Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 May 1935, p. 3

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LiFV - jf< * *r * \0 ^ V ' v *»*«, 1 p^i P® « ^ jw ^*sv *? , v > <- ^ i*^4 x r« r* ' / -v^ *qm ^ ,? *• f r» «^r--yy v ^ 'A •'• •:- ^? Thursday, May 30, 1935 * "V s., -V _, „?\ ' •**• • •»,' • '• •v - ^~ ' ?,. -, £-•1 •- ' / - •>' ••." . i» ,,' i_-^;. " <,'«•* " ,** t ^ . <&. , ,. "•»'**, 1. ^ « ' -J': . 'sfl! MoHSNST PLAINDKALEE k It Taps for the Cavalry Horse? g--J,*?" *<Y ^ -I Here Is a trooper from one of Uncle Satu's cavalry units trying out his ;.£$|w.\«Kront, a motorcycle equipped with a light machine gun. Motorltatipn enthusiasts believe the cavalry, horse will soon bea thlng of the past. ;.-: ' Where |t Is 3 ^ to Payday Robert Morris, "Forgotten" Principal in One of Illinois' "Ghost school*;" :-- and Two of His Tiny Charges. ~ Robert Morris, principal of the turn bledown schoolhouse in Hallidayboro, - J#ckson county, came out to sen? what tie photographer was doing. One of his 'sleeves was empty and hit clothes were old, shiny and impresses "How puch cash money do you ge eich month?" he was asked. aLK"Money?" he replied. "Money? .Why.. I've only been on the job here ont year. This district pftys its teacher* with orders. They're cashed in rota tioii. I'll get my first month's pay In about three and a hdlf years." , "How do you manage to- live?" "I was saving In my youth," he said with a wan spiile. Mr. Morris didn't want" to have his picture taken. He was, he said, a'-bit sensitive about his clothes. But per suasion won. The holes in the school house assure plenty of ventilation Salaries have been cut about in hall no school supplies have been bough for the last three years; the Janlto has been dismissed. \Says:= It ie better to scrape raw potatoes than pare them when-preparing them for boiling. Full food value is thus retained. • • • •• White woolen blankets, which have become yellowed with age, may be dyed pink. rose, blue, or any favorite color. Bind them with braid of the same shade. To remove the fat that forms on the toj of soup, put a piece of Ice In cheesecloth and pass It i*apidly over the hot soup. All fat will adhere to the" cheesecloth. • • • • ; * Bilk handkerchiefs Should be washed With borax In tepid water. Use little :'or: no soap. Colored handkerchiefs should always be washed In cold or. tepid water and dried lp the shade - • £ Associated Newspapers. VVNU Service. "There's an old spinning wheel- In the corner" for Mrs. J. D. Thompson seventy-year-old St. Taul^ woman, iii.ttii *er of 12 grown sons and daughters, and she uses, it . every day. Mrs Thompson, a native of Denmark, ^iips the wool, washes, cards, epins, dye; and knits the yarn hy herself. In Th<> past year she has 'nade more than 100 pairs of mittens and gl.ov.es. 50. pair of socks and other knitted articles. She sells what her children do not use Honored by Flower, DO YOU KNOW THAT-- Federal 'gasoline lazes cost American motorists about $180,000,000 a *««% " X-'&v:- ;'"-rY. Hoarders^ Francs hare salted away something ljke 40^000,000,000 francs; ; Approximately $107,000,000 Is owed to school teachers In this country for services performed. More drownings occur among boys between fifteen and nineteen than among any other group." .1 ' Every year from 30 to 50 Outbreaks of milk-borne disease ue reported in the United States^ Only two units of the federal government operate at a profit--the patent office and the navigation bureau. • If you smoke an average of a package Of cigarettes a. day you pay t%e government $22 a year/In taxes. . • Statistics show that Friday is the safest day on which to drive a car, while Saturday is the most dangerous, ' Anaverage of 25 people apply each year for portents on perpetual motion, machines--butthemodel* never wprfe Less than half of the milk produced by the farmers in this country Is marketed by them as whole milk or cream for direct consumption.--Pathfinder Magazine. ALONG THE HIGHWAY There are approximately 8,000 head •f moose in Wyoming. There are more than 620 firms listed In the New. York Stock Exchange. Woodrow Wilson coached the Princeton university football team in 1890. 4 . In this country every "year between 8,000,000 and 8,000,000 tin dtos ape filled with food.-- The American public swindled out of more than a blllidti deitsrs every j®nrT5jrTraif"T^a<r schema.":; 7 ^ Of the 4,367 vessels passing through the Panama canal last year American ships led in number, with Iiritish second ' Nearl^ .'half amilllonmiles of pipe lines made of some 30,000,000 tons of "steel" are in 1 service in the United States..- - •- Eighty-five Talencte orange trees, of the original 1883 planting hear Placental, Calif., are still liviijg and a few yield fruit. An official survey shows there arc about 2,000 judicial tribunals In Georgia, including courts, held by justices of the peace. Why "Typhoid'Nurse" . Is Giving 'Em Shots JOHN H. FREUND ESTATE PROBAUED LAJST WEEK The $7,000 estate * of John H. Freund of Johnsburg, who died March 22, was probated last week in the county court. According to the term's of the will, a son, Frtfd P. Freund, is left carpenter tools and work bench. The sum of $100 is left for the purpose of having low masses said for the deceased wife. The sum of $6,000 is left in trust to a son, Fred, to be invested for the purposes of the support of another son, Ludwipr. The sum is to be invested in good securities, the income to be used for the support of the son, Ludwig. . ' • In the event of his death prior to the death -of the other children^j^he balance of5 the trust is to be divided among the remaining children. The remainder of the estate is to be divided among the following children: > Kathrine Rauen, Elizabeth' Raueh,, "Helen* Bishop And. Fred Freund. , > X son, Fred, isi named executor by ; terms of the will, dated Feb, 27f 1931V ! The estate consists of $2,000 real est^ te; and, $5,p00 personal property.;. v Top, "drinking cistern" at Saline county school fed from schoolhouse- roof. Center, toilet at the Farris school, °C Hamilton county. (No door is needed.) Bottom, an old oaken bucket type of insanitary school well in Jackson county with some o,f ah* kids getting a load of germs. When the reporter met the "typhoid nurse" In the office of M. L. Hunt, county superintendent of schools, Hamilton comtty, -In MvIie.Hnal«»rt>. -she^ SPRING BREEZES Some men swear to love; others love to swear. • . A famous film Star Is retiring. But not very! , Women believe that a secret keeps better when divided. Do committees keep minutes *6 that they can waste the hours? A bachelor is a man who has no troubles or sorrows to share with anybody. "Referee cheered after the match," states a newspaper. So the home team won! ^ It "Is said that a rapid after-dinner speaker Is more pleasant to listen to than a slow one. Anyway, his speech - is over sooner. :i - Lucille F. McMlllin, the enly woman member of the United States civil serv tee commission, photographed with the azalea named in her honor. The flow er Is named Lucille McMlllin Azale;i and is known by the scientific name of Azalea Rutherfordi. It Is a salmon color and was developed by the staff of the botanical garden In Washington. Indian Boy Adopts Mayor La Guardia When Mayor Florella La Guardia of New York, health, went"te the Grand canyon in Arizona, he was at once adopted by Kajoch-a-na, fouryear- old Hopl Indian boy. The lad acted as the mayor's personal escort and «e0e with him on one of the big trail mules. M. E. CHURCH You are invited to attend services at the ML E. Church e-ery Sunday. Sunday school, 10 a. m. Morning worship, 11 a. m. Sermon by the ppstor, Rev. L; H. Brattain. ~ The district. superintendent, Dr. Audrey S. Moore of Chicago, presided at the fourth quarterly conference held at the Methodist church Sunday afternoon. Reports of the various officers and aoetetfea wen read and plana for the coming year were discussed. Trustee' 'or another year who weie approved by Dr. Moore are, Dr. R. G. Chamberlain, L. V. Adams, L. J. Mc- Cracken, Alby Krusr, Lloy " BenwelL Stewards for the ensuing year were appointed as follows, Mrs. William Bacon, L. J. McCracken, Mrs. Lillian Sayler, Lelah Bacon, Mrs. Lillian Cox, Mrs. C. W. Klontz, Ray Colby, Clar* ence Douglas, Arleen Bacon. Lay delegates elected to represent the church at the fourth quarterly cor fereoce are Mrs. Alby Kntff and I* J. McCracken A very sad case :. The fletlrn writer who was unable to think of a good excuse to give his wife an arrivlnc home lat? one night. A -man- who had been expecting a targe legacy found that a part share In an old fishing boat was all that had been left to him. A bit of a smack for him.--Answers Magazine. ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN More than 200 women to Canada are qualified lawyers. One In every eight drivers In England in 1934 was a woman. Women are becoming efficient as plasterers in Moscow, Russia. Girls as young as fifteen years are employed In mines In Japan.,: For a Hindu woman*no disaster Is greater than the loss of her husband. T' Women's greatest genius, so far, has been shown in the writing of remarkable novels and poetry. Women In India have been taught for thousands of years to regard their husbands as their gods. Lame, northern Ireland, has ruled that, all female teachers must resign within three months after marriage. Women constitute nearly two'thirds of the total number of employees In the leather glove-making industry In the United States. Jalked of "shots" and sanitation and sickness. Out among the schools the reporter found pupils drinking from open cisterns, the water often coming from the schoolhouse roofs. He found ancient ' openwork" toilets, falling apart; apparently of pre-Clvi! war vintage; buzzing flies and crawl log Insects. In the Farris district, home of the above -.toilet; the assessed value of, all property Is Taxing for school purposes, at the le'gal* limit, $1 to the $100 valuation, the school can get $199.40 per year. There are 18 pupils enrolled. That's $11.77 each. The school asked for $8.12.83 state aid last year. But the state, due to a legislative faux pas, is-far back In Its payments to the starving schools of the state. -- - - ,i. - Wm. M. Carroll, Attorney EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Estate of John H. Freund, Deceased. The undersigned, Executor of the last Will and Testament of John H. Freund, deceased, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, on the 5th day of. August, A. D. 1935; at which time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having same adjusted. All persons indebted to said Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the" undersigned. Datejl this 27th day of May, A. D. 1935. FRED P. FREUND, EXeetftsyr •• . i4 Fig» Tbra# LILT LAKE Mrs. William Etten entertained th^ members of the Lily Lake Ladies' League Tuesday afternoon. Cards and bunco were played and prizes were won by Mrs. C.. Miller, Mrs. Edward Wiesbaum, Mrs. G. Lipfert, Mrs. Geo. Wegener and Lillian Lipfert. The serving of a luncfi concluded a most enjoyable afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Schweighofer and daughter,s Catherine~"and Doris, of Chicago, spent the weekend at their summer home. Miss Christine Wegener, a nurse of St. Anthony's hospital, Chicago, visited the home off her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. J. Wegenr over the weekend. ' > Mrs. Fred Dosch , Mrs .MC. Lehzen and sqn, Roman, were Libertyville callers Monday. \ • i-.V': Mrs. Lucy Wegener of Grayslake sp^nt the weekend at Lily Lake.. . r " Miss Genevieve. Daw <)f Grayslaka spent the weekend at the ' home of her grandparents, Mr. &nd Mr&- Joseph Daly. Visitors in the Joseph Daly )iorne Sunday were Miri Perzenlka and son x>i Chicago. . "' : - • • Mr. and Mrs. F., Dosch and daughter, Mir. and Mrs. Gus Schweighofer and daughters visited ttye- home of Mr. and Mfs. S^tutv day evening.- WHliam Etten has done noble work on the roads and .beaches at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Wilhert Swanson and Mrsv Fred Dosch and daughter were Woodstock callers Wednesday. Callers in the Fred Dosch home Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. John Tysler and son, George, Mrs. Clara Winter and Mr. "and Mrs. Harry Miller, Christine Wegener, Genevieve Daw ajtd grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jcsph Daly. Many summer residents were in this locality over the weekend. Among those at Lily; Lake were: Mr. and Mi*s. Hanson and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bloom, . Mr. and Mrs.' Mackey, Mr. and Mrs. Esser, Mr. and Mrs. Pecha and family, Mrs. L. Gannon, George Toons J. Suprinski and many others of Chicago. Knitted Costumii WIN TYPING AWARDS Members of the typing class* at high school have received awards for skill and several have received pins from the Woodstock Typewriter Company. In the forty word group the student must write forty words a minute for fifteen minutes with a limited number of errors. Those winning forty word pins are: Dorethy Althoff, Marion Kaelin, Florence Larkin, Evelyn Karls, Isabel Blake, Elseda Freund, Ruth Klintworth, Reinhart Hansen, Maru> Lay, Delphin Freund, Shirley Covalt, Ray Hetterman, Eleanor Bolger, Kathleen Justen. ' In the f fty word group to Vhieh the same rub s were applied the winners were Evelyn Karls, Dorothy Althoff, Marian Kaelin, Marie Lay, Delphin Freund. Say you read it in THC PLAINDEALER.. -- v • JOHNSBURG •f m Mr. and Mrs. Joe King and daughter were Chicago callers Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John Lay of Spring Grove spent Thursday evening with Mrs. Steve Schmitt. » Mrs. Martha Freund was a Ringwood caller Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. P. Miller and Mrs. Geo. King and Son were Woodstock callers Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Gerlach motored to Milwaukee, Wis., Wednesday evening. s , „ Math Raufen of Spring^Grove Was a caller ..here Friday afternoon. ' ' Miss Katherine Pitzen of Chicago spent the weekend with her father, John Eitzen. * Mr. and Mrs: Peter Freund were Woodstock callefs FiriHay, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. L,. Fretitnd .^refi Milwaukee callers Saturdayv Mr. and Mrs/ Paul Schymaker and family of Crystal like- were, callers here Sunday. . - Mr. and Mrs: Jake Miller and family of Spring Grove wer? callers he^re Saturday evening. " Mr. and Mrs. Schultz of Chicago spent the weekend with Jphn Schmitt ,.,u and family. • :<• Mr. and "Mrs.. Nick- Miller of Kdt- : p.•; mond were callers here Saturday eve- ; „• ning. 'v Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Skifano of Chi- "» cago spent Sunday at .the home of - - Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Meyers. * * Mr, and Mrs. Ray Horick of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund and daughter of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Steve H. Smith. Joe Schmitt of Beloit, Wis., wmS S caller, here Wednesday. Mrs. Geo. Zarnstorff of Spring Grove visited with her sister, Mrs. Jacob Thiel, Tuesday. Charley Schaefer of Chicago, spent Sunday with his parents', Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Schaefer. There were thirteen children received their first Holy Communion at St. John's Chuch at the 8 o'clock mass Sunday morning, May 26. Mr. and Mrs. Tony Miller" and daughter of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Joe. P. Miller. ' iu y M ' * If'-:;-.- Mr. and Mrs. William Wilson of Chicago called in McHenry Sunday oh their way to the Clayton Harrison home near Ringwood. Central Garage "Plione 200-J Fred J. Smith, Prop. Johnsburg The best equipped garage iji Northern Xllinois. We can take care of any kind of an automotive repair job and guarantee our work. Standard Service Station 24-Hour Towing Service ' (lUndy Location for Summer Residents) : FRED SMITH, Prop. in buifituj Standards The smart umbrella coring, first launched by Lucien Lelong, is here achieved by sun ray pleats knitted right into a skirt pod cape of navy wool niLxed with white silk yarn. Reveres are faced with white pique to match the waistcoat that fastens with navy-and-white enameled buttons. The wide belt Is navy, blue leather. The toque from Taly In navy yro*-graln ribbon. Location* Det<Ma| ' Reno, Nev„ is farther west than Los Angeles, Calif., by about 300 miles. By the same true method of measurement. Palm Beach, Fla., is as far west a* Pittsburgh, at the far end of the State of Pennsylvania. Mrs. N. J. Justen, daughter, Varina, and • son, Peter M. Justen, were Chicago visitors Thursday. Mrs. G. A. Himler of Puyallup, Wash., is visiting in the home of her Mrs. F. E. Covalt. . CHINCH BUGS SERIOUS According to Farm Adviser John H. Brock, only a few chinch bugs have moved out of their winter quarters into the summer grain fields. The threat to the corn crop will not come until the small grains either dry up or are cut. By that time all the old bugs that carried over from winter will be dead and the first hatched bugs will move out of the grain fields into the corn. If continued rains and the spread of the white fungus disease do not wipe out the bugs by that time, the only hope for farmers to save their corn will be to suroiind it with barriers to stop and trap the young bugs as they march from the grain fields to the corn. First King of S«a Crete, third largest island in the editerranean, is the place where naval power originated. King Minos of Onossus, In Crete, was its founder. Ele was the first ruler to acquire dominion over the sea. Civilization la the Island dates back to 3400 B. O. It is believed that the alphabet originated In Crete. The island lies midway -W>. tween Europe, Asia and Africa. _JU> J Yea SEE what goes Into your crank case IsoiVis "D" is dispensed from clean, clear glass bottle*. Yon see that you get full ACCURATE MEASURE Bach bottle of lso=Vis "D" is clearly marked at the full quart level, carefully tested according to government standards. You get the ORIGINAL ANTI SLUDGE motor oil This is the famous anti-sludge motor oil firgt introduced two years ago by Standard. Entirely overhead distilled, and purifiedby the Chlorex Extraction and Propane Dewaxingprocesses. Prevents piston rings and valvesj from sticking, oil lines and filters from fouling: A atrmight mineraloil that fully protect* netv-typo high-speed bearing metalm. Yo« getFASTER SERVICE It is the quickest method yet devisedfordispsnsing oil. Each quart is ready to pour into your crankcase immediately-- no delay, no waste. You pay for NOTHING EXTRA You don't buy the bottle--there's no charge for the "pac kage" when you get Iso aVis '"D". Every penny goes for the oil itself. You get the RIGHT GRADE Each bottle of Isoa Vis "D" is plainly labeled with the exact S.A.E. grade of oil it contains. The servisma'n can advise which grade will give your particular cur the most economical, safe 1 obrication. You get an oil that LASTS LONGER You'll find fewer ii. deii quarts beween drains are necessary, because Iso*Vis "D" resists hrat. It has a remarkably high "viscosity iodfx," which means that extremes of temperature do not grea*!y change iu ayy c T*- And bore's ALL YOU FAT for the finest motor oil money can buy: Iso-Yls "9" Meter 08 2Staqt PL US TIDKRAL TAX lc o <Krorxt . EEa*. ta n too fcodBi li 111" • '« It 11 Stuftri M SJifssi * STANDARD OIL IS AB MORE FOR YOUR ON LE TO GIVE YOU EY. .•AND DOES t.pr IttS.

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