V 4rV ' » "** t' i1 * •» « ' '1 :<'W **! •S6** Thursday, August 20,1931 ^ „ " / * j * • . ' * • < • < ; v . :;m* 6, <*' '•y' *v. S>- ; :;--v.'.v '; v' ; PLAnmZALHt ic £ «. '•» fe\ ", >f < 3 j- </. ;v " " ' J ' *' i • ' .fj « " ' *,:>!./ ItTil • y;< 'i*i »t to PEK80NAL8 • *T» ' ' ; A1 Bixe and nephew, Ted, of Wood- " », A ruff, Wis., spent the weekend in the !Fred Ferwerda home, leaving Monday . ' amorning for a visit in Chicago before . returning home. Mr. and Mrs. Lester White of Chif v "cago were Saturday night guests of ^ Mr. and Mrs. Albert purvey.„ Miss Neva Toynton of Wauconda spent Sunday in the home of her sister, Mrs. D. I. Granger. • Mr. and Mrs. Fred Simpson and ' "** Robert Hutchinson of Chicago spent • Thursday as guests of Mi-, and Mrs. V Jack Purvey, the men enjoying golf ^ iat the Country Club. Messrs. Simp^ ' son and Hutchinson are classmates Jack's, the former at the University of Illinois Medical College and the <. latter was a classmate in their Fresh*, •" . man year at Northwestern. . § r Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kugler and / - daughters, Dorothy and Ethel, and " * Mrs. Anna Bittner of Cleveland, Ohio, t ^are spending the wefek with Mr. and J ^ •; Mrs! Charles Block of Dundee at ' • '-ic Harmony Court on Fox river. Miss Ann Walkup of Ridgefield was >- ' the weekend guest of Miriam Sayler. * Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ensign of Palatine visited relatives and friends here •' ' Saturday. , .:1' " Mrs. Frieda Lanke and daughters, • Huby and Shirley, of Chicago are spending three weeks in the home of her sister, Mrs. Fred Ferwerda. Bruce Granger returned home Sat-: " urday from Boy Scout camp at Camp Rotary, where he acted as assistant •Scoutmaster. - Mrs. Qrva Bratzler of Elgin, Royal Ntiphbor deputy, was a local visitor last week. • ' Cynthia Erickson spent last weelt with relatives in Beloit, Wis. Miss Christine Hittner of Columbus, Neb., who has been a guest in the home of Marion Wegener and visited . relatives here, left Tuesday for Chicago whei*e she will spend the remainder of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ferwerda of r' Qak Park, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Andet- • son, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs. MuJ* lins and daughter of West Pullman . spent a day last week with^Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ferwerda and enjoyed a trip to the lotus beds. Miss Eleanor Sutton spent a feit days this week with Shirley Johnsoft . in Evanston. Mr. and Mrs. Peter W. Frett of ' Spring Grove visited here Sunday. • Miss Mary Celine Adams, with Mar< garet and Claribel ElgiO| attended the music festival in Chicago : Saturday night. Misses Lena and Clara Stoffel motored to Oak Park Sunday to meet Betty and Georgia Meyers of Bloomington, who returned with them for a visit. Mrs. Edna Heimer and Mrs. Clarence Craig of Chicago visited ftfrs. Josephine Heimer here last week. Mrs. Clarence Martin and her sister, Mrs. Glen Robison, of Woodstock, returned Sunday from a few days' visit in Chicago. Little Ann Smith of Chicago returned with her grandmoth- ' er, Mrs. Martin, for a visit. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frounfelker and daughter, Patricia Ann, of Jackson, Mich., spent the weekend in the Jacob Schaefer home. Mrs. Frounfelker's mother, Mrs. Elsie Haupris, who has i been visiting here, returned home with them as did also Mrs. Schaefer, who will remain for a three weeks' visit. Mrs. Anna Barron and daughter, Betty, of Ridgeway, Wis., called La McHenry Thursday, enroute to New York City. They planned, also, to stop in Cleveland, O., and took Billy, Fhalin of McHenry with them as far as Cleveland. He will remain there foi a visit with relatives until their return trip when he will come home with them. Mrs. Frederick Moon of Chicago was the guest of Mrs. George Lindsay a few days last week. Walter Besley of DesMoines, Uu, called on his aunt, Mrs. W. A. Sayler, Friday. Mr. Besley, with his wife and little son, Keith, is spending a few dpys in his father's cottage at Lake Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Gill of Chicago fepent the weekend in McHenry. Mirv Gill, who is a member of the McHenry Country Club, and his bride, who was the widow of the late Tex Rickavd, recently returned from their honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Schoenholtz have returned to McHenry to be in readiness for the opening of school on Sept. 8. ' Frank Harrison, son of Mr. and -- Mrs- C. L; Harrison^ who graduated this year from the University of Illinois, left August 1 for the officers' training camp at Jefferson Barracks. Frank, who is now a second lieutenant, enlisted for a year and is now with the. Blue forces in the "defense of Chicaaro" near Allegan, Mich. Mrs. Nellie Bacon and Mr. and Mrs. Ed Bacon returned home early Sunday morning from Can-oil, la., where they were called by the illness and death of his sister, Mrs. Chas. Davis. Miss Margaret McDonald, a member Of the Old Timers' Club, has returned to Highland Park, after attending the Centennial here and at Crystal Lake and visiting old friends in McHenry and relatives in Crystal Lake. Miss Mary, Celine Adams is employed in the radio factory at Crystal v Lake Mr, and Mrs. Donald Adams of Elgin spent a few days this week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Adams. 'Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Nickels and children arrived home Friday night from a week's trip ,to Chicag® City, Minn., where they visited Mrs. Nickels' uncle. Enroute to Chicago City ' they crossed the Mississippi river at LaCrosse, Wis., while the return trip was made through Wisconsin. Mr. Nickels enjoyed a vacation from his work with H. E. Buch and Son. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Pouse and son' are enjoying a "three weeks' trip through the east, enroute to New York City. They planned to visit at various- points alpng the way and see Atlantic City, returning the last of the month. • /' Coon Hunting "A La Prank Buck" Humane"sport! Catching treed coons iH/a net is the latest fad at Old Point Comfort Beach, Va., where coon hunting has become a seriotis novelty in the tourist curriculum. Mi$s May LmdSSy is shown up a tree ready to snare Mr. Raccoon with a net. It's a" miniature Bring 'em Back Alive sport here. -"N. Flexible Glass Used in Movie Sets Recently developed by scientists in a Vienna laboratory, a flexible glass has opened an entirely new field for stage effects in motion pictures. The glass is so flexible that it takes 147,000 pounds to break it in bending. In experiments, it was found that the glass could be permanently twisted by steaming. A major Hollywood studio has created jaira trees from the glass and is using them in a current production. Measures 100-Millionth of an Inch Eight Women Intane; "Evil Eye" It Blamed Cairo.--A rejected suitor's "evil eye"' is believed to have driven eight women mad at Kafrel t>awar. Lower Egypt They are a mother and ^er seven daughters. The father has refused to allow two of his daughters to marry. Soon after he noticed the eight women were acting strangely. He. called a doctor, ^*ho found the women were all insane. They have now been removed to the Cairo lunatic asylum. The villagers believe an "evil •eye" placed on the family by one of the rejected Suitors Is responsible for the women's condition. " Ommm. Washington Letter National Kdltarial DAYS OF "GROG" IN • NAVY ARE RECALLED One Pint a Day Was Issued to Each Sailor. San plegQ.--Old navy' Men like to talk of "tbfe pood old days." hnt research reveals that .their"reminiscences do not go far enough hack to touch on the time wben, grog wa§ served twice a day and: .Wonien.vWeTt^ for; sea duty. Ah account from an old navy journal reveals details of the long-past ous.tnm of serving grog each day befor? din: ner or supper: "Shortly after eight bells, as the drum rolls, all nioye $ft toward the grog tub," wrote an officer. "Around this point of time concentrate half meditations ot the day. * I often place myself at the tuh to watch the rolling eyes and the look of extreme gratification. with whiih they swallow their half pint, for that Is the measure to each. It Is one gill of 'whisky diluted with an. equal'quantity of water. "A rope is drawn athwartshlps near the tub. Kach iuan as his name is called crosses and takes his allowance. Which must be drunk on the spot. From this they.pass on to dinner. The term grog originated with • Vice Admiral Vernon. U. S. N., who was known as "Old Orog." The name sprang from an 'old clo^k. lie wore on deck in bad weather. Vernon Inaugurated the custom of serving whisky and water and the drink was known as grog. Women-were. Included in the navy personnel during the World war, hut •T»nly as yeomen for shore service. First, known Women on navy boats were with the Rritlsh prior to 1800, when women were carried on many men o' war. The command to v"show a leg," still given with reveille on American battleshipsi originated with the British girl sailors. Allowed an extra hour's sleep each morning, the girls Identified themselves In their hammocks when the call was given to arise by dangMng a stocking- clad leg over the side. Canadian Woman Is Heir to Half Million Dollars London, Ont.--One-half million dollars gathering dust In the Florence. Kan., hank can now be made ready for transportation to Canada, because Mrs. James Broadfoot, formerly of Brussels near here, has presented proof she Is entitled to the fortune left Intestate by an eccentric spinster, Ellen Doyle. Mrs. Broadfoot Is second cousin to the Doyles of Kansas, where she hejrself formerly lived. ^ After Ellen Doyle died last January In Florence, In tin cans, cracked crocks, jars. In boxes on clothes, closet shelves and uhder the stair-, case in her home searchers found oil bonds and cash worth more than .S.'tOO,- 000. Immediately a . host of Doyles came forward to claim the money. None had proof to satisfy authorities. Washington, August 19 - Another • Senate inquisition started herfe today, | the outcome of which has the political jand industrial world on edge. It seems | that the LaFollette sub-committee J working on an admittedly biased plan j is about to blow off steam on methods j which are sometimes utilized by open | shop employers in an effort to thwart trade union organizers. If the committee adheres to its present procedure, it is likely to remove the top from a smouldering volcano of intense and bitter class warfare. Far-sighted political chieftains are working might and main to apply the brakes so thatthe apparently inevitable battle between organized workers and employers. mpy be confined t,o sporadic skirmishes. A nation-wide epidemic of strikes are anticipated after the elections without regard as to which party carries the votes. . While the Senate investigators are ostensibly seeking data as to the ser vices rendered by professional espionage strike-breaking agencies, they have in mind calling prominent industrialists among the clients. The idea of LaFollette and his sub-committee is to draw the fangs of the employing group to permit union organizers a free sweep in recruiting. Unfortunately, for the early success of this strategy, it now appears that the Senate will be defied to the extent of proving to competent legal authorities that it possesses,the right to seize private papers and records. .If you watch the tactics during the next few days, it will be observed that the Senate is due for a prolonged court test. This sub-committee held a hearing in April and filed a report expressing convictions as to "violations of free speech and assembly and interference with right of labor." >low the LaFoIette followers are seeking data to substantiate its pre-investigation judgment-- a procedure which arouses doubts as to its, fairness as art inquistorial body. Talk of the town this week centers on the dissension within the Coughlin- Lemke group; the "t^eak showing of the Townsendites in recent primaries; why the President insists on calling Jiis tour of various states a non-political visit; doubts within both major parties that White House assurances ,pf no new taxes next year is trustworthy in view of enormous public expenditures; our foreign policies in regard to Spain; hope of party press agents for public attention for their candidates with the Mary Astor racy story out of the way; Eastern G.O.P. leaders demanding extension of Landon tours to sell their man to voters in i doubtful states, notably New York, 'Pennsylvania and Massachusetts; 'speculation as to the trend of thinking among eligible Negro voters in Northern and Mid-West areas; whispers as how and where the "iheavy sugar" or campaign money is raised and spent; questions as to shake-ups in personnel at various campaign cftmps, etc. Political scouts returning from quick surveys report rumblings among the farmers which have an important bearing on relief policies. An official statement issued a few* days ago by the Department of Agrculture simply noted "the farm labor supply now was the "lowest it has been for nearly ten years." Back of .this picture is a story of grievances which has the politicians guessing as to consequence. The government" data claimed average wages for hired laborers was $22.07 at | 'these unsuaully high wage rates. | Probably, it is the old tale that interest "depends on whose ox is good." Farmers who looked with friendly eyes on policies which brought them government checks for restricting crops are inclined to look on relief of unemployed -as a gigantic waste of money calculated to encourage idleness and slothful, habits. The survey dfita disclosing changed "trend of political thinking find an explanation, in che scarcity of farm labor.' The larmers feel they are handicapped by loose spending, of relief, funds which discourages a trek of the unemployed to the rural areas. Relief rolls carry mtny "ex-farm hands who flatly refuse to- return to well-paying jobs and surrender easy living in the city. .Prof TugwelPs soil erosion scheme arid other helpful plans calculated to win the farm vote are apparently falling on deaf ears as other Federal agencies keep the .eligible farm workers safe and happy on unemployed lists. Speculation as to the effect of tihlis farm labor shortage on votes is growing, The. indifference of the general public to ."trust-busting" stunts of the Federal government is discouraging wholesale attacks on business. The proceedings against oil producers and distributors stirred little interest beyond the confines of the trade. Somehow these efforts to restrict monopoly while laudable in purpose, do Hot have/J the appeal of otfejer days when Teddy " . Roosevelt made political capital with .: the "big stick" methods. The thrill ' for the public has gone. Order your rubber straps at Plaindealer. Union Labor Chief Aids Landon Campaign Appointed director of the Labor division of the Republican National committee. William Hutcheson of Indianapolis, , president of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners and a member of the Council of the American Federation of Labor, is a new.powej in the Landon campaign. "We w-ant to win a better and more permanent deal for labor .through the election of Governor Landon and Colonel Knox," he said. \' Dr/C. Keller OPTOMETRIST Sundays and Mondays at py Summer Home, Riverside Drive, . McHenry, 111. AD. Kinds of Repairs, TVL 211-R Phone 200-J 'Fred J. Smith, Prop. Johnsburg The best'eqiipped garage in this cotmty. We can take care of any kind of repair job and our work is guaranteed. Giveusa trial. Standard Service Station 24-Hour Towing Service tRED SMITH, Prop. \ A graduate student of the University of Chicago recording measurements of the "mass spectograph," which will register measurements as small as 100-millionth of an inch. This is but one of a number of precision instruments developed in the laboratories df the university. Another is a hypersensitive weight scale which will detect differences in weight as littie as 4,000.000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 of a gram. This instrument was developed by Prof. Arthur J. Dempster of the physics department. . Famous Castle to House Garrison in Austrian Gmunden, Austria.--The garrison in the little town of Gmunden will be housed,in what may be the most luxurious barracks in the world--tlie palace formerly occupied hy the duke Cumberland and Brunswick. The duke was the son of the last king of Hanover, brother of William IV of England, and' was pretender to the' Hanoverian throne. The kings of England held the throne of Hanover until the death of William IV. One wing of the castle, which constructed in 1878 for the duke's>bride, the Princess Thyraa of Denmark, when; he was one of the richest royalists Iff TTurope. is to be converted into-"air officers' mess. WOMAN ON G.O.P. EASTERN STAFF Loses $18 on the "Hosses and $5 More in Court r~Taunton. Mass.--Leonard. Wells was arrested on ..a speeding charge while on his way to Narragansett-race track. In court lie was asked whether he got there In time. Wells replied, "I got there in time to lose fl'8." He lost $"» more when he paid his fine. TOPEKA . . . Miss Natalie Couch, in charge of the Women's Division of Eastern Republican Headquarters, New York, shown during an ^mterview with Oov. All Landon in his capitol ofhee here. Later, Mm Couch said of Landon: "He is a Just rate listener and when he speata every word count*. A man of many friends in his home state, dto neighbors call him AH and stop him on the street to chit about Stat* and actional afUv*." Roller Towel Mileage " V Chicagn^-lt takes an averagftj^jty-o and an eighth miles of automatic roller towels a day to dry the hands and faces of the 40,000 persons who visit- 'the MerthHiiuise Mart, huge "city .under one roof* here. Top Hat Squirrel's Be4 ; Kenton. <"iio.T--Eliza Limes, Riilqre way business man and former'\OJii > assemblyman, is democratic with If - silk hat. Earh night he lets Kahy. <in of dozen? of pet eijuirrtls, sleep in hi •topper." - '. «E£TTHE*3|'e&tJMseC hA See the Proof sf Low Operating Cost Be sure you can save money with the, refrigerator you buy. That's why it's so important to get PROOF of economy. Watch us actually measure the current used by the sensational "Meter Miser" unit, exclusive with cold it produces on a miserly amount of electricity. It cuts current cost to tb* bont because of its outstanding design with only three moving parts --perma •endy oiled, completely sealed against moisture and dirt. LIBERAL TERMS Gives yoa PtOOF of ALL FIVE STANDARDS for Refrigerator Buying 1. Low Operating Cost. 2. Safer Food Protection. 3. Foster Freezing--More Ice. 4. Moro 5. Five-Year Protection Plan. Frigid aire builds compartment -- oonest proof ot Satcty-Zone Tempeta- range Food-SafetyI ndicator into the center ot the ture, below 50 and above 32 degrees. 0 You need AIL FIVE of these vital advantages in the refrigerator you buy. They are your assurance of complete value that means maximum savings and greater convenience. Don't be satisfied with mere claims. Buy tmly on PROOF. y' /"' # Come in and let as prove to you by actual demonstration chat the New Frigidaire with the Meter-Miser meets ALL FIVE standards for Refrigerator Buying, That its record-shattering performance is matched by beauty that will thrill you, convenience that will astonish you! Its gleaming white cabinet is wider, roomier. No crowding of bottiw packages. No awkward groping in corners. Frigidaire saves your energy as well as your money. J( . And PAYS YOU A PROFIT every day p ; ci' l l l A I R E it's in your kitchen! Come Uti The . 0\\ FMQOS if wauuf fiat yool ntlCIDAIRE GIVES YOU ALL THESE ADVANTAGES Exdasin Mttef Mijef - Food- Indicator • New Rooaiicr Cabinets • Porta t>U- l oiity Shelf . tuli-W ijch SXidias >helyw • Automatic Interior Lijtht • Frusidaire'Hylirator • Sup^r Freezer • Automatic Reset Defrvoier • Automatic ke Tr*y .Release • Quickube anj Rubbn-r CinJ Ice Trmy5 • LV1 uble-Kiiijcc Geld Control • Sealed Steel Cab'net HiaiibeU ia Dulux or Porvelasa - brainless Pofcelaia 10 Seani!e>s lcitenor • Touob- Latch Door C>peper - Exclusive •"Freoo-114" Retnue-raot • Five Kinds ot Col J in the same cabioct. YOUN NEIGHBOf*- NOOD DEALER IS ALSO rEATURINC FINE VALUES IN MOOERN REFRIOERATORS. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS r Telephone: Crystal* I*ak» M