DRADE SCHOLARS PRESENT PROGRAM DEC. 22 NIGHT SCHOOL BOURSES MAT BE ARRANGED Because of the success which has attended the opening of the night school class in typing, a large number of individuals have spoken to the school authorities asking if it would be possible for them to arrange for night i.school classes in other subjects; such •4DPSJU5TTA AND CANTATA f® P»blic speaking, commercial Engf, nrknVT\ • J>h, advanced bookkeeping, andseveral TO BE STAGED others, It would be entirely possible for any •: °* excitement fire-; group 0f individuals in town, who de- . Tails at the McHenry public grade sire to do ao> to arrange for a class in ; jflfehodl this week, and no wonder, for.any subject in which they were inter* in just one week from today, the pu-jested. Howtever, it is still the opinion pils will present their Christmas pro-. 0f the school authorities that our town •, . £ram before the public. Jjs too small to establish a succesfui ' • The children are eager with expec-injght school. lotion and can barely wait for the bigj There is. one possibility of * taking d»y to arrive. Their eyes light with a(jvance(j work even though qnly* one joy when they tell of the cantata and individual desires to pursue the course, tfce tin soldiers, jumping jacks, the lit-j This possibility lies in the field of tie nigger doll, Santa Claus and the correspondence work. The local school Ibany other characters appearing injhas arranged with a Nebraska unithe operetta..,.* ^ !versity to supervise correspondence The musical program to be IPve*| courses in almost anv subject. The *t the high schol auditorium at 8:15 great majority of these courses would . 'Thursday evening, December 22, will cost the student only |7-00 for a half consist of an opereta, The Joys that year course The local teachers would Had to Wait to be enacted by chil- supervise the work without charge. ?en ^ii!°Wer ^r®^es' an<^ ® can" Such courses as the following are t»te, "The Chimes of the Holy Night, joffered and mi ht be of intere§t to the Which will be presented by the sev- le: Radio f6r araateurs, pub. enth and eighth grade girls and sev- ineeri j. eralgirls of the FreshmanclassPaul farming, advanced mathematics, • xa, nda,', m. usic ..t eac•h er of the McHenry (,b e'g .i nn.i ng G5 erman, effective vb usi• ness - . Work 'on^thif musical pageant is correspondence, appreciation of short . Irt-ogressing smoothly, but of course st°7' Journalism and several others. Sere is still daily practice, costumes! any°n« \s interested "Jher « to be made, tickets to be sold and 0th-i f*°o! class m any subject or m «r small matters which must be given , .e,se correspondence courses, iftontinn the individual should get in touch Titles of songs to be sung in the with the local school authorities. «antata are: "Christmas Bells ard 7 Snging," "How Beautiful Upon the LAKE ZtfRlCH COMES Mountains," "But Thou, Bethelehem," •"Earth's Wteary Waiting Done," "In the Watches of the Night," "Good Tid- . togs," "Let Us Go Even Unto Bethlehem," "Jesus, Our Lord," "The Star ALUMNI BANQUET AT CRYSTAL LODGE MONDAY, DEC. 26 GRADE SCHOOL PUPILS j TOUR ICE CREAM PLANT Eighth grade pupils of the McHenry Public grade school recently completed, as an English project, the study of ice-cream manufacture. In order that the pupils might supplement the knowledge gleaned from books ond oral SILAS W. PIERCE DIES AT SPRING GROVE, AGED 89 INTERESTING NEARBY NEWS FIRST GRADUATION YEAR 1892 ^ VILLAGK instruction in class with practical ^.knowkdge, Mr. Schoenholtz, instruc- LIFELONG RESIDENT: OF itor, on Friday took the class to the {McHenry Ice Cream company, where ... jthey were conducted through the. Plans n*Ve been completed "by of-'plant and shown and explained the^ Silas'Wright Pierce, years olcF," a ficers of the McHenry High School process of icccream manufacture. prominent citizen and a Hfe-long resi- Alumni Assn. for the annual dinner j The following theme was written by dent of Spring Grove anckcommunity, dance, which this year is to be held one of the pupils making the tour, with tjie exception of ttiree years at the Crystal Lodge at Crystal Lake,'It is entitled "A Trip to Unti's Ice spent in Marinette Courity. Wisconsin, A fire early last Sunday morning destroyed the dairy, sheds, milk house and nearly all the machinery on the old Winnie farm, one mile east- of Huntley on the Carpentersville road. The barn, which was razed to the ground by the flames, Was one <jf the largest in McHenry county,, being rp/\ about 60 by 100 feet. Fourteen show cattle from the Pe*v cy Meredith stock farm at Dundee, already in the money class and winners PAROCHIAL PUPILS PLAN CHRISTMAS PROGRAM, DEC. 18 BE GIVEN AT HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM Pupils of St. Mary - St. Patrick of actually "yards" of blue, red, gold,'school will present a Christmas prowhite and all the other ribbons be-Ijrram at the high school auditorium stowed on the Royalty of Cattlodom, Sunday evening, December ->18, at 8 -, piled up their stakes s-till higher at o'clock. Tickets are on sale now it -passed^ away at his. hqihe in that .vll-i the 39th International .l^iveStock Ex- thirty-five cents for adults and: tea •t<:* i. VV ' * !1- 111., on the evening of December 26, j Cream Factory." beginning at .8 o'clock. A delicious "Last Friday the eighth grade went lage Monday morning, December12, 'position* inChicago lalt weel^ Thir- cents for children^ turkey dinneiv will be served to alljto Unti's Ice Cream factory. We saw? 1938, at 5:45, after an illness of a!teen of the cattle placed in the money1" TW children, under the capable 4ithe quests aijid there will be a floor .how they made Ice Cream and Hi-de. week. |The ribbons given them this year num- rect»on of the school sisters, have been ?how as well as an orchestra fordanc-jho's. The man was Felix Unti. The "In 'spite of advanced age, ]VIr. Pierce I ^ ar0und 300. working diligently for many weeks ing. j first thing he showed us was the was always very active, taking keen! Ernest F Schroeder 48 years old in order to present a fine program at • Last year, the banquet was strictly machine that regulated the things to delight in his work and often enjoy-|of Elgin, died at the Sherman hospit- this time- It>s going to be a splendid a closed affair, with only alumni and make Ice Cream. Along the walls ing a day at his favorite sport of j aj at Elgin Wednesday of last week bit of entertainment, so dont fail to their husbands and wives present, are pipes with water in them. Inside | hunting. It was only a week pre-l0f shock and loss of blood from in- attend. This year, however, each member is the pipes is another set of pipes with ceding his death that he was suddenly; juries sustained when he was struck Program invited to bring a guest. The charge .ammonia. The ammonia got so hot takenMll, complaining of a pain in by a blade from a rotary molding ma- The Christmas Jumping jacks--Sevwill be $1.00 per plate. that it freezes. This is at a tempera his back. Although attending physi-;chjne at Rjnehjmer Bros Mfg I enth &rade b°ys. Pages--Harold Reservations are pouring in rapidly ture of 200 and some degrees. After Icians mpdc; vacant efforts to stem the company plant on Tuesday He had Michels and James Freond. and the banquet this year promises that he showed us the process of mak-1 fast flow of life, he grew steadily |just compiated making adjustments to The Little Christmas Sentinels--First to be even better than the one last ing Ice Cream. „ He took us in a room | worse, finally succumbing to pneu- ithe machhie and had ordered it start-1 and Second grade pupils. year, which was attended by 166 for-where they put their Ice Cream; it monia, which he contracted a few;ed The machine guard was not in "The Reunion at Pine Knot Ranch"-- *' f -j *'s.A •- mer stundents. was ten degrees below zero. Then he days before his death* place and the blade flew loose and | FROM BEHIND TO WIN BATTLE FROM M. C. H. S. , Ela Township High School battled be provided for those who do not care to the Eastern Sky,' and "The Lord Is, their way to the front on their own to dance. 1 LOCAL FIV^S ROMPS Bo™ Today " 1 JuroTUethdeaybla?eht *McHenry hS™' Las'^*r " w" "me in! OVER RICHMOND 43 Joan Reihansperger and Elaine °ut .°* tn® oiaze. Mcnenry new a more than a quarter of a century that Eeihansperger will sing a duet and, 1-POint advantage at fi^t quarter an Alumni banquet had been held ifi girls rendering solos are: Louise Ger- ^'me' 5 Points at the half, 7 Points at McHenry and brought to the minds of Members from the first class right showed us how to make Hi-de-ho ice His mother, Eleanor (White) Pierce, I struck Mr Schroeder in the abdomen, up t o t h e l a s t g r o u p o f g r a d u a t e s p l a n c r e a m b a r s . Thy h a d h o t w a t e r i n a was b o r n i n T i o g a c o u n t y . New Y o r k , } W i l l i a m J . N o l a n 84 v e a r s o l d p o -j to attend this banquet. They are double boiler and then put a big slab and his father, Marvel N. Pierce, in jice 0fficiai 0f the city of Harvard for showing interest in doing their part of chocolate in the upper pan. They SusqueHanna county, Pennsylvania.'the t 47 years pasesd away at the' to make the organization a permanent made the ice cream, put it in a box They were married in the East '" Community hospital in that city on' part of our community's scheme of and then put sticks in the ice cream 1838, coming to Burton township in December 2 |»o that eople may eat the ice cream 1840 to take" up a government land The new' gt Joseph's Rectory at Informal. Program jbettfL r- After they have the ice cream ^aim. The long,perilous journey was Richmond> which has been under con.! A rather informal program ls plan,- >on the sticks they dip them in the made in a covered wagon drawn byiStruction for thc past geverai monthS(i ned. A lengthy program is being Chocolate. The ice cream is so cold partly by way of the Great js now c0mplcted and ready for ocavoided to give those in attendance tha* the chocolate sticks to the ice ^es ^ ^ jcupancy. It is adjacent to the church' plenty of time for informal chats. An cream and »ets hard right away. They' To them were born eleven children, building Architecture is of the New 1 orchestra has been engaged for those flavor ice cream and hi-de-ho's by;of whom Silas was the fourth, born England colonial "Cane Cod" tVDe 1 who wish to dance in the spacious hall PuttmK a strawberry, or chocolate on Mai^h 22. 1849. His childhood was Mrs Emily Gleason oldest resident following the banquet. Other forms mixture in the ic_e_ cream/1 - ^pent m that community and he re- in Harrington, died Morf&ay of last iZ r " SCh001' »«•!< «t hor home «t thc ag, of 94 'i UDunrriinngc tthhoe ear.lv part roovf <^h is life yj eair. s. * Besi^d es being the oldest resi- !»io * '- I* • dent of the town, shL e was alis o second^ ne engaged in farming, later pursuine u * • u * i. •- I the occupation of carpenter work and °ldeSt ,n t nu™ber of sPent ,in «ne TO 13 FOR 4TH WIN wood carving. , community, having, lived in Barnngton, In 1877 ttie deceased was married to °r S,X 5r"six year8* •of entertainment and amusement will RICHARD ROSING. One-Act Play with the following cast: Mr. Hall, owner of the ranch -- Gordon Schmitt. Mrs. Hall, his wife -- Eleanor Young. Hal, their son--Clarence Freund. Mrs. Kerr, cook at the ranch -- . Frances Glosson. Mrs. Smith, her assistant--Grace Kunz. • "... Bill, Pete, Jim, Shorty., Ben, Russell and Bob, cowboys--Bitty Phalin, Charles Adams, Robert Smith, Geo. Nett, Henry Buch*^- Charles Blake, Thomas Sutton. Mrs. Becker, a neighbor -- Lorraine Schmitt. Gene, Cecil, Jo, Pat, Gusty, Frances, girls related to Mrs. Becker -- Esther Althoff, Maureen Miller, Bernice Blake. Mary Stoffel. Claire Freund. Lily Unti. • 1 • ': t 'H •. mm -girls Uer-.«»«=. v,rc """• ' of, , . T • • w mamea 10 Mrs p w Mwg of Hebron ^ to.|. rard, Nadine Schaefer, Mary Ann Mil- en^ three quarters then lost may Gf the older members recollec-' Tfc®' local high schoo* five romped lzzie i ; . at Wilmot, Wis., who jure(j jn an accidcnt which occurred in' Coming of Santa Claus --Third 1le r, Margare4t. Freund and .rCkhoarrilaennae 2288 ttoo 2266-. ftji/ovnnos of similar gatherings years ago °ovveerr Richmond Inst Fridnv nicrht. 4.1 preceded him in death on October 2fi. , . . „ ... and Fourth grade nunils. K' o Richmond last Friday night 43 him in death on October 26, her home lagt gunday n,gj,t §he Krohn. Others appearing in the can- 11 ^s one of the hardest played when hi h schoo, and praduation day8 to 13 on the McHenry home floor. 1908- Four children were born of this rinsing a milk preparatory tata are: Betty Blake, Betty Regner,, ^mes your observer has witnessed m were a the outstandin events in . Wlt^ Coa<* R^'s front line show- union: Manam, who d.ed in infancy; to laci ft outside for thfrnUk ma? Agatha Schmitt, Madeline. Freund, ycaw. ft looked like McHenry's game, thejr ljves> B ling a burst of speed and accuracy ifn- Jam^- 1"rho passed away on January whJn it slipped from her hand June Patzke, Elaine Heimer and Ei-^ the boys tired under the strain The enthusiastic response of formet^r Richmond's basket and the guards 22, 1934; Edna, (Mrs. H. A. Colby) ^ sink andcut anaTter^andane^1 leen Newell. |of a ha,rd dr^m« team that ,las both.graduates is most encouraging to pres- dr«PP'n^ a couP,e neat/wishers;of Waukegan and Mark of .Spring in her rSt wrfst SeTe^l stitehls A cantata is a narrative poem set S1Z® speed. 'ent officers and committees, who are £ e dom^ a on defense, the,Grove, who survive. were necessary before the wound was to melody . It may be either sacred: McHenry s sub£ though fresh, were inp forth every cffort'to make Krst quarter ended 17 to 0. *e was niarr.ed again in 1911 to ^d and the flow of or secular, but it is not intended to be ona^e to catch the stride of the fast this affair a succes* j In came a second squad--w"- -L IJ blood closed acted i moving opposition. The tide was too|v"-T aflontftd i-ot VP«rlsize if less s^ed- They Wished the ion 27, 1916 * ¥h.« to be presented on December'^ b«t «>e boy. pa. «p » gre..^ »'«?• t B. J * 22 by the grade school pupils is of a 9 iivo a ^hn}an!hin oa^ kJ YOU might be wondering what Rich-land with more | Mrs. Mary Potter, who passed away m _:_v > »u. September 27, 1916. 0 .... . .. „ .. • A good neighbor, faithful husband. I While rabbit hunting on a field west a kind father. Mr. Pierce enjoyed^S.S"*" I?ad, tetween Justin n The game was played on the grade jt,ve * *»>olarship each year to be; J Stables and the Waukegan airport last mond roughness in the game, spot for a sissy. McHenry -- 26 107 Children In Cast "The Toys That Had To Wait," an unusual Christmas operetta for children, written by Catherine Allison Christie, will have 107 children in its'p cast. A synopsis of the play follows :'G - jyrjlj-- - "Santa has completed preparations wfpu.- Hor his dash from the North Pole to . „ . "j""'*" llie houses of all good children, on this Christmas Eve. Mrs. Santa cautions „ t-,.-.!,"""""" him to be careful, and after bidding q' him goodbye, sets about to devise some R' « 7"* plan to make all the little toys happy n* "" Who were left behind in his toyshop;) ' » SO she uses her magic Wishing Cap to call the Queen of the Fairies, who in turn wakes the toys to life, as the questing little Fairies find them; 'all frolic until the Queen returns, takes M ®af^ tiie Wishing Cap in payment, and " makes them once more little toys, back on the shelves in Santa's Toy . ®fcOp. | All who have ever attended similar q/?,,. Musical productions presented by the „ ! ^ 'gfade school children will be sure to roe attend this year, remembering the fine; r*'rer witertainment afforded by them in previous years. : Admission will be ten cents for children and twenty-five cents for •dults. Totals ..... 10 ft was no ^ajear and a large membership ^ - -|and too Rroat d{>li^t In ftddiing"^1 Kie f fi,selmar\n be^amf s"sP'c,ou« 1 nfu w- Coach Reed sent his starters back; old-time dances, playing on' violins and qU,etly Crept up to lt' He found as^ let forthT®^ ,0r ^ SeC°nd half' but they h&d lost which he himself made. During his a brown ^P«r Pfcka^e containing six as set forth in the constitution, *re mucj1 0f their accuracy while lounging lifetime he manufactured four 0« st,cks of dynamite. Riesselmann took to form an organization which wr.. on the bench. Maybe the boys realiz-; these stringed instruments. <the package the Waukegan police old friendships and ac- th<> trnme was in the old «*rlc Anv-1 i j it_^iand deputy sheriffs examined the exe was enough 11CUIUM mie uruuier - - building. The ery honorable way in furthering the Richmond only 15 to 10 during the en- \ jm Pierce of Snrin'e Grove"L'th'ir^Vn! exP'os'ves were taken away by deputy interests of its members; to co-oper- i tire last half. 1 grandchildren and one great-grandson. I she A ri?\ f,or keePin»" ate with other organizations engaged McHenry's second team came Funeral services were held at the of 281 votes were cast at 2 j perpetuate ow inenosmps and ac- ed the game was in the old sack. Any-j Besides his son and daughter, the!ard deputLsheri^ e,xait1 3 quaintances; to uphold the principles hOWt wjth subs getting in for their deceased leaves on sister Mrs Mav P es" ^liey said there of good government; to assist in ev- share of play, McHenry outscored Bungard of Hebron; one brother Sel- dynamite to blow UP a bl orv hnnAPflhlo vrav furfharino fnn **• i i _ + r x _ « a j • 4.1 _ ' * nvn Totals E3a (Lake Zurich) -- 28 FG Nehmer Weber .... Anderson ; Kane cation among the young men and wo- a thrill. men of the community. I The constitution is very complete J McHenry -- 43 and regulates activities, governs mem-1 berships, resignations, forfeiture of R. Knox SOY SCOUTS Gosh, but the Scouts have a lot of TEACHERS ARRANGING jfun at their meetings! Wlhen we got CHRISTMAS PROGRAM t^ether Monday December 12, the time seemed to fly, and the hour ™ ™ ^ and a half just a matter of seconds. The annual Christmas program is. x . .. , , . , being arranged by the teachers of •of T/Z'T ^ the Community Church Sunday school ag °f, United States, and to and will be given Sunday night, De- the Colors ^ cafe cember 18, at 7:30. an, even i t we have bo L en waiting for for The children of the Primary depart- &JonS time: Mr. Schoenholtz presentment will present, "What is Christ- ed us Wlth °"f °f .hls stories, this one on his trip to Colorado. It • There will be a chorus from the waf, ^ food that if a^stranger had intermediate department an#d selec- walked in, he would have been so '-tions from the Sunday school orches- amazed that he might have believed tra under the direction of Mrs. C. W. that Mr. Schoenholtz had never been out West! But a surprise was eom- ! We were loaded into Mr. Schoenholtz* car and the Peterson truck and factory, east of town. There Glenn 2 j membership, officers and their qualifi- Weber cations and duties, elections, a quor- G. Miller um, by-laws, duties of committees and J. Gausden various other points. |J. McAndrews First Class in 189S Schultz The first class to graduate from Laures the McHenry high school was in 1892, ^arkin •*" and consisted of nine members. j*;- ^T re" * There was not another graduating "• class for four years and then with only three members. This was followed in 1897 by one graduate and other classes of one and two gradu, ates, but have steadily increased in gr^er8 "" size until now the classes number from ~rown nnt.cn /.arnstonr 66 tO 04. VII r Officers of the Alumni Assn. this BuChert" year are president, Harold Lindsay; person ' Qoodell. Parents and friends are cordially infited to attend. FG; ..•••WunMm '5 5 ' 0 I - : ^•X. - FT 4 - 1 4 2 _ 2 2 0 0 0 0 Totals 14 15 ISeluaoiMi J.:?; ""fG 0 i • vice-president, George Kinsala; treas- ffargraves " ""!!!! © urer, Edward Matthews and secretary, ^jnn 2 Rita Freund. Siedschlag ..... All ir all it looks like there is plen- Richaidson ty of push in back of this affair to pat! it over the top with flying colors. | Totals ..... FT 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 pupils. "The Gypsy's Christmas"--One-Act Play, with the following cast: Mr#. Grant--Anna Marie !•«#* ' ' perich. Eleanor--Marilyn Schaefer. Friends of Eleanor--Hilda Herdrich, Lorraine Rado, Winifred Carp, Rose Marie Kunz, Mary Ann Diedrich, Doris Hamil, La- Verne Hobbs, Betty Lou Weber, Grace Bolger, and Betty Kilday. , Mother Mathilda, an old gypsy- Betty Wirtz. Rosalyn, a gypsy dancer--Mitsi Durland. Rosalyn's friend, a toe dancer- Barbara Carey. "Christmas at Punkin Holler"--One- Act Play, with the following cast: Miss Peppergrass--Gladys Still* ing. Aunt Hesey--Joan Durland. Punils of the school--Fifth Sixth grade pupils. "The Nativity"--Play, with the lowing cast: Mary--Lorraine Rado. Joseph--William Bolger. The Angel--Eleanor Young. Man with Grain--Robert Smitlu __ , , . Man with Gold--Thomas SuttoA. MARQUETTE UNIVERSITY aRainst;L Tht"'"e are 375 registered vot-J Girl with Flowers--Mary Simon. A VS CART BTOW POT T PPI1 "ri"1] 1 I 1, » Boy with Lamb--Harold Micheb. ? / 8 .mo f ke. com'nf fJom " Kings-Henry Buch, Chas. Blate I IN NEW ELGIN HIGH GYM Posing railroad tram while driving Gordon Schmitt. 0 his automobile on the Northwest high- ® Major collegiate basketbaU will !W ^ °f Barrin?ton Saturday 1 be played in the Fox river valley for of las5, week t- J r oi\n He88' f 40? n the first time Dec. 23 when Marquette Pa .. ave '. J'Lake, struck and ««^hen We Haven't Said Our Pray university and Carleton college meet „ Florian Muska, 67, of ers," a musical recitation -- Glen Huska and James Sales. "Songs My Mother Taught Me"--Anna Marie Klapperich. Military Stepper, a dance--Barbara Carey. Mitsi Dwv - ; \ V'H in endeavors for the welfare of the through by the skin of its teeth, win-1 home of Mark Pierce at Snrinir Grove tbe sPec'a' bon^ election at Huntley! public and to promote interest in edu- ning 21 to 20. That one gave the fans Wednesday. December 14, at 2 p m„'ilast We<lncstlay to determine whether with Rev. Collins of Ringwood offici-} °5 "0t th,T vot?rs M of the villa^e favof" ating. Burial was at Cole's cemetery. ^ th?^llIa^e hal1 V™3™}' The """l* was 157 votes for the issue and 118 * Shepherds--Boys of the school* Angels--Girls of the school. Between Acta g in the new Elgin High school gym. |Barrington. The battle also will mark the first! time the two schools have tangled on] the hardwood court. I ^IJDMING EVENTS HIGH SCHOOL BOARD PURCHASES THE VASEY pp i A capacity crowd of 2,400 is expect-! December 15 I 0ed to witness the contest, which will Dinner and Bazaar--Ladies' Aid--M. A TaP Dwwe-Joan ' t be played for the benefit of the Elgin J E. Church basement I }™d- ^ ' 2 Kiwanis swimming pool at the Y. W. Meeting C. D. of A.--Mrs. Eleanor School Sisters of St. Francis ^ C. A. camp south of Elgin. I Miller. " * " take this opportunity to thank the 2 The program will provide an oppor-| ' December 16 parents and friends of the school chiln tunity for cage fans in the Fox river rKrlsfn,.0 Por.f,7 f,,„K dren for their hearty co-operation in I P- ° Rl'vSe H„rS"5SeSKra t1°b"«• 4 ducts cavort m their own back yard.' TW«>n.lv>r 1« I ' 1 f C°auh BH1 Chandler's Christmas Play--Pupils of St. Mary- SWITCH BLAMED 3 formidable Milwaukee quintet this St. Patrick School-High School. b FOR TRAIN CRASH AT --? i 'ri ^ *M°ose) Graf. who Christmas Program--Sunday School . MrHENRY OCTOBER M 20 led the Elgin Towers at Elgin High, of the Community Church Wfr MCHBWKY' OOTOBES 23 -- school in 1934-35 and established a December 20 ,?' • I EXECUTORS MAKE FINAL neJ\Bi* Seven conference scoring rec- Christmas Party--Fox River Valley . T1?e ^' t >rstat^ Commerce Commis- • »ord m his junior year (1933-34). Camp R N A sion •= bureau of safety in Washing- Other regulars on the Marquette Open Meeting--C. O. F. -'^4^-v -tton, D.C:, blamed an "open switch, ap S SETTLEMENT IN ESTATE (factory, east of own. There Glenn . . (Peterson showed us the machinery in Among thC Sick ^ : j the shop, and he cut up several boards in demonstrating the uses to (which those tools may be applied. Mr. Edward Schmitt is still under doc- Peterson has built a bench, on which ,tor's care as the result of an accident he will mount the Troop Machinery. Several weeks ago when a piece of We certainly appreciate his interest in einil penetrated his eyeball while do-; Scouting. tog carpenter work. j Don't forget, Scouts! The Board of Harold Freund returned home from Review will meet Monday night. De- ®t. Therese hospital at Waukegan last cember 19, so why don't you come to .veek and is recovering nicely from his the, meeting prepared to advance in recent operation for appendicitis; I. citis^ ANNOUNCEMENT and' Mrs. Scouting? SCOUT DAVID SWANSON. Mr/and 'Mrs. John Karls of Riv- Robert Friers of Saginaw, Mich., Drive announce the engage- has thumbed his way over 85,000 miles Jaent of their daughter, Evelyn, to in every state of the Union, Alaska, PROPERTY NEAR SCHOOL OF THE LATE DR. WELLS team are Glenn (Sparky) Adams of Christmas Party--Riverview Camp, Parentl-V due to malicious tamrv>-in<?: I . Carpentersville, erstwhile Dundee R. N. A. last Thursday for the derailment of a The Job F. Vasey home located on Executors of the estate of the late Community High star, and Bob (Skip- Farm Auction--George Dowell, oh the Chicago ard. Northwestern railway Green street, south of the high school, Dr. D. G. Wells appeared before p^'. Deneen, former Harvard High James Nevelle farm, 4 miles north- PBssentrer tram at McHenry on the recently purchased by the Donald judge Henry L. Cowlin in Probate lu"»nary. - ; west Df Wauconda. afternoon of. last Oct. .3. Twpnty Hunters, was moved Wednesday of court Monday and made final settle- Graf pla^s center and Adams and December 22 passengers were slightly injured, mm) this week a block and a half west on ment of tbe estate. |Deneen are forwards. Christmas Party--St. Mary - St. Pat*ireouiring first aid treatment. John street to a lot purchased of Mr. j)r \v*ollf=. passed away on Nov. 2$, - Norman Ebel of Algonquin, another - rick School--Parert-Teachers' Assn.! the time of the accident railand Mrs. George Johnson. 1937. The estate consisted largely of e*-Dundee star, also is a member of - and C. D. of A. road officials expressed the belief that The ground on which the house was securjties 0f the estimated present4*1* Marquette squad. ;Christmas Cantata--Pupils of Public the switch deliberately had been'locklocaled is adjacent to high school value of about $75,000, bequeathed to'. Gra^ ls a 21-year-old, six-foot two- i , Grade School--High School. • ed open." Another factor that led property and was purchased by the his son, Dr. Glenn W. Wells, now re-j'"0!1 200-pound senior; Adams, 21, al-,Christmas Party--W. C. O. F. ' them to this belief was that t^a red school board in order to extend the siding in Los Angeles. Calif.' The ex-:f° 18 a sen'or' weighing 185 and stand- December 26 warring signal at the switch was not school property to take in the entire MI,tor, were Glenn W Wells and R !in£&-2; Deneen, 20, is a junior, stands Dinner-Dance--Alumni Assn.--Crystal burning. block. Overton ' ! 6"1 and ^ighs 170; Ebel, 19-^ear-old Lodge, Crystal Lake. { In the crash, a three-car train en sophomore, stands six feet, even and January 6 [route from Lake Geneva to Chicago, weighs 165 pounds. t fleeting-- Christian Mothers. Ihit the open switch, beifg shunted op- Carleton, located at Northfield,; January 10 f "to,a siding. The cars were derailed Minn,, , has a powerful outfit this sea- j Meeting--Past Oracles--Mrs. Cainille and dragged along the siding a con- Anyone who frequents the local tennis courts in summer knows that they' are very much overcrowded and it wasi ; '« > to care for this matter that the school DirtllS board purchased the property. A tennis court will be constructed on thg, site. PETIT JURORS The following from McHenry have Mr. ard Mrs. Jos. Britz announce son, being the first team to defeat a Big Ten conference school (Iowa). The game will start at 9:30 Friday the birth of an 8-lb. daughter, Rose I "isrht (Dec. 23"). Tickets m&y be pur- Ebel--Crystal Lake. The late Senator Tom Watson of, Georgia once declared that "the whole J siderable distance, 'sixty passengers. The trait carried 'Mr. ard Mrs. Hamld•R$e#>",awS AiW' Marie, born at a Rockford hospital chtised at.. Wentworth's, Colwell's, • secret of suceess in politics is to re- ily are moving this week frow the __ _ _ December 8 |Keeney's and Leech Auto Parts in member that it is impossible to exag- Brown farm, southeast of this city, to Or. L. B. Murphy "of McHenry, the Canada, Mexico, and every country in'been selected to serve on the petit j Mr. and Mrs. Hughie Kirk of Fair.^J!1' Yernon,J T Smith's and Bond's gerate the stupidity of the public. The Algonquin. famiiv moved wedding to take place on Saturday, Central America except British Hon- jury in the McHenry county circuit Oaks are parents of a little daughter, ' !? Du^ee and Leech Auto Parts m bunk which certain politicians succeed The J£h f n ' J^Harmsen Pl»ce at January 28, 1939. duras. court at Woodstock, which opens on Catherine Jean, born in a Chicago ?! duCats *re one dollar .n mak.ng the voters beheve convinces last wfek from th«^ I January 9: Mike Winkel, George plus 10 cents tax. < ius that oW Toaaa was more than half the end of John street, to tlte Aioerc It's McGee's for Men's Gifts. 30-fp A fine gift--an electric jparey Electric Shop. roaster Mike Buried alive for more than 100 Witt, Ben Justen and Donald Given*. hoars, M. Machnrat, foreman of a; -- .. . - well-digging force in France, was still Give him an electric razor. Leading 30-fp alive when rescuers reached him. brands at Carey Electrjc Shop. 30-fp pital, November 23. Read the Want ; right. Frett place in the north end of this city. Get His Gifts at McGee's. Before purchasing that fcew radio, let us demonstrate ~Garey Electric j A cynic refers to present-day ^onth! 30.fp Shop. 30-fp as "the younger degeneration.* | Gifts for Men at McGee's. t