*00 MANY ORtVIRS T o l d "Sir Own DMtnMtioiiT far George Peek b; 8IXTY TEARS AGO A daughter, of Albany Frett, aged about six years, was kicked in the face by a colt on Sunday last and very severely injured. Barbian Bros., will remove their cigar manufactory next week from the McHenry House to rooms in the Kelter building, west of. The Plaindeales office. Martin Welsh, one of the highway commissioners of this town, has tendered his resignation, which has been accepted, Init his successor has not yet been fcppiortted. A special town meeting has been called for November 3d, to vote upon tike question of raising money to robuild the Johns burgh bridge. FIFTY TEARS AGO THE POCKETBOOK of KNOWLEDGE l£?™4EBSeS#' ABotfAfMUCK ' * as /7 A*n*sr-sfit MTMMOaiL** On May 23, 1857, Thomas Babington Lord Macaulay wrote from London, England, to his American friend, Congressman H. E. Randall of New York. In thts letter he predicted that in the Twentieth Century, America would experience a severe period of depression when (we quote) "Hundreds of artisans will be fairly brought to the test. Distress everywhere makes the laborer mutinous and discontented and inclines him to listen with eagerness to agitators who tell him it is a monstrous iniquity that one man should have a million, while another can not get a full meal." Space does not permit reproducing here the entire letter but we would like to quote one significant paragraph from it: "I seriously apprehend that you will, in some season of adversity as I have described, do things which will prevent prosperity from returning, that you will act like people in a year of scarcity, devour all the seedcorn and thus make the next year not of (scarcity, but of absolute distress. The distress will produce fresh spoliation. There is nothing to stay you. Your constitution is all sail and no anchor. As I said before, when society hfes entered on this downward progress,-either civilization or liberty must perish. Either some Caesar or Napoleon will seize the reins of government with a strong hand, or your Republic will be as fearfully plundered and laid waste by barbarians in the Twentieth Century as the Roman Empire was in the Fifth; with this dif- , ference, that the Huns and Vandal# J who ravaged the Roman Empire came from without, and your Huns and /HOHFTHW sooo semMm p&ces orawol GOffJOA &we umsr am*** MuffFrrsoe&crzyiM mty cMHorwefMone WNjLf oe M WOMSS * * 0* OF 1HE EARLIEST INVENTION* 6RAM1EPA |.S f*TFNT V4MAN IPG* FW AM ICf CXCAM F/teezeR fftwrnr, eajmofm,cts*sr (wueucw-wfc vtenppocfi SC OPHtttW Althoff A Miller have sold theit stock of goods in this village to O. C. Colby, of Nunda, and the same have been moved to that village. Remember the entertainment of the ladies of the Willing Workers Society Vandals will have engendered within at the City hall, this evening. j your country by a your own institu- Robert Howard, son of- R. A. Hdw- tions." ard, has gone to Elgin to study Veter- Macaulay died long before the term tnary surgery. . | "Fifth Columnist" had been coined, Anton Snyder has purchased the ( ej8e he probably would have used it Larry Durney property in the north instead of the woxd "barbarians." But part of the village, consisting of a house and two lots. have had cement walks put down in front of their stores instead of asphalt, they offering to pay the difference in the cost. Mat Weber is building a house for Nick Winkles in the Fegers addition. Jos. Blake is building an addition to the house which he recently purchased of Nick Winkles. On Tuesday the Bank of McHenry paid out to farmers something like $3,000 f?r the Borden Condensed Milk Co. Jake Leickem and Mrs. Lydia Simboys was anything but quiet THIRTY TEARS AGO mons were quietly married last week, I spongible for making America the but the ovation given them by .the great naiion that 9he is. He would listen to soap-box orators ion street corners and to demagogues over his radio, advocating various and „ „ ^sundry crack-pot economies to replace -- M a r y W e b e r , m o t h e r o f MilMI tjie splendid one we now have. In Gertrude and Kathryn and Peter H. cert»jn newspapers and magazines, j Math, Maeaoiay would read ridiculous ' ^1S-' *W*J j charges against the American System h°™e.O" Washington jof Free Enterprise -- accusations so street Thursday morning following an false> M utterly lacking in factual 081 THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR QUICK RESULTS Increasing Farm Accidents Attributed to Machine Ag& Above--When the horses start, the fcnife-eharp blades of the discs bef| in to turn. Agricultural Impleiment « are the leading'farm accident hazard. Right--Cigarettes and ^gasoline are noted for their teamwork in causing serious injury and .costly fires. *?«> X 'ra- : } Farmer Is Urged 4 • By Red Cross to Check • Accident Hazards 1 Washington, D C.--Mechanization of the American farm is ac- 5 • counting for a mounting accident V. ifatality toll, the Red Cross pointed f '^out in an appeal for farm owners to particip&jt in its yt>ar-round Home .and Farm Accident Prevention drive : beginning the last week of October. J Of the 4,500 farm workers killed I'ih' accidents last year, approxi pSStely 28 per cent were doe to Icarelessness and the use of faulty its, the Red Croes said, nianimals, Tehicles, excesheat and falls, led other farm !/*•*-' , > 1 accident causes in that order. iK • 1^1."-To the farmer, the Red Cr<^» . .SBges a close check up for the re 'asoval of accident hasards. Macbin- 1 ;• '7jl "*ary. tools and other equipment ' afcould be examined periodically sal kept !a good repair. Tools and Implements should be kept in regular places, oat of the farm yard or * serious Ck f ' CslL dolla, boars and other danger 1§m MM snHnsls should be kept in se- I;' a>M naaa. itely 80 Injuries of vary- _ occur for every farm ac fatality--a natkm-wtde total the terminology makes no difference. Shakespeare wrote: "What's in a name? That which we call a rose by iany other name would smell as sweet.* . , , ,TJMacauIay was keen enough to foresee A few of the west side merchants (that here in America, we were sowing FORTY YEARS A< the seeds for our own eventual de struction by nursing vipers in our bosom. Macaulay died in 1859. Wefe he alive today, he would have ample justification for saying: "I told you so/ Here he would see the sickening spectacle of the American people abandoning the fight to govern themselves, delegating more and more power to the Central Government, and looking to that government for. their every need, forsaking the spirit of initiative, thrift and enterprise which was re illness of only four days. At the hour of nine, at St. Mary's Catholic church in this village, evidence to back them up. that even he, in spite of his skepticism, would , wonder what could have happened to Wednesday morning of this week, a formerly sane "people to cause them there occurred the marriage of Miss to Rive heed to such drivel. r*fI7 Anna Freund to Mr. Henry E.) He would witness the alarming spec- T* <5* » » «n8r t,<d ** itacle <>f national, sUte and local gov- ' yer . . .. ernments spending and borrowing with Martin Stoffel has moved his family n0 thought of the future, while Amerfrom the Stephen H. Freund residence icans apathetically look on, making on Pearl street to the John Regner cottage on Broad street. Butter was declared firm at 29^ cents on the Elgin board of trade Monday. TWENTY YKARS AGO The painters at St. Mary's new parsonage are now putting on the finish* ing touches on the interior of the structure, which will soon be ready for occupancy. John Oeffling this week moved his family from the John Justen cottage on Elm street to the rooms on the second floor of the Mrs. Elizabeth Rothermel store building on Riverside Drive. Patrick Cleary is having his barn on Main street remodeled into a private garage. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jencks are now occupying the John Justen cottage on Elm street, having ° moved into same the first of the week. little or no'protest about this profligate waste of money and resources. Our Founding Fathers set up a beautiful thing here in this country. For 150 years we closely followed the pattern they designed for us. We became the envy of the entire world. What has happened to us? Are we going to let the barbarians within our gates destroy us? Our fervent prayer is that before it is too late, America will awaken to its senses, get back on the pathway that led it to unprecedened heights, and which if followed again, will carry it to a new record high in civilization. Order your Rubber Stamps at The laindealer. Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman and Mrs. Wm. Bacon were callers In the Lewis McDonald home in* Woodstock last Thursday. Sunday guests in the Albert Vales home were Mr. and Mrs. John Krahulec and son and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Vales. Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman and Mrs. Wm. Bacon spent Tuesday afternoon at the Charles Newman home at Slocum Lake. SLOCUM LAKE Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren were callers at McHenry Saturday. WUlard Darrell and Mrs. Harry Matthews were callers at Waukegan Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner and daughter, Joan, were callers at Woodstock last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Marlett Henry and son, Marlett, spent ' last Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell. ' Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pfannenstill and Miss Marie Wagner of Mundelein spent last Thursday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Wagner. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, called on Miss Helen Davis at the Woodstock hospital at Woodstock last Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Wagner and daughter, Joan, and Mrs. Catherine Wagner spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett. Miss Helen Lawless and Pete Jacobs of Chicago were Sunday supper and evening greats st the hOtne of Mr. and Mrs. Marlett Henry. Miss Frances Converse and Miss Frances Davis spent three days at Winona. Minn., going up through Wisconsin and returning through Iowa. Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren were callers at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lusk at Maple Park last Thursday. They were accompanied home by Mrs? Lusk and daughter, Betty Lou, who spent Friday and the weekend at the Blomgren home. Mr. and Mrs. Marlett Henry and son, • Marlett, and Willard Darrell spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Raeburg and two children of Chemung were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests at the home of Mrs. Celia Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping of Starks Sttaion were guests Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews. Miss Jennie Dowell was a caller Saturday at North Chicago and was accompanied home by Miss Marion who spent Sunday with home folks here. Mr. and Mrs". John Blomgren and guests, Mrs. Raymond Lusk and daughter, Betty Lou, were Sunday dinner and sunper guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Axel Nerstrom at North Chicago. Mr. Lusk of Maple Park joined them at dinner and sunper. Mrs. Lyle Litwiler of Round Lake was a caller last Wednesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. H Hansen. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Brooks of Libertyville' spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. Willird Darrell attended an executive meeting of the Lake-Cook Farm Supply Co. at DesPlaines Monday. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney, and Otis Phillips were callers at the home of Mrs. Ella Parks at Park Ridge Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son attended the America First meeting at Libertyville Township High school on Sunday night and enjoyed the address by Rev. Dr. John O'Brien, professor at Notre Dame university. Mrs. C. H. Hansen and mother, Mrs. Jennie Morgan* were callers at Woodstock last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and Willard Darrell were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beu at Island Lake last Thursday evening in honor of the letter's birthday. Miss Dessie Swisher, Miss Doris Schlee of Chicago were guests Sunday at the cottage of Mr, and Mrs. J. Pentalas Mr and Mrs. B. Stasch and daughter, Dorothy, of Round Lake, Bill Siebert, a sailor from Great Lakes Naval Training school, and John Stasch of Lunkville were visitors Sunday at the Franz-Eisner coftage at Mylith Park, Mr. and Mrs. B. Ruthenberg and Mrs. C. Rodene.of Mylith Park were luncheon guests last Wednesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Mason tn Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. E. Held of . Chicago spent the weekend at their cottage at Mylith Park. Mr. and Mrs. B. Ruthenberg spent Saturday evening in Chicago. Mrs. Arthur Johnson, a bride of three days, was stricken with an appendicitis attack while starting on their honeymoon trip to California and was rushed to the North Chicago hospital and operated. So far her condition is fair. Mr. and Mrs. C. Rodene had an old- _ last Saturday. Those pnMMMt were Mr. and Mrs. P. En* mqrow of Oak Park, Mr. and Mrs.JP. Bhamberg of Berwyn and Mr. and Mrs. A. Lindgren of Waoconda. The folks ate 'til their heart's content. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett were dinner guests one day last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Litwiler at Round Lake. Guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Burnett last Sunday were Attorney Frank Raymond and wife, his mother and two daughters, Edna and Nora, of Chicago, Mr. and Mm. Geo. Windell, John Eastman of Evanston, Mr. nad Mrs. Paul Kraepel from Elgin, Mr. and Mrs. John Da vies and son, John, Mr. and Mrs. Hews from Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Litwiler of Round Lake and Mr. Sherman and two friends 6f Riverdale. OHUBCH SXBVICM 4Daylight Savings Time) St Mary's Catholic Chare* "Sundays: 7:60; 8:M; 10:38.^ Weekdays: 6:48; 8:00. ^ First Friday: 6*0; 8ilL Confessions: _ Saturdays: 3:90 p.m. and 7:60 p. m Thursday before First Friday. After Mas* out Thursday, 8^ 7:00 P-«. Msgr. C. 3. Nix, pastor. St Patrick's Cathode Chan* Masses: Sundays: 8:00; 10:00. Weekdays: 7:80. Firnt Fridays: 7:80. > ^ On First Friday, Commiuueii cus « tributed at 6:30, 7:00 ana I and during the 7:30 Mass. Confessions: 1 Saturdays: 4:00 to 540 p.n. 7:00 to 8K)0 p. m. Thursday before First Friday: 4:06 to 5:00 p. m. and 7:00 tr 8HM p. m. Rev. Wm. A. O'Rourlre, paster. St. John's Catholic Church, Johaabarg (Central Standard Time) Masses: Sundays: 8:00; 10:00. Holy Days: 7:00 and 9:00. ^ If Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. ~ Confessions: , v,-. .> Saturdays: 2:80 and 7tW,: Thursday before First Friday: S'Jl and 7:80. ler. A. J. Neidert, pastOBI PETER <»pi -B <1| PEEVE • y. Service) i hefovs Community Church Sunday School: 10:00 a.m. Worship Service: 11:00 a. nM Junior League: 6:30 p.m. Bpworth League: 8:00 p.m. Rev. J. Heber Miller, Lather an Evangelical Sunday Service, 8 a.m. Sunday School, 9 a.m. Rev. Herman P. Meyer, pasta* St Pater's Osthoiic Onrefc ' Sprteg Gro-ve Sundays: 8:00 and 10:06. Daps: 6:90 and Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 4:06. Confessions: Saturdays: 8*0 and Thursday before First Friday: 146 and 7:1ft. In. John L. Daleiden, Pastsfv Yolo Community Bile Cksnk Combined Service, 10:00 a.ss.^ - » Rev. W. P. Rueckheim, piastoar^y- AB »f» tnvtted. ,.;i.. Aastralla -f •: • fhe Commonwealth tsf Aiatfana came into being on January 1, 1901. Th» CommonvMalth has a bicameral parliament, the upper house (senate) of which is composed of six members elected from each state and the Jower house (house of representatives), composed of members directly elected on the basis of populational districts. The executive council, or cabinet, is composed of members of parliament to which it is responsible. The head of the government, the governor-general, is anointed by the king of England. tffcHXlOT 7L0&AL 00. ~¥bomMUk-t-- On* 8onth of McHnry on Rotate 31 Flowvrs for all McHDnty OA&AGK Electric and Acetylene Welding; General Repairing. Wagons and Trailers to (Mart Bte. 31 -- ?oba it Front St«. Phono 97-# or 151 -M Hlek P. Miller , ? ' 1i.fw*Ss .rfcc> •5v"- Phoaa-MdSoiny 677-R-l - -- Bsasawt Excavating -- WHPT'8 IAHD ft GffiAVSL Rates sa Bead Gravel and Lot Filling ... Black Dirt ft Stoaa leveling and Gra«fing ..Cemeat Mixers for Beat . J. E. NETT Jahaahnrg ~ P.O.--McHeary '•>' 'f, .1' Telephone No. 800 KolW 4 BoUutnsporfu •fsnte for all classes of property in the best companies. ' WEST McHBNRY - - DLLINOEB J! a. woewiok; Pertraltars - Osauaaraial J*hetography - PWte-FUtakiag "^1>' C^h| - Fraada W -- Urstrtis Drive . EUL V,,5' ; t, o ft- » 'Mf-M ™ INSURANCE riSl ML I. FFALSB ^ M»hh Oompanioa Wksa yea need tasaranee of aay kted Pheae 48 or 61-M ' Prl* Bldf. . . McHdory ' Hj* - ' ••'tm PHONE IS . k-Bay --H. jr; DENTIST H P" UH «||0 9 to IS W, A.P.FrauulCo. fBl/^WkMMMll a Craas NJOM McH«ry,ltt •^4er Freshea Crampled Flowers To freshen crumpled artificial flowers, hold them over the steam from a tea kettle for a few minutes; then pull them out into shape and shake them until they are quite dry. This treatment works wqpders, eapecially with velvet flowers. PHALnf 8UPE& SERVICE SINCLAIR 6aa, Oils and Greases Cor. Routes 31 and 120 -- McHenry •S!3S5 Dr. John Dncey VETERINARIAN rteae a Prfee BUj^ YDMH J. KKOX ATTOBNET AT LAW - OFFICB BOI7B8 ~ tteriari aad Fridays McHotfy ; ' - l«l --- • l*Bay * ;l ..r. j}V' ' Sk V DR. L. B. DBNT0T Office Maasa -- • a.m. te • p^sk Greea street -- ; . J*- •• ' y • Charlie's Kefair Shop : . Ufa Paintinf Punltore Upholsterinf •Bd R^iirlng ^ CHARLE8 RIETESEL "B wesa-- I BUT Old aad Diaahled Beraea. Pay treat $8 te 814. ----> ARTHUR W. WEBRBACK Pheae 844 486 E. Calhooa 84. III. v-^. .-S > ,>;v- ; ItW1 of some 225,000 for last year, the Red Cross appeal for greater safety pointed out. 1 To launch this year's Accident; Prevention program the Red Crest' again will distribute 10,000,000 home and farm "check lists." By folloW , ing the suggestions urban boused--- holders can systematically chect' the home for accident hakards. & similar eheck-up is outlined tor the jqC_htaMrds on th« Jsrn. ] 5 m NOW QlO \ LEAVE THAf COAL o treating - HORSES. CATTLE. DOGS, CATS. ETC. -- Sleeping Sickaeee Vacdaa .-- Tel. Rfchssoad U Rkhmosri, IlL CASH FOR DEAD HORSES and CATTLE Home, 13.00; Cow», $100; Dead Hogs and Sheep removed free! MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. Tel. Woodstock 1624-M-l or Dundee 10--Reverse Charges WANTED TO B9T We pay $3 to $15 for Old or Injured Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt's Jehnsburg Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 669-J-? CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES ft CATTLE We .pay phone charges. . _ S. H. Freund & SOB CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience Is at Tour 8erviee in Building Your Wants. Phono B6-W McHenry LAWN MOWER8 SHARPENED AO kinds of General Repairing! MoHENRY GARAGE Roate 31--Front & John Sta. ( Phone 97-J or 151-M NICK P. MILLER v & FRED C. MTT.T.ER, M. D. ETB, BAK,'maud THROAT wB bt is Dr. A. L Freehlich's OMs^asrasr Grass ft Ba / Basty Friday fMa lldi to Idl a.sa. OLAB8B8 FITTBd . . a,*' ^"SA* K'1. ^ •c I yS'?