Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Aug 1937, p. 2

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- 'J '-jot fl'lf" • /. ? • Tajft TWO . mxdDnntTPLAiinnAiJS - V , V m-$ • • ' V - ON VACATION f Miss Lenore Frisby, who is employ- "ed at the American National Bank, 1 , Woodstock, is enjoying a vacation > from her work and is spending the week at the Stafford cottage at Glenwood Springs, Lake Geneva. Others at the cottage with her are Lucile Miller, employed ifi the county clerk's office, Franceso Holmes from JosJyn's law office and Helen Beck of Harvard, employed in the treasurer's office. Miss Mary Althoff is spending this week at Forest Beach camp in Michigan. Miss Althoff, who has been teaching school at , Coral, will teach in the McHenry Grade schol next year in 'Miss Ward's place. Miss Ward will teach at Waukepan. Ruth Phalin and Antonette Huetch of. Chicago are enjoying a two weeks vacation, trip through the west and Thursday, August 12,1937 BUILDING RAZED One of the\biijldings at.the Farmers Mill has be<t|K razed, making more room on th» premises. The building was very old, once being used for a vinegar factory, it is said, and of late years was used only for storage. It has not yet been decided whether a new building will be erected on the site.. The coal elevator at Alexander Lumber Company has, also, recently been torn down. This was quite old, as well. Read The Want Ads. BUYS GROCERY STORES Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Stringer of Marengo moved last week to Rockford, where they have purchased a grocery store. Mr^ Stringfer, who has been a teacher in the Marengo High School for several years, is also a former instructor in "the McHenry High School and is well known here. I Our Washington \*'f i v;* I;, HORN'S TAVERN McCULLOM'S LAKE ' ,v "Fisli Fry- Every 'Friday '?;f' ;; '!-'y Dancing Saturdays C * o| Vince Connors arid His Jam Babd McHENRY BEER V ' MIXED DRINKS Gom6 to Hoqt'^ Tavern DINE AND DANCE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT r- Music by Chicago Music Masters PISH FRY EVERY FRIDAY r PA'STAVERN '• €>if ^tlie' XXriv^' Yo«^ find a place that's always alive. ELM STREET " McHENRY, ILL. Sensational Low Price! A BIG NASH SEDAN-""5 FEDERAL AND STATE TAXES INCLUDED Delivered Complete in 1 Hour Nothing Else to Buy! A Mi pfckioB-bwHt NMfa-LsFtjrcttc Mdu turned over tt yom cooplete for the price above--indvdiaft mythial: BuSt-ta trunk, aafety ftlaea all around, extra wheal and tire, all dual eqvripment, and transportation rhiifrt! BIG TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE All modeb here now ... no waiting. Drive in today ... when you fat our appraleal on your old car, wall bat youll drive out a beautiful, m B. H. Freund Motor Sales Phone 332 Elm Street REMRMBU PRICES ON NASR M, *XES AND EI«RTSI BUST MOP A reversible dry floor and wall mop 'that gets into all the corners, picks up allthe dust and holds it Made of chemically; treated cotton yarn. Handle*" is waxed and fits into screw socket that eliminates old fashioned nut and bolt at? tathments. Mop has a full if™ inch spread. A regular 50c value. L I M I T 2 TO A Washington, August 11--With the wage and hour measure ready for the final stages of enactment the attention of politicians, industrial and labor leaders is turned to the identity of the five members of the Labor Standards Board, which will have much to say' about extension of Federal control over business. The debate in the Senate brought out a claim by noted Democratic Senators that this new Board has "greater power over the economic life of the Nation than the power ex-; ercised by five European monarchs over the affairs of their peoples," '*It is small wonder that lawmakers are I keeping a weather-eye on the White I House these days to ascertain the , names of candidates now under con- I sideration. However, their interest in [the Board members is not. entirely altxustie as this new agency is without A gentleman, staying in a provincial town, put up at the beat hotel. While dressing in the morning, he wished to summon the chambermaid. But the only bell he could find in the whole place was one in the bathroom attached to his bedroom. He rang several times without result, and finally gave it up in despair. Later on, after dressing, he met the chambermaid on the stairs and reproached her for not having1 answered the bell. "Which bell did you ring, sir?" she asked. "The bathroom bell," he replied. '•Lor*, sir," came her answer, "you shouldn't have used that. That bell's only to be used in case, you failor drown in the. bath."--Answers Magazine. ' Yaah! ' -- Along a country road came a $7,000 limousine. As it caught up with the small car, the owner of the "big car could not resist the temptation to slow down and jolly the other driver a bit. - "Heavens, man," he said, "what; is it about your car that makes such a dreadful rattling sound?" the $6,500 jinnal. ,ONf OF THE GIRLlS "Did you see the lady senator? "I did." "And what was she doing when you saw her?" "She was powdering, her nose." That's Different "Do you know that Mr. Softman I was just speaking to?" asked a guest at a tea parfy of a woman standing next to her. "O, yes," was the reply. "I suppose he says those sweet things to all the women he meets?" "No, he never says them to me." "Indeed! and you know him?" "O, yes--I'm his wife!"--New iiavea Pest. , A Bit Thin A man dining out ordered chicken soup as his first course. When the soup arrived he called back the waiter and said: "Do you call this chicken soup?" "Yes, sir," replied the waiter. - "Well, I don't. Take it away and get the old hen to step through it again." . Make Believe Schoolmaster--Now, Willie, If the earth's axis is an imaginary )ine, can you hang clothes on it? Willie--Yes, sir. Schoolmaster' -- Ha, ha. That'a good. And what sort of clothes? Willie? , Willie--Imaginary clothes, air. Main Street C O S T M E R * A i * , i • - That?-- "Qh,.that's limitation as to €he number of people] gling ar0und in my pocket," raid the 'ta assist in admmistemg the actj small car driver .--Wall Street Jour- Patronage gis important with the mad scramble for jobs which the Board will have available after their initial organization session. While Congressional jeliques, have been criticizing the enorritous powerg given thi6 Board, the legislators are not free from blame for this condition. If the fi$e hien selected *fey the President go haywire in the course of interpreting the new" statute, Congress itself may be rightfully censured for evading responsibility in circumscribing the scope of the Board's powers by clear definitions and limitations. Instead they choose to adopt the easiest way by which judicial decisions of administrative'boards are really the equivalent of supplementary legislation. In other words, Congress ducks these issues by permitting a newly created agency to interpret the law with the full knowledge that these concepts may differ widely from legislative intent. It may be admitted that the solons I have dumped a (ch6re on the Board | which calls for talents bordering on | omniscience. They have so much power and so many pressing problems that something more than super-human efforts will be needed to chart their early course. Employers in cities and remote hamlets are on their tip-toes as they ponder what the Labor Standards Board will do to their working conditions by boosting hourly wage rates and reducing the work week to a minimum of 40 hours. The contention of Senator Byrnes of South Carolina in opposing the measure had a disturbing effect. This Democratic leader alleged that "in the bill itself it is declared textually that the Board shall not observe or be bound by technical rules of evidence or procedure." The Carolinian provoked uneasihess when he asserted that the Board is charged with one objective--to enforce collective bargaining "with the power of life and death over industry" backed by a law, he ^ays, to make arbitrary raids to which the employers have no appeal. The opinion prevails that the White House will be obliged to place one or more Southerners on the Board to keep a semblance of peace in the President's party and to allay deep suspicions of Secretary of Labor Perkins' ideas of making the Board an adjunct of trade unions. The current controversy over adjournment and a special session, of Congress in the fall illustrates the return of the notorious bloc system in legislative affairs. The agicultural bloc which was in full bloonMw)21 has apparently been revive^HBFim* ited basis. This time the m^^Lent is centered on cotton and a government loan policy. This clique want a Federal guaranty for cotton at 12 cents a pound as a special subsidy. The fear is felt that it would only be a question of time before other commodities would be found on a preferential list at the taxpayers expense. The Senate Agricultural Committee which is dominatd by Senators from cottonproducing states have stood out against the President's general farm legislation as unnecessary. Oddly enough, these solons show no sign of retreating under threats of special sessions. An extra meeting is not welcomed because the lawmakers would be obliged to pay their own railroad fare as the 20 cents per mile allowance is for regular sessions and is riow exhausted. The farm lobbies are split on vital issues and legislators do not know which way to turn. It would be foolhardy to assume that the drubbing given the President's court reform plan means the end of the controversy. On the contrary evidence is cropping out that the resentanent within • the Administration is deep and abiding. Hence, the precampaign activities of the Democratic National Committee and the Senatorial and House Democratic Committees are closely scrutinized by rebel Senators of the same party for signs of "dirty work at the cross-roads." The sudden switch of Generalissimo Farley to "let bygones be bygones"1 is tak- KNOWS HIS STUFF City Council Proceedings Council Room, August 2, 1987. The City Council met in regular monthly meeting with Mayor Overton presiding. Aldermen present: Bolger, Busg, Ferwerda, Freund, Kreutzer, Regner. Absent: none. Motion by Kreutzer, seconded by Ferwerda that the minutes of the last regular monthly meeting be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Freund, seconded by Kreutzer, that the minutes of the special meeting, held July 25, be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Regner, thatfche treasurer's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Freund, seconded by Bolger, that the collector's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Bolger, seconded by Kreutzer, that the clerk's report be approved as read. Motion carried. Motion by Kreutzer, seconded by Buss, that the following bills be paid as approved by the finance committee. Motion carried. Mayme Buss, Commissions 27.66 John Stilling, Gasoline 2.73 Louis Althoff, Repairs .:15 .85 McHenry Co. Farmers, Brooms and shovel W»i, H, Althoff, Cutting keys H.. E. Buch & Son, Material and. labor on water fountain Downs Motor Express Hauling meters ........ 'McHenry Plaindealeiy Printing1 and supplies ................ Mrs. H. W. Fisher, Filing cab- ' inet Neptune Meter Co., Meter repairs Art Diedpch, Hauling gravel .. Board of Ed., Dist. No. 1^, Cutting weeds B. H. Freund Lawn mower sharpened Earl R. Walsh, Stamps L. F. Newman, Work at city park . Wm. Tesch, Work at city park Robert Patzke, Work at city park .............. Herman J. Tfreutzer, Telephone ca"s - ...» Illinois Tel. Co.. Illinois Tel. Co* ........., Public Service Co. .... Public Service Co. Public Service Co. ...... M. M. Niesen, Supt. service .... John B. Wirtz, Marshall service Matt N. Schmitt, ^Compensation insurance Special Sewer Fund Earl R. Walsh, City Clerk service Vernon J. Knox, City Atty. service . Josephs M.- Regner, Alderman service Herman J. Kreutzer, Alderman service George P. Freund, Alderman service! Fred Ferwerda, Alderman service Edward J .Buss, Alderman service John A. Bolger, Alderman service Robert L. Weber, City Treasurer service R. I. Overton, Mayor service .... Peter Wirfs, Police service ....".. 3.65 3.00 12.38 1.50 16.85 7~95 82.19 78.00 2.75 1.00 3.00 16.00 9.60 3.20 1.10 . .40 .50 1.40 5.48 66.75 50.00 110.00 150.00 75.00 105.00 50.00 25.00 25.00 25.00 25.00 25.00 -25.00 80.00 40.00 95.00 W. C. Feltz, Caretaker street service 1 100.00 Public Service Co. 158.18 Public Service Co. 95.31 Fred C. Feltz, Caretaker Sewer service 75.00 H. C. Kamholz, Motor Repairs (sewer) 17^7 Public Service Co ...., 75.48 Freund Oil Co., Fuel oil 2.25 Motion by Kreutzer, seconded by Freund, that the purchasing Committee be given authority to purchase a fireproof safe or filing cabinet to be used by the City Collector . Motion carried. Following a discussion, the Waterworks Committee was instructed to investigate improvements deemed necessary to assure the city of adequate water supply. Motion by Buss, seconded by Kreutzer, to pay interest in the amount of $360.00 due August 15, 1937 to the Reconstruction Finance Corporation «>n bonds issued for the sewer project. Motion carried. Mr. Andrew Worwicjc presented a petition, signed by McHenry business men, and a copy of an ordinance prohibiting solicitors and peddlers in th© city. The petition requested that the same ordinance be passed in the city of McHenry. Motion by Bolger, seconded by Kreutzer, that the copy of the ordinance be turned over to the city attorney for investigation and recommendations. Motion carried. Mr. Henry J, Schaffer was present to ask for funds from .the Band appropriation. Because the tax money levied for this purpose has not been received, the council referred the question to Atty. Knox and Auditor Nortki for investigation.^ Motion by Ferwerda, seconded by Kreutzer to adjourn. Motion carried. EARL R. WALSH* City Clerk. ' • • . NOTICE ^ Y'^vhkiis -tlte" siuamer "months my optical dlfiW »•- & k* A. E, Nye building will be closed. Classes . Fitted ."J"*; Dr. Paul A. Schwab# OPTOMETRIST 'Eyes Examined Phone 674- - Woodstock (for appointmezit) Monday -- Wednesday ---^--Saturday •*" ! - The new Grip-Safe, Silent Tread tire is the last word in safety--road grip and anti-skid pro tec* tion. More tough rubber in a deeper grip-safe center tread; More anti-skid mileage in a tirfe that grips the road. And underneath the tread» extra-heavy, heat-resisting plies of anti-friction cord for maximum blowout protection. Let us show you this modern achievement in tire design. • • s_;: - • nUiuw WITH MIP-IAFI SIUNT TRIAD CENTRAL GARAGE Poll Line of Atlas and Goodyear Tires - " Electric and Aoetylene Weldinf _ Car Washing and Polishing Phone 200-J Towing JTofensburg "Whan what you did you say? "J aaid hiatory rapeatad itaaKJ the tcacher aakad knew about history, whit in with a grain of salt by the Senators who opposed the real and titular leaders on this issue. Senator Wheeler, the leader of this protfp, has sounded a warning that retaliatory tactics by Administration forces will be miet by similar methods from his followers against pro-court colleagues seeking return to office. Claim Violin - Bow Invention The Hindus claim to Have invented the violin bow. They maintain that Ravanon, king of C^lon, who lived about 5,000 years ago, invented the ravanastron, an instrument played with a. bow. Sanskrit scholars say that names for the fiddle bow occur in works which are not less than 1,500 to 2,000 years old. Skfri--Dad, what does aaeinc thi humorous side mean? Dad-Well, I'll illustrate. A banana skin has two aides. Hie person who slips down on a banana skin sees the serious side and tha one who laughs at him saw tha humorous side of it. Altemathre Father was standing at tha adga of a cliff admiring the sea below, tha sandwiches clutched in his hand. Eiia son approached him. "Mother says it isn't safe here," said the boy. "And you're either to come away or else give me the sand* wiches." The EUgher the Mora Peebles--I see where they took a woman up in an airplane and it re-" stored her power of speech. Jeebles--That shouldn't surprise anybody. When my wife goes up in the air you wouldn't believe hovsr|| improves her powers of spea$^;v;;:,t A Natural Visitor--What profession have yon ^elected for your son? Farmer--I'm going to educate him to be a lawyer. He's argumentative by nature and can't keep out of othear people's business, and he might ag well be paid for it. ytm Bright Idea First Burglar--Bill, how do stop the chimes of this clock? Second Burglar--Don't know, Jim, I'll go upstairs an' ask the lady ot the house. West McHenz|r Mr. and Mrs. Edward Houlihan aiftl children of Evanston are spending their vacation in a cottage on Fox * i v e r . ' o - " REAL RANGE BARGAIN While they last r BUY NOW AND SAVE! fltSTlHGHOUSt euectric range with 3 Corox ,„J Economy INSTALLED * M30.5O VAU» (.E«.p> pp' . COROX Scaled in solid steel, tbcri'i no place for dirt to collect oa the fast-heating Corox cooking coil. A wipe with a damp cloth keeps it clean. Hammer blows cannot hurt Corox, not even ice water -^wrfcile Corox is red hot LOW DOWN PAYMENT-- As Long as 36 Months to Pay • We have been fortunate in securing a limited quantity of these Special 1937 Model Westinghouse Ranges at this Sensational Bargain Price. * * SEE THIS RANGE AT YOUR PUBLIC SERVICE STORE TODAY! Economy Cooker ' ^e Economy Cooker cooks an entire meal of meat, vegetables, "•dessert-without transfer of flavor OT odor-or bakes one potato without need for heating the oven. It adds a whole new bag of tricks to the homemaker's routine. Neighborhood prlco* modal* display PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS _ *

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