, this fact may be considered with o*her competent evidence in determining whether the person was under the influence of intoxicating liquor. EDDIE the EDUCATOR says... A Stanford University musician has developed a computer that teaches pitch. It can be programmed to progress at the student's best pace. ILLINOIS EDUCATION ASSOCIATION