Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Jul 1947, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

FaMUM •sery Dnwtaqr «t Mc- Henry, mi liar Lacy H. Bato. liter and lIansger......A. H. Mosher Imffati Editor. .Adele Froehlkh laMnd m oeeond-olass matter at «• poatoffice at MeBaarj, IU.. und«r Mm aet «f May 8,1871, _a£. Om Tear .$2*0 CDITORIAl-- SSOCJATION ^CnSl Display ads for the Plaindealer will be accepted until Tuesday noon of the week ad is to appear. Classified ads will be accepted until Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock. News must be in our office by 5 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon. Circle 1 To tbve Lanekton Ojrcle 1 of the W. S. C. S, is planning for a business meeting and 'uTicheon at the Villa Club Resort at.: Pfstakee Bay tra Tuesday, July 8,, at 1 P- m. > Saturday, June 28, was the day selected by Miss Lucy Stevens of Spring Grove and Mr. Earle E. Harrison of Burlington, Wis., for their wedding. Miss Stevens, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. ^L. Stevens, and Mr. Harrison, the son of wklter Harrison, formerly of MeHenry. were married at an 8 o'clock nuptial service Saturday evening in the Richmond Community church, Rev. Lester R. Vining officiating. The bride wore a princess style gown of white silk brocade, with fingertip veil. She carried a colonial bouquet of white flowers. * Mrs. Willis Stanek served her. sister as matron of .honor, attired in light blue net and carrying a pink colonial bouquet. "Lindy Larson served as best man. Ushers were iBtarton Stevens and Russell Doolittle. , The bride's mother chose an aquacolored dress and a corsage of pink rosebuds. The church was beautifully A romance which began between| Organisation of the medical staff an American soldier and a German jof Woodstock public hospital in acgirl during the last war culiAinated j cordance with standards set up by in marriage last Saturday, June 28, the American College of Surgeons when Mies Elizabeth Frans of Ber-1 and the American Medical associalin /became the /bride of Anthbny tion has been announced by Charles Schwars,. son /"of Mrs. Andrew O'Brien, president ofvV tn1 e Ih ospi- Schwarz of 175 Country Clut» Drive, MeHenry. Msgr. C. S. Nix officiated at the 9:30 o'clock servic* at St. Mary's church. tal's board of directors. Recently elected officers of Woodstock ptJUic^fcOBpital's medical staff are: William H. Newton, M. D., The couple met while Mr. Schwars j Woodstock, president; and Saul Burwas serving, in Germany about two vears ago. When he returned to the United states in Aprjl of 1946, he began immediately to secure the necessary papers which would bring his future bride to this country. After more than twelve months of waiting, she at last was granted admittance and arrived by plane five weeks *go. Attending the couple were Grace and Otto Schwarz of Chicago, the groom's brother and wife. Following the nuptial; breakfast was served at the Schwarz home and ton, M. fa., Woodstock, secretary. Other members are : Dr. Frank L. Alford, Crystal Lake; C. E. Wittenberg, Woodstock; Dr. Henry W. Sandeen, Woodstock; Dr. George A, Pflueger, Crystal Lake; Dr. William A. Nye, MeHenry; Dr. Glenn W. Wright, Woodstock; Dr. Emerson C. Kunde, Marengo; Dr. James F. Harris, Richmond; Dr. O. E. Nelson, Woodstock; Dr. John R. Tambone, Woodstock; Dr. Thomas F. Forrest, Woodstock: Dr. James H. Goodlad, Harvard; Dr. Francis J. Quincannon, Harvard; Dr. John C. Purvey, Crys-1 tal Lake; J)T. William J. Copeland, Cary: Dr. A. V. Lindberg, Crys-1 tal Lake; Dr. A. S. Romberger, Woodstock; Dr. C. W. Klontz, Mc- : l l / ' S' * ^ *v j ' • fcfw.' , decorated for the occasion with blue |,n evening eighty ^ guests delphinium, white and pink peonies j attended a reception at Club Luyand white and pink painted daisies. m9?.r- , - Preceding the service, the Misses! _ rh« yo*xig people will reside on Doris the organdy, lighted , ... . Mrs. Robert Gardner played the!Lh'caK°- , • ^nryj Ih- C. G. Schuyler, Harvard; traditional wedding march as the ! Among those from out of town Dr^ John M. Warren, Harvard. w The United Stales is "tile only Country with a known birthday. * v r \ ^^ *** ^ CELEBRATE THIS ALL-lMPORTANf. DATE IN AMERICAN HISTORY, THIS BANK island PhvllilT 'Ehrke cousTns' of Country Club TDrive and the groom • Henry; Dr. Alexander D. Leschuek, i* ; ' WlLL NOT BE OPEN ON JULY FOURTH! bride, attired ™ pin? frSitld I commute to his>ork with the Hebron; Dr. Bernard, B. Neuchillar! \ \ > andy, lighted the various candles.' ^e"®ral Electric X-Ray company in Woodstock; Dr. Lee Gladstone, Mc-, < »f s ' - Christian Mother®" I^rch5!Sjr" y i H a r i * K « r : " » » „ * > ? ? Fkote by A. Worwlek, McHmiit MRS. EUGENE LA FONTAINE A lovely summer ^ ^«Miing *u | ^ai' cou'ple" entered the* church and!who attended the wedding last week Woodstock public hospital meets johnsburg, on June 1? uniting a,so accompanied Mrs, M. Houck of ] I ^ure?^rT^^A°^re^rat,on ^ i solemnised at 0# -pnng Grove as she offered ine *_nisuan Johnsburjr and Mr. Eugene LaFon-1 Love T1 nheeee " aannda "BBeeccaauussee.. " society will meet in the parochial uine coap]e wiU make their 1. A reception for 100 guests w( | Mr. and Mrs. Emil Schwarz and son,(both the American Medical associa- 4^; V Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yaeger, Mrs. | tion and American College of Sur- -I Ann Gothke, daughter, Helen, and! geons, Mr. O'Brien stated. In ad-']B school hall on Friday, Julv 11, in- u"'"" at^k'll ^Green s't^et'" McHen^ ihel(l following the ceremony, aft^Fj and Mr. and Mrs. Gus dition to regulations governing or- .# stead of July 4. . _ home at 311 Green street, MeHenry. I h{gh thg ^ # tr}p t()|Ehrecke, Sr., and Mr and Mrs. Gus ganization of the medical staff these ; ^ - ;iH»rn A T POTTPT V ' I "the VV'isconsin Dells. Upon their re- -ajl" 5 a f and | standards are^ concerned with the Mrs. Frank Mathieo iUuilAL lA/UJrJUE .. jturn they wijj live in thgir new home Howard Warnig of Indianapolis, Ind.|adequacy of the hospital plant and! r« Olwrre Birthday Mrs. Frank Mathieu of Johnsburg will otserve her eightieth birthday anniversary on Monday, July 7. She has been in poor health for the past few months but is in good spirits and enjoys visiting with fr&nds when she is able. Altar and Rosary Will Meet July 7 The next meeting of the Altar and Rosary sodality of St. Patrick's church will be held in the church hall on Monday evening, July 7. The committee in charge includes Mrs. James Powers, Mrs. Sibre Whiting, turn. Kenneth Powers and Mrs. Fred Kunz. • •• • • Etotertain -At ' ^ - Birthday Dinner 1 ! • Miss Ann Nett ehtertained at a dinner one recent evening in honor of her sister, Arleen, who celebrated her birthday anniversary. A 9:30 o'clock dinner was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Diedrich, Isabel lliwaite, Terry Phalin? Bob Clarke, George Nett, William Fruehe, Tony Puetz and the Misses Nett. • * • Anneance Business Wnwen's Cosnmitees ~ rit-ar Burlington, where the groom, is ehgaged in farming. The bride is a graduate of < the Richmond high school and has been employee! at the North American Accident Insurance company in Chicago. The groom is a graduate .of the MeHenry high school. Photo by A. Worwlck. MeHenry MR. AND MRS. PAUL SHADLE PARKHURST-MOBEY VOWS EXCHANGED AT f ! LAKE BLUFF JUNE 28 A very beautiful summer bedding was solemnized last Saturday afternoon, June 28, at 4 p. m. in the Union church in Lake Bluff, 111., Dr. Burtis R. MacHatton officiating. United in marriage Were Miss Erin Marie Parkhurst, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. S. Parkhurst of Woodllawn Park, MeHenry, and Chicago, and Mr. William Monroe Morey, son of the C. L. Moreys of Long Beach, Calif. A reception (followed* the ceremony at the MeHenry home,of the bride's parents. Mrs. AlWrt Barbian of MeHenry *uInwairUpt?L8er^Cei?^ »r.mei at presided at the organ, and Miss the William Pries, Sr home by Rev. Rhirl joto<Wh Df Chicago sang Wayne Price on Friday, June 13, "Because," "Thine Alone" and "Love Miss Elinor Pries became the bride p-mp rnllinir"' of Mr. Paul W. Shadle of Ringwood. ;aIovIYv khHa n white Committees for the enstiiilg year The couple will spend the summer eown deai|rnL esDW:iaMv for h» 25 were selected this past week by Mrs. 1 in Boston, where the groom will take Ju^anvillf J mamJ a Verda Dierzen, president of the Mc- post graduate work at the Massa- deSrner It L? » wh^ i;,P H«,r, Business and P™f«- j chnsett. of T,chnolo«f,. double net nonal Women's club. MeHenry wo-1 - - - wt^T. w^ll serve as follows: Mrs. P.' PATRICIA OEUNEWALD M. Jus ten, health; Mrs. C. W. Good- • vnvvpni w a mm u 1 urn ell and Mrs. Paul Schwerman, inter- i AHD KOBEaT MAllllEWS net skirt on which was appliqued white lace, and long lace pointed sleeves. She wore a floor length veil, which was held BRIDE OF JUNES McHENRY STATE BANK { ^ ; Member Federal Reserve System y" Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation equipment, selection of its govern- \ ing board, keeping of medial rtu>. • |m) i 1 l l j j l l | 11 f f | 11 IT 1 IT f i t U ' t t l l l i n u I I I HI 1 1 » t i l l ords and polices regarding the con-, "" duct and management of the hos p|tal. KAME LOCATIONS OT FOURTEEN PEBHANENT MILITARY CEMETERIES Locations of fourteen permanent military cemeteries and three national cemeteries as final resting places overseas for members of the armed [daughter, have returned to their homes i» Falls Church, Va. after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Howard. Rev. Wayne Price spent the past week with relatives in New York. „ _ • ; i. , . TT A He accompanied home by hi» Miss Georginna Donahue of Hunt- wife and family, who had spent se^i ley visited Miss Genevieve Knox last era3 -weeks there. | C.rl Roberta, of Waukegan pending two weeks visiting her MARRIAGE LICENSES forces who died during the war out- | spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. mother Mr*. John R Smith in M«_ side the continental limits of the Zena Bacon. 1 ^ In Uke Jfe United States if next of kin re-, Miss Vereha Justen of Chicago r.eva. Wis. quest burial to b« made overseas, spent the weekend with her mother, was announced last week by the war1 Mrs. Gertrude Justen. department, The locations were| Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Whiting of agreed to jointly by the quarter- Lake Geneva visited relatives here master general and the American Battle Monuments Commission. Action by Congress will be required before the permanent military cemeteries or the new national cemeteries may be established. Temporary United States military cemeteries laid out during World War II but which will become pereu kiiu mnj. raui ociiwerman, inver- i ~-- --^ -- » • n' » , j .. - & r * L w 7 ' a « " M r . : m WAUC0NDA; i L e p l ^ d « ! Xd f i e , ; dC»« Goodell. nnwrin. •' Mr.'! . .. _ . . ] consisted of white larkspur, with - 1n-ciS!;mMdk.Mn|e"d 'hit* ^ S#nTo manT. AA . °n". ^n-o-sgn,e.rr-, 'ir,-m,;asior. Uri"i;| I F«d£ui;i.r.t 1hS5i. Ui„Sn. i ! 'Swi"Su_ inKm m*S/! Photo by A. Worwick, MeHenry SIRS. WILLIAM C. FOLEY on Sunday. Anthon.y Schwarz and Elizabeth! The M. L. Schoenholtz family and Frmna* ^ MeHenry. their guests, Miss Frieds Schoenholtz and Doyle Miller of Peoria, 111., spent Saturday at Lake Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Richard McDonald and family, of Druces Lake visited Mrs. Zena Bacon last Sunday. Complete line of Beebe livestock remedies at Wattles jDrug Store, MeHenry. 43-tf-pA Read the Want Ada. 1 - -- r M S f l f U X Boreau At McNeil Heme The l»»t meeting of the Ringwood Wome bureau was held at the home age Miss Patricia June Grunewald, while another sister, Mrs. W. M. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Forrest, Cochran of Hammond, Ind., served appeared in last week's issue of the Grunewald of Golden Bull Farms, as matron of honor. Bridesmaids Plaindealer. and Robert Matthews, son of the, were Miss Cynthia Udell of Lake Harry Ifatthews of Oak Glen farm, Bluff, Miss Helena Magnusson of east of MeHenry. The double ring Berwyn and Miss Jean Conty of In a lovely double ring ceremony two an(I a half mil^ 8outh of Epiperformed at 9 o'clock on the morn- nal France> two and a half miles ing of June 26 in St John's church gouth of Epinal St. Xvold ^nce Johnsburg Miss Margaret FVeund twenty-three miles east of Metz became the bride of William C.|Dragruignan France, twenty-seven Foley of Richmond. Complete details | miieg west of Cannes; Netuno, Italy, o o voH f m 1 a o r ttfiiAlr "ft 1 ASH A AT W h A • « • . . ,• . • A J thirty-two miles south of Rome; and manent cemeteries are: Cambridge, i ^T- and Mrs. Clarence Reinfried of Margraten, Holland, ten miles west|^e home of their daughter and husof Aachen, Germany; Hamm, Loux- j band» the Herb Reihanspergers. embourg, two and a half miles east .Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Martin and of the city of {Luxembourg; Henri Richard of Jacksonville, Fla., and Chapelle, Belgium, eighteen -miles1 Mrs. Ammon Cafey of Caney, Kas. northeast of Liege; Neuvilleen-Con- i vj«ited in the Clinton Martin home droz, France, nine miles southeast of Liege; St. Laurent, France, twenty miles northeast of St. Lo; St. James, France, thirty-three miles northeast of Rennes; Epinal, France, ^JSenVSne^embeS1 .MS!SS? ^ *erf®nned ^ ^ ^I*°> *]1 the"brid"e: MISS LUCILLE BLAKBV OHARMING BRIDE Of 0RVILLE SABATKE wST^rv^at noo^^ollowed"^^°a1 The lovely brlde cho8e * town of'yellow taffeta an^wore clusters of bSdnSs mertinl ind^tod^^by^WI2g£'"K "£33*? iSdil'w" ^ headvTth St' Mftry'8 wa» the »cene new chairman, Mrs. McNeil ~p --~ I sBoonnee8s-. ^one cc*smrnsead aa obnndoaali bnootut"- c«o»n»n"e*cttiinngg iivvyy sseerrvviinngg aas. hhaalloo«s mittees were named for next veTr 13?^ ?f. f.11'.1® ro8W and Pink and Their bouquets consisted of white j ? ^ named lor next year, bjue delphinium. daisies with yellow centers and i^ a^S meeting choseft. j She ^ attended by Miss Ruth beby ivy. * ' Eppel' gaVe^he lesson,""Ap^opriate Hackmeister <rf Glen Ellyn, who act- Robert Morev of Long Beach, i became "the"^ bride " of Mr."* Orv'ille | & the Marianas, and at g»h Juan; D?5?irt«" srd then servS S fd 'T , a ' filS b«>ther aj best Sabatke, son of the Albert Salbatkes Puerto Rico. pinwheels and orange rolls Iru111 lores Dowell as bridesmaid. ! man. Groomsmen tKa nr.it u niflntiinfv . --i. i LyIe Matthews served his brother Foster and Hunter Foster of Lake to take n LeP^n %ccHen^ on'ap man' while <*<>*** Darrell, Bluff, cousins of the bride, Sheldon V>„_t?.keo« _._C^H_eTLry_.^n John Dianis and Ben Fish were Udell of Lake Bluff and Robert of a pretty wedding service at 3:15 o'clock last Saturday afternoon when Miss Lucille Blake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blake of this city, were William (of Cary. Msgr. C. S. Nix officiated the United States Armed Forces Cemetery at Manila, Philippine Islands. In addition, Florenec, Italy, and Tunis, Tunisia, will be cemetery locations although the exact sites are not yet chosen by the quartermaster general and the American Battle [onuments Commission. The three new national cemeteries are to be established under the plans, at Honolulu, Hawiian Islands, Guam, August 29. The next regular meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Paul Doherty on Sept. 2. Eatertain For ~ ViKiting Cotiisin Sixty relatives a n d ushers. A dinner followed the ceremony Nead of %Ake Forest. at the i i uptial ceremony. The couple was attended by Miss Berriire Blake, sister of the bride and Francis Coughlin of Cary, a . ... . . .. , . - The couple left the first of the friend of the groom. in*he Pavilion at the bride's home, week for IW Beach, where they Dinner was served at the Blake with 125 relatives and friends in at- will make their home. ! home for twenty-four guests followtendance. The couple left on a The bnde attended Judson college ing the service, after which the short honeymoon trip and upon their in Marion, AJa. The groom received coupie left q:i a wedding trip into j . ^ , friends return will live in Round Lake, his education in Long Beach and northern Wisconsin JSld lUrt^ Kno^ W Satu^vTv? ths^T.oom f}fs employM atHhe after serving with the marine air: The bride graduated from the lo- M!l^-Kll0iL!as\?a.tu ; rday Socman Dairy Co. plant. , corps is now m business with his cAl high school and has been emmng at a party honoring their father m Morey s music store. ' ... - - --- cousin J. A. Farrell, and son, Jerry, LLOYD FRANZEN Jr., of Los Angeles, Calif, who have TTrKn> OA been visiting in MeHenry, for the MAItlfcllilJ JUMIS Z4 pa?t ten days. The senioivltfr. Fer- TO EASTERN fllftT. , mil. a former resident, had not seen! MeHenry in twenty-one years. ^ ~ ^ •, A pot-luck supper was enjoyed, I mtere>t locally is new of «»e followed by several hours spent in!w/d^in5 ^ Tuesday June 24 1947, reminiscing. 1 °* Myrt Morrison of Maiden, Mass., Ayiong those who attended werel?™L *!,• KoH°f ?Une 28' when Miss Marilyn^Mertes they following from out of town: F.^ became_the bride of George Ditt- 'Orphan' Roem •! Old Home Can Be Used to Advantage Fibbet McGee's closet has nothing on some of the poor, little rooms to be^found in many old homes. These rooms for some reason, which nobody can discover, were built too .small, supposedly, for any good reason. As a result, they are MARILYN MERTES BECOMES BRIDE OF GE0ROE DITTMANN ployed at the Oaks. "The groom i used by the whole family as a graduated from the Crystal Lake dumping ground for everything high school and is employed in Al- from ^out-of-season clothes to picgonr> uin. Mr. and Mrs. Sabatke will, tures of unpopular family relatives. reside in Cary. :*•!. ?"rta1 m- 8-» tcrest locally occured last Saturday. O* Jtinp" 28 uhon Mioa Edward Knox and daughters, Dorothy I "upr ^an- The bride is the daughter" of sm. , . . 5TE, ceremony, took ('harlf-s "G. "M ertes of PistaW and daughter, Gertrude, and Mrs'. ^ ce " j, . JVyu^ Ch"rch McHer.iy, and the bridegroom the Mary McCabe of Chicago; Mr. and urou"l, J^® Nasliu^ New son 0f Mrs. Mabel Dittman of Elgin. Mrs. George Hoelscher of Wheaton; e Walker, The service was performed at 3 Mr. and Mrs. Ed Larkin, Mrs. 4S* . ' ... P- "»• in the home of the bride's " The bnde chose for her wedding aj aunt, Mrs. F. A. Schurmeier of navy blue dress, turnc style, with 849 Douglas avenue, Elgin with the which she wore a white picture hat j Rev. John SchSfS, pfstor of was corsoge First Evangelical tlnited Brethren was or red roses. I church, officiating. New Hampshire friends of the The attractive bride chose a pale b n d e a n d g r o o m , a c t e d a s a t t e n d a n t s -- i . -- j : -- -- - Clarence Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Whiting, Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward and Jean Conway of Elgin; Mr. and Mrs. Dan O'Shea and children of Grayslake. Hazardous Business •Tragic stories from all ovef the country prove that farm folk are, as the insurance statisticians say, in a hazardous profession -- almost aa hazardous as coal mining or some other supposedly dangerous work. Why not start an accident prevention'campaign of your own today? Fix that broken step. Fill in that old dry well. Put a railing on those •lairs. Be sure your electrical wiring is safe. Store your gasoline and «0 b» a separate building well •way from house or barn, and in containers, painted red. Be •are that bull is kept penned up prqp- «lf and handle him with staff and flag. These and a few other simple precautions will pay off in making Am home a safer place in which to Hvo and the farm a safer plaee on whkij to work. There are few, if any, unavoidable Accidents. The terrible accident toll ooqld be rewitbjust a little and after the service accompanied the newlyweds to their Nashua farm home for a wedding supper. The couple will reside in Maiden, where the bride operates a gift shop and where the groom is also employed. Mr. Ftansen received his honorable discharge from the navy about a year and a half ago and be* ii| sections with weather and fertile and day or silt loam soils, are not recommended. pink gabardine suit, complonented by a white hat and black accessories. She wore a corsage of pink roses. Attending her sister was Miss Charlene Mertes of MeHenry, who was attired in • beige nJbwtiine suit and black accessories. Her corsage was of yellow roses. Albert E. Cook served as best man. since that thne has been living in the home*Wiethe"scene ^th^ramti^ EUst. H, formtrty mvk hU h.™ whT'h^ &iXd «T ti«7^SS£'. " SPW Owe. . lfrs. OM Job Speda Bsl. • A color - measuring instrument, which seemingly never quite "recovered" from its first odd-)ob assignment of standardising the color of WAC underwear, now is in the busi. DOSS of matching false teeth, predict* fag the color of orchids before they bloom and tellinc good oysters from these o<Urjot^#Nf>T%r enni^t •the beaten path, tM instrument auo is currently performing such functions as analyzing lipstick colors in crime deletion, determining for Hollywood what colors are most photogenic for technicolor motion pictures and investigating for laundries how much soaping certain fab* rics can stand without fading. local high school in 1946. Mr. Dittmann is an Elgin graduate •«! Mmd for tw, ?5n •• TeaeMng Feree M^s ' Of the 900,000 teachers In 1919. M0.Q00 have quit the teaching pro- To make work easier on your washing and ironing days, try using two ironing board covers alternately. Use one for dark and colored clothr ing and the other one for white things. That way you'll be taking no chances of colored stains on freshly washed white blouses or curtains. Manufacturers Redact 14,000 Shotshell Loads Since 1916 The neglected story of how more than 14,000 different kinds of shotahdl loads were eliminated in the' last 30 years' from hardware and sporting goods dealers' shelves is brought to light by the current announcement that the total number of loads has now been reduced to 137. Unofficial estimates place the total different loads in the year 1910 at 14,383. As early as 1916, manufacturers realized that the shotshell line was badly overbalanced with unnecessary low sales items and balhstically equal and overlapping loads and started swinging the axe. On January l, 1921, a major red" cuon lopped off approximately 9^00 loads which had accounted for j** Jf1*® P®r cent of the total sal* 5 i ahotshells. That aame year Herbert Hoover established the Di- *•*9° Simplified Practice In the National Bureau of Standards at the department of commerce. Two years later this agency #as called tato action on belwlf of ahotshslh. Gold In Oeeaa Thara are about 10 billion tens of fold in the ocean but no commercially profitable way has been found to extract it. Moth Central A number of solutions are on the aaarket which, when applied Is • lothing, rugs, drapes and furniture covers, are said to make than immune to moth attacks. Among the beet sprays for killing moths In woolens is a 3 per cent solution «f magnesium silicefluorkle, a sate, rated sodium silicoflueride solution Powever, in these days of space economy and imaginative ingenuity, there is no reason for such a roorrii to remain an "ojephan" when It could be put to so many good uses. For instance, it might make an ideal daytime retreat for the housewife and it could also serve as an extra guest room. It would be a cozy haven for daytime napping, doing needlework, listening to a favorite radio program or Just reading. Cleared of its Accumulated spoils and freshly wallpapered or painted, the room will begin to present interesting possibilities. Planning for a bed in such a small room would seem a problem but modern sofa beds take up little room and ret provide top comfort for both daytime lounging and sleeping at night. The color of the aofa bed upholstery can set the color schema for the room with draperies and extra pillowa chosen to harmonize. End tables at each end of the sofa bed will provide space for lamps, books and plants. To avoid a crowded appearance, only the abaolutely necessary places at furniture should be added to the sofa bed group. A cabinet or chest of drawers to provide storage space, pin-up lampa for extra light, one or two pictures, mm) psrh«pe a mirror to give the illusion of mofe space, some wall brackets for plants and a small radio are enough to complete an invittep roakn of honribew smartness. ' - for a few days last week. Miss Ferol Martin accompanied her guests to Jacksonville the first of the week, where she will spend a three weeks' Vacation. Dennis McDonough of Chicago is spending several weeks in the Hugh Murphy home here. Mr. and Mrs. Fred fcrohn, Sr., and son, Pat, and Mr. and Mrs.. Elmer Glosson and family attended the fiftieth wedding aniversary of Mr. and Mrs. August Burrows of Harvard on Sunday. J. A. Farrell of Los Angeles, Calif., has been visiting friends in MeHenry. Miss Hilda Bailey of Rochester, New York, is spending a summer vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Berend Bleeker of Urbandale Farm. Guests last weekend in the Martin Conway home were Mr. and Mrs. Glen Gardner and daughter of New Hampton, Iowa, Mr. and Mrs. Harold IFondell of Dubuque, Iowa, Mrs. Celia Konx of Crystal Lake and Mrs. DU. Holle of Oak Park. Charles Unti has returned after Spending several months at Daytona Beach, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Fred .Leonard and Mr. and Mrs. Guy Shipp of Peoiria spent a few days last week visiting in the M. L. Schoenholtz home here. Mrs. Edmund Lowe and children left last week to spend the summer in San Francisco, Calif. Mrs. Mary. McCabe of Chicago spent Sunday .with MeHenry relatives. . Mr. and Mrs. Art Edstrom spent several days last week visiting at the Laures Resort at Long Lake, Wis., and also other places of interest in that state. Jacob Buss of Chicago was a weekend caller in MeHenry. Ed. Walsh of Chicago spent the NEW GLORY sfwr ^rottrr old Ddamood with a Modern Mounting - ^.f rt Make yonr cherished Diamond Appear larger, more radiant with a setting styled Mr the mod«m mam*^ f fcoet is surprisingly low. Mountings • ^13.95 and up. * j i jfewe!0 514 West Main Street .TW**.! Fhoie 12W MeHenry Ala., is visiting friends and relatives j , «- Mrs. Jack Fletcher and daughter .iiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiraiiiiiimiiiiimimniw Now Teck Leads New York City has more telephones thiui any city in the world, with a total of 1,210.000. This compares with 1400,000 to all of'South America. Complete line of Dr. Bess* poultry and animal remedies at WaAtlas LOWEST IN PRICE HIGHEST IN QUALITY *11.98 Aft frtftMr slMa „ jfrwm* y^iflig - >>•» by Wrtut .at iur atfle jfrtees. f nRffilwWp Tru#Mt" mk Tlrss. •i ifoecet. ' AW nnaijlUip. Jiattarks. Slsea to tt al sUsw IS to $4 for yetur elif bettoey. ^ WALTER J. FREUND m. iosa gl^Uy «n^l ni tridn, W# ' Wl OPSN 4MB SDMMYI -* i or a S per cent 9f DDT OH. >. v > ?*> a »1

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy