1 Heaviest Rainfall in London The heaviest rainfall ever recorded In London In 24 hours was on June 16, 1917, when 450 tons to the acre fell la North Kensington, , .••••' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES "Ancient and Modern Necromancy, alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism, Denounced," was the subject of the Lesson-Sermon in all Churches of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday, May 28. The Golden Text was, "If God be fl>r us, who can be againsf us?" (Romans 8:31). Among the citations which (comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the following from the Bible: "1 will hear what God the Lord-will speak: for he will speak peace unto his peo- - pie, and to his saints: but let tfaem not turn again to folly" (Psalms €5:8). The Lesson-Sermon also in- . 4foded the following passages from Ike Christian Science textbook, ' *fecienee and Health with Key to the » . Scriptures,' by Mary Baker Eddy: '"The supposed existence of mote tha n one mind was the basic error '4>t idolatry. ... The children of God • tave but one Mind. How can good lapse into evil, when God, the Mind •of man, never sins? The standard Of perfection was originally God and man. Has God taken down- His own Standard, andhas min fallen?" (p. 470). >: v-: • ; K. J. NYE, M. D. ir. A. NYE, M. D. X-Ray, Laboratory and Physio Therapy OFFICE HOURS • Dally--9--10; 1--3; 7--9 Phone 62-R CONNEL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Hojnrs: Z&Q to 11 a. m.; 1:30 to 5 p. m. Evenings, 7 to ft Phone 238 Pries Building McHenry, HI. Phone Richmond 16 Dr. JOHN DUCEY VETERINARIAN TB and Blood Testing RICHMOND, ILLINOIS KENT & COMPANY All Kinds of I N S U R A N C E Placed with the most reliable Companiei Cnne in and talk it dfW C "hone McHenry 8 Telephone No. 108-R Stoffel & Reihansperger iMorance agents for all classes property in the best companies. Of WEST McHENRY ILLINOIS Dr. C. Keller OPTOMETRIST •nd OPTICIAN At His Summer Home, Riverside Drive, McHenry, I1L SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS All Work Guaranteed Flone McHenry 21jl~R A. P. Freund fixcavatijig Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic and Crane Service Road Building TeL 204 M McHenry; I1L S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDER| ^ Phone 127-E McHenry Our experience is at Your Service in building Your Wants DEAD ANIMALS Remove Free of Charge Phone Dundee 10 Reverse Charges MIDWEST REMOVAL CO. Twice T o l d Tales Items of Interest Taken From the Files of the Plaindealer ff Years Ag». TEN YEARS AGO A: Edgar Nye, who for a number of years served as head of McHenry's school system and who since leaving our city has been likewise engaged at Coal City and the last year att Toluca, 111., has purchased the building and stock of goods owned by the late N. A. Huemann. The Pan American Coffee mills, which under the management of George P. Powers of Chicago, has been doing business hi the Brefeld block on the West side since the fore part of December, closed the place the first of the month. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Thurlwel! and farrtily have vacated the flat over the C. J. Reihansperger hardware on the West side and "have taken up their abode in the house just west of the rail road tracks owned by the. McHenry Artificial Stone and Construction company. The canoe party from Dundee and £lgin passed through this village on Fox river last Saturday. The sixty Canoeists completed a three days* Cruise which began at Fistakee Bay, jit Elgin Sunday evening. Th£ brick work on the new Bowman bottling plant at Rihgwood is going On with great rapidity. - The walls of the big plant are climbing and already the structure begins to take on the appearance of a gigantic enterprise. TWENTY YEARS AGO Butter was .declared firm at 28 cents on the Elgin board of trade Monday. The water hydrants about the village were tested and cleaoned out this wek. Another very excellent idea. Let the good work go on. TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO The butter market remains steady. Twenty-three centsp was the official quotation. - „ .. A new cement sidewalk has recently been^ laid around the residence of N. E. Barb fan on Water street. Dog owners should remember that all dogs running at large must be muzzled during the months of June, July and August. _ The Northwestern has "bl.ow.ri" itself for a new truck wagon for the local station and has also,placed a telegraph operator at this station. Edgar Thomas, who resides west of town, recently had the misfortune to lose two valuable farm horses one of Which he was offered $215 for only a short time previous to its death. Lights of ®r Q . J WATI NEW YORK WATTFR TRUMBULL V FORTY YEARS AGO W, E. Wire, county superintendent of schools, was a caller on Monday. Howard R. Perry, who has just graduated at West Point, was calling on friends here the past week. Miss Dora Besley, who has been teaching at Genoa, 111., is home for the summer vacation. ' D. S. Babbitt, of Elgin, has been visiting friends here the past week. He expects to get located with his family in his Cottage St Pistaqua toy{ are underground business centers also A subway express banged past a man In dirty overalls with a red and white lantern In his band. He was standing beneath a ventilator and a shaft of sunlight revealed his pallid features.' lie was a trackwalker--one of the hundreds who spefid their.»working hours tramping along the long, dark tubes alert for loose bolts, broken rails or anything else that might cause disaster or delay. Here and there they flash their white lights, the red showing toward the rear, being a warning to approaching trains. On them Is heavy responsibility. Over the steel which Ihey inspect, millions ride each day. •" ' 1 * • - • •" • •" • o There are thousands of underground tollers in New York." The'subways account for an army. Dispatchers' offices are little botes down beneath the street level. Hundreds of station agents work In small platform booths. At the larger stations, there are guards who assist tit loading and unloading freight. They are the ones who, when a car seems full to bursting, pack in a few more sardinfcs. Porters get more sunlight thaft others as they sweep the stairways--usually when the stairways are greatly crowd^ ed and sweeping is extra difficult J Subway track repair men make repairs in bright light. It is artificial illumination, however, of such intensity that they actually toil in the spotlight. Between trains, they are lu furious activity. They -don't have to be on the alert for danger. A lookout equipped with a red flag, red light and a whistle keeps watch for them. At the approach of a train, he shrills the whistle,,. and the workers hop. Though they move quickly, they have, due regard for the deadly third rail, of course. 1 Train crews, in the subway seldom see daylight, except for brief flashes, except when they are off duty. Motoriuen, before they are accepted, must, undergo strict -physical examinations. Then they ape put through" a long course of training before they arg^aK lowed to handle the controller. Yet in the operation of subway trains, the human factor has bpen eliminated to a great extent. On the controller handle is what is known as "the dead man's button." Should the motorman relax pressure on that button, the train stops. And maintenance men have to be called to get it Jn motion again. It Is Impossible'for a motorman to ruo past a station. If he fails to shut off power and apply the brakes, a trip does it for him. Nor can lie pass a red signal, that carrying with It an automatic stop also. A «train can be "keyed" past a signal Imt that practice Is In disfavor because of the danger attached. A motorman can pass a danger s i g n a l , or "red b a l l , " as it is called, by getting out of his compartment and throwing a lever. Hut be must have an excellent reason and know that the rules of safety are not being violated. Considering the num-' ber of persons carried daily, the safety average is extremely high. Many other New York workers see little of the cljty in the daylight. There are those who are employed In conduit^ and tunnels. Or they go down In man* holes and do not come up until quitting time. Railroad men work underground in and about terminals. Thei^f this week. FIFTY YEARS AGO The annual sheep washing has commenced in this section and wool buyers will soon be around. The interior of the M. E. church, in this village has been undergoing quite extensive repairs, papering and painting and is much improved in appearance. L. J. Dinsmore, pastor of the Universalist church, in this village, has received and accepted a call from the Universalist church at Owatonna, Minn., and will commence his labors in his new field on the first Sabbath in July. Quite a serious accident happened with the section hands on- the railroad, near Ringwood, on Friday morning last. As they were going up the track, eleven men being on the car, a wheel broke, throwing them all into a heap on the track. All were severely bruised, and* one ftian, Charles Peters, was seriously injured, and will be confined to the house for some time in consequence. and the underground galleries of Grand Central have a number of men who call them home. There are others also who do not see daylight while they ar* working-though they are not underground. They are under water--th* toilers in the caissons beneath the surface of the rivers. e. 1***. B«ll Syndicate.--WNU 8«rvtc«. Purely Technic*! - Bil|m>--You promised to pay ipe 19 a week. : ' Fillup--Have a heart, B11L Billjip--I have a week heart, James, not a sixty-day one.--Brooklyn Eagle. RIGHTO! Boys Raise Bees to Pay for College Education Alma, Mich.--A sweet way to get an education is byr the production of honey, according to Howard Totter and Barker Brown. Both have paid their way through Alma college by raising bees. Last summe^ the two handled 150 swarms of bees, which yielded 15,000 pounds of honey. In a generous mood, the bees furnished two crops of honey. "No, sir--there's nothing like a wife to bring out all there is in a man.** "Right I sunk one fortune th&t ,1 Alibi Nero was being reproved for fiddling while Rome burned. "After all," he retorted, ""it is better than harping on one's troubles."--Kansas City Star. 1 The Average Man An average man is one who likes to feel properly dressed without looktag all dolled up like a cutle. -MOperates on Mother to Save Her Life • Sudbury, Ont--Sirs. Mike <Kmeegle, thirty years old, owm her life to the courage and resourcefulness at her twelve-year-old son Steve. Without funds to obtain medical attention, Steve performed an emergency operation on his mother. who was suffering from pleurisy. For two days the boy had petitioned doctors in Sudbury to visit his mother, who lives In a small" cottage six miles north of Sudbury. He failed - In his efforts,, however, because he lacked the necessary $10 fee. When his last effort failed he took a razor, made an incision" in his mother's back and drained out more than a quart of fluid. Provincial police visited Mrs. Snieegle and found her doing well. They said that there was no doubt but that she owed her life to her son. Poiporii in Mexico and Ciaadi A passport is not required for aif: American citizen for direct travel to Mexico aad Canada. A certificate. of Identity will serve instead. ; V Many Document* Stamped About 1,500,000 documents art stamped in government offices don every day. Plaindealera for s*le at Wattles Aviation Fan Grandma had finally yielded to the repeated urging of a grandson to ac- -oompan.v him on a flight Up and up they went until the youthful pihjt leaned back and shouted: " "Do you realize thal/we are 7,500 feej up?" "Oh, I doii't nfind that," said the old lady'bravely, "but don't you think trs cool enough for you to turn off the fan?"--Montreal Gazett«, Not Back-Fence Neighbors "Where's your home?" asked the country child of a city visitor. "In Washington," replied the city child. "Why, that's where the President lives, isn't it?" " - ' \ • "Yes," was the reply, "but not on our street-"--Boston Transcript.^ " When the Crow Is Afoot Hunger Marchers-How far ts it to Washington? ; Fa rmer--Well. If* about 60 miles as the crow files. Marcher--Yes, but how far is it if the darned crow has to walk and carry a pack with him? PLAIN ENOUGH? -- i^V, - First Hiddv--I caffl^ understand why Mrs. Plymouth RocK Is opposed to votes for hens. Second Biddy--What else would you expect from one who insists On hatching her Own eggs? :•'/* . Too Many He-i-Have you ever kissed a tn4n before? . She--Y-yes. He--Tell me hls name so that I can thrash him. . . She--But--but--lie mirfitr b«i too many, for you,, ' •*" Eiiipsif" "I noticed," remarked the purist, "Jli«t Just now you said, 'Between you and I.'." _ '"My mistake," said the other man, "What I meant to say was, 'Between you and I aud the gatepost' "--Boston 'Transcript," ,f ' ' Parado*.' • • "You say that all you wartt tO do.lt to talk plain common sense?" "Yes," answered Senator Sorghum. "The trouble is that the kind of sense referred to as 'common" is at times so exceedingly unusual.", -- Washington Star. Municipal Job "I hear your brother's working." "Yes." "How long has he been at it?" "Three months." v ."What's he doing?" J " "Six." - -, : Mrs. Nick Young entertained the Bunco club at her home, Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. George Shepard, Mrs. Nick Young, Mrs. H, Thomas and Mrs. G. Young. • Mosdames F. A. Hitchens, t. *13 Hawley and H. M. Stephenson attended Social Wheel at McHenry Thursday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Walker of Waukegan visited relatives here this week. Mr. and Mrs. Horn and son, Irving, of Crystal Lake were dinner guests of Wayne Foss, Friday. _ Mrs. Hilery Thomas of Woodstock visited in the Edgar Thomas home this week. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard and family were visitors at Woodstock, Friday. / .. ... •• . Adrian Thomas of Chicago spent •Wednesday and Thursday With Ms parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas. Mr9. Lester Nelson and children and Mrs. George Bacon , of Antioch spent Sunday in the W. A; Dodge home. ;. - ,' .., • • ' Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young and Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nimsgern spent Friday afternoon at Woodstock. Mrs. Clifton Miller and children and Miss Mildred Flanders of Crystal Lake spent Saturday with Mrs. Cora Flanders. . , ' ° •• Mrs. Edgar Thomas and Mr/. H. Thomas were visitors at Elgin Thursday. Mary Catherine Edinger of Woodstock spent the week end with Virginia Jepson. Mrs. Cora Flanders spent Wednesday and Thursday with relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and fam: ily of McHenry spent Sunday with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shaefer of Chicago spent Friday with Mr. and Mu. Joe Shafer. • Miss Elaine Jackson of Solon Mills, is visiting in the home of her grandparents, 'Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Beatty, Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Thomas and son of West McHenry spent -Sunday evening in the Edgar Thomas home. _ Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Rife of Wauke-, gan were visitors here Sunday. r Dr. Audrey Moore of Evanston, district superintendent, Conducted the' services and held quarterly conference at the M. E. church Sunday. Tne Greenwood congregation "also attended services here. ; The play, "Crazy to Reduce", was presented at the community club on Wednesday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Dates and son. James, and Mrs. Gordon of Chicago spent Sunday morning here. Frank Walkington and Fern Lester of Libertyville and Mr. and Mrs. Davis Walkington and,son of Green Bay, Wis., spent "Sunday in the Ben Walkington home, Mrs. Joe Wagner Of McHenry spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Oxtoby and family of Spring Grove 'spent Sunday evening in the M. L. Welter home. ' Frank Hawley' of Chicago spent Sunday ift the home <?f his ta:ther, E. C. Hawley. Mrs. Ed "Thompson visited, relatives hv Chicago, Thursday. E. L. Hanford of -Chicago spent the past week iti the S " W. Smith^homei:- Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters spent Monday and Tuesday at Belvidfere and Hunter. Dussel Duncomb of Chicago spent the week-end and over Decoration Day in the S. W. Srhith home. Fred Wiedrich and son, Roy, were Chicago visitors, ^Monday. Charles Coates of Genoa City spent Wednesday in the home of his sister, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper and daughter, Dorothy Ann, of Chicago spent Thursday afternoon with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith. . - ; ; . ' Mrs. S. W. Smith and daughter, .vi B^rnice, and\Clyde Hanford visited at '. ^ the fox farm near Woodstock, Thura- - I 1 -day. - * •• ,f\*., ? 4 Mrs. Viola Low was a caller tX\ ' | Richmond, Monday afternoon. | Mrs. Mildred Munshaw and Mrs. ' A , h Lora Munshaw and sister of Elgin spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Wiliam McCannon. Mrs. L. Frs(ihcisco of Woodstock spent Monday'with'Mrs. W. A. Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Schroeder spent Monday evening in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs- Frank Dixon of Bristol spent Thursday in the J. V. Buekland home. Mae and Roy Wiedrick attended, i barn dance at Barreville, Saturday evening. v The Home Bureau held a card and cootie party at the M .W. A. hall on Friday evening. Prizes were awarded in bridge to Mrs. W. B. Harrison and Mrs. L* E. Hawley. In cootie to Virginia Jepson and Robert Anderson. In five hundred to Carl Hafotrom and Mrs. Joe-McCannon. » " ; • j 1 . Rats Boss Valley, Care Not to Roam Washington.--Why a rat large enough to control acres of land should confine Itself to a particular territory Is a question which puzzles Dr. Joseph Grlnnell, of the University of California. Doctor Grinnell's report Was on a study of ^he giant kangaroo rats, a comparatively unknown species -making Its home in the San Joaquin valley, in California. According to the report, the rats "own whole square miles, to the practical exclusion, of other seedeating mammals." - Each rat has its own particular plot of ground, usually covered with rich vegetation. These plots are separated froip, each other by comparatively barren strips. Boundary lilies apparently are respected by tire entfre group. .•1s ~' ,*$9 ' • >. "IN THE MEW DEAL" - ...elect-- CHARLES E. CARPENTER democratic Candidate tor CIRCUIT JUDGE 17th Judicial District I promise to be prompt and faithful in the discharge of my duties; to be fearless, but just; and to show no mercy to criminals or racketeers. J ELECTION JUNE 5th i --^ Hay 22. 1933 - - V 1 ^ ' » w .« ' •! . i ^ 1 .J *y% I not only • I suppose that I may claim to bo the first Ford Doaler. •ids oars, but sold them and frequently delivered them myse . The "drive away" is not new; often I have driven oars from Detroit to towns in Ohio pr Indiana or Michigan to make delivery. ; There were no good roads in those days, »nd the people wher» I drove had never seen a motor car before. _ My-first, really enthusiastic customers were Country Doctors. They wefe the first to realize tht-jatyfc-Qf dependable transportation o a WldeEven°todayei occasionally hear from some of those first Ford user®. We had to teach local mechanics how to care for the oar3; T^t T. i, how Ford Service began, which is no^ found everywhere in the ^world. We believed from the beginning that a sale does not complete our transaction with our customer -- it creates upon us an obligation to see that our customer's car gives him service. Ford Dealers know their duty to the public in this respect. « ^ I can say of Ford Dealers generally that they have; been are wo of character and standing in their communities. Most of them have been with us many years, which indicates that we agree on basic business principles. The Company provides thatthemethods^sed to a.U the Ford car are consistent with.. of pe^lsrs "h° ^present Ford V-8 is the peak of our 30 years experionee. We have never made a better car. Its eight-cylinder engine is powerful and smooth running. The car is admittedly very good lookfc* •and has comfortable riding qualities. It is economical in operation because of advanced engine design and low car It -Umroomiest and most powerful car we have ever buil . • '* •