Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Jul 1933, p. 6

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\ |r f ':' • •" «<> £ CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES -• Sacrament" was the subject of lesson-Sermon in all Churches Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, uly 9. The Golden Text wa», "The cap blessing which we bless, is it not communion of the blood of ? The bread which we break, not the communion of the body Christ?" (I Cor. 10:10). Among the citations which comrlsed the Lesson-Sermon was the Mowing from the Bible: "Purge Out therefore the old leaven, that £e may be a new lump, as ye am Unleavened. For even Christ our ssovcr is sacrificed for us. Therere let us keep the feast, not with d leaven, neither wtyh.-the leaven if malice and wickedness; but with (t>e unleavened bread of sincerity And truth" (I Cor. 5: 7, 8)., * , The Lesson-Sermon also ia- . Cjuded the following passages from Christian Science textbook, . r*TSclerice and Health with Key to the . •fsflrriptures." hy Mary Baker Eddy:, " '^llypoerisy is fatal to religion. . . , " If we feel the aspiration, humility/. I'*.gratitude, and love which our words ex press.-^this God accepts; and it Is wise not to try to deceive ourirlves or others, for "there la nothing covered that shall not be rfevealed'" (p."7 and 8), Windham Bonham ATTORNEY AT LAW .. Stilling Building, Riverside Drit* McHenry, Illinois Saturday and Sunday Afteraooil^^. All Day Mondays, . Chicago Office--19 So. La Salle St^ Suite 1206 Phone State 8680 N. J. NYE, M. D. Wi A* NYE, Mi D. X-Ray, Laboratory and Physio Therapy OFFICE HOURS Daily--S--l»; 1--8; i- Phone 62-R The world's largest thermometer, one of the dominating structures of the World's Fair skyline, gets an official test from the weather man. Inset •hows C. A. Donnel, senior meteorologist and chief forecaster of the U. S. weather bureau in Chicago, comparing the reading on the 2-foot wide neon-light "mercury" column with his official "sling" thermometer. !n the background Is the 218-foot Havoline tower which tells fair visitor* day and night Just how hot It Is. JOHNSBURG Anna Komish of Mich., visited with her friends, Miss Mary and Barbara Althoff last week. Mrs. John Jerach and family of Chicago is visiting- a few days with her father, Peter Schaefer. Miss Laura Smith of Chicago is •pending a few days with her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Huff. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Davy and faments, Mr. and Mrs. George Broughton, left Saturday for her nome. Mrs. Neva Stubbings is on the sick list. Miss Helen Vasey is spending the week with her sister, Mrs. Irving Townsend, at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rudsinski have moved into the new bungalow on Wilson avenue, owned by Mrs. Carrie Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Kennedy, Mr Uy of Joliet, were callers at the home and. .M.rs.. .H arold Allen and daughters of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers ® Miss Mary Kennedy, all of Wau- $undayv | kegan spent the Fourth with Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Louis Althoff and James ,^arr* „ „ , family, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Al- Ml* and Mrs- Ed enter CONNEL lit*, McDERMOTT ATTORN EY-AT-LAW Bears: ZM to 11 a. m.; 1:30 to S p. w. •• *• Evenings, 7 to 8 - - Phone 238 Building McHenry, IIL thoff and family of "McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff and son, Bernard and Mary Althoff visited' with Mrs. Elizabeth Tonyan and fam ily Sunday evening . at Heights. tained a party of friends and rela' tives on the Fourth. While there were no serious accidents here on the Fourth, several Pistaqua1 P1™01, ones W6re reported. Gerald 1 Jepson, son of George Jepson, had the ""Phone Richmond 16 Dr. JOHN DtpgY VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing WCHMOND, ILLINOIS KENT & COMPANY All Kiads of IN8UBANC1 Mr. and Mrsi Steve Huff and firv^ers on his riSht hand burned from daughter, Katherine, of Spring Grove firecrackers. Stephen Itayzik of Chiwere callers in the Adams home Sun-, caS° suffered a deep laceration in his day evening. right cheek. It took ten stitches to Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund of Chi-lclosc the wound. James Sullivan of cago motored out Saturday to spend Chicago a fish-hook caught in hi9 Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Stephen'finger while fishing on the lake. H. Smith . j James Lindgreen of Chicago burned Mr. and Mrs. Paul Schumacher and ; the finEcrs and palms of both hands, family of Woodstock visited with Mr.!A ?randson of James Belch of Sloand Mrs. Jacob Schumacher Friday c.ura Lake received a severe laceraevening. I tion of his face, from the bursting of •Mrs. Math Lay of Spring Grove a tin can" over a firecracker. It took was a caller here Saturday. I twelve stitches to close the wound. Mr. nd Mrs. Joe Jung and family ^a,ter Alexander or Chicago had of Grass Lake were visitors in the t'feep lacerations on the thumb and home of Mrs. Martin Jung Sunday. ) fingers of his right hand. i Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers' ^T- and ^rs- Stanley Stone of Chiand family and Mrs. John King mo- Ca#° »P«nt the first of the week with tored to Kenosha Sunday to visit with re'atives here. Mr. and Mrs. Louis King. | Mr. and Mrs. Douglass Crooks of » Richard Guyser of Chicago motored ^enilworth visited Friday at .®ut Saturday evening to spend Sunt." J Tales -•ft-- of InterestTaken Frost the Files of the Plaindealer Torn Al*.':"1 :' FIFTY VEARS AGO Quite a quantity or wool was de live red in this village on Saturday last, purchased by P. D. Smith. The board of directors have engaged the following teachers fpr the McHenry public school for the com ing year- J. A. Sheldon, principal, Miss Etta Torance, teacher of intermediate department, and Miss Belle Stoddard, primary department.. The steamer, "Mary Griswold", Capt. Hill, made her first Sunday excursion of the seos6n on Sunday last, and about fifty from this village took advantage of the occasion to make a trip to the lakes. i. - . FORTY YEARS AGO The Board of Supervisors have been in session, at Woodstock, this week. We are now enjoying in this section as fine weather as the most critical could ask f«r. Crops, of all kinds, never looked better at this time of year than now. Mrs. C- V. Stevens, the efficient P. M. at the West McHenry Post Office, has been making some improvements by putting in a window on the east side and making other needed changes. She is running the office in an unexceptionable manner, and to the entire satisfaction of its patrons. The Board of Health of this yillage report that the village was never in a more healthy condition than at the present time. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO It is estimated that nearly one thousand people boarded the Chicago train at this station Sunday evening and Monday morning, and still the North Western company declines to give us the new depot. C. L'. Page now drives a lyautiful new four passenger Rambler touring car. The car is driven by a. two cylinder 22-horse power gasoline engine and is one of the finest in this vicinity. Mr. Paige drove the machine down from the factory at Kenosha last Wednesday. Eggebrecht and Miller, the monument manufacturers who h$ve a shor> in Elgin, have purchased1 the Broad street marble works of B. A. Taylor at Lake Geneva, Wis., and have already taken possession ot the same. Besides being interested irt the above shops, Mr. Miller is also enjoying a growing business at his local work5*. Placed with the moat reliable Com panic* €o»e In aad talk it wng V !*fcoao McHenry 8 Telephone No. 198-R ; - Stoffel ft Reihansp«rger Ijwraari agents for all classes of property la the best coapanios. WEST McHENKY ILLINOIS ; • Dr. C. Keller OPTOMETRIST mmd OPTICIAN At His Summer Home, Riverside Drive, McHenry, IlL SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS All Work Guaranteed Phone McHenry 211-R §ay evening with John Pitzen. Mr. and Mrs. John Gerach of Chi- TWENTY YEARS AGO Fdr the first time/in many a moon, a hobo was seen working out time on the streets of this village. Herbert Freund, who owns and occupies the old Covell farm, east of McHenry lost five head of cattle hv lightning on Tuesday night of this week. The new barn, under construction the'0,1 the Edward Knox farm, south of this village fago visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe'of Jfrs^F- LKing Sunday afternoon. Misses Delores and Lorraine Sattem of Woodstock are spending the vacation with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Althoff. James Carr home. jthis , was moved from its Miss Dorothy Bremer of Chicago!foundation during the severe wind is» spending her vacation at the home i 8term on Tuesday night. Frankie Justen, McHenry's boy !n- The Powers family annual reunion : ^®®tor, has ^ again sprung a new one was held at the farm home of Mr. | ®n us* This time he has fitted an and Mrs. Willis Powers, who reside o'djoa^y bicycle with ^an engine and west of Wauconda. twenty-sixth annual This was the gathering and Mr. and Mrs. Steve May and fam-'war held on JulY *th, with thirty relily, Mrs. Steve King and son, Eu-1ative* Present. Those attending were gene, and Eleanor King motored to from Bar^ngton, Elmhurst, Edison Elgin Wednesday evening. IParlt- Vol° and Wauconda. Mrs. Cora Miss Marie Kempf?r of Chicago Bang8 represented members of the spent Thursday with Miss Alvera ! fa^,ny "aiding in Texas Hettermann. is having all Borts of fun with his home made motorcycle- Last year Frankie gained considerable notoriety by making an automobile out of an ordinary buggy. TEN YEARS AGO The stone" and cement work on tho Mr.' and. Mrs- Marlow Harris, the "ew building being erected as a Mr. and Mj*. Fred Smith and Mr. ,ormer * son Bert Harris of this jhome f°r Spring Grove S<*te bank id Mrs Tr^. Dundee P^ace' now residing at Barrington,!18 Practically completed. It is the A. P. Freund Excavating Contractor Zrvckiag, HydratOic and Owe t Berrice -• Road Biuldiiff Tel 204 M McHenry, HL and Mrs. Joe King ' were callers Thursday evening. I had their home entered by burglars Mr. and Mrs. Frank Michels and on Saturday evening, who secured daughter, Delores, were Elgin callers *100, while Mr- Harris were Friday evening. |out *or the evening. Silverware and Mrs. Joe King and daughters,'oiheT articles were not taken. Mabel, Eleanor and Sally Mae, motor-' Mt" and Mrs- Wm* Darre11 have reed to Burlington Friday evening i turned from a visit with Mrs. Dar- Mr. and Mrs. John Degen 'and rel1'8 P*renta» ***• and Mrs- Albert daughter, Jeanette, Mrs. Joe P. Mich- Roth*r' at Mineral Point- Wi®- Mrs. Lulu Quartel and Russell Magraw of Plymouth, Mich., are guests cf the former's mother, Mrs. Herman Brooks. George Jepson received word Satn- a ^ . . . . , urday of the serious and probably fa- ^ ^a8CJS ll entfitainmK heT Alness at North Adams, Vermont,, » 5 WeUs, two sons and 0f his father. In company with his g anddaughter from Dakota. Mrs. brother, Chauncey Jepson, of Ring- Wells was formerly Miss Ada Dowell. wood, and Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Under- In company with her guests, Mrs. wood of his place, he left here Sun- Case, Mrs. Alda Smith and sons spent dav morning for Vermont. Wednesday at the Century of Progress, Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Anderson announce the birth at a son, Friday, July 7, ete and daughter, Evelyn, and John Schriener motored to Elgin Sunday- WAUCONDA hope of the 'officials or the institution to have the new structure ready for occupancy early this fall. Mrs. A. G. Barbian has had erected on the west shore of Fox river near the N. E. Barbian residence, one of the very latest camping tents, for which she has taken the agency. While some of our business men report this year's summer business on par with that of former years, others report a very noticeable falling off. On account of tho activity on McHenry's new sewerage system some of our principal thoroughfares have been badly torn up during the past week or mora. §. H. Freund & Son ' CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Vfeone 127-R McHftnry Our experience is at Your Service in building Tour Wants Mrs. Jack Pescheck of Mikkelson, S. D., is spending a month with her father, Herman Brooks, and other nine-pound relatives. T - - I Mr. Brooks and daughters, Mrs. Mrs. Jack Ringer and children of Pescheck and Mrs. Lillian Larrabee Akron, Ohio, who have spent the past, of Kenosha attended the Century of three weeks with Mrs. Ringer's par- Progress Thursday. ^ ' AIN'T IT THE TRUTH! Wh«a Jiffirw Retlr«l Thomas Jefferson retired from public life to enjoy the comfort of tranquil pursuits only when his country no longer demanded his services. In hts beautiful mountain home, on the heights of the Blue Ridge, and near his beloved university, the "Sago of Monttcello" devoted his days to his gardens and his books. •©r. Prank J. Jtrka, Director of the Department of Public Health of the "State of Illinois, has released the following communication to officials of Cook County cities: "Public health is being, endangered and the milk pasteurization plant law Is being violated in municipalities In Illinois by the sale of "dipped milk" alleged to be pasteurized. "By 'dipped milk' is meant - milk that is dipped or drawn from a can or other* container and placed in coners tion to the consumers. There Is possibility of pasteurized ytnilk becoming recontaminated when It ts transferred to other containers outside the pasteurization plants. "The Illinois milk pasteurization plant law requires, that pasteurised milk be delivered to the consumers In the containers In which It Is placed at the pasteurization plants. The law also requires that pasteurized milk be placed, in containers washed, rinsed and sterilized by some efficient means approved by the Department of Public fieaith. The department does not approve the sterilization of containers outside of pasteurization plants. "Many persons undoubtedly buy 'dipped milk' believing that it is pasteurized and therefore safe, and do not realize the hazards of recontaminatlon by disease carriers. "The anticipated large attendance at the Century of Progress Exposition makes every precaution for the protectiorv of health necessary. An outbreak of communicable disease might have widespread and devastating results." Cheer Up, Sisters Women between the ages of twenty and thirty have, according to English statistics, three times as good a chance to marry as those of the same ago. In 11*14. Fingerprint* " iqigerprints are not allko^ ittd once an individual's record has been made, It may be filed with ev^ry police department in the country. By Marie H. Callahan, Editor^ Modern Beauty Shop Magazine Since the millinery industry has ovtdently made up its mind to disregard the old-faShioned idea that a hat is something to cover the head and insists on our wearing infinitesimal "inkspots" perched on an ear--or an eyebrow-- we tvomen are going to have to think about Our hair whether" we want to or not. We no longer need to grow a mop tiiat we can "sit on" to rate a place among the beautiful but what little we ha£e, after the thinning^ clipping prod&ss Is over, is certainly on parade At it never has been before. \ It is common knowledge that one of the results of some serious illnesses is frequently, falling out of the hair. But few of us take into account the fact that our general physical condition may also be the reason for our own ordinary hair troubles -- that physical condition might be the explanation of why our . once glossy hair has suddenly become dull and lifeless. But such is the case. The first essential for a healthy scalp is an active circulation of rich blood throughout the body. So~ It naturally1 follows that, dally exercise which keeps our circulation from becoming sluggish, and the proper functioning of the digestive system which provides the necessary nutritive elements to the blood stream, are both essential to hair health, go, the diet built around fresh milk, fruits and vegetables which is recommended for your figure and your complexion is necessary for lustrous hair, too. These protective foods guard beauty as well as health. ' The value of hair tonic lies in the stimulating action of some of its Ingredients which serve to improve the blood circulation, or in its oil producing or drying qualities. Hence, it is obvious that massage and regular brushing are also* most important' in producing beautiful hair. Now, about the shampoo. Pure soap, soft Water, thorough rinsing, are essential. If your hair is excessively oily it may need to be washed as "•-I; often as once a week. Dry hair be done a little less frequently. Brl massage given at the time of the, shampoo is a good idea. There artr numerous special methods such as egg".- shampoos, oil shampoos, etc., that wlu do wonders toward putting new life*, i n y o u r h a i r . V . . * * • • * • ' The arrangement of your hair ca^-:v" do so nauch to make or mar youf whole appearance that it Is wortlt"5 while to give some actual, definite study to it Here are a few hints to •guide you. First, look at your neck-- if it's short and plump a short halts „ cut or long hair worn with a slight upward line will be most becoming. On the other hand, If your neck i(t long and thin a long cut, or, for ev«» nings, a roll or fluffy ringlets at the neckline will be your best choice. . ^ Study your head and the shape o| your face. If your face is wide an$ full, keep your waves close to youf ears; If the face is long and thin, fluff ^ your hair out at the sides.1 Is youf' forehead high? If so probably yott need a bang or a flat curl. If it's low, try brushing your hair back. There was a day when we might have reo* omraended a fly-aAvay, fluffy bob fc the young flapper-type of girl, but day we're all pretty ^'smooth.' sleek Is a pretty good general rule] to follow. i- >'• 0nlya STRAIGHT EIGHT can giv* Straight Eight PERFORMANCE! "I likt Pomtiac j kteaut* I wamt I Straight Eight < performanct-- aot smithing Just at good." "I likt safety and m # fort, Mud tbeu Irat da|% helitvt at, I prigf Ptntiac's Fisher Cath' tfUtd VentHatitm. * ~A«*rit*btmmm • *ec*isttj for mr. Pomtiac meets mf first meed betaust it lasts, stands up amd "PmUiat »»t emit ptrftrms liJhe a trutf mudtrm car--iit--hs the part, amd I'm twemdtf*." "Pm k--m m**4tm. eoiUy cart, but 1 must saj my P*mliat gims mtertrytking I could wmpt--amdgit ts it "I don't want Cheapness, hut I want a Ureal automobile amd f vMsutpractical ectm- «•;. Pontiac ghm •fee Just that," PoNTIAC--the Economy Straight Eight--Is oftf." of the outstanding successes of the year. It is showing the to big-car comfort and Straight Eight performance at low price and with operating economy. Everybody knows that only a Straight Eight aui give Straight Eight performance. - Pontiac is the Economy Straight Eight. Ask a|y Pontiac owner---and you'll find it is giving 15 miles or more to the gallon--and gives that noc only for a few thousands of miles, but for 'many thousand® after you'd expect it to show signs of wear. One of Pontiac'3 outstanding features is Fisktr OmtroiUd Ventilation. Many say xto qMT Cta be cpftsidered modern without it. Try a demonstration. Let PoffllSe !t*tf coo» si»A you that it has no equal at or near its prica j' Ath yemr doater for a copy of tho hoohiot, 1 "What eh you moam--Ba/amood Vatmo," U is fro*. Vtoit tko Comoro/ Motors Budldlmg Cemtmry of Progross PDNTIAC THE. ECONOMY STRAIGHT fl^HT 1 OVERTON ft CO WEN 5 B 5 WEST McHENRY, ILL H B¥ ARNOT m;:v, YouR fttCH UHClE HAS * UPT.Vbo ft mUOK DollMtS m 8o*S * HIE LfcHCku* HIS C .f'-l, -his."'! :

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