- <• * - v.? ^^5,*f' Thursday, April, 2,1939 •v •'• 't •iii ' v r •-' THS HoHKBRY FLAJERDEALKK PmIM •a.: K. •• ^ ... -W ANNUAL TOWN MEETING Notice is hereby given that the annual town meeting of the Town of McHenry, County of McHenry, Illinois, will take place in the City Hall, McHenry, 111., on the 7th day of April, 1936, proximo, being -the first Tuesday of said month. Hie town meting will be open at 2 o'clock, p. m., And after choosing a moderator, will proceed, to hear reports of officers and to appropriate money to defray the necessary expense of the town and to deliberate on such measures that may come before the meeting. Given under my hand at McHenry, 111., this 17th day of March, A D., 193* - T R A Y M e G E E , Town Clark. STATE BEER TAX \ Illinois collected $2,542,758 by a gallonage tax on beer, which went into the genera! fund from which appropriations for educational institutions are made. This beer tax was equivalent to one-tenth the sum expended on Illinois common- aehools last year. TEMPERATURE DROPS Just as a gentle reminder that summer had not yet arrived the temperature took a decided drop this week and sent local residents shivering after their winter coats again. From a maximum temperature of 66 degrees oi\ Saturday the mercury dropped to below freezing the first of the week, bringing overcast skies and a sprinkling of snow. Among the many signs of spring which have been evident during the past week is the raking of lawns and even the spading of a few of the earliest gardens. As soon as the warm sun appears the real gardener gets out his tools and prepares for his spring work and as soon as the ground is dry enough to work the planting begins. New Deal Still Tr*«« ia FtUitii* gome of the trees which grew In Palestine in Bible times Included the oak, olive, cypress, tell, aloes, flg, bramble, eedar, sycamore, apple, frankincense, ap&more, palm, willow; potaiegrannte, heifclock. Juniper, chestnut, flr, pine, almond and nlmtis. . HOUSES ARE SCARCE . Hie city of McHenry is becoming ft popular place to live, it would seem from the recent demand for houses being made in this locality where nearly every available house is inhabited.; The growing shortage of homes here; is evidence of better times in McHenry and if continued it may1, increase building here during the coming season. With the return of the summer residents it, is expected that the population of McHenry will be greater this season that it has since the good old days of prosperity. Order your rubber stamps; at t)M Plaindealer. Deficit Looms Bigger Than Ever; Civil Service It Put on Skids. ^ Goodyear Clearing Sale We have a large stock of the famous Goodyear Tires, which we are offering at the following reduced prices. Compare t^em with any other high-grade tire. $4.85 4.85 5.15 6.20 6.10 8.15 14.80 21.50 24.25 ces in Proportion 29x4.4Q--21 30x4.50--21 28x4.75--19 ...... 29x5.00--19 28x5.25--18 ; J : 27x5.50--17 30x5--8-ply Truck 32x6--8-ply Truck 32x6--10-ply Truck . All Sizes - All Fres tock - All Big Selection of Good Used Tires Walter J. Freund Tires, Batteries, Battery Charging, Tire Vulcanizing, Etc. ~ ^4 : ? West McHenry, 111. I desire to announce that I have purchased the McHenry Ice Co. and will render to my patrons a prompt and courteous service. Deliveries will be made promptly and at all timigs, handling both natural and. artificial ice.' Arthur D. Krause umgana Moving McUenrv McHenry Ice Cream Co. is enlarging its frigeration capacity and is now in a position to manufacture fancy Individual Ice Cream Molds and Cakes. -:^ #or Yoor : : - - V- • ' p Palm Sunday Dinner Special Palmer-House Ice Cream in a Sealright Container, which is tested and approved by the Good Housekeeping Bureau. Did yoo ever stop tothink that loe food fox4 all seasons, but for all ages? ICB CREAM FOE PINNER ICE CREAM FOR SUPPER Order Through Our Dealers FREE DELIVERY WASHINGTON, {^-Having entered its fourth year of administration March 4, President Roosevelt's New Deal is still spending two dollars for every dollar it takes in. Federal receipts for the 1936 fiscal year to Feb. 29 were $2,348,L,81.7(X), while expenditures stood at *4,758,086,881. This two-for-one spending progresses despite the fact ,that the President said. In his first annual budget mes sage, that the nation should plan for a balanced budget--Which In simple terms means spending no more money than you take In--during the "third year of recovery," which Is the' 1986 fiscal year. Now all Indications are that the 1980 deficit will be surpassed by the deficit In the 1937 budget, which has been t*tl!iiated to be more than *4,000,000,- 000. New Deal Spends '19 Billion. ^Slnce he was Inaugurated on March 4, 1933, tlie President has spent $19,- 000,000,000. of which S10.000.000.tMX) was for purposes other than the ordinary running expenses of the government. A further expenditure of more than '$5,000,000,000 is provided for. Most of the spending outside ordinary expenditures was for the purpose of "priming the pump," pouring Federal money out of the taxpayer's pocket on the theory that .business, once stimulated by the artificial pur chasing power created, would "pick up" of its own accord and put the idle millions back to work. Afte^, three years, with money still roiling oui of the treasury In billions for relief and '"made work" (boondoggling),, the American Federation'of Labor, through its president, William (Jreen, estimates that at the end of January there were stHi l^.cc'O.oOO workers unemployed. The increase in unemployment of 1,229,000 from". December to January was the largest such Increase in five years. ; ' As three years Qf the New Deal came to hn end the National debt had 'reached'a total.of about .">.'>2.000,<XX),<KX>, a new hijrli for all time." And an excellent prospect for the near future was a debt of 33 to 40 billions of dollars. This would be a debt of $.1,100 to ?1.2G0 for every family In the United %tate«, a prior lien on everything each family earns and a first mortgage on everything It owns. Fifty Bureaus Created. In its efforts to spend its way back Into national-prosperity, tlie New Deal has in three years introduced novel and contradictory methods. It has spent $S.000,0<tf,000 for relief. It has set up fifty new agencies (mostly alphabetical bureaus) which have created hundreds of thousands of "administrative" laws--rules of executive order in which the executive branch of the government Is both Judge and jury, may fine or Imprison the citizen j. without his recourse to the courts? and may tell him what to do with Ills property. In the operation" of these bureaus, the New Deal has added 2.X»,- 000 full time federal employees, iesd than 1 in 100 of them being required to pass civil service examinations. The civil service in three years has declined from 81 per cent of all fed; era I employees to ft7 per cent. Three years, have seen the crop curtailment program of AAA, combined with the drouth and New ' Deal free, trade policies, produce tlie enigma tip' condition of imports of foreign farm products 'stealing the Internal market away from the American farmer at a rapidly Increasing rate. Imports of grains, bacon, hams, pork; beef, animal and vegetable oils have multiplied, until In 1935 farm product# worth mf>re than $1,300,000,000 at cu rent prices, were imported to enrich the farmers of other countries. Roosevelt monetary policies causetfv the dollar to be devalued 40 per cent In gold content, with the result that on the basis of gold the farmer sold trices 13 per cent less than In 1932. Despite the fact that to his budget message at the start of the yeaC Roosevelt said that no new taxca would be required,'tlT§ New Deal's new farm program, new relief expenditures and other costs made it apparent that $1,500,000,000 or more In new taxe* would be required. 67 Taxes Squeeze Pocketbook I Chicago;--"Today we have 67 ra. rleties of taxes, direct . or indirect, which affect the .prices of nearly every commodity of commerce," .James M. iWk," iwted authority on the t'onsti tution, said here. "Today the Amerioan citizen is directly or indirectly taxed from the cradle to the grave, These taxes would be iieavy to the point, of-confiscation were not the iarg est amount of our public expenditures raised, by borrowing against the fui ture, and thus loading down an Innocent posterity with Intolerable burdens.'" , j Interest on Debt Climb* ' Washington. -- In the last " fiscal year, the New Deal spent more tliaii. ' 47,875.000.900, an Increase of 114 pet cent in five'years. The payment of Interest on the national uebt is alonegreater than the entire expenditure# of the government 80 years ago. Bridge Tablet-Inscription The inscription on the bronze tablet placed by the Colonial Dames on the Louisville-Jeflfersonville municipal bridge Is as follows: The discovery of tl»e Ohio river--in 1669 A. D. Robert Caveller, Sieur de la Balle, commissioned by the French officials of Louis XIV at Quebec, seeking a water route to China and Japan, guided by an Indian and accompanied by a party In canoes, descended this river, called by the Iroquois Indians the Ohio, meaning the beautiful river. HEADS ARMY FIVE Charles "Monk" Meyer, ace backfield man of the 1935 Army football team, and a forward on the Army's basketball team, who was elected captain of the 1937 'iflve." QABBY (jERTIE IN INDIAN TAN Delphi's SUIm* Ancient Delphi, Greece, the most famous shrine In antiquity, was so fall of statues that when Nero carried off 500. or so It was hardly noticed. The finest statue ever found tbefe was the bronze charioteer which, burled by a fall of rock, was recovered by French excavators In almost perfect condition ; Thm FartUmcftla A farthingale Is a hoop petticoat, originally distended with canes and later with whalebone or crinoline. It' reached its most exaggerated form is the costume of the Seventeenth cetf* tury, when the tops of women'.s skirt* flared out almost at right angles to tbt bodice. Indian tan is the color scheme of this pebble silk zipper-frock. An unusual folded treatment at the neck, shoulder and hip lines gives It subtle fullness, accentuated by the zipper openers set across the' hips and at the blouse front The Peter Pan hat matches the darker tan of the other accessories. ANNOUNCING THE FORMAL OPENING the.. Betty Nielsen Shop. i Friday and Saturday, April 3 and 4 FEATURING AnExclusive Line of Ladies' and Blisses , Tffillinery -Hand Ba^s-Gloves-Lin^erie- -Hoeiery *' Smart Dresses for HighSchool Giria i ^ <jyidren's and Infants' WeM Telephone 54-J xviverside Drive McHenry ,111. (Political Advertisement) "People who try to get back money they have loaned know there are no early settlers in this country." Small Case to Supreme Court In March, 1935, the Tnite'd States Supreme court was obliged to review a trivial case--a $10 damage suit-- which came directly on appeal from a justice court In Texas because no other state court had jurisdiction over It, owing to the small sum. In question; and because It involved a viola .tlon of tlie federal Constitution.--Lylton K. Maxwell, Durham, N. C., In Col- Vote for CHARLES P. BARNES (Former County Judge) Republican Candidate for COUNTY JUDGE ftfowries Tuesday, April 14. It is nbw conceded by all that arte not partisans in the contest, that former County Judge Charles P. Barnes will .be-, nominated bya^jood plurality on Primary day. Quite a number, who are said to possess keen political foresight, are freely predicting that on Primary day, Judge Barnes will receive more votes than the combined vote of the other three candidates. ^ Judge Barnes is well and favorably known by nearly all the voters of the county, and as soon ats his candidacy was known, scores of voters in every precinct rallied to his support* without waiting for wcrd from him. His unquestioned ability is admitted by the few that are now opposing his nomination, and everyone knows that the County Judge should reside at county seat where he is needed almost daily. He has made hundreds of votes by making a clean campaign, and by treating the candidacy of every other candidate with absolute fairness and impartiality. • No on© can over-estimate the importance of tit# ladKce of couiity judge. in SAFETY! HERE'S WHAT YOU GET! 1. Ford Super-Safety brakes are an improvement on the type of braking systeni used on r and on most racing cars. They are the last word in sureness of operation. 2. Ford easy brake-pedal action --with big drums and big contact surface for the tire on the road (6.00 x 16-inch air-balloon tires) --means less fqot pressure needed to stop your car. 3. Separate, temperfid-steel rods go from, the brake pedal to each brake. Each brake is independently linked to the brake pedal under your toe. No one Ford "brake ever depends upon the other three. 4. Ford brake drums give you more square inches of braking surface per pound of car weight (186 sq.in.) than you will find in many more expensive cars. 5. These big, 12-inch brake drums with air-cooling ribs are specially constructed to prevent "fading." Cast alloy-iron drums give longer life to drums and linings. NO brakes made today give you greater assurance of operation than the Super-Safe y brakes on the 1936 Ford V-8. Yet brakes are only one of the features that giv<; this car its unique safety. Its steel body is welded into a single unit, reinforced with steel. There is Safety Glass in every win Jo w. To the safety of Ford radius rods and Torque-tube is added the safety of transverse spriogs, which cut down side-swiy and tilt on the turns . . . You don't have to "fight" a Ford car around corners. Safety has been built into this new Ford with the same thoroughness that Ford has built power, comfort and beauty into it. We heartily urge you to see this Ford V-8 today, and to drive it for yourself, YOUR F O R D DE A L E E *25 A MONTH after usual low dov n-paymenc, buys any new lord V-8 passengercar or light commercial unit under new authorised Ford finance plan of Universal Credit Co. 6% for I X mon hs or '•} 9f rvt a month tor longer period- figured on total unpaid balance plus n sura nee.. ^tractive UCC" terns on used cars alsos iM tfca sir - • fot* tymjfciay Orrh»«r«. luifcrt > f.M.1. S. T.. Cctai Stcwtimrd mcttsan grvmp imcMmg kmmfrrs and sf*rt Urt extr*. A yjSal'