«r the om fih Vycital &V «. Hi* toft th« km, irhni he vacation. Mat and tm hers to attend aid Juv at Gary last Snndty i Frank Johnson, Herb Reihan Granfew of Elgin spent fi^if in the Robert for a twoweeks' trip to stopped in OldakMM enroote, for a yWt with the tatter's daughter. In Texas they are visiting Li« lira. Richard Vydtal. Miss Hand the weekend Thompson home here. lbs. Bob Newkirk! Mrs Ben Boyle and children ot Williams. I Lockport, 111., spent the weekend in Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith of Chi- McHenry. On Saturday they visited cago visited in the home of his par-1 Mrs. Boyle's mother, Mrs. Elisabeth ants, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Smith, Lindsay, who was s patient in the last weekend. i Woodstock hospital. John Sehreiner of Elgin visited Miw Marguerite Johnson of Whea- *elatives hen last Friday. I Jon was a weekend visitors m the Mrs. Helen Heuser and Miss Laura h<>2* other parents. . Weher attended the Sonja Henie Ice Mike Daly, West Side barber, is tevae on Saturday evening. I enjoymg a few months' vacation in ,*Mrs. Steve Engels and son, Ar-j^l»*ma, .In his absence, John Hold, and Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Miller Dreyiniller is replacing him in his attended the christening of the in- hart>er .^op. , Hint daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mer- , Harold Owen returned recently lin'W. Ehgels in Lake Geneva last 8 business trip to New York, guhday I Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Bungard and At the last meeting of the Johns-' children and Mrs. Mae Bungard of inxf Qkttiunity club, the following Elmhurst visited McHenry relatives puMiciw^nftnittee was named: Ed- on Sunday. ward rVett, Leo Freund and Henry, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Sullivan and son, Hiller. | Eddie, of Woodstock visited in the Mrs. Nifck Young and Mrs. Nick B. Thomas A. Bolger home last week- Freuud called in the William Staine* end. home west of town on Friday after- ' Miss Mary Douglas of Chicago Itoon. I spent the weekend with her mother. Sunday guests in the Frank Kemp- Mrs. Clarence Douglas. Iter, Sr., home were Joseph Launtz i Weekend guests in the Martin mhd Mrs. Fred Simon and daughter*, Conway home were Mrs. Ed. Holle! Kathleen and Barbara, of Chicago, of Oak Park, Mrs. Celia Knox of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Thill and Crystal Lake and Mr. and Mrs. Lynn Daughter, Janice, of Aurora and Al- Smith and son, Dennis, of Rockton. fonse Diedrich and son, Duane, of I Miss , Therese Mergen, student Chicago spent the weekend in the < nurse at Cook county hospital, Chihome of Mrs. Jacolb , Diedrich. cago, spent the weekend at the home Mrs. Jacob Adams has been visit-!of her parents. lag in Burlington, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Phalin and Sunday dinner guests in the Wil- • Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Conway atliam Staines home were Mr. and Mrs. < tended the Sonja Henie Ice Revue Prank Kromer of Highland Park,! at the Chicago Stadium last Friday Mr. and Mrs. Joe Boxer, Arthur evening. Staines and Louella Madause of I Kenosha, Wis., and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Whiting of Woodstock. Mrs. Helen McAuliffe of Chicago lis been spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Walter Brooks. Weekend guests in the Brooks home were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Knobloch and Jack Cummins of Chicago. Mrs. Martin May and Mrs. William Staines were callers in the Ben Kerne beck home east of the city on Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Thurlow York and family of Sharon, Wis., spent Simday visiting in the Leslie Olsen home here. Recent visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred W. Krohn were Mr. and Mrs. iFrancis Curulewski and daughter, Sharen, of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. John Freund are pending an extended vacation in Martin Cooney was called to Cleveland, Ohio, this week by the death i of his brother, Lee Cooney. j Miss Betty Blake has. accepted a Sagar Beet 'Cola* A Joint Allied Intelligence agency report on the German food-processing industry says "the product of some interest is a non-alcoholic beverage made from sugar beets which is produced as an item for popular consumption somewhat like our cola drinks." The report is one of thousands of German and Japanese documents now being released by the army and indited by the department of agriculture at the rate of 5,400 a week. Approximately half of these have either a direct or indirect bearing on agriculture and are hoped to open the way to developing new uses for American farm products. Manufacturers requesting a copy are mailed a microfilm or photoprint of the original report. 1EANY BENEFITS OF JOHN&-KANVILLE HOME INSULATION 18 years experience blowing . -Mansyille Rock Wool Home tion into the sidewalls and attics of buildings; we must all agree! Jhat the benefits of an insulated • home are outstanding. Just looking ' at the roof of an uninsulated house is enough to convince anyone. Notice now quickly the snow melts off. That! is heat loss passing through your j ceiling. Other benefits of Johns- Mansville "Blown In" Insulation in-! dude greater comfort by making i the walls and window surfaces warm-1 er, reducing drafts, and making heat! more uniform; cooler house in summer, and money saved by reducing; fuel cost up to 40Te; an insulated' house means less load on your heat-1 ing equipment, or even a smaller • heating system. Also, walls and ceil-' ings are cleaner because dust and; dirt do not gather on warm surfaces i as they do on cold walls. ! Johns-Manville insulation will not i attract insects and mice and it is i nreproof, will not absorb moisture' and get soggy and will- not deterior-' ate or settle. There is a big difference in rock wools. Be sure you get Johns-Mansville. For free estimates write the Wall- ^11 Co., 200 E. Pearl St., McHenry, ; Jjfo J. Stilling, Dist. Mgr. Industrial Control - By 1942 the 200 largest manufac* turing corporations controlled 44 per cent of the total assets of all manufacturing corporations and 58 per cent of the net capital assets of such corporations. • • • IMoub £PAybiciat% a We are pra«3 of the eo» dorsement give* this Pre* acription Pharmacy by the leading physicians aad su«* geons of oar community. TheJ| know that we maintain thf " highest ethical standards; thai our drags ale fresh and poteng our prices uniformly fair* That's why they direct patients , to bring prescriptions here. Bolger's Drug Store] Green Street McHenry •?£ K.v M&s ItsM,' Skipper Sweaters Trust a cardigan for comfort and warmt)|I Super-soft 10055 wool yarns in attractive heather shades. Also see our fine assortment of other Wilson Brothers Sweatew--in both cartfcgan and slip-over type*. McGEE'S MeHENRY " • '^--4 \ Comfort plus! Citilti 7:01, 8t* aad 1140 * i^he general attitude toward on* 1 pires is, in our opinion, one of At greatest crimes in sport. Ball players in large'numbers have victed in the past of .selling and throwing games. Players and managers have been indicted on other counts, outside of baseball. But no umpire that I can recall has ever been connected with a scandal of any sort. They have been the backbone of Baseball -- the foundation of base- OraatlanJ Rica baH. ^ _ What has been their reward?. The age old cry of "KID the umpire." They have been hated aad assaulted and started by the mob. They have bees stormed at, cursed, Insulted by flayers and managers who in the main were using these umpires as alibis for their own mistakes-- for their defeats. I can go back a long way in umpires-- Tim Hurst, Silk. O'Loughlin, Tommy Connelly, Billy Evans, Bill Klem (and what a guy), Cy Wrigler, Hank O'Day, Bill Dineen, Lord Byron, Arlie Latham, Charlie Moran, on and on and on. A great bunch. Dead honest. Dead game, these Big Boys in Blue. You couldn't buy one of them at any price. You couldn't scare 'em. No one can bluff any of them. Once in a while they may get to be overly tough, overly officious. But after all they are supposed to run the game--and when they don't the game will be a {yckA A complete joke. Honest and Tough I've known umpires for over 40 years. Among the top ones, I've never known anyone who wasn't honest and fearless--and tough when he had to be. Honest, fearless and tough. For the umpire knows how the managers and the ball players use him in an attempt to cover up their mistakes. Umpires make many mistakes. But Ty Cobb only batted .367 and Babe Ruth wasn't even close to this mark. That means mistakes for the ball player over two-thirds of the time. Who; is perfect or close to being perfect in the world's most imperfect period of time? What is the umpire's reward for the job he turns in? An outcast, as a general rule. Sure the hours are good, as Tim Hurst once said, but no better than the hours a ball player or a manager knows. Not only a social outcast, but also the subject of vile abuse from managers and players--and from the crowd if the umpire doesn't happen to call the play in favor of the home club. H What eaa the crowd la the stands see? The angles ea strikes--plays at the bases--nothing at all. They don't know that slight angles eaa make a difference of many feet. These crowds haven't the slightest idea of what actually happened. They can miss a strike or a hall by over a foot. So can any manager sitting on the bench. He also is all oat of line. He Is only guessing Us own way where ma general average he Is completely wrong. A vital part of an aggressive ball team, including manager and player, always concerns attacking and riding the umpire. This is supposed to mean a fighting, hustling team. Why was it, then, that Walter Johnson never protested an umpire's decision? Why was it that yoy rarely saw Joe McCarthy or Billy Southworth, certainly two of the* best, storming from the dugout in some protest? These two let the umpires run the game. ^ < Riding the Umpire John McGraw, a great manager, came up in a different era. McGraw always faced two opponents-- the other team and the umpire. You couldn't give McGraw enough opponents, including hostile stands. All Mac wanted was a fight with anybody. x But the game has changed in later years. And now'we have too many managers and ball players trying to copy McGraw. They are using umpires for their mistakes--as alibis. The point I'd like to make is this-- here we have a group who should belong at the top of sport. And yet their reward is abuse from the crowds--abuse from the ball players --abuse from the managers. About 95 per cent abuse. In the main these umpires are picked from the best.of the ball players. From the smartest and the most courageous . The wonder is that any sane citizen would ever want to be an umpire. • • •. The Middleweights The middleweights, always among the best in the ring, still dominate all divisions by a wide margin. The middleweights mean quality as well as quantity. Some while ago we figured five top middleweights running the show. They were Zale the champion, Graziano, LaMotta, Cerdan and Abrams. The verdict was that either Cerdan or Abrams had to be eliminated. But the Cerdan-Abrams party was too close to be decisive. Confjaslous SSSi: 6:90 1:00. Saturdays: 1:00 p. mu and 7:00 p. m. Thunder before First Friday-^ After 8:00 Mass on Thursday; 8:<W p. m. ai ~ " Msgr. p. m. and 7:00 jPj^n C. S. Pastor. St. Patrick's CathoHc Char* 8:00 and 10:00. Weekdays: 7:30. First Fridays: 7:80 On First. Friday, Comtnvnloa -Attributed at 6:80, 7:00 and before and during the 7:80 Mass. Confessions: Saturdaya: 4:00 to 5:00 p. m. aad 7:00 to 8:00 p. m. Thursday before First Friday-- 4:00 to 5:00 p.m. and 7:00 to 8:00 Kev. Wm. A. O'Rourke, Pastor. St. John's Catholic Church, J« Masses: Sunday: 8:00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 7:00 and 9:00 > Weekdays: 6:85 and 8:00 Firat Friday: 6:35 and 8:00 •: . Confessions: o ; Saturdays: 7:25 and 8:00 v'^ Thursday before First Fridajw»% t:80 aad 7:30. " Rev. A. J. Neidert, Pastor/ St. Peter's Catholic Church, - Spring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8:00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7*lKr* Thursday before First Friday-- 2:80 and 7:15. Rev. John L. Daleiden, Pastor. Zion Evangelical Lutheran Chareh (The Church of the Lutheran Hour) John St. H block east of Hwy. 81 West McHenry, 111. Frederick C. Pudsell, pastor, McHenry, 111. Services, Sundays--10 a.m. Sunday School and Bible Study Study Group--9 a.m. A cordial welcome is extended to all visitors and vacationists to worship with us. Sunday school children will receive attendance cards for their home-church records. "In the Cross of Christ we glory And find joy and peace divine." Community Church Church School: 10:00 a.m. Wbrship Service: 11:00 a.m. Methodist Youth Fellowship, 7:49 p.m. Rev. Wayne Price, Pastor. m • Mailt 41 _ at TIn? have fooad that tHe oil eon. lent hybrid cctm» aaay differ widely--as inuch as 99 per cent in the case- of two popular hybrids. As a result, corn growers one of these days may be growing and selling new hybrid, corns bred to supply mere corn oil whan processed and worth more on the market because of this Increase in oil value. This, applies particularly to growers who sell corn for use in industries producing .products such as •tarch, alcohol, breakfast foods, hominy and oil. The oil reaches the public and industry in a variety of commodities ranging from ahortening, margarine and salad dressto soap, paint, varnishes and printing ink. The importance of corn oil in the United States--production averaged more than 200 million pounds annually from 1940 to 1945--started research at the department^ Northern Regional Research laboratory, Peoria, 111., to discover the range of oil content in hybrid corns, whether the variation is wide enough to be significant to both growers and processors. F. R. Earle, J. J. Curtis and J. E. Hubbard found that two commonly grown hybrid varieties showed a difference of at least 36 per cent in their yields of oil. In most corn the oil is" mainly in the germ. By dissecting many kernels and analyzing the parts it was found that hybrids did not differ from open-pollinated varieties in their physical proportions. Oil was still confined mainly to the germ whether oil content was high or low.-- new it easily. The solution if boiled starch, as you weald make for the laundry, thinned down to a wafery consistency. Brush it on to form a very thin, transparent wall coating. Liked Candy The flrat users of candy were the Egyptiana. At ike _ ~ Pi , , aa mayor ate tern to act during, Ike. absence of Mayor Overton. The acting mayor has had nwiqr years experience on the city cmmi aad kaa demonstrated his ability to handle the positton when acting in a similiar capacity on previous occasions; • ! •* fV,. * j Children's Brashes ' Old nail polish bruehee mjk * ceUant paint brushes for childraq^ , They are light and easy for ttaE& fingers to handle. Colorful Market Plaee Market day in South America is a rare treat for North American travelers. In the foothills of the Andes, such as the one at Huancayo, Peru, a market takes place every Sunday, and the country folk stream from the hills to barter and sell their wares and produce. The Calle Real (Royal street) is closed at either end, and stalls and booths are hastily constructed and laden with all types of merchandise. Native fruits and vegetables, live j poultry, squealing pigs, hand-woven | rugs, blankets, ponchos, bric-a-brac, ! hand-wrought silver and gold sou- ! venirs, regional foods, chicha and intoxicating win«s, all are dis- ! played in a kaleidoscopic panorama of chaos and humanity that until nightfall. Ringwood Church Ringwood, 111. Sunday--Public worship, 9:80; Sweet Clover Church School: 10:30. Sweet clover is a vigorously grow Choir Rehearsals--Wednesday eve-; Ing plant but is sensitive to shortning. Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, director.! ages of fertility elements in soils. Specials Fi riday Ota SPAKE Rlfiil 39c lb. SUGAR CUBED CORN BEEF ^ .MM 55c lb. BOILING " PLATE BEEF 32c lb. n«H SKA PEBCHt _. 39c • ooe. FOOD ' HALIBUT 49c SALMON 49c OTSTEBS . 79c pt. • •; PERK V METW» . . K-9 ' •;' ; : .M: :• • ' Specials Saturday FRESH GROUND BEEF 39c lb. ntESH PORK ROAST 39c lb. ittivm- Subject People Before World War II, ll per cent of the world's population, or about 270 million people, excluding the population of India, lived in colonial areas . . . one-fourth under British rule, one-fourth under French, -one-fourth under Dutch and the remafaifog quarter under the ade< ftartugtf, BitghilH, Now In Production--fh« 19' Marked by smart new lnnovationa In both exterior and Interior design--the 1947 Cadillac Is now on ty. It Is the thoajjpmdaonie, the amootheet, [-performing Cadillac eter built. Product of forty-four years of progresaive betterment, it la the undisputed leader In all that makes a motor car a pleasure to drive and a Joy to pososss. As la the past, CadUlac cars for 1947 are offered In four series--the "tl", "42"--and two distinguished Cadillac-Fleetwoode--the "M Special" and "75". Hmm are ntee body types in all sack available in a wide selection of oolors--with upholstery fabrics of smart new deelgn. One look will tell yo« that the "Standard of the Weetd" kae I to even greater heights! 'Mil' ;»<#; Italy, Japan, Spain and the United Stsfere Overton Motor Sales 403 FRONT STREET ^ MeHENRY, ILL. / " . rs . - - '• _ •!.>" - ,-r