Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Jul 1941, p. 4

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hp** •5S?C S&. *? FOE SALS fe. FOR SAL®--lM© Fieper Cub 80 h. p. Airplane, $900 cash; or 1/10 interest therein. $98.50 -- terms, $48.50 down, rest $5 week. Proposed club ship to be hangared at Woodstock airport References required. Hughie Kirk, Phone 661-M-l. ® FOR SALE--Six room house on John ptreet, near schools. Reasonably priced. Also double garage on lot. Inquire Mrs. Will Blake. Tel. 611- W-l. FOR SALE -- Two - wheel trailer; stronp, pood body and tires. Tel. McHenry 630-R-l. FOR SALE--Bantam chickens; pairs $3.00. Tel. McHenry 630-R-l. 7-t£ FOR SALE -- 2-piece Living Room suite; S-piece porch set; cfcina cupboard; buffet; bedstead; low dres- «er; table; fruit jars; gas range. H. C. Kamholx, Center Street, McHenry. 8 tf FOR SALE--3-pieee porch set; 2- piece Irving room set; libra ly table; dressing table and bedstead; 3 stone jugs. H. C. Kamhols, Center Street, McHenry. 9 J*OR SALE -- 600 White Leghorn Cockerels, seven weeks old. McHenry Flour Mills. 9 MODELED TO FIT THE MALE FIGURE--Jockey, the famous brand of support underwear provides masculine comfort and ends squirming: Made only by Coopers. 56c up. Mc- GEE'S, "Green Street, McHenry. 9 ran mut FOR RENT -- One 5-room modern apartment, first floor. Steam heat. Garage. Call Mrs. John R. Knox, telephone 17. 9 WA1VTKD WANTB>---Three waitresses for Saturdays and Sundays at the Pistaqua Hills Country Club. 9 RELIABLE PERSONS WANTED-- to call on farmers in McHenry county. Steady work, good pay. No experience or capita! required. Some making $100.00 in a week. Write Mc- NESS CO.. Dept. S., Freeport, 111. 9-2 MISCELLANEOUS DEAD OR ALIVE ANIMALS --^ $100 to $15.00 Oaik v r Cows - Hones - -,«*•: Ho help needed for Prompt and Sanitary flax t if Day and Night, Sudan and Holidays PWae WIMMI lM Kwihi Cliim CLIFF'S RADIO SERVICE -- New location, 107 Riverside Drive, Phone 486. Repairs on all radios and electrical home appliances. All work guaranteed. CLIFFORD WILSON, Prop. 9-tf i§J THSATM McH€NRY FRIDAY -- ONE DA if. (1) "MAIL TRAIN'* (2) "STRANGE ALIBI" SATURDAY - ONE DAY Sstaig^y fetatinee--3:45 OsMwm J«u BUwfell Dtck PeweQ "MODEL WIFE" Abo---• New* • Cartoen as SUNDAY -- MONDAY MyM-a Tyiene Ptswer liad "BLOOD AND SAW* Ala* -- News Eftnta Special -- Ufa* Owaby, "Swing with Hug." Sunday Matinee, 2:45 Oaptiann--. TUESDAY Admission -- lte - Me • (1) "NAVAL ACAMEDT* <2) "THE BLACK CAT' WEDNESDAY -- THURSDAY .. "A WOMAN'S FACE" 1 r !' fe'; > kr Beaut Hut i<:I rovAif mm CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. McHenry Co'». I.ending Theatre C - 0 - O - L - E~ D FRL - SAT. -- JULY 18 - It Giant Twin Bill! "Marlene Dietrich in "THE FLAME O* NEW ORLEANS" with Bruce Cabot - Roland Young Also "THE NURSES SECRET* with Lee Patrick - R. Toomey SUN. - MON. -- JULY 20 - 21 Son. Cont. from 2:45 p.m. 25c to 6 p. m.; 30c after. Children, 10c. Spencer Tracy . Mickey Rooney in "MEN OF BOY'S TOWN" with Bobs Watson - Larry Nuiut "The Picture every Father will want his son to see!" Get rnmm :i%v; Risk Urn to Gam Uiefd Facts Checking- Halifax Scourge. BOSTON. -- A dramatic, ubniv sored account of viruleiit epidemics which have been raging In Halifax, Nova Scotia, and which' threatened for a time to cut the lifeline of Britain-bound supplies, has been revealed here. With it was disclosed the heroic story of 11 American men and women, members of the Harvard medical school research staff, who went to that port while it was infested with meningitis, dfeththeria and scarlet fever and joined forces with local authorities in combating the diseases. •. This story can be written now because the epidemics are under control and be6*use<the>Mar*ard expedition has setup public health measures which make. their recurrence unlikely. Moreover, iu the battle, the expedition gained scienti£c - knowledge of the diseases and their conquest which is expected to render them far less dangerous than they have been. A report it being made to the sur» geon general of the United States public health service detailing the work of the expedition from its departure from Bortbh by plane on January 27 until >it* .return four weeks later. - : Gain>NewKadwMge. Aside from the main rtechnical theme, the report telftr the story of 11 men and women risking their health and eveu .their lives for the progress of medicine. Beside* additional- knowledges about scarlet lever, the report describes a new technique £ss diagnosing meningitis and a mot* powerful drug tor combating it^whfch offers a possibility of eliminating: carriers, and an improved way for. dealing with adult immunisation- Against diphtheria. These advances were possible because Halifax was so ridden with in* fection that the lIaipa*d<;capedition had available in four weirs material which normally might,not have been encountered,in fMir years. Doctors worked overtime:as disease mounted. HoypftaUhtoeeme so crowded that one .tunned a golf clubhouse into an annex,. Halifax was termed the perfect culture medium for epidemics. -, Diphtheria came first. , -It first struck early last fall agA-, spread rapidly. Doctors wer* able lo check the number of deethp- wilfe. antitoxin, but the. sick lists.climbed steadily. Cases Fall Abrupt!* Harvard tests later showed that between 70 and- JO- -per cent of .the population was susceptible. The first step waa collaborating with local officials, in- establishing daily, free, ioMwafoatioii a clinics. Army and navy officials qafddy ordered the same procedure htt their men. Abruptly the number of cases felL "From this exjoentuice and our experience in thinFeneral situation," Dr. Mueller wrote 1n his is pffsO^le to f^rm! which seems " " agafnit diphtheria if; come necef aty in otto miiitaiy ------ Meningitis alence of di] Dingle used ly recent mide family, tb1 Data on all " adult* stub ics are ioriesin pittance of to Halifax the studies now, doctoi forms a brilliint medical history. Fined Author His FKflk FroA Na»s NEW YOWf .~A tale p< tragedy and seemingly hopeless dagpys in reaching America was told through tears by Frank Pe&tf, Viennese author and playwright.. . With his wife, J5d&, R*ul fled Vienna before the Nasi invasion, and finally reached : French Morocco, where they hoped to get a boat for America. Delays in getting exit visas drove hie wife to suicide, he said, only a few days before the visas arrived. .. , 1 War Brings New . Navy Problems 0 -Z. • Experts Ar« Kept on Mora. In For«ifn Lands to Gather Information. WASHINGTON.--Fresh back of the screen that hides the navy's puah for a two-ocean fleet diecloee a whole series of attseatkms fhat era being made as a reeutt of development^ in Earape'* war. T6 a far greater extent than ev«r before, the navy ia keying men en the move in foreign fields to gather information and enable it to devise deftness for any new forms of at* tack that may be cradled by European ingenuity. At Pearl Harbor oil and power plants are being housed in underground bomb-proof shelters. Gasoline is being stored underground at all air stations off continental United States and at many of those on the continent itself. ?n maqr places this includes not only aviatm gasoline but fufel oil and Diesel oil. At Panama, however, all fbel is above grcund except for aviation gasoline. The storage space at Pearl Harbor is one of the most elaborate. Fuel oil there is in vertical tunnels 306 feet high and 100 feet in diameter. Bomb preaf Shelters. Bomb-proofing of various other types is also being done, particularly at outlyipg naval stations. The Pacific island stations are subject to bombing, and special thought is being given there to guarding the lines of communication. High frequency radio sets are being installed in bomb-proof shelters. In many of the areas, too, this precaution extends to pereonneL Some bombproof shelters are being builtT Hie quick glimpse that may be caught between the line* of the appropriation estimates does not provide an idea of how many. Airplane attacks upon warships have led the navy to hasten plans tor providing more protection for the men who operate anti-aircraft guns. The loss of life from bomb splinters on the upper works of ships was far higher than anyone expected. Thus, protective works are be* ing designed for anti-aircraft guns. Aircraft Defease. Until the fleet gets its full complement of planes to prevent and fight off any attack from above, the ships will carry an especially heavy baV tery of anti-aircraft guns. Ships that used to carry only four or six such guns are now being fitted out with 8 or 12. These include not only the long-range five-inchers but also the fast firing quadruple guns. In addition, the speed of airplanes has been stepped up so much that old range-finding devices were useless. Before the old range computers and directors could get a bead on the plane it would be gone. New mechanical computers have been devised and are being installed. The airplane has even changed the old lookout system. The crow's nest is not enough now. It was all right as a station from which to. watch for surface vessels. But the ship that wants to stay afloat today has to watch the air as well as the sea. Sky lookout posts are being installed. Here the man on duty is stfttehed out in a half fcrfljif positk »rwatching the ftar. It costs from $2,000 to flftoo to install the proper appara. >tujits. o-*nm .. a^ sph. iAp'. Scorch for Flower Soil Profit to Now Orifltfii NEW ORLEANS.--An iris hunt on flie swampy outskirts of this city several years ago resulted in reduced expensss for New Orleans' parkway commission add prettftf flgwers and shrubs throughout the Felix Seeger, superintendent of the commission, noticed the rich leaf loam of the soggy swamp lands and took a load of it back for experiments. Before, the commission had to use bagasse and peat moes to cultivate camelias and azaleas, for which this city is famous. The experiment was successful. The plant not only survived, but the blossoms were larger and more perfect than with other expensive soil mixtures. mm TOL to Dad, Dies in Operation PHIO.--Daniel BielawskL" jn; d<iueedd ssuudaodeennljyy iinn St. Viartstfs hospital while he was givfeit.a Wood tranmislen to his father, Frank Bielawski, 50, followtag an emergency operation. CSffttfter Frank G. Kreft said thai emotion may have caused a sudden aOation of large arteries, causing his death. Sacrifice Limbs |^ :l- For Few Dollars "*T TUESDAY lOe -. Special • «15e Brian Aherne - Kay Francis in "THE MAN WHO LOST HIMSELF" Also -- Leon Errol Comedy and Sportreel. WED. - THURS. -- JULY 23 -24 lean Crawftmi in "A WOMAN'S FACET* MeH-ym Beagles - Conrad Veidt Here's an For U. S. Army's Tootsies WASHINGTON, r-The army, despite the era of mechanization, still expects to do a lot of strenuous walking. In fact, it was announced that effective July 1 each man would be issued three pairs of shoes, instead of two, .as in the pasfc*» < Girls Born 27 Hours ^ Apart Doqble Cousins LANCASTER, PA. - Robert and Richard Falk, brothers, became fathers of daughters within 27 hours, but the long arm of coincidence reached farther. The mothers are cousins. Both babies were born in St. Joseph's hospital, the first to Mrs. Robert Falk, the former Helen Fralich, the second to Mrs. Richard Falk, the former Amelia Fi&lich,-f? hours later. • ' >" Four Generations Mark «- "• The Same Natal Days RIO VISTA, CALIF.--When members of the family of Mrs. Margaret Ryan of Hamilton City met to commemorate her birthday the celebration virtually assumed mass proportions. It also was the birthday of four other members of four generations of ^ the family. In addition to marking j the seventy-seventh anniversary of Mrs. Ryap's birth, it also was the birthday of two of her daughters, Mrs. Helen Kibby of Hamilton City, and Mrs. Carleton Hansen of Crescent City; that of her grandson, Robert Winters of Colusa. - . 'Naked' Truth The truth is often called "naked" because according to fable, Truth went bathing and Falsehood stole her clothes. Later, Falsehood offered to lend Truth some clothes, but Truth refused, preferring to go around in the altogether. Cinchona Trees More than 43,000 cinchona trees have been planted on the AfrfCafi island of Reunion in an attempt to produce Peruvian bark year Gold 'Prospector* Finds Ore Mined and Stacked TEMPS, ARIZ.--Gold mining de luxe was the order of the day for some lucky "prospector" on the highway west of here. Guy Stewart, a truck drivei hauling a load of sacked gold ore from mine to smelter, discovered he had lost two sacks. He retraced his steps, but found some "prospector" already had taken the ore. Total bonanza: two sacks, worth *10 zents each, ore worth $60. Insurance Companies Hit Havdby Claim Racket ST. LOUIS.--What price an arm? Or a lest Or weeks of pain? Pastau' inspector* who break up fake accident rings by bringing the o|zrattots to trial for using the mails to defraud insurance companies of hundreds e>f thousands of dollars annua^ Mf* the deliberate sacrifice of a lirabr sfcnosi never pays the ring members more than $1,000. Aoconiiag to William L. Noah, chief inspector in charge of the St Louis office, by far the greater number of faked accidents results in small claims of s few hundred dollars being paid. He recalled the notorious '"serum case." In 1925, a widespread ring of fake accident victims. was uncovered in northern Arkansas and southern Missouri. The ringleaders had discovered that heavy injections of turpentine with a hypodermic needle would result in swift and lasting breakdown of the surrounding tissues. - Tbe assaltant blotch, on tbe flesh' bed., aHf the appeszaitoe and • char- *ct*ristk$r »f a deep-seated "bftrise Infection and sloughing often followed. For years the ring succeeded in collecting small claim after claim. Inspector A. F. Burt said that fake accident victims who are able successfully to simulate paralysis following supposed injuries were nonexistent. Keflex action and response to the stimuli of pin pricks or electrical shocks are impossible to feke, he pointed out. However, Burt said, many persons have been able to collect liability or accident insurance claims by simulating injuries to fV Kl,tlr and muscles. ' Aged Trio Spurns Relief Ami Dies of Starvation LINDSAY, ONT.--Choosing death in preference to charity, a 79-yearold woman and her two brothers died cf starvation here. Charlotte Shouldice and,her brothers, Isaac, 70, and Thomas, 68, lived a secluded liffe on their 50-acre farm in Jtfariposa township. The farm, ordinarily, provided for their needs, but last year, failhur health prevented titan from working It. Recently'a neighbor, visiting the lonely farmhouse, foUnd all three occupants in a state of exhaustion from hunger He notified the township relief officer, who walked more than a mile through deep snowdrifts, to bring the trio an offer of food. They rejected it, insisting "We don't want cKfrity." v We reUef of&cer celled health authorities, who ordered all three removed to a hospital here. The sister and her younger 1>rother died within an hour of each other and were given • double funeral. Five hours after their burial the other brother had joined them in death. British Wobub Suffi A tripte Wir PLYMOUTH, ENGLAND. - Mrs. Gladys Faulkner learned last Sunday that her sea was missing at sea. A big bomb shattered her home shbrtly aftet-wsrd during a German air raid. ' While she was standing amid the wreckage a b6y handed her a telegram. It said her husband had been killed et sea "by ^nmy action." Holes in Pants May Keep Policemen in Their Can DENVER.--To avoid embarrassment Colorede highway patrolmen soon may have to "call politely out the window to toalBe violators," Supervisor Joseph Marsh said. Continual getting in and out of their automobiles hss woi^i thin the seats of their wits; The $8,900 needed for repain or new ones isn't available. r"~- Drives Taxicab 25 Years With Only One Accident CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA.--Frank Smrcheck, veteran taxi driver here, has rounded out his twenty-fifth year of driving with a record of one Occident in 500,000 miles. Smrcheck said the accident was not his fault. It occurred four years ago when another car skidded into his taxi on an icy street. g Blindness for 15 Year*..' Fails to Halt a Gardener BUTTE, MONT.--Robert J. Brimson, blind for 15 years, has one of the neatest gardens in Butte. With the aid of a notched board for planting and ropes along the pathways between sections of his garden to guide him, Crimson lias produced results that afe the envy of his neighbors. . • JNaaning Garden ,. Make! a "plan of your veg£$Src$ garden. Know just where you an going to plant your beans, your sweet corn or your tomatoes and als<# plan out succession crops. This idf very important where you are lim-t ited for space. Fish Symbol The design motif of the flsh, hi early Christian art, symbolized ~T ^ Christ, since the initials of His full ,m accor"' I title in Greek spelled the Greek mm*** -f mm is'ns: ^ When * matti esn hns been "sanitised" it bscomee gem resistant *hd odor repoBoal tws tnoet doshv able quantise, the new matUess yoa buy mar%e <e!eaa cad hygienic when perukes s< bat you can readily understand ths* the ordinary (unsanitized) mattress wfll not neccaccrHy remain truly sanitary for long when in nes in the heme. There ate gem?* hi the air. Genps picked up in handling. Germs from sleepers' bodies. All these can get into the ticking of the ordinary mattress and there they thrive. The very warmth and moisture of a sfcfepiag body provides ioeal cfihdflBns tor bacteria to bread and offensive perspiration odors to develop. Although s careful bou--keeper changes her * bed linens frequently, she can't launder her mattrtss, and no matter how thoroughly she brushes and airs it, due doesn't in that way ge^ full protection and peace of mind. Sanitised ticking definitely inhibits germ griowth. Even the tough hard-to-kill staphylococcus aureus (the standard germ organism used ic the U. S. government approved tests of antiseptic efficiency) does not breed and multiply in the sanitised ticking. Sanitized ticking resists formation of offensive body odor. A normal person's perspiration is odorless as it leaves the body. It is the decomposition of perspiration by bacteria that gives rise to ifnpleesant odors. By preventing the action of such bacteria, the sanitised mattress stays freeh, clean-smelling and hygienic. Mr. and Mr*. Walter Vasey and son called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rushing at Hampshire, HL, Vegetable Water Gui Be . - A Vitamin Filled Broth U you have beep you mdpt qeftiliiljijy |il^R!, tbUbe'^Hdespread* advtee ^ Shviftg thc^viater in which vegetables are cooked you may be looking for an idea on how to use this vitamin filled broth. Say you have a cupful of eepence from cooked carrots, spinach, string beans and potatoes, you may use it to good advantage in a Bisque of Salmon and Oysters. First, combine this vegetable liquor and add enough water to make the quantity measure 3 pints. Add 3 vesl or chicken bouillon cubes and heat, stirring, until these' are melted. Then add 1 tall can of red salmon which you have freed of bone and flaked. Let these simmer for 35 or 40 minutes. - Meanwhile, in the top cf the double boiler melt 2 tablespoons of butter and Mend in 2 level tablespoons of flour. Add % teaspoon of salt, a dash of nutmeg, V* teaspoon of Worcestershire sauce, a trace of cayenne and 1 tablespoon of minced parsley and then stir in 1 cup of top milk or thin cream and cook this over boiling water, stirring from time to time, for about IS minutes. Then stir the salmon mixture into it and mix well and sifter that pour it through a sieve pressing all the substance that will go through frith little persuasion from the back of a spoon. After it is sieved, reheat it but on no account let it actually boil again--just get it boiling hot. At the lest minute add a large tablespoon of butter and 2 dozen oysters that have been heated in their own juice until the edges curl, then drained. . I J M.H> Oerk Nativi ef Cork is ttie -thick, soft, porous outer bark cf the cork oak, which is an evergreen-tree of the oak family native to Portugal, Spain, North Africa and most other countries bordering on the Mediterranean. The cork of oommerce is not the true hafk. of the fcbrk balf thl'&ugh whtefc the sap circulates, but a layer of spongy, elastic, tough and impervious cellular tissue that forms outside the true bark. If the true or inner bark of the- cork oak is damaged, the tree will die; but.the outer layer of cork, which is light becsuse composed of the walls of dead cells filled with air, may be removed. Miss Miriam King spent Sunday in Chicago with Mends. Ralph UtOifiild spent a few days the past week at the home of his grandpttwuts, *r. and Mrs. J. Withers at Roekford. ZBtaob. Mr- yfcfc^EMiariy Pusil, Berwyn, spent Wednesday wjtktheir daagh- Mr. gtii'Kn. A^piCaRe arif family spent Sunday at the home of Mrs. Cora Hook at feoaad lake. iir. and Mrs. George Tiffany of North Chicago called at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher Monday evening. Mrs. John Bsumruk and son of Berwyn are spending a few days st the home of Mr. snd Mrs. Frank "St. George. Bruno Gtjmelli of Sullivan Lake called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank King Monday. Mr. and Mrs. James WHlitms of Crystal Lake were Sunday evening guests at the home of Mr. nnA^Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. Mrs. Margaret Grabbe of Crystal Lake is spending s few dsys at ths home of Mr. art! Ust. ^Falter Vasey. Mrs. 8arah tlsher'-taNKit 8undav with Mrs Ida Fisher et w&enry. Mrs. J. Withers snd daughter, Leona, of Roekford -spent TViesday with Mr. end Mrs. Len Littlefleld. Mrs. Terry Smith of Chicago is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Frank King for a few days. Harold Grabbe'of Crystal Lake is Visiting his annt and unele, Mr. and Mrs- Walter Vasey st the present. William Lofcmsnn and son, Raymond, of Libortyville wen 8nnda* vtsitpm ^t-tbe home of Mr. and Mxp. Lloyd Fisher. . Mr. snd Mrs. Robert True and son of Waukegan, Miss Jeanette Sibrowski of Tlgerton, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. Van Kellan and family of Chicago spent Sunday at the home of Kr. and Mrs. Frank King. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rossmenn and •son, Jean, of Banevflle, Miss., Evelyn Clinge snd Frank Mitaick of Barrierton spent Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Vasey. The Volo unit of the Lake County Home Bureau met' at tile home el Mrs. Harry Matthews Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. John Blomgren and the "Volo Sunshine Queens" 4-H club as co-hostesses. The Volo Sunshine Queens held their local achievement program at this meeting. Delicious refreshment* were served at the close of the meeting. Arvilla and X41ah Fisher spent s few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker at Capron the past week. Mrs. Van Kellan and fagnily of Chicago are visiting Mr. and lira. Frank King for a few days. McHenry. DL IheaetCfltoy.VllW^ One Tea Biz Msaths Straub and daughter, Yvonne, of Chicago spent Sunday with Mrs. Bertha SPRING GROVE train kMki PIHmu A new device utilises the best itom the smoke pipe of e house heating plant to heat water for the bathroom, kitchen and laundry. The unit consists of a jacket of best iron or aluminum alloy which is clamped around the smoke pipe. Cold, water from a storage tank travels to the jacket where it is heated and then returns to the upper half of the tank. There is a continuous circulation of water between the storage tank and the heating unit around the smoke pipe. It is claimed that water which enters the unit at a temperature of 48 degrees is ^heated to a temperature of 130 when it leaves. The unit utilizes heat given off by a smoke pipe which otherwise is wasted* Mrs. Ernest Peacock entertained members of her club at her home on Tuesday night. Two tables of five hundred were in play snd prise winners were Mrs. Math Nimsgern, Mrs. Frank Sanders and Mm. Peacock received consoladci. Mrs. Ella Siegler and Mrs. Nin|Sgern received traveler'p prises. Refreshments were served following cards. Miss Meroa EUio and friend. Miss Miller of Stscyville, Iowa, are visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown. Miss MDlcr was also a guest in the John Miller heme. Dr. and Mrs, X* L. Kagan returned on Thursday fuss a top to Ohitf where they spent several daft with relatives. Officers and several members of the Christian Mothers 8odalHy met at the home of Mrs. rVed Meyer on Wednesday night to discuss plans and make arrangements for the annual chicken dinner to be htld at St. Mar's parish hall on Sunday, July 20. There will also be a carnival which opens on Saturday night, July If. Mr. and Mrs. Jake Miller and fan.- ily attended the wedding of Miss Agnes Smith and Henry Weber st St. John's church in Johnsburg Wednesday morning. They also attended the reception at the Peter Smith home. Miss Bernieee Nimsgern returned to Chicago on Monday having enjoyed a week's vacation at her home here. Mr. shd Mrs. Clarence Amann yi Mundelein were visitors in the Edwin Freund home Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Glendsle Esh, son, Dennis, and Mr. and Mrs. Andy Miss Evelyn Sanders, who is ployed in Woodstock, epent the end with her parents. Mr. and Mrs.' Frank Sanders. Mrs. Matfi Nimsgern and sea, Arthur, attended the wedding of her nephew, Charles Thoma, in Chicago Saturday. ^ Among those who attended the carnival of St. Joseph's parish in Rtabawnd Sunday night were Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern, Mr. and Mrs. John kattner, Mr. and Mrs, George Huff and family, Mr. and Mrs. Joeaph P. Weund, daughter, Sharon, Mr. and Mrs Chauits Freund and children, Mr. and Mi*. Arthur Kattner, sea, Billy, Mr. and Mrs. Frank May, son, Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. George A. May and family, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Meyer and family, Mrs, J. J. Freund snd Mrs. Anton May. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Freund spent Sunday with his mother, Mrs. John S. Freund, in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Rauen of Chicago visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Kattner, eta Sunday. 'VpZ&#k uttunum i Ot MIMaii>M 11 m ;V 5^%!' Mr. and . Mrs. Walter Sesrbrough «re tbe .parents of a daughter bora last Vjftdfesfar, July 9, at the-Wis* . stock Public hospital. The mother is the former Anna |farie Ktapperich. A daughter was born last Thursdsy st the Woodstock hospital to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence VanderPal ef mond. ,,-v An old roof can be insulated sni renhingled at the same time. Aaphalt Miingles laid over an existing worn-out shingled roof, greatly increase the insulating value of tha roof, in addition to making it resistant to chimney and other sparkschief causes bf all roof fir**. Right et "Taking the right of way" caua more injuries than any other factor involved in American traffic accidents in 1940. Approximately 230,TW persons were hurt in accidents under that cause. fwrrmsr---- WANTED AT ONCE Msnsger of large, well known feed company must appoint two men for good paying work in the localitiea where this newspaper is circulated. Render service and do sales work. Farm experience or any kind oi sales experience helpful. Must have car. Pleasant, permanent work. Send only name and address. Personal interview arranged. Write MM,M care McHenry Plain dealer. Name Address ......... wmjhm i* fU fMHaj t see, taste or i latryou Rapmatt bee ihem Moa iuth." That's wh| lbs intsgrity of tin is a fint cpnsideraaiw, k isa't the ARsr seacchiag i, we feetece the ef Abbott libowiesiss s sieassr in the vitaaria field, la Abbott Vkuua Ptodects you are assured of high vitamin potency and iwnh so Isbsl rlsin LerusfiU veer Docnr*! erescripdoas with Ais dspendeUe braed. Bolger's DrugtStore f- VITA**1*! Election FeUs Plan Convinced that he'd foiled of reelection in 1916, Wood row Wilson the next day hit on a plan of resigning immediately so that his supposedly victorious opponent, Chsrles E. Hughes, might assume office and formulate his own policy in those tumultuous World war days The plan: Wilson to appoint Hughes his secretary of state, then he (Wil son) an£ Vice President Marshall to resign. Hughes would then atitomatically become President. But while the plan was being discussed late results turned the tide and Wilson won by s hair's breadth. Acreage Long in Faaaily Miss S. Agnes Whitelaw of Wells River, Vt., lives on the land her great-great-grandfather settled in 1773. He purchased acreage which then included the southern half of the town of Ryegate, Vt., from the ftrst president of Princeton college Signal Lamp in Water ~ A aignal lamp that lights automatically as soon as it comes in contact With water has been invented to be worn on life preservers by ship- |rreck victims to supnmoa aid. ; li Homage that Lives on* T h a t brief moment 0 f homage which constitutes the conclusion of a-service for a departed love4 one can be such solace that it will live on and on. We try 4o Imake our services, regard? less of cost, achieve that ef- JAOOB JTTSTHT & SOWS Funeral Directors Phone 103-R McH«iry

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