Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 19 Jun 1947, p. 4

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ly at Heck. mk *anager......A. H. Mosher Associate Editor Add* FroehHch " RnMnd a* seeond-class gonqain. Marshal, bron; Organic!, Woodstock Al- Hern, Davis, Ma- Anderson, fadys Duncan, ismww •» UMIUU-VMM -1 Antioch Mm pwtoffice *t McjWy, 111., undtt; o; Esther, tetUdi tfce act (of May 8, 1879. j Richmond; Martha, jQIadi " 177^ Milburne; Electa, Gertrude Strain, <** Year ..... - •2 5° i Grayslake. 'NATIONAL €DITOMAl_ | Sentinel* HHaarrrtyy Shorn, Richmond; LotMUa Stephenson, Mc- Henry; Guest of Honor.Bthel Holl SSOC1ATION t McHenry^ soloist, gart autcheii wijyfcwWt j Louise Kramer Display ads for the Plaindealer ^ « - . -Will be accepted until Tuesday noon Weddingjof M|as rrjlfcg et the week ad is to appear. Class- Mr. and Mis. John Freund, who Hied ads will be accepted until Wed- reside north of McHenry announce nesday morning at 10 o'clock. News the approving carriage of their must be-in our .(Tic by 5 o'clock a.uehle^M.r^rrt,^ to WiU. Foley. Sr., of Richmond on June 25 at a 9 o'clock high mass at St. John's church. „ „ • • •• tte So UL * ents. flOMt mT.mni^ P^TM ||H| or PAOt W. &HJSL1 ON FBIDAY, JUKI 13 fit Tuesday afternoon. feimmaxe Sale Now ii Anaownce Marriage , , OfFormer Resident Announcement has bean made the marriage of Bias ... in Progress {daughter of Mr. and Mrs._ A _ The rummage sale sponsored by' Johnson of 717 Radswwood Drive, tile Christian Mothers and Altar so- Highland Park, yd _Jacob L. Bre» dety is now in progress in the Buch feld, son_or J. 1* Brefeld of Bebuilding on Riverside Drive. It will, Henry. The ceremony was read by continue through Saturday, Jane 21. Re*- John 0*Connell m the- rectory of Immaculate Conception church in Highland Park on Jun# ?, *#* j • •B %• Anniversary -I. vV William Wrights to Mr. an^Mrsf'william Wright ofj Sj^T^ower Prion's Bridge will observe their M williara Pnea, Jr., and Mrs. ^tden wedding anniversary on Sun- H , Boettle -of Waukegan were 5iy' iU"C xLZ en «hey 7 } h°ld hostesses at a linen shower held, at open house between 2 and 4 p.m. the Pries hoine in McHenry »k*t Mid 7 and 9 p. m. at their farm home. Thursday evening, tfhoring .Miss June 23 is the actual anniversary Elinor pries, a bride of June IS. • *>te- , . ' ^:.Juuxuju:L. Twenty-five friends and relatives _ _ • * * were present to enjoy a social eve- Bridfl Shower for ~T~ | ning, at which time Miss Pries was Miss Margaret Freond i presented with a variety of beauti- Miss Margaret Freund was ^hon- ful gifts. A tasty lunch was served ered at a bridal shower given on1 at tne close of the evening, a two- Wednesday evening, June 11, by Mrs. tier cake occupying the center of the George Thompson, Mrs. Florence table, attractively decorated in pink ffYeund, Mrs. Olga Freund and Mrs. and white. . Leo Young. The party was held at * * the Villa Club Resort at Pistakee Bride-To-Be Honored Bay. The guest of honor was the At Shower June II recipient of many beautiful gifts, Miss Marjorie GriswoM m Greenttom the thirty-five relatives and wood was honored at a surprise iriends present. The hall was beautifully decorated fcr the occasion and a delicious lunch ______ and Miss Lorraine Erber Between their collate graduation days on June 8 and June 18, two young people from^his community managed to find time last FHday, June 13, to exchange marital vows. Rev. Wayne PHce of the Community Methodist church officiated at the 4:30 o'clock service which united Miss Elinor Mae Pries, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Pries, Sr., of McHenry, and Mr. Paul W. Shadle, son of the Wolf Shadles of Ringwood. "Hie ceremony was performed at the Pries home on Riverside Drive. i . . The bride was charming in a white afternoon dress with which she_ wore white accessories. She .carried a colonial bouquet of Ibriarcliffe roses and white, sweet peas. 'Her ^h'ly attendant was her sister, Mrs. Helen Boettle, of JVfeukegan, who was attired in a coral-colored afternoon dress. She wore a corsage of white roses. Herbert W. Reichert, a close friend and classmate of the groom and a teacher in the college at Grinnell, Iowa, served Mr. Shadle as best man. The mother of the bride wore a poudre blue dress and a "pink carnation corsage, while Mrs. Snadle chose an aqua-colored dress and a similar corsage. A dinner for the immediate families was served following the nuptials at the Villa Club Resort. Miss Pries attended the University of Illinois as a Freeman, and her Sophomore year was * an honor stu-. dent at Lake Forest college. Her last two years were spent at Northwestern University, where she was a member of the staff of the Purple Parrot and assistant editor of Pegasus magazine. She graduated on Wednesday of this week with honors in English and a major in journalism from Northwestern. Mr. Shadle graduated on Sunday, June 8, from the University of Illinois, majoring in engineering phys- His Freshman year he was a wa*s »ws Up Wife Husband Made It for 'Other He Warned Her, |M Curiosity Won. ^ ^ PORTLAND~ ORE.--James - W. Bowden, a steamfitter, acknowledged to police that he killed his wife with a "Pandora's Ik>x" filled with dynamite, but insisted that he had not meant to kill her but to blow up a rival for her affections. Mrs. Bowden was blown to bits in the basement of her home when she opened a fiber suitcase which her husband had forbidden her to touch. Like Pandora of the classic fable who disobeyed the gods and opened the box containing all the world's evils, Mrs. Bowden was unable to restrain her curiosity. , Away en Fishing Trip. 'Bowden, 47, was away dh a fishing Ttrip /at the time. When he, returned police arrested him and. Detective Captain Eugene Ferguson announced, he acknowledged having constructed the infernal machine. "She was running around with another man," Bowden was quoted. "I decided to get him." He refused to name the man. He said that he bought six sticks of dynamite and detonators from a contractor and set to work in his basement. He wired the detonators to the lid of the suitcase. "It would go off when the lid was lifted, but it was padlocked with a combination lock," he stated. "I was afraid of it and it just sat there." Bowden said he put in the suitcase a diary containing a chronicle of Mrs. Bowden's alleged affair with the other man. . Warned His Family. His -daughters, Shirley, 19, and Doris, 17, told police that their father had repeatedly forbidden their STATS .. a. I'tii ill ii i»ti 11 n H III nmi i n t n m > 1111 um» McHenry of one of Hopkins, 17-year old tin of'Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hopkins of Riverside,. Drive, who mu informed during the " past ten days that ha had won first ! place in a state esaajr contest. The contest, sponsored locally by the Si" Hie oft-Heard criticism that ^banks are not interested in .providing serv- ^ice for the "little eus- ;; ^tomer,* the one who can't :: I afford to maintaiMaore than a small dep/mt balance, is answered effectively by data developed ba^s. This* study" discloses that about onethird of the checking acta these banks have balances less than $100, while almost onefourth of these accounts have balances of less than $50. Bank service is «pr counts by the Country Bank Op- every member of the com- -erations Commission of munity who can use it to the American Bankers Association in a cost analysis study of over 4000 small and medium-sized advantage Large or small we shall be glad to welcome your account at our bank. Start one now. V. F. W. 'Auxiliary, was entered hy several thousands of high school boys and girls from throughout the state. Five judges from McHenry chose the best entries from among the j more than seventy essays submitted i iS^tSST^outotaiidi^ww^ state headquarters, where Illinois! . " - •winners were chosen recently from | McHENRY STAJE UlttBtf rwrerai Bjltem Mniy^W PflJMfjt OffiTportUOB the 3,529 essays which had won local' McHENRY GIRL IS C°Ato"i«pho„e cril on ThunKfaiy ISBAPUATEP FROM served late in the evening. j Erber, Sr.,.ana aim Scholarship Key for the junior year.! was away and her daughters were Y-Vter* atottoiwd • iWj£n£Traded .ntertommmt. with gi» ,0°' "rs/ Bowde" evWen,ly "uc- 11' . |.wards tong th. w.nn.r, He member of* the Bronxe Tablet group, i were hostesses. foangsters &itertained » j "Bunco provided entertainment, Club Meeting Jane 13 1 | awards being presented the winners Fifteen children between the mgm ? Later, a delicious lunch was served, ef three and fourteen, from Elgin, after which the bride-to-be openea were present at the Mother's club,her many lovely gifts. •Meting in the Legion hall last Fri-; Those present were Delores and day afternoon. All students of Mrs.1 Donna Roewer Miss Elaine Krich, Violet Brady Stewart, they told a' Mrs. Fred Burman and Mrs. Wilbert story in bong, with narrator, and Erber, all of Crystal Lake: Mrs. this was followed by several solo, Wilbur Griswold and Miss Dorothy numbers. Mrs. Stewart also enter-1 Griswold of Greenwood; Mrs. Chas. tained with a vocal selection. Mansfield of Woodstock; Mrs. George During the business meeting, plansr Erber, Jr., of Wonder Lake; Miss vera discussed for the garden show Etda Miller of McHenry and Mrs. te held next fall and for an old- Elmer Erber of Richmond. -* Miss Griswold will become the bride of Erven Erber on Saturday, June 21, at 7 p. m. in Zion Evangelical Lutheran church here. lee pream social to be held at on* of this summer's band concerts. • . • • and at a surprise party last Monday LIVERPOOL GJBL AS yening at her home on Main street, BB1DB ON SATURDAY " the occasion being her birthday an-| .niversary. Cards were played, withi . . >"*P. ' . prises being merited by Mrs. Louelto cMinrthatfea '« & romance whiCC the highest honor bestowed on a graduate by the University of Illinois. The young couple will go to Boston, where he will do graduate work at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. HTM BERNIOE KmS IS RADIANT BRISK OF XUGKNE LA FONTAINE Bowden told police that while he was working in the Aleutians as a civilian during the war he had sent his wife $9,000, which she had "squandered." "My wife filed suit for divorce." he said. "There was no motive after that, I didn't Know what to do tyi'fh the suitcase." Mrs. Bowden's divorce complaint charged crueltyt The district attorney's office announced that Bowden would be charged with first degree murder. A lovely summer wedding was solemnized at St. John's church, Johns- f * " _ burg, on Saturday. June 14, When New Air Torpedo With Miss Bernice King, daughter of Mix Emma King t>f Johnsburg, became the bride of Mr. Eusena IiFontaine, son of Raymond LaFipntaine of Fostoria, Ohio. The dwbll xinr cere- ^ imjmi Atnii Jtneks | Rocked Engine Announced SHARON, PA. -- Rocket power, which scientists harnessed to propel mony was performed at a'^"o'clock i Plan«s 1 2-j- ... i air, has been adapted for use under nU^T were attractively dec- the «a, Westinghorse Electric corine •»«». I --Sliced with approval forces. torpedo--called the thrust of from Mrs. Hildred Domrell, essay chairman for the V. F. W. in Chicago, informed Jacque of his good fcr NURSING SCHOOL IN APPRECIATION . I wish in this manner to exprc**- my sincere thanks to the editor aiWl members of the staff of The Me- ______ | Henry Plaindealer for thfj{ very _,;n k. . . 1 fine account of our newly remodeled ,c_on; ; that Mrs Kath^n McAnS^ P?p" r°"er rink- W® contribute much the accurate description of the rink. firming this word was received in a daughter of~Mr' and"Mrs ~Earf ^j16 success on our opening night to special delivery letter sent to Mrs.! Andrews of McHenry complet«£i th^ ^CUT&^ description of the nnj Mildred Reese of the local V. F. W„ o„M«y19«tfcnrot7H<S *°aT« one of the local judges. i pital School of Nursing, Chicago, c pAp uipRrHMTTfiT Besides the great lionor which Commencement exercises for the 5 , BOB HIKSCHMUGL. winning the contest meanfe for th? twenty-three graduating nurses was " local senior higfc school student, he held at John D. Murphy hall, ' \ CARD OF THANKS In. this manner I wish to expraep my thanks to relatives, friends aai A reception followed the impres-! neighbors for gifts, flowers and carda is essay will now j sive service at the nurses' home, | sent to me during my illness at bona join the winning themes from other | where friends and relatives were and my recent stay at Hot Springy, states to vie for national ranking: entertained. Among those present Ark. They were very much appro*- later this month. we,'e Mr. and Mrs. Earl McAndrews ciated. _ The subject of all of the essays !and son, James, and Miss Mary Kin- $ MRS. SUSAN ADAMS, was "Home, the Cradle of Good Citi- I of McHenry, Dorothy Soulier of j venahin" Mankato, Minn., Mrs. Joseim Mc-1 P" ! Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Parch- j will also be presented with the "first, American College of Surgeons, on prize cash award of $100 and a! June 5. medal at a meeting of winners to be held on June 28. Hi CARD OF THANKS wish to express our siifceue ' Nylan Janata* and daughter, ESvelyn, and Mrs. Paul Man/ American cattlemen ana | Weber and son, Robert. of Oak Bark. ly n i P^' ZcZLZ' iRfrS! MiniZt I thanks "to relatt^;"" tfriendi -- ,Jneighbors for floral offerings, spto. other stockmen are finding nylon useful. Cowhands, particularly on the ranges of the west and south-j west, aFe beginning to rope with nylon, now being fabricated into superior lariats. An increasing number of the horses on which the cow* punchers ride will also become the beneficiaries of nylon's strength and abrasive resistance whfeb they find themselves girded with nylon girths. They already have proven themselves superior for saddles on racehorses, with wide acceptance from jockeys and trainers. itual bouquets, tender words of uji» pathy and kind deed*; also who donated cars. We are ally grateful to Father Dale Father Blake and Father Bilstein. Family of the Late Joseph Kattnesv to thsaa DalSda* CARD OF THANKS -Wfc wish in this manner te Thtoe guests y of edib . „ , . „»U1 inn,...., -- uses the erpool, and Mr. Lloyd R. Whiting, j fingertip veil held in place • brought a delicious «°n of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence JUThit- rhinpatnne tialrm. llW SWs edibles including a lovely i ing of Elgin, formerly of McHenry. «*,. ^ the. evening ^ | m JffS ^^^8?.^d.nU, Mrs. Viola Walt«r» and Miss Lillian LaFontaine, sitters of the groom, Mrs. Earl Paddock, sister of the bride, and Mrs. Cletas LaFontaine, sister-in-law of the grocftn. Broken by Mountains - Haiti, one of the most romantic ol the Caribbean countries, is divided by three mountain ranges, running from east to west, which separate this tropical land into a series of isolated valleys which are I press our thanks for spiritual baftbroken up into many small parcels ! quets, floral offerings, donations of land. | cars, cards off sympathy and the i many other kindnesses extended flt". our recent bereavement. Complete line of Baebe livestock; Mrs. Susie Miller, remedies at Wattles Drug Store, Mc-! Celia Miller, Henrryy.. 43-tf-p4 *5 Mrs. George Firsching. to a close with 4he •f a tasty lunch. • * • - ••• fairsa Jeaes in ' Radtal USS' by the Rev. Father E. A. O'Brien in the parsonage of St. Laurence Catholic church Jit 10 o'clock. ! The charming bride chose for her wedding a gown of white lace, styled with Uoering long slaeves and full last week in'the annual stoo0nk g which of the artist pupils of Ray- ier from Great Britain by her sis- Md~Ifoch and Hdten Bickerton of Iters. She wore » »nprtip veil and -- --- ne Sherwood School of Music in| earned a brides bouquet of red qujgette. Both carried bouquets of "* ' - roses and carnations. Both Mrs. t honor was Jfrs. paddock and Mrs. LaFontaine were of the | attired in orchid-colored dresses of * carried h°uwhite car- His selections were "In roses. lence of the Night" by Rach- Her matron «f and "Je Gvis Entendre • Delbert Whiting, sister-in-law , ... bv Bizet. groom. S»e wore a pink gown with 1 iace an(] marquisette and c ~TWe who attended from McHenry floor-length skirt, which wm gath-1 quet8 yellow roses and Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Goodell, ered into a deep fullneM, the mar-|nationg . .. , Ethel Jones and Vaughn Jones., quisette yoke being edged in a pleat-, George King, Jr., served his v fFbm tatter's wife had the misfortune ed ruschmg. She earned a carna- brother-in-law as best man, while, - to brank her arm in a fall on Wab- : tion bouquet. groomsmen were Cletus LaFontaine, JyfedlCine and SurSCTy t ^h^^Twhile Bronte to tha re- Delbert Whiting served his brother | ^rother of the ?room, and^ Everett « 6 7 . 'jeital. ; as_best man. _ ! Klinker, brother-in-law of the bride • o -- t . . . burning, expanding gases to propel, rhinestone tiara, with two levewris . through water instead of air ™ and can stand tha shock of being bouquet ox red and jrnm ivses. dropped 600 feet or more from a ittane going 300 miles an hour, F. L. Snyder, a company engineerings manager, said, The engine of the hydro-bomb, he^ explained, is a large pipe packed with solid fuel which, when burning, ^r creates expanding gases that are: expelled through a nozzle. When tha?; torpedo hits the water, the impact throws a switch that ignites the rocket motor's solid fuel. Electrical controls with a gyroscope keep th# bomb on its path and special com trols regulate its underwater depth;, Mrs. Walters wore* a gown of yellow organdy, while Miss LaFontaine's dress was of the same color in marreception famil; Fallowing Little Bobby LaFontaine, nephew ifctertain Worthy :wa* iieldf< Matrons, Patron* the A special meeting of worthy ma- the trons and worthy patrons was held, 1-- ------ , , »»...* -- -- 7,--. , _ , - , at Acacia hall last Monday evening, arnved in the United States for the weddinjf a dress with white | medical corps Casualities in Germany BOSTON.--German medicine and "lite . WORTH j wt AN INSURANCE POLICY WHICH held For frienS^ftd famlhr it 0f groom, acted as rinlf bearer, 'w«rtimpJ*<'as*uaUv home of Miss Genevieve Knox, attired in white and carrying a white > ^ , c , Robert M Zol- . groom s aunt, in McHenry. ' 0ni0W. according to Col. itoiwsri m. ^.oi The former Miss Muirhead, who ^jrg' King chose for her daughter's j linger of the United States armf l l « _ 2 1 . a a t U k « t k 1 f n with the *ollowin«r holding office: first time six weeks ago, has been; accessoriea and a, corsage of pink Worthy Matron, Edith Carter. Chi- residing at the Wmting home. In and blue carnationl: cago- Worthy Patron, Ralph Carter, England she attended Walton Lane Following the service, a breakfast Chicago: Associate Matron. Elsie Council school and was formerly, wag served at the home of the 'bride s Kirby. Barrinjrton: Associate Patron, 'bookkeeper at Wilsons .Laundry grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Arthw Anderson .^Richmond. Ltd., Liverpool **'" ~iU J:---- Secretary, Henry Swenson, Algon-, The groom attended the McHenry fi- ' ! • ' r'4:& ••Si PMilw ol Nttn--10W»» NtoCw !- i FLAVORS FOR JUNi # / RRVAL STBAWBBlRRTt VANILLA TOASTED HAZEIMTT --^~ BLACK RASPBERRY BOY ALB Miller, with dinner being served at the Villa Club Resort at Pistakee Bay for the immediate families. About 150 relatives attended the reception and supper at St. Mary's- St. Patrick's church hall, with wedding dance following at Nell's ballroom. , ... The coui&e left on a short wedding trip and upon their return will be at home at 311 Green street. The bride attended St. John's school, while the groom received hiB education in Ohio. Both are employed at the Alemite. Among the Sick V^jKd^- BRICK ElACH WEEK-END. "rTBOLGER,S DRUG STORE POOKS10 : .S. • : HdBOWt* Miss B. Doherty was confined to her home on Oram street because 6f illness (the last of the week but is wain able tba Ve about. Mrs. lisatha Freund underwent surgery at SL Thewaa hospital, Waukegan, last wedc. Master James Hanley of West McHenry underwent surgery at the Woodstock hotpitai last week. Mrs. Bu^h ahwphF 3ms heen a medical patient at tha Woodstock ^°S«orge Thompson of rotte 8, Mc- Jtany, underwent surgery at St. Therese hospital, Waukegan, the put week. Replace Fane Is really an electrical safety valve. Tampering with a blown out fuse is like'tying down the safety valve on a steam boiler. When a >fuae lilowa, correct the trouble and ireplace the buraed out fuse with a upwone of proper aiza. Writing in the New England Jouf% nal of Medicine, the colonel said;f "It is now apparent that the myth of German superiority in the medical profession is as much a fallacy as it was found to be in other forms of German endeavor. "Although the basic principles of good surgery appeared to be thoroughly understood, it was evident that many practices were years behind the times. "Penicillin had never beds made available. "There was no evidence ot the use of plaSma or any type of aminftacid preparations for the intravroous therapy of malnutrition. "Transfusion was largely affected by an antiquated direct method." Cripple's Crutches Are * ^ ; Stolen From Him in Park . CINCINNATI.--Willard Bruce, 34, S|>artansburg, S. C., ttluSt believe that the cruelest person in the world lives in Cincinnati. Bruce stopped for a nap in a Cincinnati park recently because walkteg on crutches for a one-legged man gets pretty * tiresome. When lie awoke, his crutches were gone. But Cincinnati police hurriedly replaced them for Bruce, who said ha had no funds to buy a new set. INSURES: 1. Husband, wife, your children and other relatives--no age limit: all 1 if residing in same household. AGAINST: 1. Damages for which the insured it legally responsible. 2. Damages by others for whom y#8 have ^ssumed responsibility by nrritiAi) wAfi KwiwAfla • * O a : y. . ; •, ; 1. BodUy injury (accidental or not), J- sickness or disease. 1,2. Damage (accidental <r| not) to property of others. » ^ . 3. Employers' liability for two res^- ' iM dence employees. 4. Medical payments--®60 limit per * » & % j. il' M Ate Eggs Latest Hgurea indicata that AflMN lean consumers used 382 eggs per capita dur'n-i the past year. line of Dr. Hess* poultry kl rgmadiss wattles , HiliiaqV Food Valaes Lost Food values can be almost oobh pletely lost in cooking. For example r--Mg away one-tenth to one-4uarir the potato results in physical s bpt in addition iron and vlt-»r iii the potato are dissirp' -r>t cooking H with person; medical expenses of resident employees (two) and members of the public, incurred because of accident on or away from • • premises. . |. • .! . SA2AKDS OOVSaSD: ' I ,* . 1. principal residence. | ; 2. Premises rented by or temporarily by insured for residential for farmiag. 4. Participation in all spoilt t 5. Personal acts of the insured (unless he is an executive officer) in connection with his employment by an individual, part-T|fti*«hjp ^ corporation. * & Dogs, other pets and saddle animals on and away from premises. - 7^ All watercraft on the premises not in use. : t^Oanoes, rowboats and sailing craft not exceeding 21 feet and power-» propelled wateraraft equipped, solely with outboard motor awayr from the premims. Private house elmAor|. ' 10l Automatic coverage on _ bought or rented during the pelicjr al us# imm period for insured's personal Tfor reridMtial purposes. « Vacant land 1* $10,000 each ooeumnoe -- $250- ^medical per aocident (higher lim^ its if desired). ; % 4OBT 1 $10 a year. V S. $25 for three TPIft Hi n-JiAV. Earl R.- t.. *I: • • -- • •--J**.- ' ' ' PHONE 43 i'i' * - ---

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