Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 31 Aug 1933, p. 2

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'.' • V - ';f "->j'.V,;V- -Vv",W.K "raw* The Penny : WAL. CO. • FAIR! ELKMORN SEP. 4-7 :-'"w Days "Headliei<ti& Attractions WLS BARN DANCE :n.; -<^-r W*I/S'V ' ' r GO ROUND y ^ATURE ACT|4, BASEBALL GAMES 11--RIDES--1% XQ-~bands--IQ 12~~' HARNESS RACES 15--SHOWS--15 Daily1 Program (Subject to Change) Our Washington Letter ' -Br- National Editorial Association Washington, Aug. 30--It is almost inconceivable but reports indicate that CongTess has been as easily, forgotten by the rank and file as yester*- tiay'f toothache. The laws which Congress passed .authorizing reconstruction activities have provided a stage for the President, General Johnson and his associates. The importance of the national legislators, in the scheme of recovery, has suffered Ijadly" from • 'deflation in the- public - 'in'Tia. Except for ambitious office" .reo£ers, the average citizen relalizing the futility of getting help, is not liooJifig the mails \Vith inquiries :to Senators- and r Representatives. The JSlue Eaglf atjd its boosters With new personalities have- for the time being ... .... . chased the so'lons oilt of the spotlight, ' srock, McHenry County,' Concert for the afternoon program by the Holton-Elkhorn Band at 1:00 p. m. Race program caned at 1:30 p.m Saddle horses judged Tuesday and Wednesday at 1:00 p. m. Concert, for the evening program by. the Holton-Elkhorn Band at 7 p. m. WLS Show and Special Attractions at 7:30 p. m. Tickets for ampitheatre will be on sal« at 9 a. m. Sunday, Sept. 3r': BASEBALL 1:00 p. m.--Whitewater vs. Elk- ; horn. 2:45 p. m.--East Troy vs. Palmyra. , Monday, Sept. 4 LABOR DAY _ BASEBALL 9:45 a. m.--Burlington-va. Lake sUeneva. 1:30 p. m.--Geona City vs. Walworth. A. M.--Whitewater High School Band. P. M.--Belvidere High School Band. 7:20 p. m.--Drill, Harvard LegionBoy Scout Drum and B'.igle Corps. , ' : 7:30 p. m.--WLS Barn Dance Show and Attractions. RACES 2:22 Trot .......... .$500 ,8-yr. Pace, $400 and Stop Watch Free-for-All Pace.. $300 ^ Tuesday, Sept. 5 CHILDREN'S DAY BASEBALL 9:45 a. m.--Sunday's vWinners. A. M.--Elkhorn High School Band. P. IVL-r--East Troy High School Band. 7:30 p. m.--WLS Barn Danee Show and Attractions. RACES 2:15 Pace. .$500 2:18 Trot..$300 8-yr Pace ..... ..$400 and Cup • ' ; • Wednesday, Sept. 6 HOMECOMING DAY BASEBALL 3:45 a. m.--Monday's winner-?, A. M.--Delavan, Darien and Palmyra High School Bands. A'ddipg .insalt-to ihjury. one finds that those remainingr here have- never ! penetrated the, recovery board? witix' (their influence. ' Congressional "fixi er*'\ do iiot count at the. eagle's nest- When a true history of the codemaking' for industry . is . written for future generations, it must contain a reference to the, "big-stick" methods of Presidents Franklin D. and Theodore Roosev.elt. It is quite likely that Cousin Franklin will have the greater victories chalked up to his score. During the last few days he has been instrumental in breaking down the ancient grudges between capital and labor in the steel and coal trade. The power given the President by the last session of Congress has been quietly utilized, to whip warring factions into line; It is reported that the President talked with Wall Street leaders who control the financial structure of coal amd steel enterprises that he would exercise his'inflationary authority over currency; unless the leaders in these two "basic industries agreed t? A code. • The capitulation of the coal and steel groups is such that class strife between the union and open-shop labor outfits will be resumed when the code now nothing more than a truce, is a dead letter. The unions will concentrate on organizing these fields where ^they have been rebuffed and check-mated for years. It has been gajling to yield on what the industrialists always held as a sacred principle in dealing with employes. Roosevelt hit at their solar plexus when he-threatened Wall Street which pulls the strings. Maybe as old Ben Johnsdn once said., "let them call it mischief, when it is past and prospered, it will be virtue." At least, that is [apparently the philosophy of the j President when he considers the political aspects of his strong arm methods for recovery. Wonder is frequently expressed as to the ultimate appearance of Arrieri- 'can industrial ^fabric when the fever of innovation and reform subsides. The march of the intellectuals has been met with relatively little hindrance. Their theories have been accepted in whole or in part in the fond hope that things cannot be much iwoi'se. The unfortunate feature is | that professors and other theorists manifest no interest in the practical operation of plans once their ideas have been approved. In substance, this state of mind is proving bothersome for the success of the National j Recovery Administration. It is one tiling to fill the world with long words and long beards but something different to make the machinery work in afecordance with pet theories. . The consuming public, particularly those not feeling the effects of sporadic wage increases, are realizing that somebody has to pay for government elief. The processing tax on wheat which is now effective has forced an increase in the price of bread. Meat products and groceries have likewise been boosted. Wearing apparel and household equipment' prices are advancing as operating costs of factories and storfes are increased under the terms of the industrial recovery codes The main problem is to keep purchasing power, abreast of living costs--a condition which keeps our best minds under a severe strain. Putting the screws on business to raise wages Administrator Johnson at last has demanded co-operation from the bank RUSSELL ALLEN, Solicitor r State of Illinois, County of McHenry, ss. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County, May Term A. ^D. 193S. JACOB SCHNEIDER, Complainant ' vs. WILLIAM G. SCHREINER, CAROLINE SCHREIN.ER, «t al., Defendants. IN CHANCERY " GEN. NO. 26083 TERM NO ^431 PUBLIC NOTICE ik hereby given that in pursuance of a Decree made and entered by the Circuit Court of! McHenry County, Illinois, in the sbo^eT entitled cause on the »17th day of August A/. D. 1933, I, Henry L. Cowling Master in Chancery of the Circuit ;Court of McHenry County, Iillinois, • will on Monday, the 18thday of September A, D. 1933, at the hour of 9:30 o'clock in the forenoon of said/day, (Central Standard Tirtie). at the East main entrance of the Court House in the City of Wood- , offer By ELOISE BENNETT .i' fVOU may go home, r * I^ura McElroy for sale and sell at public vendue to the highest and best bidder the fol-: lowing described fe-al estate,' br- sb much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said Decree in full, to-wit: A part of lot number one (1J of Block number eight (8) in West McHenry, Illinois, described as follows.: Beginning "on Street line, One Hundred ancLifiighteen, feet (118) easterly on Street line from the North West corner of^ said lot ope (1) at a stake; thence Southerly along the east line of a sub-lot formerly sold to Henry Heiner, One Hundred, and Thirty- Two (132) feet; thence easterly along a South line of lot one (1) sixty-six (66) feet; thence North £5% degrees East One Hundred Thirty-two (132) feet -to Street line, thence Westerly on street line to the place of beginning, " situated in the City of McHenry, County of McHenry and State of Illinois. Said sale being made subject to judgment now outstanding against said premises "in favor of The'orior& Hamer, Receiver of the Citizen's State Bank of McHenry in the sum of $487.67. i*ERM5 OF SALE Cash in hand on day of sale, at which time a certificate of purchase will be issued in accordance with said Decree and the Statute. Dated this 18th day of A. D. 1933. •• * HENRY L. COWLIN, 13-3 Master in Chancery. P. >1.--Jefferston County Farm Bureau Band. in many communities. ,rfhe politicians are watching developments in the banking investigation at Detroit with more than ordinary interest. The prospect of Herbert Hoover taking the witness stand as ~ 7:3TT p. m.--W L S Merry Go Round Show and Attractions. RACES 2:15 Trot..$500 2:18 Pace..$300 2-yr. Trot i'.$400 and Cup Thursday, Sept. 7 STOCK PARADE DAY .. BASEBALL • 9:45 a. m.--Tuesday's wi Wednesday's winners. A. M. -- Lake Geneva High School Band. P. M.--Walworth High Schocl Band. 1:15 p. m.--Steele Parade, 7:30 p, m.--W L S Merry Go Round Show and Attractions. RACES 2:22 Pace §500 2:12 Trot..$300 8-y- Trot, $400 and Stop Watch "The Fair That Always Wakes Good" WILLIAM M. CARR#L, Attorney State of Illinois, County of McHenry, ss. In the County Court of McHenry County, September Term, A.D., 1933. IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF HENRY M. WEGENER, Incompetent NOTICE TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN, and HENRY M. WEGENER, BERNARD P. WEGENER, JOSEPH G WEGENER, GEORGE J. WEGENER, ELIZABETH SCHWEIGHOFER, MARY McDERMOTT. YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED that the undersigned Conservator of the Estate of Henry M. Wegener, in competent, has filed a Petition in the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, in Probate, for leave to sell the following described Real Estate: An undivided 1-6 interest in Lot Number Four (4) of th€ County ; Clerk's Plat of part of the South Half of Section Number Twentysix (26), in Township Number Forty-five (45) North, of Range Number Eight (8), East of the Third Principal Meridian, said Plat filed for record in the Recorder's Office of McHenry County, Illinois, on May 6, 1902, and recorded in Book 2 of Plats on^ Page 38, (excepting and reserv-" ing therefrom that part thereof dedicated to the Village of McHenry, by Dedication dated October 15, 1925, and recorded in said w, Thomas.** settled her {email and aged body back comfortably against the taupe velours of her car, sfirveyins with satisfaction the assortment of small packages bv her side. Between the thin, veined forefinger and thumb of her left hand she held "a penny. After her eyes had wandered apprai.singly over the packages they turned on the penny. It was an Indian head penny. It had eoine' Into Mrs. XR-Klroy's posses slon nof two minutes before In the change from jthe jig-saw puzzle she had bought. ?|t would "do for t'he day'S gift to ten-year-old Bobby. Every > afternoon, unless "extreme leather interfered- Thoiims,- the M^- Diamond History India was the original "home of the diamond as a Jewel. For centuries Inremained the sole source of Europe's diamond supply. About 1730 diamonds were discovered In Brazil. In 1867 diamonds were discovered In South Africa. South African diamonds constitute more than . 30 per cent of tho world's snpply. ' ° 4 *?«• nt;»rf» Klro.V chauffeur for twenty years,, took Mrs.' Anthony • McElroy, senior,' on a chopping^ e^xp^dition from the house \j;here she lived with her son and her * grandson.: On. this expedition she did such small e'ir^nds as' thp yarious^bHsy 'members of the family, neeiiecl. And alWj'Ss at: tjlfe pnd of the trip:; there was one • finalerrartd, Some lcnicl; .tenaek for Pobby, tier great-grandson ; -Thbmas . fidgeted slightly." "Quiie sure you're -finished, Mrs.v McElr,oy he-questioned. ^ "Yes, thank you, Thomas. Oil--, you're thinking of Bobby! Yes, I've an Indian head penny for him. He's collecting"coins, you- knovv." , Thomas chuckled. "Yes'tn.. AjiI stamps and cellophane and bid pipes and--" Mrs. McElroy went on: "Yes. And specially Indian head pennies. He wants to make a fortune witli them. He's heard they're worth more than a cent now and he's trying to corner the market so that when they go up he can sell them:" Thomas, relieved, let the .-car-out a bit and Mrs. McElroy turned tlie penny over in her fingers and looked at t'-ie date. An old one, 1S66. She closed her eyes. She had been--let's see. ten years old, in 1866. On a .Tune day In that year she had found a penny, too. Slie remembered that she arid John Martin had been walking home together from school. How the city had changed since then! There had been country lanes where there' were city pavements now. And where she had lived, up near Fifty-ninth streets, there had been a little pond that all the children loved. Choked under cement, now, of course, the springs and streams that fed 4t. She and John had loitered in the shade at the side of the pond on their way home.; v ; I "1 wish we had some candf^' 3ohn * had said. , ' ' ; - : • - " :• "Would you divide?" she had asked. "I'd give you morjb than half," John had said. ' "Would you, John? Oh, thank you. Oh, look ! * Home money !" And there In the grass at their feet she had spied a penny--bright and new and shining. "Look, John." We'll go buy some candy. . You carry the money." „ So John had taken charge of their find. "It's our special penny," he had said. "I'll mark It for ours." And then they had sat on the grass while he scraped away with his knife at the edge of the penny to mark it for their own. "It's brand new," he had said. "Look--it has this year's date!" He let her feel the ridge with her finger nail, right in front of the tip of the Indian's nose. "Now let's go buy some candy." "Laura," John had bragged, "I'mgoing to be rich some day when I grow up. I'm going to have piles and piles of money. And I'm going to marry you and give you half, of It. And we'll have candy each "day." John Martin--well, he'd b€en right. He'd laid the foundation of the great fortune that his grandsons were work lng so hard to hold together today. She turned over the worn old coin in herfingers. Her nail caught in a worn ridge at its edge She opened her eyes and looked, with a little Recorder's Office, in Book 10 of breathless start of Interest. There It Miscellaneous Records on " PagCT '^r fl8 Vl" 0 247), said above described premises situated in the City of McHenry, in the County of Mo Henry, in the State o£ Illinois^ and the application for such leave under said Petition will be made to said Court in the County Court Room N - --- --- ----- | of said McHenry County in the Court ;ng- fraternity. There are faint signs (House at Woodstock, Illinois, on the <r expansion of commercial credit but first Monday of September, A.D. 1933, the procrastination h^s proven costly at the hour Of ten o'clock A. M.,^t which time and place you or any of ycu may be present if you so see fit. D. F. QUINLAN, Conservator of- the Estate of Henry M. Wegener, Incompetent-, 12-3 Ant* First Builders • Wllite ants built the first skyscraper andf were well organized Into colonies millions of years before man's advent on earth, fossilized remains show. carry a full line of RURAL SCHOOL BOOKS ; Netc and Second Hand S • W RIG H T, Druggist mVTI;;. i-1 ".n,^ Woodstock. 111. LABOR DAY SEPT. The New GOODYEAR mileage PATHFINDER safety value 1.40-21 $5-55 4.50-20 $6-00 4.75-20 $7.00 • • price U • good looks 5.00-19 $7.20 5.00-20 $7-45 hfetime guarantee 4.50-21 $6-30 i 75-i» $B70 30x3 y\ $5-15 c Don't postpone getting the tires you ; need now. Enjoy your last summer - ^ohday on a new set of Goodyears. Exceptional buys in \ discontinued brands of tires. Ask for your '• size. • Great Savings. - f. Prices -are still lower than they were - last fall. Play safe. Before you start out, drive in and let us look over your liires. BUY THIS TIRE # Prices are marching up. ' But if you act in time you can still buy Goodyears at prices shown here--and most of them are lower than they were last fall. . . Look at this new 1933 Goodyear Pathfinder. With FULL CENTER ^TRACTION, 20% thicker nonskid tread, and stouter Supertwist Cord body, it turns in more miles, more blowout protection, more safety, than you could get from any tire costing four times as much a few years ago . . . Now is certainly the time to replace worn, dangerous tires with Pathfinders all around. No one can guarantee how long today's still low prices can last. We have your size. Be sure to get Goodyear quality tubes, too. sag ALL FULL OVtRSIZE Ottor itm prfeM *f0»0»tl0n«tW)i Ita G O O D Y E A R WALTER J.--FREUND Tire and Tube Vulcanizing, Battery Charging, Repairing Phone 294, West McHenry, Illinois Pinq:Free,yes I not all..... requested is not without political sig^ nificance. He cannot be required t& testify in a local scandal involving banking methods. The historical records faff to disclose many instanced whero former Chief Executives voluntarily put themselves under the merciless spotlight to explain some of their official or unofficial acts while in high office. Hoover is still thi| titular leader of the Republican party. His lieutenants and millions of partisan followers still maintain that the voting public did not give him a fair: deal when they turned, down his bid for return to the White House for another term. Therefore any quiz regarding his influence in banking matters during his, regime becomes a »;atter of . supreme political importance. NEW CAP FOR C. C C 'Oak* Live in Colonie*...• Ofttnbel oaks live in colonial have an elaborate underground root system spreading from the parent tree of the colony, with runners sending up aerial shoots to form other trees, while these individual trees also have a 11m- Ued, secondary root system. •** m T«1-r of the Indian's nose, worn smooth and even. This ' was the same coin. John hadn't forgotten. He had gone West to win his wealth. He had asked her to wait for him,and she had half' promised. But then Anthony McElroy --poor, then, too, though he did well enough later on--had come along and She had forgotten John and her halt' promise. And when he had come back from the West with a small fortune already his, he had found her promised to Tony. - - , But there was that'coi» ttii.ii6r;iignil»' a part of John's struggle. ' The very same coin. "Thomas," Mrs. McElroy. said to the. 'chauffeur., "Perhaps you'd better not go home yef. Go back to \Vih.-diips' and I'll bu>'.. Bobby that new stamp album he wants. I'll keep this old 'iteony,*'^ . -V* "' ' Coin Selli for $2,083 Numismatists flocked to a rare coin sale held in Paris at the Hotel Drouot recently, where $2,080 was paid for a tetradrachuia strijfk at Ampbiprdis ,-(,Ma('edonia), and S(5G0 went for a ^Kilver^decadraohma struck at Syracuse. In 187H. only -,?r>0 was paid for the coin sold here for $2,Oc0. Other rare coins sold for from S.'UtO to .S2H. and the entire sale netted the auction liovii-e a -siitii 'of 241/KX) francs, ov $o;o4o. THIS NEW COMPLETE SUPERFUEL COMBINES 7 Show Us Scentless garlic has been developed by a San Francisco man.,. Quite natty is Private Jatnes L. Goode of Boiling field in the fiverseas cap that the War department is issuing to the members of the Civilian Con-. servation corps forest army. Subscribe lor The Flaindealeti Bounty Jumper* A bounty Jumper in Civil war days referred to a map who enlisted In fhe army when bounties were being paid for enlistments. After receiving the reward, he deserted. Often, the same man would collect several bountlee nnder different namrs. Po*t Lacked Tkrax* Horace, the Latin poet, complained l!n his day that it was difficult to dle- •cover an original theme. ALL ESSENTIALSJ Top onti-knock rating for its price class O Unsurpassed in starting, acceleration and . mileage O Free from harmful sulphur and gum £ Accurately adjusted for seasonal variations C Always uniform everywhere 0 Fresher because of Standard's popularity y Sells at the price of regular NEW STANDAAD REO CROWN Try 5 SUPERFUEL ** Gals. "J* RRICED NO HIGHER THAN REGULAR GASOUNE T5X ft 1A10 '• (Price applies to city proper. May vary aiighfly tilaev ' SOLD EXCLUSimY BY STANDARD OIL STATIONS AND DEALERS...ALSO DISTRIBUTORS OF ATLAS TIRES

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