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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Jun 1933, p. 7

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' • . . * * ' - rj •f 9°=*=^: ^ v-. 4L« - -*£j. * *?» -"'3^~-^*??X * "SSM* ~" tf «* jeV*' Vs"*&*<**£* % "% ^^^*7.- v "^ - **• '*r<t' 4 a**--* >vul .-»* '*•*-- - ^ v - & * .-Tjt «v 'F t \ * " * " * *"\ ~ m<" ,* -"* * - '* * * •• ' ° ,' •' «-• '. • * ^ r ~ THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THTOSDAY, i rs -"~t W-lW S -u huJtj^W!, ,.-, «.i „ -v -1 •• N „ , ^ ' | ' * - ^ *" L -... '•" ' * " v ^S*--' \ • ! >- ' ~ '- ^ ' ' *' Yi. V;V-.:. '••* ' .'•:' ' •1 '• •••.•'•'.•.•" ••':•••. ! .• '. ••; :<>•". Si.i '- '^-iM.'V*v^ 1 ill v' S* V ^ Romance of Oifficial Washington Feeling of Unrest in Bird Song, Writer Says Bach individual bird song, rightly heard, with an effort to hold it single for what it Is, will create a feeling of : ^ unrest In a human listener, says Chas. E. Tracertell, in the Washington Star. This may arise because a bird is a piece of nature untrammeled by mind. It makes no attempt to correct what It Is into something It would like itself to be. It; is nature, and nature has a flaw in it, somewhere. This sad truth is at the base of all religions, and systems of-ethics. It*'fo the apple In the Garden of Eden. Man knows It, but man covers it up. The bird kuoAs it, but the bird does not conceal it He opens his bill and he sings ; atid when he sings he does so in a .distinctly minor key, to tell the whole world truly what the whole world knows. Surely this does not make the birds' songs any the less enjoyable, or: any the less beautiful. ThG sorry belief that happiness Is dependent upon laughter . is merely a modern manifestation • it has arisen, it is having its day, and it will die out, because it is false. The trtre, as told to us In the songs of the birds, will, sound, f^per. Assistant Secretary of War Harry Woodring and Miss Helen Coolldge^ i daughter of S.enator Marcus A. Cooiidge of Massachusetts, married on July 2$ at the Cooiidge home in Fitehburg, Mass.p/V 8L0CBM LAKE Will&rd Darrell was a business - caller at Waukegan Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse were/ business callers at Crystal Lake Saturday evening. Mirs. Wm. Foss and Mrs. Wm. Berg were callers at McHenry last Thursday. Willard Darrell was a business caller at McHenry Saturday. Emmet Geary of near Wauconda •spent last Thursday at the home of his father here. i . Mrs. Nina Tomisky and daughter, Lucille of Crystal Lake and Mrs. Fannie Pratt of Wauconda spent last Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordmeyer. Hx>rry Matthews attended a special ° meeting of the board of directors of the Lake County Farm Bureau at Grayslake last Thursday evening. Mrs. Earl Converse spent Wednesday at the home of her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Wm. David. Mrs. Aimed a Grantham and son Walter, of Chicago spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and MTS. G. J Burnett home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Foss and sons, Leslie and Billie, Mr. and Mrs. Wm Berg and Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Foss and two daughters of Woodstock attended a birthdky party Saturday evening at the hor$e of Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Foes at Libertyvllle in honor of their daughter, Vivian. Mm James Doyle and children of Chicago spent a few days last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. v Heffernan. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nordtaeyer and daughter, Beatrice, were Sunday supper and evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Lohman at Lake View Villa. Mrs. Lulu Quartel and Ruseel Kagraw of Plymouth, Mich., arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs, H. L. -Brooks Tuesday for a three weeks' » visit. Harry Matthews accompanied Mr. and Mro. Harry Gilkerson and two children of Grayslake to Marengo last Friday evening where Mr. Matthews and Mr. Gilkerson attended a directors meeting of the Illinois Farm Bu reau Baseball League. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dowell and daugh /ters, Alice and Estella, were callers at Waukegan last Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and «orvs, Robert and Lyle, were Sunday supper guests at the home of the former's mother at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Heffernan attended the horse races at Arlington Heights Monday afternoon. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesaey were callers at Elgin last Thursday evening. Miss Lucile Rohman, Alfred Rau and Wm. Struwe of Chicago spent the •week-end at the H. L. Brooks home. Earl Converse, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Geary and two sons, Mr. and Mrs- J. N. Zimmer and Henry Geary attended the funeral of Len Geary at Wauconda Monday. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Haas of Wau- .conda were callers* last Thursday >vening at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. John Osmun and Henry Serine of Crystal Lake were callers Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughters, Dorothy and Dolores, were callers at Woodstock last Saturday. Mir. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughters, Dorothy and Dolores, and Mr. Johnson called on friends near Racine last Sunday. -Utey enjoyed a picnic dinner. ' Willard Darrell accompanied A. DSmith and Mr. Herring of Libertyville to an auditing meeting of the Illinois Farm Supply company at De Kalk last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughters, Dorothy and Dolores, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dowell andl three sons and daughter, Alma, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping, Miss Matg^ret Esping, Mr. and Mrs. Willard Darrell ard Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons, Robert and Lyle, attended the base ball game between Lake and McHenry county at WoodstoclT Saturday. Mc Henry county *ron with a score of 12-8. Mrs. Clara Smith was tendered a real surprise, birthday party last Wednesday by a number of friends and relatives. The afternoon was spent in visiting and the serving of delicious refreshments. Mrs. Smith was also the recipient of many useful and beautiful gifts. Those who attended were: Mrs. Alice Basely, Mrs. Lucy Clough, Mrs. Cadee Dixon, MTS. Mary Harris, Bfrs. Geo. Scott, Mrs. Alma Graham and Mrs. Anna Case of Wauconda, Mrs. §. J. Russell and Mrs. Eliy.beth Bacon and Mrs. Ensc Fisher of Volo, Mm Emily Smith and daughter, Ruth Frances, and son, Russell of Edison Park, Mr. and MTS. J. D. Williams of Crystal Lake, C. K. Werden and Jos. Haas of Wauconda and Mrs. Page Smith. r POLISH LASS AWARDED NEW CHEVROLET CAH To an eight-year-old Polish laiss whose father works part time as a janitor went, scot free, the first car bailt on the assembly line operated by the Chevrolet Motor company on "A Century of Progress" grounds. The car was a gift of Chevrolet, whose president, W. S. Knudsen, insisted that the first automobile off the line be gftem--rather than toi a personage of national or local prominence-- to some Chicago school child in or below the eighth grade. Odds against the child's winning were 400,000 to one, for 400,000 tick ME Plilribus Urtum,w tliC " vi' I Official Motto of U. S. The Latin motto "E Pluribus Chum" --one from many--the official motto of the United States, and by act of congress is also inscribed on the coins, was originally proposed on August 1, 1776, by a committee of three which had been appointed by the Continental congress to prepare a device for a state'seal. The committee consisted, Incidentally, of Benjamjn Franklin, John Adams and Thomas Jefferson. Their suggested seal was not accepted, however^and it was not until June 20, 1782, that the motto Was adopted as part of the second and successful device, which was submitted by Charles Thomson, secretary of congress. It was in 1796 that congress directed the employment of "E Pluribus Unum" on the coinage. On the great seal it Is inscribed upon a scroll Issuing from an eagle's mouth. The motto itself Is an ancient tnrn of phrase, to be found in a number of classic^ authors. -- Cleveland Plain Dealer. ,</. CAP AND PERFECT The young m&n who had inherited money rang the bell on the door of the "School of Deportment." He had decided to learn how to carry himself in society. A bowing Frenchman begged him to enter; * "Vou give lessons iq deportment, don't you?" inquired the young map. " "The beet, m'sieu!" gushed the proprietor; "My system it ees perfect. Two weeks ago a yoUng man like you. m'sieu, he take only three of my lessons in deportment, and--yesterday he W^S; de|H>rted!"--Tit-Bits Magi*i»ei Heartfelt Eloquence Henry--Did you-all evah speak be-- fo? a large audience, Gawge? Gawge--Ah 'low ah did, once,.yowsah. - r ' • Henry--WhatX^id you-all say? Gawge--Ah said "Not guHtj."-- Farm Journal. ? : ^ No Plac« lor Uona "Pad. are there lions in Africa?" "Yes, son.'* "Have they got a too?" 'Wo, they have no zoo." "Then what do they do' with the lions?" -- Frankfurter Blustrierte (Frankfurt); Standard Ea(li«k Word* Standard English words are thoee Incorporated in the language by authority, custom or general consent, says Pathfinder Magazine. All good unabridged dictionaries have marks to distinguish foreign and obsolete words, while slang terms, colloquialisms and words having a purely technical meaning are also so designated. All other words listed may be accepted as standard English words or their variants. Do and did, for instance, are variants of the same word--the verb to do. It is essential that an up-to-date dictionary be used, since the language Is constantly changing. Camouflage, for instance, is now standard English, although it was not prior to World war. nal currents of water drawn through ets requiring the^entry'of"their"name^ their tub^like passages. A species of »• . ? J ' tnAViffa tfti+nA«-+Sk nnvnAwn a^laniia Wallriac Speaeplk Sponges, those simple collections of cells said to be the second lowest form of animal life, have always been known to fasten themselves permanently to some spot on the ocean bottom and never leave it until they die; food being obtained from the continaddress and school affiliation were distributed to eligible pupils just prior to the close of schools for the season. From the filled in blanks a five-yearold Winnebago Indian in full regalia, off a Fair grounds reservation, drew the winning name in the presence of Vincent Lopez, orchestra leader as principal judge, and Chevrolet and General Motors officials. Out came the name of Miss Dorothy M. Maciepewska, of 2828 W. 39th Place, Chicago, who now knows the thrill of falling heir to an unexpected fortune- No member of her family has ever owned a car. A twenty-four-year old brother unable to get work for some time past will serve as her chaffeur. Scouts located the winner late that •night and checked her eligibility thro the parish priest. Early the next morning, accompanied by the priest and two young companions who havr been promised their first ride with her Dorothy was at the General Motors building to inspect her new property --a Master Six coach in black Duco finish. The car was formally delivered to her this week. It was the first of nearly 300 Chevrolet* already built on the Fair grounds since the line got into production, but first choice is being given those who make their purchase on the grounds in the expectation of driving home in the locally-built product. sponge, hitherto unknown to science, discovered in the London aquarium, is reported to be capable of slowly creeping from a foodless area to one in which food is obtainable. It la supposed that one ^or more of these sponges entered the tanks unnoticed with sea water, and has multiplied. B«>| a Good Citiaaa Opinions probably differ as to just what qualifications a good citizen should have He should be familiar with local Issues and local affairs, not only from a study of events as reported from the newspapers, but he should read current magazines and familiarize himself with the operation of the local and national government, and he should follow the development of legislation in the national congress. He should be familiar with the records of the persons for whom he votes. He should conduct his own affairs with honesty and decency and should expect the local government affairs to be conducted in the same fashtoa. Stony Life Young Wife--Tqui, it's Just about a year since our honeymoon, when we spent that glorious day on the sands. Tom (gloomily--We little thought then we'd be spending our first annivers ®fy on the rocks.--Vancouver Province. STRANGE Bird--It's funny, Bill, this thing has no wings, but it flies almost as well as we do! Her Alibi Policeman--This wont de, madam. Tour car has been here 20 minutes. I timed It by your clock.' Lady Motorist--By ithe clock in there? Oh, you can't go by that, it's fast--Humorist Magazine, BINGprOOD Happy Clover 4-H girls met at the home of Alice, Peet Tuesday afternoon. They cut out their undergarments and sewed on them. Afterwards a picnic supper was served in Jepson woods and games were then played. Mrs. George Young entertained the Bunco club at her home, Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Edgar Thorrias, Mrs. Eld Thompson, Mrs. Thomas Doherty and Mrs. Wm. McOanron. Mr. and Mrs* William Thomas and family, Mrs. Lucy Thomas and Miss Alice Mann of Woodstock were Sun* day dinner guests in the Edgar Thomas home. Mr. and Mrs> Elmer Olsen and *»n spent Sunday with Mr. land Mrs. Thurlow York at Zenda, "fris. * ; Mi*. Viola Low and children spent Friday afternoon in the Leslie Allen home at Hebron. . « Mr. and Mrs- A. K. Burns of Qak Park spent Wednesday evening fa the W. A. Dodge home. : Vv Miss Eleanor Kihsala of Fox Lake, Mildred Kinsala of McHenry and Harriet Bobb of Chicago spent the weekend in the J. C. Pearson home. '. Wayne Foss was a visitor at Woodstock Thursday afternoon. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Fay of Wheaton spent the past week in the Frank Fay home. Mrs. Frank Dunham and children of Fort Dodge, Iowa, are visiting in the B. T. Butler home. Mr. and Mrs. William Hiene of Jeifferson Park spent Sunday afternoon in the George Shepard home. Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, Mary, of Evanston spent the weekend at the Stevens home. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Pearson spent Wednesday at Warren, I1L Mrs. Lucinda Francisco of Woodstock spent Sunday afternoon in the W. A. Dodge home. Mrs. Mabel Johonnott and son, Sheldon and Mrs. J. F. McLaughlin were visitors in Chicago, Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thompson, Jr., of Chicago spent Thursday with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson. Wm. Giddings, former cashier of the Ringwood State Bank, was visiting friends here Thursday. Mr- and Mrs. Joe McCannon and family attended a wedding at Greenwood Wednesday. ^ „ . Mrs. J. C. PeajJBllyas a visitor at Woodstock Thursdfp^fternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Foss of McHenry spent Sunday in the Wayne Fose home. Mr. and Mrs. Schlect and Mr. and jMrs. Andrews of Oak Park were Sun- HOLD ON TO YOUTH Begin Your Beauty Treatments v-r ; •• From the Inside '*=--=== 1 By Marie H. Callahan, Editor --Modern Beauty Shop Magazini Along with the passing of the socalled "good old days" we have also caSt off some of the old things that were not so good, such as sweeping skirts, hour sermons, horsehair furniture, the vogue for swooning, languishing women--and the idea that to be attractive a woman must have been endowed by Nature with a perfect, magazine-cover prettiness. Today, fortunately, fainting-, women are no longer in fashion and it is styiish to be healthy. The modern conception of beauty as typiflpd--in the popular actresses of the day is that radiant, "youthful quality, that is the natural adjunct of good health. > Agftfn it- is fortunate that nowadays just about any of us can be attractive If we have* good health, gobd sense-- and a good hairdresser. Nature liSS given us a bad deal--a now or' mouth that doesn't fit the re§t of "us or hair that is no particular color, or a figure that curves in the wrong places, we flo longer just give up in despair and frith a sigh • of resignation "join the ranks of the unbeautifur. - No, by diet and exercise we reduce or develop that unattractive part of the figure; get a hat with a line (hat makes that long nose look distinguished." by an In-* genious hairdress glorify that hair of no particular shade, and l\4 clever use of cosmetics we can even rfcmodel the shapes of our faces. ^ But--the foundation of good health must come first. No hairdress in. the world can glorify straggly, dull hair, and "facials and cosmetics can't do their best work on a skin blotchy from eating the wrong kinds of food. Begin your beauty treatments from the inside if you want to get the best results fronf your outside beauty care. All of us know we must use creams on the outside of the skin to have that soft, smooth complexion we desire. Why not URe fresh milk and cream on the inside, too? In fact, recent experiments have proved th^t one very de sirable result of drinking severs** , , glasses of milk each day is that onb' " qualify In it--the calcium--is, beelityM being a complexion aid, a very larg»^.j^v; facto*-in preserving all the' cbarae5^ {eristics' of youth. Further, milk con^ T:- > tains vitamins necessary for buildin®^rS%^^y resistance against various infection* .including those of the Skin. And of course you don't need to be told that intestinal sluggishness is a big enemy of a • clear complexion. Jjf milk, cheese, buttermilk, lepfy vegetables, clear soups, oranges and grapefruit compose most of the diet, yoq are quite sure not~to.be bothered wit* complexion troubles. For the co»;-' plesion truly reflects the condition of the general health, ,, In the matter of selecting the crehips to use on your face, of course. :. there are almost as many different . tyi>es of skins as there are people, s%- without studying your own particular ;T problem personally, even : cannot prescribe for you. But in general--take your insidli beauty treatments by building yot# dally diet around fresh milk, fruits' and vegetables, and make cleanliness*- the basis of your outside treatment* using cleansing creams or pure soap and water, depending on your lar skin. r~~ of Elmhurst were callers in the H. M. Stephenson home Sunday morning. H. M. Stephenson returned home on Friday evening from a Ashing trip at Lake Vermilion, Minn. Fred Schau of Chicago spent the past week in the home of his daughter, Mrs. L. E. Hawley. Paul Stephenson of Ann Arbor, Michj, spent Saturday night with his Miraci* Maa "Doctor, when this injured hand heals, will I be able to play the piano all right r "Why, certainly." • "Doc, you're a woofer, I could play it before r On Wk W«k Miss Slater--Are you living in ths handsome house left you by your aunt, Colonel--the house you went to lair about? OoJonel--No, my lawyer there.--Pearson's Magazine. Boy, His Hamhle Opiaiaa Motorist (inquiring his way) am I all right for the zoo? Bright tad--As far as I know you are, mister, but I'm not running the zoo.--Montreal Gazette. If It C««M Talk-** A rolling pin which has been in the same family for more than 150 years is still being used by a family at Olathe, Colo. The rolling pin, made of hard wood in ah unusual design, has been handed down from generation to generation. Air View of Fort Knox Conservation Corps Camp % S« You I "After all," says a politician, "Great Britain and America speak the «eame language." "Oh, yeah?"--The Humorist Magazine. UNANIMOUS day guests in the W. A. Dodge home. Parents, Mr. and Mrs. EL M. Stephen- They were accompanied home by Mrs. Dodge and Mrs. Ray Shafer. The Ladies' Aid society will hold an all-day meeting at the home of Mrs. Jennie Bacon Friday. Bemice Smith and Mrs. Waterfall attended the Fair in Chicago Thursday. Roy Wiedrich returned home Friday from the Woodstock hospital where he underwent an operation for appendicitis. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nimsgem and family and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and family spent Sunday In the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. Hanford, Mrs. Coiford Mrs. Chick Anderson and Frank uWdwood of Chicago and William Lanburg of Detroit spent Sunday in the S. W. Smith home. Charles Coates of Genoa City spent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mrs.. Nellie Harrison and daughter Miss Dorothy Peet and the Yankee children of Ridgefield spent Sunday in the Ed Peet home. Mr. and Mrs. George Luniley and daughter of Renville, Minn., Mr. and Mrs. Ed Westerman, Estelle Lumley and Mrs. Kellogg of Chicago were callers in the J. F. Stephenson home Saturday morning. They were on their way to a picnic at Wonder Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Stephenson joined them later at Wonder Lake. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens and Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hawley and two daughters spent Sunday at Holy Hill, Menomonee Falls and Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Buckland, J. V. Buckland, Miss Flora Taylor and Mrs. Cora Flanders spent Sunday at Wing Park, Elgin. Mrs. F A. Hitchens spent Wednesday in Chicago. F. A, Hitchens, Cv L. Harrison, and three daughters, Lom» nie Smith and two daughters, Jee 1 McCannon, Ed Peet, Fred EppeL Clinton Martin and Tony Freund at~ tended the Home Bureau tour «t Grayslake and Mundelein Friday. At* Mundelein they went through thechurch and grounds and at GrayslakS* through the gelatine ractory. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Harrison, iSfeand Mrs. S. W. Brown, J. V. Buck> land and Miss Flora Taylor attended the open installation of the Nigfcl Templars at Woodstock, Wednesdays Mr. and Mrs. Will Schroeder andl granddaughter of Milwaukee speat from Thursday until Saturday in tbe Lewis Schroeder home. Miss Carol Yankee of RidgfieM spent last week with Lucile Peet Mise Lorraine Yankee is spending thia week in the Peet home. Miss Gudrun Milander of Woo#^ stock s>pent Sunday with Ethel • : i" ' . • Affifateirs ' Though scientists are convinced tfefti - crocodiles nnd alligators belong te th4 same family tree the natural habitat# ' of these reptiles as we know.them te* day are on separate continent*. Croc* odiles are found only in Africa southern Asia, while alligators are aft* tives of the Americas. wt of fellow is J ones T* "Well, he means welL" "So you think him a nuisance, too." 8ha-Do > you rem struck by my beauty? i, dearest. It was j masked ball.--Boston Transcript- No Stopping It ~ Teacher--Willie, what Is an adultT Willie--An adult is one that has stopped growing except in the middle City Star. < . The change of the moon has no affect on the weather or at least none ever has been determined. There is no evidence to support this belief. The change does cause a slight tide in the atmosphere, but this dees set tgseti weather conditions. : "A H. ^ Airplane view of Fort Knox, Ky., one of the many civilian conservation corps conditioning camps which Uade s has established throughout the country. The men are farming & lines for "chow." ",'m That mb is much boaored whoea neighbors think and talk about trim as his mother does.--Chinese Provsrfa. ?%-3 : - •vv--•• • , '"•o- 33 COSTS LESS THAN Sticky and hot vT^ not a breath of air. But a fan soon stirs up a good gusty breeze. The electricity that brings you this comfort is cheap. It costs less than a third of a cent an hour to run a 10-inch fan in the average home served by the Public Service Company of Northern Illinois. Fans are low-priced, too: Small sUses are now less than $2.50 0 Public Service Stores and other LOCAL ELECTRICAL DEALER& Mi

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