Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Feb 1947, p. 4

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"* f* •'«<*?.X •*/»* '\*f-1W>»!fcfr>.»..r»» V> *»«0^»i, »»Mi «t*k #w «-»-!««.<> »«<>» >•*».«'»>!•»" - -M MeBXintT 7LA1HDSALI* '$&***: -i-;^ act «f Vi> I, OTL W» rtnnol aw^pt i**s after Tues-, if tftmoon at & o'clock. Please in yonr items in before the dead- ;- NATIONAL CDrrORIAL-- • • * • vmt£32! KMer «f It B»f» EZMVM ky SfMtf GUATEMALA CITY. - Joae Miculax Box, convicted of the murder of minors, was executed by a firing squad outside the walls of the cemetery. He was found guilty of murdering IS boys between M ud 16 years of age. His accomplice, Mariano Macu, was sentenced to SO years' imprisonment. W" I* •<£•' * BRIDAL COUPLE Jthnny't Dream Became* a WeandW Yttsran Is Adoptri by His Horn# Tewn. N1SW ^ORK. -- Johnny Chiefa, 30- year-old wounded veteran of World War II, lay on a bed in Bronx Veterans' hospital and full realized he may never walk again. Just the same, Chiefa was happy. BASEBALL has grown restless. , Especially in the spring. This time they will be playing and training as far apart as Hawaii and Cuba. Teams will be shifted all over the spring map. ^ The Giants move from Miami to Phoenix and travel as far westward as Hawaii. The Cleveland Indians shift from Clearwater, Fla., to Tucson, Ariz. The Yankees tour Cuba and sections of Central and South America before landing at St. Petersburg, Fla. The Dodgers leave •arftStf Club A dream he has had since he was j Florida for Cuba a little orphan boy is about to come j and -other Latin GraatlandRice true. - « ] turf. The new He's going to have that home of! slogan-, ought to be--"Join a ball his own. ^ | club and see most of the world." It's all because the folks, ift his j The Cardinals are firmly set at home town of Paterson, N. J., | St. Petersburg, the Red Sox at Sarar , • : ' MR. and MRS WILBUR CANE Miss Bette Wirtz and Mr. Wilbur, Cane, both of McHenry, were mar- - ried at a quiet service which took place in Woodstock on Saturday, F e b . 8 . j "adopted" him. * It was this way: Chiefa before the war lived with an aunt in Paterson. He got overseas and suffered a bullet wound that left him paralyzed from the waist down. sota and the Tigers at Lake Wales The Yankees hit St. Petersburg around March 12. The Reds report back to Tampa. Arizona gets its first big league training test with the Giants at Phoenix and the Indians at Tucson, where a warm, dry They brought him back and put | sun ought to help. jr 'j. ' HOLD RITBB FEB. 22 j McHenry residents have been not!-, *ed that last rites, with the usual j Ceremonies of the Craft, will be perf o r m e d by W i l m e t t e L o d g e N o . 9 3 1 , j A. F. A A. M., in the Temple, 10101 Central Avenue, Wilmette, at 3 p.m.,! Feb. 22, for Brother John Robert tweet. Sr., who passed away in l Lutheran hospital, Pasadena, Calif., > tn Jan. 29, 1947. Interment will be; t 8 p.m. at Algonquin, 111. SLED HIT BY CAR Leonard Smith, 8, son of Mr. and. Jtfrs. Alonzo Smith, 449 Fremont St.,! Elgin, was injured last week wheni fcis sled shot out of a driveway in j front of his home, and hit an auto- Eobile driven by Lewis H. Gray,j Igin, which was eastboand. The: |»y was taken to a doctor's office i And then to St. Joseph's hospital.' fie suffered bruises and abrasions• On the head and face and a concussion. him in the Veterans' hospital. Chiefa thought his dream of having his own home was gon^ forever. He took up watch repairing, because he figured he couldn't live on his pension alone. But the word got around that Johnny was back -- and that's when his friends went into action. One of his friends got his picture j Ball players could use better legs, printed in the Paterson newspaper. j Watch a pitcher after he hits a It seemed that everybody started ! triple. He winds up at third, puffing Bat we like the training ides of the Cardinals, Red Sox and Tigers best. They go directly to (me spot, from which point they have only s short traveling range to meet high grade competition. Smart ball players begin working out their legs before spring training starts through golf or hunting. chipping in for Johnny's futun especially for that home. The dollars rolled in. Soon, Chiefa was able to buy a lot. Then he got enough to buy materials, short and expensive as they are. ! Then Paterson's trade unions j stepped in. Carpenters, plumbers i and brick masons went to work. Up shot Chiefa's home. "It's a wonderful feeling," Chiefa ' said. "Being an orphan isn't SO bad | after all." ' jr. - CHILD DIES IN FALL ' Slipping out of his father's |S| while being twirled about the room,] Lawrence David Creemens, 8 months' ©Id, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Cre- i , ineens, residing near Elgin, suffered, Internal injuries which caused his <leath before his arrival at St. Jo-| f ueph's hospital last week. Dr. And-' , few J. Nowakowski performed an Autopsy on the child at the Conn 4 funeral home an<t*#ound death was .<iue to a rupture of the liver and 7 the portal artery. Jf Invented Bike ' * ..'"Hie first bicycle was made WO / years ago in a blacksmith shop at ^•-."-•.'"'..Courthill Smithy in Scotland by ; Kirkpatrick MacMillan. ^ . His first bicycle was quite differ- |i jmt from present-day models. He ' tiad invented a "dandy-horse" or v fiobby-horse. To propel it without V flushing with his feet against the ground, he geared it with treadles £ «o that it operated much like a . child's tricycle today. 4 On this iron-rimmed bicycle, Mac- |Jtllan created a local sensation by tiding some 70 miles from Keir to Glasgow. That was m 1839, but the :l\ celebration of the centennial was 3 s Postponed until this year because of ; the war. It was jws* a hundred fears ago, however, th*t another 4' Scotsman, Galvin Dalzell of Lanark- Shire, improved MacMillan's model, *uid some historians divide honori *; » for the invention between the twe Spinster Waits 24 Years For Love, Kills Herself SAN MARINO, CALIF. -- Florence Farringtori, 51, a spinster, ended her loneliness with death, leaving a note declaring that She | Country had waited 24 years for love. Police Chief Glenn F. McClung reports. Chief McClung said he discovered the body of Miss Farrington, a writer, in her home. He said she had shot herself with a J32 caliber like a volcano and it often takes him an extra inning or two to retain his pitching form. The Cardinal System , The St. Louis Cardinals have the best idea of the qualities tha' go into the making of a good ball player. Their farm system was arranged on the general idea of giving experience to young players whn could run and throw. For the nasi 20 years the average Cardinal could run and he had a good arm. Hard hitters or big hitters who were slow, rarely stayed around. Ball players with bad arms were not wanted, no matter how good they might look otherwise. The arms of Terry Moore Slaughter in the p*>st have been as deadly as twin --and both were extremely fast on their feet. When a Cardinal starts from first to third he usually makes it. And when some rival starts from first to third he is revolver. Keeping watch beside the j quite often cut down short of the bag. Fnrnitnre Industry North Carolina is credited with being the country's largest producer of medium and low-priced furniture, with 12 per cent; Michigan is listed as producing the largest proportion of high-cost furniture, with 5.6 per cent. More than 42 per cent of all freight shipments of wood furniture by weight originates in the south. body was her dog Sandy, a Sealyham. McClung said Miss Farrington left a note addressed to ah undisclosed friend, with excerpts which read: "Twenty-four years of fruitless waiting and at the last you are still my best beau. . . . There is only just Sandy, and my preference to go ftane rather than endure the | Dodgers Are Younger silence, which meets me here. I j Eddie Dyer and Durocher-are. both hope your weddmg tomorrow will banking on speed and good arms bring you what you hope for." 1 **--• -- ~ - Branch Rickey and Sam Breadon were the pair who worked out this selective plan and now Rickey is using it for his Dodgers. Experience is a big factor but a brace of young legs and a young throwing arm are also useful. *9 Order your rubber *Ihum at the Plaindealer. (2'Oittzvtteci GIVE MORE MILK We UCOMMEND lr. DAVID ROBERTS DHHJCE contains Sabadilla, NTctoine, Naptbalene and Sulphur the proportions proven effective in destroying lice on livestock. Mother and Daughter Saieiies, Peliee Say RANDALLSTOWN, MD. -- PoUce reported the second case of suicide in eight years at the Hellwig farmhouse when the bodies of a 73-yearold mother and her daughter were found -- arms entwined -- in a gasfilled kitchen. A deputy medical examiner issued s suicide verdict after a sonin- law came home from work and found the bodies of Mrs. Lena Hellwig and her daughter. Miss May Hellwig, 40, seated at a table. In December, 1938, police records disclosed, Mrs. Hellwig's husband, Philip, shot himself in the chest with a shotgun after an argument with his wife and daughter. Miss Hellwig escaped her father by tripping him as he ran from the house. He fell on the porch, and fired at the daughter, but missed. Then he killed himself. Throne Is 'Foreed* oa . Him by laps, Says Pu-Yi TOKYO.--Henry Pu-Yi, the 40- year-old "boy emperor" of Manchuria, asserted that the Japanese threatened to kill him if he refused to become nominal head of the vast empire they had seized in northern China. He pointed directly to Seishiro Itagaki, former chief of staff of the Japanese army in Manchuria and 3ne of 27 major Japanese war leader* on trial before the Far East international war crimes tribunal, as the man who threatened his life if he refused the puppet throne. %4k. 4-M.pl* SO# fNk $i.oo -..A . T»H»!U•«S •I%» *K lr. DAVID teiEITS Alimony Dodger Eludes Police hy Seeing thaws UNIONTOWN, PA. -- County Detective Lawrence Haggerty has never seen so many movies in his life. Haggerty is assigned to serve a warrant on an alimony dodger who boasted he was going to hide in a movie house until officers tire in their search. Onr An efficient dairy cow produces 18 pounds or edible milk solids for Mch 100 poigds of digestihte 'ft* trients in her IML'ao6ordlnf to tfto Encyclopaedia Britannica. this season. The Dodgers have this advantage--they are younger. More than one Cardinal star is now deep in the veteran class and speed doesn't increase with the years-- not even with a Terry Moore and an Enos Slaughter. If Robinson makes good st third, or wherever he is nsed, his addition will increase Dodger speed. Teams in the National league hoping to crowd out either Brooklyn or St. Louis will need more speed than they have shown so far. A large number of ball players can get in better condition and stay in better condition than many do. For any daily competition that runs through 154 games demands the best sort of physical condition. This can be obtained much better by sticking as long as possible to one spot, rather than through extensive traveling around. 0 • College and Pro War There is now an underground, undeclared war between the colleges* and pro football which may break into the open any day or any week. The colleges are charging that the pro leagues are taking away star football players, who have from one to two years left for college football--a direct violation of propromises not to take any man who is eligible for the college game. The pro leagues are charging that college football coaches and college athletic associations are holding players in college, or trying to hold them, long after their classes have graduated. _ This argument or feud of course dates back to the war. 1 happen to know that when the war came along, many southern coaches were something more than mildly upset over the fact that Army and Navy had taken away their best players Unless he actually wants to finish a college education above everything else, I can see no reason why a man of 25 or .26, especially those with families, should stay on in college to play football. Under these circumstances, I would say that he is entitled to leave college and get the best pro job available. can but «jrsmunity singta* with Mrs. Carl Weber at the pi«Wt Mid the recitation of old time Valentine Of Lacffle Nickels Mr. and Mnk» Fred Nickels of West McHenry announce the engagement of their daughter, Lucille, Lucille, to John J. Battling, Jr., son of the senior John J. Burning* of Oakhurst, McHenry. Nio plans have been m a d e f o r t h e w e d d i n g . * • « v Evenin With Members of the Evening Bridge club were entertained at the home Mrs. George Lindsay last week, *™h prizes being awarded to Mrs. Bd. Nickels and Miss Inez Bacon. * • • Mrs. ARxrt Vales Hostess To Club Mrs. Albert Vales was hostess to ,. ~..n - ... . T i members of the East River Road 1':?lller wedding in Chicago las<t Satafter- i were Mrs. Anna Miller, Mary An attractively decorated table, at whidi Mrs. C. w. GoodeU presided at the coffee server, included plates and napkins in keeping with Valentine's Day and centered with a bouquet of white snapdragons. The committee included the new officers, Mrs. Huch Murphy, Mrs. C. W. Goodell, Mrs.'<Clarence Anglese, Mrm FTed Wahl, Mrs. Charles Brda and Mrs. C. H. Duker. y A special meeting of interest to the general public is being planned for the March meeting. Details will appear in a later issue. Among those to attend 'the BuenztaMHtnmts L first year ywtf-J iagi» in val| bands will] steadily _ --# ue.Your savings account at jthii: bank is another / VMi' Pinochle club on Thursday after „ . , „ noon. Prize winners were Mre E. an^ ^rome, Mr..and Mrs Nick ^ R. Sutton and Mrs. Ben Diet®. Mrs. I Mr- a"d Mrs. Charles Miller,| . Sutton will entertain the club next 5L012^y aJ?d ,Cha.rJes' Jacob * on Feb. 27. ' Stoffel and daughter, Mary Vern Thelen, Mr. and Mrs. Joe! «if Neighborhood Club Wetoer, Daniel Edstrom and Mr. and j • f At Stoffel Home The Neighborhood dlib Ijeld' its last meeting, a Valentine party, at the home of Miss Clara Stoffel on IFnday evening. Prizes were merited by Mrs. C. H. Duker, Mrs. Peter M. Justen and Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger, Mrs. Justen will entertain the club next on Feb. 28. Children Entertain At Valentine Party Mary Lynn and Kathleen Marie Murphy entertained twelve of their little friends at a Valentine party at their home on Ma^le avenue last Friday afternoon. fie children en- Mrs. Phillip Doherty, all of Mc- a .. Henry, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hermance «ift and Mary Kay of Richmond and 1 Mr. and Mrs. William Miller and i children of Fox River Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Adrian Thomas of iForest Park spent the weekend with relatives here. Miss Arlene Nett, who has been on vacation from her duties at the local A. & P. store, spent the weekend in Spring* Grove. Stand ay guests in the home of Mrs. Anna Miller were the Misses' 4* Helen and Dorothy Merges of Chi-|X cago. One of the biggest comforts anyone can get from an investment is the as| surance that will always be worth 100 investment that doesn't > cen^s on the dollar. In shrink; it grows the long# good tfmes and bad, you er you leave your money1., v can be sure that the TET on deposit These tirne^. bonds you bought during tested ^investments yoti the war, and those you are can hold: With confidence, buying now, will never be Invest in both, for you#/ ; . worth less than you paid own future security and lor them. In fact, after the for your family's welfare! 't's: McHENRY STATE BANK r Member Federal Reserve System Member Federal Deposit Ixuarance Oorporatioa joyed games after which Mrs. Murphy' TI5"' "re^c^®^ ,aT^! ®on» | ?erved a tasty lunch, "the table be- J?71?Ited the for- nn s. .s.. t. .t. ,i. .t. ia»s. A * unim f f| | m i ill 111 I H 11111 «• ing attractively decorated in keeping!f®!8 John Murtaugh, i ' ""gig with the spirit of the day._ o* ' CARD OF THANKS , CARD OF THANKS i" Present were Karen" Kralowetz, Julie and Theresa Tonyan, Georgia, Susan and Mary Kay Stenger, Marilee Liptrot, Carolyn Schaefer, Patty Blake and Joan Smith. • • » Committees Appointed .. By Mothers Club President TTie following committees Were appointed recently by Mrs. Hugh Mj«b Elaine Landgren of St. Elisa- beth's hospital, . CnvhTic ago, spenit. 1t.h1 e we:eeKkeennda aati hneerr hnoommee hneerree.. thank everyone iwlh o thsiean .tm f«lonranle ,r oVf-" We wish in this m, an,n er at o thai* rM"r;. aOnI1dr "MPrs. E BD« W"tatrrda VvIis8i1tle«da ferin**„> of sympathy, donated ;eT,bor8 and ^n«nds floral of- M aM.. j -formera en nfna *.i relatives in Kankakee last weekend 1 c?rs or in any other way offered j **rin£®» spiritual bouquets, donati Mr wid Mm Walter Manning tmd |thei^ ^ bereave- of cars and . the many , other " his Parent®, Mr. and Mrs. George Murphy, president of the Mothers Wirfs, last weekend. club: Movies, Mrs. E." B». Ward;; Mrs. H. Olsen of Elmwood Park adult bo oiks, Mrs. Zion Baker; chil-1 visited friends here one day the last dren s books, Mrs. Clarence An#lese;totf the week. welfare, Mrs, A. J. Wirtz; program,| Mr. and Mrs. Harold Steffan and children of Oak Park vurited^"rela.! J t i v e s here on Saturday and Sunday.' fMasonic order for their Edmund Wirfs of Rickford visited 0i aness v rPY>pr,_, RniIB his niiwnht Mr atul Mm nuwiM JKMS. uCA/Ku£ oOHB. Rich Mixtures For cooking rich mixtures, such wcume, mr», j. vviriz; program,] aass firruuiitt ccaakkeess,, uussee hheeaavvyy bbrroowwnn Mrs. C. H. Duker, with Mrs. R. M. | children, Marie and Paul, attended; greased paper or a heavy wax paper Fleming and Mm C. W Goodell as assistants; garden, Mrs. Lillian Cox; publicity, Mrs. C. H. Duker; reception chairman, Mrs. Robert Newkirk. the wedding of Miss Evelyn Steffan and Raymond Krog, at an 8 o'clock candlelight service at the Presbyterian church in Elgin last Saturday. The bride is the sister of Mr. .. | Steffan. Chrisitml Knox Miss Isabel Twaites and Miss Baoy Sunday Annabel Nett Were callers in Sikokie The infant son of Mr. and Mrs.! on Thursday afternoon. Bob Konx was christened Thomas! Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson, o **services held at; Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Fleming St. Mary's church last Sunday, Rev.land Miss Mary Fleming attendee ®®ther Etogene Baumhofer officia- i the golden wedding anniversary celeting. Sponsors were Miss Elaine i bration of Mr. arid Mrs. William in the baking pan. Greased paper is the best protection for mixtures baked at,low temperatures for a long period of time. nesses extended in our bereav< They were much appreciated, Mrs. Alvin Steinsdoerfer Mr. and Mrs. George Steinsdoert Brothers and Sisters Streamline Housework Streamlining housework is an in|» portant objective for hnusewivei. It's worth the time to sit down and check over your daily tasks to determine if you could save just a few minutes here and there by rearranging your work. Landgren, a cousin of the baby, and John Knox, his grandfather. Following the baptism, a dinner was served at the Edgar Landgren VanNatta in Crystal Lake last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Buss and Mr. -and Mrs. Harold Evans> and son home for those participating in the of Chicago were Sunday guests in service and the following guests; the Fred Nickels home here. . Mrs. Gu& Persson of Woodstock and ! Mrs: Charles Gibbs was a Chicago Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Smith Slid caller on Saturday. family of McHenry. Miss Genevieve Knox spent Saturday in Chicago. * nlj 5,cers i Mr- and Mr. George Johnson a- Infitalled Feb. 17 . tended the Lumbermen's convention On Monday, Feb. -17, .a special is Chicago two days last week, meeting of the Fox River Post | Mrs. Cora Herdrich spent a- few No. 4600 was called to install the days last week in Chicago, where newly elected commander and ad-! she acted as sponsor at the christjutant. The past commander of ening of her grandaughter, Patricia Crystal Lake Post administered the Ann Boyk, daughter of Paul Boyks. oaths to Commander M. L. Schoen-| Mrs. Albrt Krause and Mrs. Fred holtz and Adjutant Allen Noonan. j Meyer visited in Woodstock and Following the installation, a joint; Crystal Lake one day last week, social meeting of the post and auxil-1 Dr. L. B. Murphy attended the aniary was held. Impressive pictures! nual Chicago Dental convention held of the invasion of Okinawa were at the Stevens hotel in Chicago hist shown and after the movies, a light lunch was served. The next business meeting will be held on Monday, March 3, in St. Mary's-St. Patrick^ ^chool hall. Valentine Program : v For Mothers Club week. Miss Marjorie Duker, R. -'N., of Cook County hospital, Chicago, visited her parents a few days last week. Clintin Martin has returned from a visit to Jacksonville, Fla. Mrs. Elizabeth Oeffling and daugh- Thirty-ftve members of the Mothers i ter, Norma, visited in the H. Olsen club were present at the last meeting i home in Elmwood Park last Saturon Feb. 14. No special program was day. The former remained for the planned, but the ladies enjoyed com- weekend. Heating Caaaaikf Built-in fireplace drcwatns increase the heating t dojot replace central Steffans Jewelry ENJOY THE FAMOUS LTJICK ICE PRE AM EVERY DAY FLAVORS FOR FEBR / CHERRY ICE CREAM RED RASPBERRY ICE HEART IN VANILLA BUTTERSCOTCH ROYALE NEAPOLITAN NEW SPECIAL BRICK EACH WEEK END BOLGER'S DRUG STORE PHONE 40 McHENRY New Glory for your old DIAMONDS With a Modern Mounting Make your Cherished diamond appear larger, more radiant with a setting styled in the modem manner . . . the cost is surprisingly low. Mountings .90.75 and ujr SPpTTAT. Bensational Value-- ' OOOKTAI^ RINGHI W MAUI 8TBBIT--PHOHE 1SS-J--WEST HdHSHlT Coronado Home Food Freezers Now Available Seamless Nylon Hose $1.15 pr. Creepers 98c ' CfNpttl WlttKWMIfl sleeves. Assorted sisss and colors. Knit Suits *T98 Knit suits . . . step-in. style pants. Striped snirt with short sleeves. 12 Assorted sizes and colors. v -\TK » Q * • >• ii •/" - . . Drib Blankets $1.98 Crib blankets mads l> Esmond. Embossed Jacquared pattern in pink os blue. 36 x 60 GnmM&k liaMMJiitlM* 6B0RGB OOtLBlTBi Owner tai ||AiN snuKBr PHONE uamtmr «ie WlBT McBBNKT, ILL. ' "

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