April 13,1934 ;Vf A' »p^f -' Ifew King and Queen of W'.' Leopold III and his queen, Astrld, who became the new rulers of Rel^ium after the tragic death of King Albert, who was killed by a fall while mountain climbing. NOW IS a Good Time to Have YOUR Tractor Looked Over Our Shop Is McCORMICKDEERING SERVICE Headquarters GENUINE IHC PARTS Vied Don't Delay -- Our Shop Can Handle Your Job Quickly Now ^fTOUR tractor has important work ahead of it. Let us X look it over and tell you what it needs. There is no : charge for inspection--and when work is needed our prices •re reasonable. We have the experience and the equipment-- you are assured a first-class service job when you tarn your McCormick-Deering Tractor over to us. Adams & Freund PHONE US AND WE WILL COME OUT ANO INSPECT YOUR TRACTOR £ ^;vWr SLOCUM'S T.aitk . . J..' . v ' Sat- John Blomgren was er at Grayslake last Thursday. Henry Geary and son Jack business callers at Giiayslake urday. Harry Matthews attended » tor's meeting of the Lake County Farm Bureau at Grayslake last Thursday. Earl Converse was a business caller at McHenry last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping were callers at Crystal Laxe last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter Frances were callers at Crystal Lake last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Brooks spent last Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Larabee at Bristol, Wis. Louis Pearson of Libertyville spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Shaffer of McHenry spent Sunday afternoon at Carroll and Charles of Bristol, Wis., were Monday evening callers at the call- homes of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Brooks and Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Fred N'ordmeyer spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Hierzing. Mrs. Arthur Scott and two daughters and Miss Betty Hauri of Woodstock were callers Saturday morning at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred 4- VOLO John Hutzel of Chicago _ Thursday here with ner parents, *Mr. and Mrs. William Dillion. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield and family called on Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dalvin at Wauconda Tuesday. John Wagner visited Nick Miller at the St. Theresa hospital Thursday. Mrs. Harry Maypole of Fox Lake called on Mrs. Fred Casper Thursday. Misses Edna Fisher and Genevieve Radschweit of Waukegan spent the weekend here with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd "We're S lk Unless We 7 link" . i ' r • LEONARD .1BARRE&* A,salesgirl in partment stores TeL 186 Pearl St. McHenry the home of Henry Geary. Mr. and Mrs. Hoffman and children and Frank MWholland and son Lau-j Fisher Mrs. Wm. Foss. ' f n 8£e ' ^ .Willard Darrell was a business 1 Arthn^K^ tt ° ^ ^ S" «l.er at W«uk6g.n last S.turd.y. d° •ning, for the benefit of the St. Joseph church. ^ The Yolo cemetery society met ntf the home of Mrs. "Frank King Thursday. Four tables of airplane bunco, and two tables of five hundred were played. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Lloyd Fisher, Miss Miriam King, Mrs. Joseph Passfield, Mrs. Frank Hironinuis. Mrs. Joseph l«nzen, «nd Mrs. Albert Rosing. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oakes and family of Chicago called on relatives and friends here Saturday. Herman Dunker attended the Agricultural Adjustment meeting at Madison, Wis., recently. I Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter visited j Mrs. Anna Case at Wauconda Thursday. Mrs. Charles Dalvin and daughters *>f Wauconda called on her sister, Mrs. Joseph Passfield Saturday. Mrs. Hudson and Mrs. Carlson of Winnetka visited Mrs. Frank St. George Thursday. Mrs. William Waldmann and Adolph Waldmann of Chicago spent a few days here with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family, and Mrs. Esse Fisher, were Tuesday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Lohmann at Libertyville. Miss Ellen Magnussen of Fremont called at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Lloyd Fisher Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Waldmann and family spent Sunday in Chicago at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Waldmann Mrs. Lloyd Fisher will entertain the Volo cemetery society May 3, at her home. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker and family spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Ritt at Algonquin. Mrs. Graffe and daughter of Terra Cotta, Mrs. Joseph Vogt and daughter of Round Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dunker, Mrs. Mary Dunker of Crystal Lake, Mrs. Mary Hutzel of Chicago, William Dillion of Volo, visited Mrs- G. A. Vasey, the past week. Miss Marian Barkly of Chicago, E. Williams, Morri* Lowell and Robert Townsend and Mass Hazel Townsend of Round Lake spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson. Rev. and Mrs. Taylor and family of Wauconda spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis and family of Slocunrs Lake called at the home of Mrs. E. Bacon, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Passfield and family were Grayslake callers Tuesday. Mr, and Mrs. Charles Rushing of Eldora, 111., spent the weekend here with the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Passfield, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Frank St.George, and Mrs. Earl Donley, attended the card party and dimce at the Vasey school Saturday evening. Mrs. Roy Passfield won first prize in five hundred. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kruppa of Efranston spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mr*. Frank St. George. Mirs. Arthur Wackerow of Slocum's Lake was a Sunday dinner guest at the hoine of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher. U Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Detrich of Chicago were callers Sunsay at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks.- Mr and Mrs. Wm. Berg of Griswold Lake were Sunday evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Foss. Mr. an<^ • Mrs. Elmer Esping and Mr. and Mrs. Willard Darrell spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. LaDoyt Matthews at Forest Park. They also called on Mr. and Mrs. Earl Prouty at Brookfield. Mr. and Mrs. Geo Lundgren and Miss Nelson of Wauconda spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Blomgren. John Nestad spent Sunday with friends in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and sons Robert and Lyle spent Sunday afternoon .at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Roselein at Cary. W. E. Brooks and son Chesney and Wilbur Cook attended a farm sale near Lake Zurick last Wednesday. Chesney Brooks Misses Neva Toynton, Ellen Harris, Kenneth Granger and Mrs. Darwin Granger of McHenry attended the opening day of the flower show at Navy Pier in Chicago last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Zunmer and daughter Joan of Palatine were Sunday afternoon ami evening guests at the home of Henry Geary. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter Frances spent Sunday evening at the home of Mir. and Mrs. Ray Dowell. Russell Cook of Wauconda was a supper guest last Friday at the home of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Cook. Mrs. Jos. S. Haas of Wauconda spent Monday afternoon at the home of her sister, Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Esping, Mr. and MJrs. John Blomgren and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Lundgren of Wauconda attended a Country Life Ins. Co. entertainment at the Libertyville Township High School Saturday evening. Elmer Esping appeared on the program in a whistling soiu. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son James Howard of Crystal Lake were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Whiteman and children of Highland Park spent Sunday at the home of Henry Geary. Mrs. Celea Knox of McHenry spent Saturday at the home of her father here. Mr. and Mrs. Q. A. Bevans of Des- Plaines spent last Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Darrell. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Larabee and sons Tartar Princes* The Nation Votes for the FORD V-8. Registration figures for the first three months of 1934 show Ford far out in front of the next nearest make. In-built value, beauty, economy, comfort and safety all axe features in the new Fords. Unquestionably tho trend is to the Ford V-8. SOME REASONS FOR FORD LEADERSHIP Featmrts tfFord V-8 for 1934 Pmmdim no other tar V-Type 8 Crliodet En sine .... . . . $2595 Striddlc-Mounted Deirimg Pinion . . . . . 2 3 5 0 Torque-Tube Drive ...... . . . 1125 . . . 1545 WakM Steel Spoke Wbeds . . . . . . 9 2 0 0 I Wf> T. O. B. Detroit. Maty hrau through UaJrerwal CfWtf Compamy. A Ford V-8 "deliTered" price It the total cost to you--BO < JW V-8 Radio Program, Fred Waring and Guest Start Sunday and Thursday Evenings, Columbia Network WATCH THE FORDS GO BY Dr. Charlotte Do **0Here Davenport, Who arrived in Washington the other day, was born In Russia, a Tartar princess, in 1824. and is nearing ber one hundred and tenth birthday. She says she has never been 111 in her life. She studied music under Llsrt and among tier friends hare been Robert Louis Stevenson, Admiral Dewey and Rudyard Kipling. Doctor Davenport has had three husbands and is the mother of 18 60ns, the first of whom was born when she was thirteen and Is now ninety-seven years old. think. Any num' been given for Hi. economist has !:> of little avail m , pened unless l i t e With it the itViM'; The salesgirl fiII i• unless we tiiir.k ' of our large des recently quoted s having said. This world crisis >as waked me up. never before had h o u g h t o r r e a d bout public af- •ilrs. I never even •othered about how ' voted. But now 1 , ee that we are all unk unless we all hlok." This ecoi o m i c c r i s i s h a s akened up a lot •f people, it is rue we are fill unk' uniess we r of reasons have depression. Every special idea. It Is iscuss how it hapsuggestion carries • ion of a remedy, right. "We're' sunk When work was easy to obtain in ! money was plentiful, we yielded • r Judgment to the pressure of i>rv?:-.»ss and accepted without quest'on he statement that the golden «?:<» h i arrived and good times were with •;<* forever. We did not think. We in ihe other fellow do the thinking fur us We are now suf ferlng the conswinences. Many persons have the that thinking con cerns only ihe pr.-sent. There Is a prophetic element in It. The wisest men think fur into the future. When we are In trouble we expect to find our way out by the same way we got Into the mess. We must think our way out and noi leave it to the^bllnd chance of fate. Not only in fln.inclal but also In moral values, we are sunk unless we think. Many of the crimes would never have been committed if persons had only thought before they acted. Crimes are caused by uncontrolled emotions and evil Impulses. In the heat of anjrer a man wrote a scathing letter. Before mailing It, he to<ik a ride through a rity park. Ueturnin? to his office he threw the letter In the basket. Fie had tiiken time to think. Thoughts are the determinative fnctors In character. A man Is what he is in the or>;:mi<- unity of his secret thinking. A ship In a storm is lost without a plh>t. The directing energy In life Is centered in our minds. "We're sunk unless we think." © hy W. st. i n Newspaper UnlML/v JOHNSBTTRQ Mrs. Steve May and Mrs.'Joe Kinfe visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller at Richmond, Tuesday. Joe Schmitt of Beloit, Wis., was a business caller here Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bildner and Steve Pacek were Chicago callers Monday. Ben Schaefer and John Pt£?.en visited with Mrs. Ben J. Schaefer at St. Theresa hospital Tuesday afternoon. Miss Helen Mickles spent a few days with Miss Lillian Miller at Lily Lake. « Edward Frett of Sauk City was a visitor here for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Steve May were Elgin callers Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Chamberjin and daughter Bernice of Chicago and MT. and Mrs. Henry Stoffel and daughter Miarie of Volo spent Sunday with John Pitzen Miss Gertrude Williams of Mo- Henry spent Sunday afternoon with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Williams. Math Lay of Spring Grove was a caller here Tuesday evening. Mr, knd Mrs. William J. Meyers arid family motored to Waukegan Sunday evenings •.. " ' . • ; .. . John Sciiriener of McHenry visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mickels and family Sunday afternoon. John Huff, Mrs. Anna Lunkerheimer and Mrs. Anna Bugner attended a shower which was given in honor of Leslie Huff at Powers Lake, Monday evening. Visitors at the home of John H. Freund Sunday were Mr. and Mrs John Rauen of Spring Grove and Miss Emma Freund of McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. George Schriener of McHenry were callers here Sunday afternoons , Miss Katherine Pitzefl of Chicago is spending a few days with her father, John Pitzen. Misses Florence and Helen Smith of Woodstock spent Sunday with their parents, Smith. Ifir. and Mirs. Stephen Miss Esther Lawrence of Ringwood spent Monday with Mrs. Joe Karls. The Christian Mothers held a card party Friday evening, ten tables being present. Cards and bunco were played, prizes being awarded to fitn. Henry Nell, Mrs. Fred J. Smith, Mrs. Steve May, Mrs. William Hiller. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Lunkerheimer and family moved to Ringwood this week. Mr. and Mrs. Ben H. Meyer of Racine, Wis., visited with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Meyers and family Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Davy and daughters of„Joliet spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs Frank Mathieu. 1 Mr. and Mrs. .JCmil Simon of Chicago were callers here Monday. • „ Miss Isabel Schmitt of Chicago spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Math N; Schmitt. John Pacek of Chicago spent Sunday with his uncle, Steve Pacek. Mr. and Mrs. Peter M. Wagner of .Volo were recent visitors in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Althoff. - ' •* * ' . Mir. and Mrs. Wm. ' Altl^ff and daughter Mary and son Bernard visited relatives at'New Munster, Wis., one day last week. Mr. and Mrs. .Bob Welke and Miss Caroline FreUnd of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Freund. Mr. and Mrs. Schultz of Chicago visited with her father, John J. Schmitt, Sunday. Mrs- John A. Miller entertained the Five Hundred Club Friday evening, prizes being awarded to Mrs. Fred Smith, Mrs. Leo Freund, and Mrs. Steve May. Miss Evelyn Meyers of Waukegan spent Sunday with her folks and Mrs.: Wm. J. Meyer. Miss Barbara Althoff visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Louis Althoff and family one day last week. ' " - ' f- • : POTPOURRI Where the Ark Landed Mount Ararat, on which Noah's ark is supposed to have rested when the flood waters subsided, is in Armenia, western Asia. It Is a volcano with two cones, the highest of which is 17.200 feet above sea level. The last eruption, in 1S40, caused great loss of life and property. 0 by Wc-nfrn N>wipap«r I'nioo. Claire Beauty Shoppe Shoppe Phone 145-R McHenry, IU. Res. Phone 208-R We Have Moved Two (2) Doors North of Our Old Shoppe SPECIAL MON. TUES. WED., PERMANENTS $1.75 (complete) Children's Permanenta, complete $1.25 End Permancnts - A.' ' /• ',/ .np from 85c Finger Waves „1.; • . 2 5 c AA\ : --ALSO-- Guaranteed Permanents, complete . $2.00 to $6.00 (Croquignole ^ Spiral- Combination) All other types of work done .. ...... „.. . .each 35c Marcels .....; 50c We Service All Permanents With, a Shampoo, Rinse and Finger Wave _ ^ 50c Oil Shampoo and Finger Wave 65c Three Operators at Your Convenience This Shoppe has been noted for its guarantee and good workmanship. We aim to please all. TRY US. TIME TO CHANGE OIL DRAIN OUT SLUDGE,THE OIL EATER- , This New Motor Oil stops sludg* formation ... cuts oil costs tiflfr Time now to drain out winter-worn oil and change to heavier grades, and when you change, decide that this summer you'll keep sludge out of your engine. For sludge clogs your oil lines, hinders lubrication, fouls your filter. It makes valves fluggish so you lose gasoline power. Finally, |t causes rings to stick and pump oil. It is the greatest cause of high motor-oil consumption. Keep sludge out by using Iso«Vis "D the Anti-Sludge Motor Oil. It does not sludge under the nardest kind of driving. It keeps rings lively and free, reducing oil consumption to the minimum. That's why you have to add to it less frequently between drains. ISO'VIS "D" . . . . . . 25c f t u s F t O S K A l T A X . . . . . . . . . . ° roTAi vT, V . 26c ° f c 5 STANDARD OIL SERVICE ALSO DIITtminMl «f ATLAS TIMS Cm*. iMilwirt Ofl c*.