McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jul 1931, p. 2

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t*,< !| Yvl ; |y V&-:W m.. •^'o m~ py> ••eft' H" i iiife&l %'-l. $k i^;'- W> •fi:* "• Washington >,:;: Letter ' >•* -' --By- National Editorial Aaaadatfcm Mr. and Mrs. B«n J. Schaefer and children motored to Vol© Wednesday night, where they visited Mr. and Mrs. George Miller and family. LeRoy Smith of McHenry spent a few jdaya with his cousin, Donald Michels- His brothers, Elmer and Raymond, stayed for a few days also after the former returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Guzsardo children of Ingleside visited the lat- Washington, July 29--Decision of tcr's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William President Hoover to stay in Washing. Oeffling, Sunday. ton for the summer insures govern- Mrs. Richard^ Guyser and children mental activity and the presence of a returned to their Chicago home after multitude of minor government of- j j)aving spent three or four weeks ftcials who would otherwise take long wjth relatives and friends, vacations at the taxpayer's expense, j Miss Marie Miller of Vblo spent The time has long passed when the ( Wednesday evening and Thursday town became colorless and tranquil J with her cousin, Miss Helen Schaewith the departure of the legislative fer." body. The city has retained its war- j The Pistakee Bay-Johnsburg picnic time reputation as a world center and was a fine success- Many people from expanded so it is no linger standard- surrounding towns were present and ized by seasons or Congressional ses- everyone went home well satisfied, sions. Caridor compels the admission Miss Olive Hettermann of McHenry that the wheels of government run spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. smoother with Congress away. The an(j Mrs. Joe Hettermann. Congressional mania for intervening j JMr. and Mrs. George Obenauf and at the least possible excuse into the children of Grayslake visited Mr. and affairs with which the legislative Mrs. James Chamberlin Saturday group has no concern or real interest evening. has a tendency to over-shadow in- J Miss Catherine Pitzen of Chicago dustry and government agencies. It visited her father, John Pitzen, Satwill be recalled that a nation-wide urday and Sunday. ^ survey of business last winter brought j Ralph Schroeder and Walter an overwhelming vote from cham- Schroeder of Chicago are spending 1 that mum has the fnr nfls school. bers of commerce favoring the shutting down of the Congress as H relief measure to the country. Men and women who have bfign designated or mentioned as delegates to the nominating conventions of the two major political parties find them tfheir vacation with relatives- Misses Mildred and Susan Frett and John Freund of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Schaefer visited Mr. and Mrs. Peter Schaefer Sunday. Stanley and John Pacek were CM- ! c«go visitors Saturday and Sunday, selves in demand. Their views on con- John Pacek remained in Chicago with troversial political and economic sub-, his sister and brother a few days, jects are as eagerly sought as their | Mis8 Helen Smith of Woodstock opinions on the leading candidates for spent Sunday with her parents the Presidential nomination. The vet-1 Miss Josephine Guyser of Chicago erans among the delegates, usually spent the week-end with Miss Genemembers of Congress, are solicited vieve Adams. Mrs. Nick Freund entertained tto Bunco club at her home Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awaviwl to, Mrs. Ben Justen, Mrs. Ed. Thonqweii, Mrs. N. J. Adams .and Mrs. Thomas Doherty. At the close of the games luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. M. Nimsgern and family of Spring Grove spent Thursand day in the Nick Young home. Mrs. Laura Waterman and daughter, Laura, of Moscow, Idaho, are visiting friends here this week. Mrs. Lucinda Francisco of Woodstock is visiting old friends here. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter of Antioch spent Thursday in the W. A. Dodge home. Mr. and Mrs. G. JI. Shepard, and family returned honft* Thursday evening, from a trip to the Wisconsin Dells. Mrs. W. A. Dodge, Mrs. Ray Sfiafer and Mrs.* Harvy Bumgartner and son, Harvy, spent Friday in {h* George Bacon home at Antioch. Mrs. Davis Walkington and son, Davis Leo, of McHenry spent Friday in the Ben Walkington home. Mrs. Ray Peters and Mrs. Viola Low were visitors in Woodstock Fri day. Mr. and Mrs. Gy E. Shepard and family, in company with Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Claxton of McHenry, spent the week-end with relatives at Iroquois, 111. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Biggers, Harvey Biggers and daughter, Gloria, of Chicago spent the week-end in the Nick Young home. Mrs. Frank Dix and children spent the week-end at Kenosha. ^ . 1 Rose Wice and Theresa Francona of Chicago spent the past we£k in the Roy Neal home- Miss Shirley Neal is visiting in the home of her aiint in Colon, Michigan. Mrs. J. D. Smith of Urbana and daughter and children are visiting with Mrs. Mary Hodge. - Mr. and Mrs. Mark Jtfatson and I,"**®! ttiNp DMer.att W Wwa* Ifr - Tfcat ho*rffrar, l a (tha thet University of WtaoMln, twd daughters and two sons of Jfi Caldwell, lumfver man of Rio, are In the freshman class. The two girts, Mabel and Bernice, are twins, eighteen years old. They are in the college of letters and science. The boys are Byron, twenty, and Donald, twenty-one. Byron Is In the' commerce department and Donald major- "nig In geology. Three other members with more persistence because their peter Freund and sbn, Loyal, and experience favors their appointment nephew, Gerald Miller, motored to! family, Mr. Francisco <and Mr. and to the important platorm committee, winfield Sunday where they visited! Mrs. David Stanley and son, Dwain of This committee which drafts the plat- Mrs. Peter Freund who Is in the sanform on which the parties define their itarium for a length of time, positions regarding current issues is Mr. and Mrs. James Chamberlin all-powerful. Therefore, the organ- and daughter, Bernice, and nephew, ized crusading groups anxious to as- Walter, motored to Wisconsin Monsist in framing the planks for the day afternoon. party are at work early in the sea-j Gerald Ball'of Chicago is spending son utilizing various methods of per- his vacation at the home of Mr. and sfision- It requires considerable time Mrs. Joe King s to shuffle the cards so that the party's Mr. and Mre. Anthony Oertel of achievements and promises can be Woodstock visited Mr. and Mrs. Geo. exploited with the emphasis that is Michels Saturday given to their denunciations of the Mr. and Mrs. Howard Simpson and opposition s shortcomings. | children and Mr. and Mrs. John Dean The aspirations of various cities to and children of Chicago visited Mr. play host to the Democratic and Re- and Mrs. George Michels Sunday, publican conventions next year are Mrs. 0ertel |and daughter, gradually taking shape. The bidding Marie> and ^ Rack an<J was started by Philadelphia with the filing of an application for the Republican conclave. The actual award will not be made until late in the fall or after the Christmas holidays when the national committees of the two groups present at meet for this purpose. A number of Misses Rose factors govern the selection of a con- Schaefer, Emily Semon and „ _ is politic"ali 7, ge^og r1ap Ih yl ea?InMdee,dW, ht£he °dvoda- Schaefer wasl* th® Wil»am Kelley home, TW unable attend the rt bein„ iU, day afternoon. DUrS psychological feature of a convention at the time. Boys present were: Lyin a certam state is ordinarily stress- man Miller, Charles and Raymondcaf? ***** M<*day here. se!51®2S ? f national com- Schaefer, Walter Brefeld, Clarence' „ El C- L E irnttMs E.d. sut. .sk5 it. two w- a„d K.yrtond Smith and Arnold An- " ~ RRN\A':V?.L°/!M^"!H!;RAR? Pi.y.d .„d. de. daughters and Peter Ferlzer of Chicago visited Mr. and Mrs. George Michels Tuesday. Fred Miller was pleasantly surprised on his nineteenth birthday. the party Mueller, Rose Marie Emily Woodstock were v.callers in, the William Kelley home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Simpson entertained the former's father and brother of Benton, 111., over the- week-end. Fred Schau of Chicago is visiting in the home" of his daughter, Mrs. L. E. Hawley. Mrs. Roy Neal and children, Rose, Wice and Thiesa Francona, spent Wednesday at Kenosha and Thursday at Waukegan. " Joe Weltei; of Chicago spent Stit»" day in the M. L. Welter Dome, Mr and Mrs. Harold Kelley and daughter spent Sunday with relatives at Belvidere. Mrs. Harold Whiting of Chicago is visiting in the Lewis Schroeder home. n.^r- Mre. Max Beth and son, Billy of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. J. McLaughlin and daughter, Julia, spent the past week at Oconomowoc, ^ Mrs. Albert Purvey, Mrs. George Jones and Mrs. Harold Blumb called Thura- Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of igo spent Monday her Mrs. E. C. Hawley, Mrs. of a room. %tfvering in a |K#ir lfft of average 'fltsa would hardly be lai1!* «Mra«h4<> havt^ii^Mlenfng affect the revevberttien Do the divck «s a whole Mas)dans generally prefer to have their Immediate surroundings bare and' reverberant. Fahlic Most Appreciate TWsa Artists may produce excellent designs, but they will avail little unless the taste of the public Is sufficiently culUvadad qppredqt* Msson.' • *' v --AcMiieaa Bfagadae. Malls'* Garage Phone Oil, prthihT'in* ^ol'k^jJft^wishfng P.K, n« indicate that Senatt or0 TBLo rWah", hoinneg toof; Mrs. John Hiller, Mrs. John M. Pit. ttn and Mr and ^ j j the stormy ^treh of the Republican motored to E, in Thursda d side m the Senate, is arming for a jlt, . u' T„ „ * IFF TONNDTRE^NNR^'TN^L^SN Smopwn «»ntn«ThUi5 interpret. Willi.m AKhoff T few d.ym' SSft ad here as a move on Borah's part to weelc ' yip h'mMlf with inf.nation not m„ EUm!| Althoff of HcHrary yi,. ber«.ltod it<,d Mi,a taK) H.ttern^n . Out Setter from vie Idaho legislator few days last week „ »«"»«' Tony.n Vl.lto4 hi. «***, more effective than a passport from Donald Hettermann Sunday. V' IS! *?Teir l§ Mrs- Walt€r Hollander of Chicago obvious, as Borah has been the lone spent a few day last with her mother champion of Russian recognition for Mrs. Joe Thelen mower, years and the Soviet is grateful to1 w„ t.„.. , .. -M'T'«nd Wklter Schro^ter J world th*t chances .re th.t . gag will George Mueller VOLO . « . -A- A. , John Patterson, Jr., and be necessary to keep their attentwn Johnson visited Mm. ROM on domestic problems when Congress Sunday* convenes. They all want to tell the people via the Congressional Record ci their travels and "impressions." The, failure of the Department ofi "-m as m . , -- , ____ Justice to approve powerful demands Monday Racine, Wis., for a Presidential decree or embargo I i> , . . .... on oil importations may precipitate1 gDent J«l»t more trouble for the administration. i:v , " ere re^a' Whether their protests against the, m ir t. activities of the Federal Farm Board an?Iiy! ? ,f ^'if Fl*h®r Mr. are well-founded or not, it i« assured ed t th„ . ^ 's^r and family callthat the wheat marketing problem A °LMt- and ^s- R'ch" will share the spotlight with oil.' *#_ Waukegan Thursday. These two products of the mid-west' „ ^ r"u5?%^ f,™ and and southwest states are bound to ?„° Libertyvflle called at the home figure prominently in legislation and 2L /' " ' Lloyd Flsher Tttesp o l i t i c s . N a t u r a l l y , t h e c i t i z e n s i n * ? , v , ' these localities are more absorbed in Sf/u W*Uii' *arm for Mrs. toe subjects close to their pocket ^7 . past two years» books. The stereotyped arguments I™:1..6" s.,8eri0U8,y.. iU Saturday "rl7S?,d Mrs* Prank Stonebraker attended the theater at Crystal Lake, r nday evening. Roy,Neal entertained fourteen y^ung people at a weenie roast at rT .r ' Tuesday evening. " 4»f orget the "Ringrwood Homeoming Saturday, August 1st The Home Circle will serve a cafeteria supper and the choir will put on^ Negro M,n»tKT to tb. e.enin* Cb.rgeawill b.2fcfor uluit. ud lte for children. T.""r- ant Mrs- Herbert and Thomas Peters of Woodstock, Jane Gould and Melvin Wagner of Elgin were aillers in the S. H. Beatty home Sunday Dinner gueste^S Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frev and f«m •€k*on •"d fwnily of Solon H *r-^ Mrs. George Harrison and ***' C^arl- SI and daughters spent Sunday aftar. w><» »t Crystal Lake. Ir^n« Mrs" Carlson and Anderson of Woodstock spent W? eVemnr ^ ^ Alec And^S Ruth Owen and Edward Harrison °f Elgin spent the week-end in 1* °«orge Harrison home. MfUhew8 of McHenry and Kirk Schroeder spent from Sunday until Tuesday as guests with the J. F. McLaughlin family at Oconomowoc, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Davis and Eugene Thomas, of Iroquois, I1L, spending the week Shepard home. M the son, are about American isolation and foreign morn,n^ with appendicitis and was !S^«lement» ^ not weigh heavily nZZn .®Iiza^th with them. f W0: %-V ' ? I- ' f . - > •.' 1,'. Long-Lived Twitst the oldest twins In Wlsconrfn live In Port Washington, Is asserted by friends of Mrs. Katherlne Kaiser, and Mrs. Mary Dunglingw, ^ghty-five years old, who have lived there more than Sixty year$. The twins are daughters of the Delles (Emily, one of the first Luxembourg faml- Ugs to settle In the state. Both worn- . 16 are active, keeping up their homes, Sid enjoying travel. They make regar trips to Clilcngo and Milwaukee 'to visit sons and daughters, always traveling without aid. Mrs. Dungllnger has adopted all conveniences and en- J*ys them, although her sister still candles and oil lamps to light the t.--Indianapolis News. T : , Paris No U>|« "WaB^ Paris Is no longer a walled city, the ^fortifications having been razed following the World war. At that time tfcey measured about 22 or 28 miles la Circumference and Ineloaed an area of •lunif !tf> «m«rf mtlr>g Condell hospital at Libertyville where he underwent an operation. Robert Board of Chicago spent the |>ast week at the Dowell home. Mrs. A. E. Case and family, Mrs- M. E. Smith and Mrs. Anna Case were Waukegan visitors Thursday. Arthur Warkerow attended " the show at Barrington Saturday night. Mrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grayslake called on her parents Mr. and Mrs. Harry Passfield Saturday- v Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gottschalk of Lake Zurich spent Sunday at the Lloyd Fisher home. Mrs. Richard Dowell and family, Milton Dowell and Robert Board motored to Grayslake Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family spent Wednesday evening at the Sylvester Wagner home. Vernon Baseley is on the sick list. Howard Anderson is now employed by Herman Dunker. Milton, James, Lloyd and Ellwood Dowell; Earl and Howard Herominus, Mr. and Mrs- Lloyd Fisher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer GottacWalk and Arthur Walkerow aU%nd«l the ball mum si Bargained With Bandit It Is better to have bargained lost than never to have bargained it an.' That Is the motto of Abraham Rosen8teli), who conducts a Baltimore tailoring establishment. When a bandit entered his shop recently he held out |2, at the man's demand for $8, and then offered to split "fifty-fifty" with the robber. The man refused to split, but Mr. Roaensteln claimed a "moral victory.** "For," he told detectives after It had happened, "he wanted $8, I had only $2--a moral victory. He dldnt get agmt he was after." jjalU«wm» FULL LINE OF PERMANENT WAVES $7;f>0 value for IS.M. $10 values far $8.09 $U valuea for rio $13.0# STOMP A NATO'S Recognized Beauty Artists «f America and Abroad Tel: 641 226 Main St, Woodstock Open evenings until 10, D. S. T. PMTI Street, MeHeary W:' $ >:-v ttajs*'. » -»:v W The DeVaux 6-76, creation of Norman DeVaux and Col. Elbert J. Hall, two men who have won national reputations in the automotive industry, is cm display today in the showrooms of Hawley Schneider De Vaux Company, local DeVaux deal#*^:* At upper left is shown custom sedan model of the new De Vaux displayed locally for the first time this week. Sedan interior views are shown above. At the left is view of the engine, designed by Col. E. J. Hall of Liberty motor and Hall-Scott fame. It develops over 70 h.p. and is the first Lhead type passenger engine with 6-port intak S T O R Y a p t e f NEW TwmjiQUi THE world's fiunous chefs may all be men, but women cook most of die 350,000,000 meals served each year in the northern Illinois Communities served by the Public Service Company. And they're meals to be proud of, too! The art of roasting ham in a brown-sugar crust has been borrowed from the South. A ®ecipe-£ot feather-light angel, food cake-has freen passed from one generation to the next. ^The secret of rolling out puff paste for apple fbie was discovered in an old cook-book. These are tricks-of-the-trade moct women knofe fittTifyring mtkt^ars, things hen bapptn- $ng in tbt kitchen. New ovens with auto- .poatic heat controls and automatic timers liave made cooking less of a sleight-of-hand jperformance, more a science. There are flectric beaters to mix batters better--in half ihe time, with one-tenth the effort. Mechanical refrigeration is coming into common use ind with it a chance to cook with cold. These are developments homemakeri had no notion of a dozen years agt>. They played no part in the kitchens where they learned their cooking lessons. Since the new cookery is so intimately tied Hp with the electric and gas appliances the ^Jpublic Service Company sponsors,'the Company is offering a sort of post-graduate course f|n cooking to interested customers. Every day its Home Service Department is dramatizing |§he new kitchen in vivid, practical terms. Last year, 100,000 women in northern Illinois attended the free schools the Company's Home Service Director and her staff of assistants staged. Some of the schools were held in huge auditoriums, were attended by 3,000 iqpmen--and men, Some were hel4 in little church-parlors where not more than 30 people could be crowded in. Booklets brimming recipes were distributed. Tfce Home Service Department does not cflf- . fine its activities to meal preparation. It goes into the dicing room and suggests attractive, proper table settings for any function. It goes into the home laundry and demonstrates improved methods for washing, drying and ironing clothes. , Every dajr letters come to the Department asking for advice--what to serve to a dinner party of eight--how to can spinach--how to iron men's shirts on a rotary iron--how to remove an ink stain from a linen table runner. To keep up with new developments, the Company maintains an experimental kitchen. Here every recipe the Home Service Department recommends is thrice-tested. Here new * ways of doing old things are evolved. Here the appliances offered for sale in Public Service Stores are wed daily «p determine their -.v effectiveness. m v . . . s ^Tlie Public Service Comparer is nor aloneRfck ^ pioneering the new kitchen. Newspapers and magazines are giving splendid assistance. But, because of its association with the appliances that are making the new era possible and its familiarity with the needs of customers, the Company is in a particularly good position to do a thorough, practical job of teaching die new home-lore. And it is proud of its opportunity to help women solve their home problems, to shew than how they can make the best pmibleMMoftbegassndeUctrkitytbtyartbitymf. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY v: OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS W ' Tim b At afctft •/ * Jfrim if tfiries ctoitkling tbt ehnhpmtm tf tit FnUk Stnkt Com^mjtf Northern Illinois and thie servict it is hinging * the #rt+ into which Chicago is growing. Copies tf previous chapters will he mailed yon if yom will write tt the Company, 72 West Adams Street, Chicago t i l I K U I I • # M « ' » • M v N • R T M « • N « WM Afe. r

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