Windham Bonham ATTORNEY AT LAW Stilling Building, Riverside Dtivt McIIenrv, Illinois Saturday and Sunday Afternoons .'All Day Mondays Chicago Office--19 So. LaSalle St- Sui te 1206 - Phone State 8680 ; N. J. NYE. M. D. ;X-Ray, Laboratory and " : Physio Therapy . - o f f i c e h o u r ^ S.^|"' -iJfaily---®--10; 1--3; 7~& \ , - • Pfewr* (2 R> - * pSKL;;M; McDERMOTT /-• ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Imti: Z J» to 11 a. m.; l£tto 5 p. m. Evenings, 7 to 8 i Pkoae 258 Pries Bailing McHenry, ID. KENT & COMPANY All Kinds of INSURANCE •Y Placed with the mosWcliable Companies Crane fat and talk it "hone McHenry 8' ^telephone No. 108-R Stoffel & Reihan*pergsr durance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McBENBY - - ILLINOIS) Mr. *nd Mrs. Roy Davey and daughters and Hubert Meyers and a friend from Joilet were callers in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers Sunday afternoon. , Mr. and Mrs. Gene Condjon of Chicago visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Karls Sunday. ; , Edward Thompson and sons, Bill and Jim of Ringwood ~were callershere Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hoffien of Genera spent Sunday wfth Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller. Mr> and Mrs. William Biel of Winifield spent Sunday with Mrs. C. Downs. William J. Meyers was a Waukegan caller Saturday morning. Stephen Smith and son, Peter, and v - Our Washington -By- National Editorial Association Sunday. 0 Mr. and Mrs. John Lay and family of Spring Grope visited in the home . Mrs. Stephen Smith Tuesday- Miss Oliva Hettermann of Crystal Ljiko with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe B. Hefttermann Monday. Miss Katherine Althoff of Elgin is spending a few weeks vacation with home folks.. - - Miss Gloria King and her sister of Kenosha are spending a week" with Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyer®. Mrs. Jack Mills of Michigan is pending a few weeks in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Mertes. Mrs,' Joe Schaefer m'otored to, Milwaukee Monday. Mrs. Annie Swanson and Mrs.. Walter Graibe of Chicago are visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Mer- "ter this week. Washington, August 9--There is something spectacular and pathetic in wafching a man walk down a street with a huge purple patclf on his shabby trousers. The country isr in exact ly the same condition. Reports show that business men anxious to clothe themselves in new deal fashions to meet public approval are signing up Eugene King were Chicago callers on, Presidential agreements without even knowing when or where they will get the money to pay for their promises. The red, white and blile poster of the Order of the Blue Eagle is gaining membership „under the spear point of threatening propaganda. The employing class know full well that the crowd, swayed by governmental appeals, is absolute, intolerant and dictatorial. No secret is revealed in the "admission that the country is prepared to bow to necessity. Napoleon Bonaparte described the, present day policy of the Federal government more than a hundred years ago in the succinct declaration, "Public opinion is an invincible, mysterious power which nothing can resist." It is like a juggernaut with power to crush those who do not prostrate themselves. Over-night changes in policy inter- Mrs. Arthur Klein and Miss Regina i pretations are contributing to the K'.ein were Woodstock callers Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Welke of Chicago spent the week-end with her parerts, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Freundgeneral confusion. Now this represents another side of the picture which is concealed from the public. General Johnson's propaganda agencies pnly mention the pleasing as- Miss Francis Gurzado ,of Chicago' pects, they never refer to the aval is spending a week with Mr. and Mrs. I anche of protests coming over their Gurzardo- desks as industry asKs them to face John Britz of Waulcegan called on j facts. Instead of eliminating "red- Dr. C. Keller OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN At IBs Summer Home, Riverside Drive, McHenry, 111. SUNDAYS AND MONDAYS ^ AH Work Guaranteed Pfcotie McHenry 211-R A. P. Freund Excavating Contractor friends here Saturday evening.^ Mr.- and Mrs. Jimmie Chamberlin and daughter, Bernice, Mrs. Elmar Schroeder and family and Miss Katherine Pitzen motored out from Chicago Saturday to spend Sunday with John. Pitzen. Miss Marie King spent a. week with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hoffien at Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Freund of Chicago motored out Sunday morning to spend the day with Mr. and Mrs. S. Smith. » Joe N. Schmitt and Dr. Leo Gerlach motored to Cary Sunday. Mrs. Albert Huff visited with Mr. and Mrs. John S illing at Lily Lake Friday. Mrs. Delbert Smith of Fox Lake spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs- Ben Schaefer. J. Benolken of Minnesota was visiting with relatives and friends here last week. Miss Rose Tonyan of Chicago came out Sunday to spend a three week's vacation with her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Tonyan and family. Mr. and Mrs. Hameister of Elgin spent Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Wnf. Althoff and family. Bitter Medicia* "So the specialist put restrictions on you, did he? Which of the things he made you give up do you miss mest?" 'The $25 he charged me.*'--Boston Evening, Transcript trucking, Hydraulic and Ci*ne • Service tel. Boad Building 204-M McHenry, HL S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS - Phone 127-R McHenry Our experience is at Ypur Service in building Your Wants > . Oftra Arounj Tony Mistress--I'm glad to hear that you will be staying after your marriage, Anne. Do I knov the locky man? Maid--Oh, yes, madaapu It'# your son.--Bystander. Putting It Acroa* "I think It's a disgusting state of affairs when one reads of comedians earning more than cabinet ministers!" "Oh, I dunno. On the whole they're funnier t"--Humorist Magazine. / Let It Rain! A suburbanite in planning his home left the roof off one room. A friend asked the reason for this. "Oh, that's the shower," replied the near-city man.--Washington Star. Raising a garden makes easily belief in God. Give the Folks a Hew Deal A VACATION TRIP TO THE • STATE FAIR SPRINGFIELD, AUG. 19 to 26 The Nation's Greatest Agricultural Fair Inexpensive, Instructive and Entertaining for the Whole Family. GRAND CIRCUIT RACING, AUG. 21 to 25, INC. ALL VETERANS' DAY,« SUNDAY, AUG. 20 GOVERNOR'S DAY, . THURSDAY, AUG. 24 I ADMISSION ONLY 25c • * i tape" new regulations, so dear to the bureaucrats, are making industrialists more timorous. Just at a time when the public was willing to consider three years of unpleasant relations with the banking fraternity as a bad dream, circumstances now force a renewal of relationships. The majority of firms are agreeing to pay higher wages and to increase the number of workers by shortening the working week, must have money to fill the pay envelope each week. Until such a time as there is an increase, in sales and the prices for their products they will necessarily be forced to operate at a greatly advanced cost. Where is the money coming from? Not from the government surely! The town and city bank must do its part. Unfortunately candor compels us to declare that banks are continuing the same hard-boiled tactics which were largely responsible for the debacle of last spring. Only their deaf ears are working nowadays. It is reported that the Federal Reserve is pressing banks to call in paper considered good in view of the commodity price advances. This tightening up process, if approved by the Treasury Department, may eventually ham-string the President's recovery plans. Mr. Roosevelt probably will find it to his advantage to put the screws on banks as well as employers in order to insure fair play. The, absence of the blue eagle may ostracise the small shopkeeper or manufacturer ifi the community. Yet the presence of the patriotic insignia in the neighborhood bank may not imply that the counting-house is actually stating the truth in the slogan, "We do our part." It is well to ascertain how the bankers are treating the small business man before doing a little high-class snubbing. Government statisticians reckon the day of stationary or evtai declining population is at hand. The "present outlook is for a fixed population in this country within 20 years ranging from 140 to 146 million. This guess hinges on the maintenance of restrictive immigration. The Federal farm agencies are endeavoring to key their far-flung programs to provide an abundance of food, to make the country self-sufficient if required- "It is a genuine problem for more than 125 million acres of land have been seriously impoverished in recent years by erosion. Officials estimate that 34 million acres have been so devastated by erosion as to be incapable cf reclamation. Much of the-damage has been due to torrential rainfall and malpractices in planting. It is only at times when food is scarce that the average citizen realizes Ihis dependence on the farms. Flace-hunting which has been more or less sidetracked since the Roosevelt administration took over the reins Ttfarch 4 is still in a state of flux. It is almost impossible for patronage seekers to invade the privacy of the President's summer home at Hyde Park. Likewise Cabinet officials stall off wrathy legislators seeking jobs for constituents under the very efective excuse that politics must be subordinated to the national emergency. « The postmaster has suddenly become the source of contact with the Federal government. In each community, the post office bulletin board is transformed into an information center for merchants and consumers. The fact that all official notices relating to cooperation or non-co-operation under National Recovery Administration make the postmaster a vastly importt. cog in government machinery. r,e,ate> the majority of postal office-holders are Republicans which is not at all to the liking of the ambitious Democrats in tKe community who would like to bask in the lime light and a paying job on the Federal payroll. State and county leaders are frankly concerned as to the aftermath on party workers now denied their rewards. ' Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown attended the postmaster's banquet at Union on Monday evening. Mrs! Lulu Appley and daughter, Mary Ann, of Libertyville visited Mrs* Agnes Jenks this week-end. Mrs. $. W. Brown was a Hebron visitor Thursday. Misses Helen H£rrison7 Alice Peetf Marion Peet, Ethel Krohni Marioa Krohn, Jean Whiting, Ellen Smith, and Mrs. A. 1*. Smith attended the 4 H club meeting at Geneva on^,Wednesday. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and children of Antioch were visitors in the home of Mr. an3 Mrs, W. A. Dodge Sunday. k Mr. and Mrs. Harry Arnold oi Woodstock spent the week-end in the Edgar Thomas home. Mrs. B. T. Butler entertained the Scotch Bridge club at her home Wednesday. Prizes were won by Mrs. E. E- Whiting and Miss Ray Peters. S Mrs. Luella Stephenson and MrsJ; "Viola Low, Mrs. Wanda Todd, Mrs.' L'nnea Peterson and Mrs. Elsie James; of Richmond attended the monthly' meeting of the county Legion Auxiliary at Cary Friday evening'. Mrs. Laura Soht and daughter of Barrington and granddaughter o£: Michign, Mr. and Mrs. George Imm6;' and ^Irs- Isabelle Boyd of Chicago, Will Hendrickson of Richmond, Mrs. Malissa Gould and daughter, Jane, an<2 Melvin Wagner of Elgin called cav Mrs. Jennie Bacon. Sunday. Mrs. Agnes Jenks and daughter, Mary, of Evanston are spending a month in Ringwood. Ed Hawley of Crystal Lake spent Sunday with E. E. Hawley. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Bruce and daughter, Phyliss, attended the WLS barn dance at Chicago Saturday. Richard Peck of Elgin is spending a few days at the C. J. Jepson home Sunday callers at S. H. Beattys were George Frye of McHenry, Mr and Mrs. Alva Herbert and daughters, Caroline and Shirley of Elgin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schninder, Mr. and Mis. Harry Peet and Leon Edirger of Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson, Mrs. Robert Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Chamberlain, Miss Maude Granger and Mrs. Ratcliff spent the week-end at Lake Kegonsa. Mrs. Frank Hitchens Was a caller in Chicago Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin and daughter, Julia, and- Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Simpson and Mir. and Mrs. Max Beth and son, Billy, are spending a two week's vacation at Rhinelander, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley of Elgin were visitors in the E. C. Hawley home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kist, Mr. and Mrs. Pat Moriarty and children of Chicago were visitors in the Ed Thompr>u home Sunday. Ralph Clay and little daughter, Maxine Betty, and Dorothy Peet spent Saturday night and Sunday in Apple River and Galena. James Lawrence is spending a week in Belvidere. Mrs. Earl Whiting is spending the week-end in Chicago. Mr, and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich were visitors in Crystal Lake Sunday. . «-oxctv to<» itJP* Mrs. John Jones and son,'Neil, of Elgin were callers in the Ed Thompson home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Irving Smith and family, Mr. and Mrs. John Schaid and family, Mr. and Mrs>. Pete Wiengart and family and Mrs. Jenson attended a picnic at- Grass Lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Potter of Orento, New York, spent this week in the Ed Peet home. Mrs, E. Jensen of Chicago spent this week with Mr. and Mrs. George Young. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Mosha, Broadhead, Wis., are spending a few days in the Edgar Thomas home. Carol and Lorain^ Yankee of Ridgefield spent Saturday with Lucille Peet. Dr. Graham and Mrs. Whiting and daughter, Ardis, of Chicago spent Sun clay in the Lewis Schroeder home. The Mann reunion was held at the Edgar Thomas home Sunday, Aug. 6. Those who attended were: Mrs. Ada Mann, Broadhead, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Mosha of Broadhead, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Stokes and son and Mrs. Jay Williams and son of Zenda, Wis., Mrs. Margaret Mann and daughter, Helen, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Thurow and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Eail Mann and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Arnold, Mr. and Mrs. H. Mans and son, and Elsie Thomas of Woodstock. The Mioses Elizabeth and Carolinfe. Tenn of Burlington, Wis., and Francis Hallisy of Hartland spent) Sunday i& the Wayn© Foss home,, How About Yothvelf? "When you denounce the conduct of others," said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown, "can you be sure that you would not have Imitated it had the temptation or opportunity been your own?" UNTIL IS LEARNED BETTER used to six wood and steel In our oar 1 But the state of the art body than to better way in-* dollars for new dies,, large expensive cars afford this, because the dies That alone explains why all- U.J. vais. the beginningm a k e a g o o d car better. Until we learned better, bodies and wheels. It was the best way to make bodies--then. has advanced. ,, Of course, it is more expensive to make an all-steel fc&ke a wooden frame and nail steel panels on to iU The vclves an initial expenditure of several millions of which renders a change very costly. Cars, especially which are produced in small volume, cannot cost as much for one car as for a million. jteel bodies are not used in all cars. But our basic policy from .e discarded .ood-steel body construction not because ie lacked wood. We still have some thousands of acres of best hard wood in America. Economy would urge first, and then adopt the better all-steel body. % Quality was more important than ©xPe^e. _ we made the change. We weighed the "asons- a^r ®etaini„g a mixed wood-and-steel bodf We cotild see only one reason for retaining the metal on, instead of welding whole. That reason was. Our reason's for adopting an all-steel body is not much stronger US to use But we it was up the wood decided that •-nailing - jitrong one-piece reason's evidence of this, may have a metal extreme shock or but not crushed. an all-steel body into a it would be cheaper--for us. \ body were these: A wood-steel frame.. In all Every used car lot Rain seeps in between joints and the wood decays, surface, and yet not be of steel construction, stress the steel body remains intact--dented perfine for American climates, wood construction weakens with_age. gives A car Under ^Ste^ does°not"need wood for strength or protection. Wood is but not for the high speed vehicles of 1933. In the Ford body there are no joints to squaak. no seams The all-steel body is mobe expensive--to us odds, then, steel bodies seem preferable. have become all-steel. No one argues ... wheel, such as the Ford wheel,*needs to be to squeak, no seams but not to you.r, that an electrio&ll^ the strongest, safest, ^t#test, •°*t By all Wheels also welded one-piece steel "strengthened" by adding wood to it. The one-piece all-steel body is durable body made. That is our only reason for making them August 7th. 1933 Red Color of Royal LJvery Red Is the color of the royal livery. H 1« believed that it was adopted byhuntsmen because fox hunting was declared a royal sport by Henry II.