McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 5 May 1938, p. 2

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- ' "a - . " ' '* V " plahtskalks Ml • f " mm-- ><y *?'J« C', V« " "' ' ' * * *: V') >> >"v f . ; '1 J4 ./* ^ , « £tC t ^ *- <, *-4, v 'Hr. and Mrs. George H. Johnson and eon, Frank, visited their daughter, Marguerite, at DeKalb, Sunday. Mrs. James Freeman and daughter, Mrs. Wm. Van Oeyen, visited friends here Friday. Mr., and Mrs. Cecil Rothermel and Loren Rothermel, of Chicago, spent the weekend in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joe «t- Rothermel. John Schreiner of Elgin visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A1 Krauae Sunday. Alfred and Esther May and Joseph JqstCTv feft for Caltfornia test week. They intend to spend several weeks with their , uncle, Frank Justen, at Chowchilla, Calif. Dr. and Mrs. F. J. Aidter spent Wednesday in Chicago* ' Mr. and Mrs. John Bolger and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ma&in attended the K. of C. convention at Danville this, week. 1 Jack Hart of Chicago spent Saturday in the Jacob F. Justen home, | Bemiee Unti and friend, of Northwestern University, Visited in RINGWOOD Miss Marion Peet of Elgin spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peet. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and family spent Friday evening with the | ^ SmTth latter's parents at McHenry. Mrs. Clayton Harrjson was a caller at McHenry Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Remer and Catherine spent Sunday in the home of their brother, Ralph Simpsop, and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle! Hopper and daughters of Chicago spent Thursday afternoon with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith. j Mr. and Mrs. Wm Wurtzinger and! dau g h t e r o f C h i c a g o s p e n t t h e w e e k - j end with the latter's parents, Mr. and spent Saturday afternoon at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Neinhaus of Ostend spent Friday evening in the D. L. Hall home. , ^ Mrs. Jennie Eddy and son, Claroh, of McHenry have moved into the Mrs. Cora Flanders rooms. Merritt Cruikshank of Morton Grove spent the weekend in the Wm. Mc- Cannon home. Mr. and Mrs. Puller Boutelle and son, Clyde, of Lake Geneva and Mr. and M^s.- J. R. Smith of McHenry Ralph Simpsort is enjoying a weeks' vacation from his duties in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and daugh- Coyne. ter, Shirley, and son, Jotin, "spent Sunday with relatives at Waukegan. Mrs. S. W. Smith and daughter, Bemice, spent Saturday afternoon at Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carlson and Our Washington Letter •;> Editorial Washington, May 4--Few seasoned cas^s before the bar of public opinion before the judiciary reaches a conclusion. This plan calls for publicity in eash case brought under the anti-trust laws. There is some doubt among strict legalists as to the ethics, but the die has been cast. • T h e P r e s i d e n t ' s r e c o m m e n d a t i o n s for tightening of laws regulating business aroused considerable talk here this'week. Hundreds of business men. representing some 1400 chambers of spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. the! Young. home of the former's parents, Mr. and1 Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon and Mrs. Charles Unti, Sunday. I family of Algonquin were callers in Mrs. A. K. Burns and son, Bob, and the C. J< Jepson home Sunday afterfriend, of Oak Park, visits here Sat- noon." '. ; • urdfty and Sunday. [ Ben Justen attended a land con- Miss Jeanne Aiche?, of Oak I>rk, servation meeting at "^eodstoek on was a Sunday caller in the/'F. J. Thursday. < Akher home* > ' Nell and Maud Simpson o* Chicago observers of the political game are cpmmercei ar® in session and conversawilling to hazard a guess as to what *!ons naturally veered to the imprica- Congress will do in its haste to shut't,on.s. of the Administration's program down for the current season, Over'on, ®\.a little enterprises alike. A the weekend an effort has been madep^f0: UT!fa €sf Was detected in the to revise the strategy which is essen-' 8 8 VTvS fr.business intial for the rescue of pet measures 'J.,Cated that th« ^^adjournment of family spent Sunday afternoon and jfrom Congressional scrap-heap. It is ' cern^nrovided the solons Monday with relatives at Port Wash-!conceded that the national legislature^, father than to ington, Wis. would quit within a fortnight in event I ""metimtely ac- Rev. and Mrs. Collins and Mr. andisome bright person could devise a f°r-lex<.ens^on 0* B-0vernme<nt*l Mrs. H. M. Stephenson spent Sunday mula for ear-marking expenditure of Little credence was attached to Post in the Paul Collins home at Arling- the "pump-priming" billions. Affairs J;1™® TarlevWUlm ton Heights and in the Frank Collins!haves moved so fast and furious lately Thursday, May 5,1938 (Spending of the four j the triseacres say, whatever shortcom- 1pum]p-priming." By ing the-Roosevelt plan eventually reveals, might be plac<& on the shoulders of Congress with the charge that the legislature had #ed the hands giving relief. The publication of PWA grants by states in the* Congressional Record lately has brought this angle sharply to the fore* The spending program attracts Wore attention than the LaFollette revival of the Progressive party largely because the Third Party will not figure prominently in a local election. brakes to the billion dollar placing "ear-marks," or definitely allocating the funds, they could probably check retaliatory schemes wherein the money Congress authorizes would not be used against rebels in their local political opponents. The sage politicos warn of the dangers of definitely limiting the expenditures They point out that by giving the Administration a free hand, the failure of the projects could be laid at the dooi* of the White House. Otherwise '•?L Dr. C. Keller OPTOMETRIST CENTRAL GARAGE When your car or truck needs attention, we are prepared to serve you. One of the best equipped garages in Northern Illinois. Full Line of Atlas and Goodyear Tim . Electric and Acetylene Welding CftT yaahing fl.nH p^lip>iiTi|r Phone 200-# Towing Johnsburg FIR \ PROTECT YOUR FURS FKOM HEAT, MOTHS AND DAMPNESS IN OUR AIRCONDITIONED AND ELECTRICALLY PROTECTED VAllLfc McHenry Cleaners AGENCY FOE Snow White Laundry SNAPSHOT CU1L PICTURES WITH WEAK LIGHT iSl-f Hard to take? Not A box camera gets It with a 4-second exposure. Other, tameras, 1 second at 1.9.9, Exposure Is short because the light Is near her face. IT IS surprising how little light is I needed to make a picture if the tght is placed close to the subject. For instance, look at the snapshot \bove. The only light is the weak ilttle electric candle lamp, held ibout a foot from the child's face. With the lamp at that distance, a »ox camera loaded with supersensitive film can get the picture with a tour-second time exposure. Lamp iwo feet from her, exposure would be sixteen seconds--four times as long. Lamp three feet away, expoiure Is thirty-six seconds -- nine limes as long. Reason: When light is close up, it Is concentrated on a small area. Tar* ther away, the feame amount of light spreads over a much larger area, and your subject gets very little of it. The distance between the light and the camera doesn't matter. It's , the distance from light to subject that counts. ~ To take a picture like the oneabove, use a frosted white bulb, and have it as near the center of the picture as possible. Such pictures are worth trying. Bometlmes yott miss--but the good ones you get are so unusual that they Justify your ex< periments. John van Guilder K <U takti A^'© ft- Tkb kHW taUfe 16mco*4*.. nr Ami Alt will ui< 36 MCOMI* UCMM fefkt Kidifi 9 M aick. SM MOW. A --nr -*© At 1 (Mt tow, Mi rBneiM»it»< oa'uul Mm Al > It* mm hfk KMan S«t *mi, upturn b 4'lbMi m loaf Al J hM, fcjfcl mWtn 3i3 #•«, ciipoMn It9'Himi m tout, m ok The nearer the light to subject, the less exposure required. (Distance frorK camera to subject doesn't matter.) If your Indoor pictures are coming out toe dark, ti-y using more light, have bulbs closer to subject, or give longe# exposures., ' II . ' . I! ' ' II* I V l" I I I I >'! tt.' home at Wilmette. Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, Mary, of Evanston spent the past week at the Stevens home.. Mr. and Mrs. Bratz and daughter, Marie, of Chicago and Mr. Ruehlman of Hebron spent Sunday in the A. Ruehlman home. Mrs. S. W. Brown spent Saturday afternoon in Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stevens and family of Milwaukee spent Sunday with Mrs. Agnes, Jencks and daughter, Mary,' ' "" *'*" Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Engels and Mrs. Louis Hawley visited Wm. Engels in the Woodstock hospital Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiedrich spent Sunday afternoon with the latter's parents at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Peet and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Fout spent Sunday in the Ralph Clay home at Rockford. Mrs. Wm. McCannon and Mrs. Merritt Cruikshank were callers at Hebron Saturday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich were callers at Solon Mills Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Ed Peet spent - Thursday in Chicago. Frank Wiedrich of Solon Mills was a caller in the hom« of his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich, Sunday. ^ Opal Fisher spent Sunday in the nome of her sister, Mrs. Harold Wiedrich! * Mrs. Wm. McCannon and Mrs. Merritt Cruikshank were McHenry visitors Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wiedrich were callers in the home of theii^son, Harold and family, Sunday. Marion Jean and Frank Block of Kenosha 'spent the past week with their grandparents, Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Beatty, Mrs. Jennie Bacon, Mrs. Viola Low and daughter, Alice Mae, and son, Robert, called ^ relatives in Richmond Sunday aftejTioon. ', ^Mrs. C. J. Jepson and daughter, Virginia, Mrs. Viola Low and daughter, Alice Mae, and Mrs. Joe McCannon and son, Loren, attended church services at Greenwood Sunday evening- Mr. and Mrs. George Dixon spent Friday afternoon and Saturday in the J- V. Buckland home. They were on their way to their homg in Eagle Lake, Wis., froni Orlando, Fla., where they spent the winter. Edward Harrison of Elgin spent the weekend with his mother, Mrs. George Harrison. Mrs. Viola Low and daughter, Alice Mae, and son, Robert, and Mrs. Jennie Bacon were callers at Twin Lakes Sunday afternoon. Paul Stephenson of Brooklyn, N. Y„ •pent, the past week here with his par- <BBts, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson. George Young attended a land conservation meeting at Woodstock on Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heine of Chicago spent Sunday in the George Shepard home. Among those from here to call ip Woodstock Saturday were Mrs. Geo. Shepard and son, Howard, Wayne Foss, Mrs. D. L Hall, Mrs. J. A. Vaillancourt, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and Mrs. Frankie Stephenson. Mrs. S. H. Beatty and Mrs. Viola Low spent Tuesday with Mrs. Edgar Thomas at McHenry. Mrs. W. B. Harrison entertained the; "Easy Aces" at her home Tuesday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mis. , M. Stephenson and Mrs. J. Cristy. Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son, Billy, of Chicago spent Wednesday in the Wm. Beth home. Billy remained until Sunday. The Ringwood PTA met in the school house Tuesday evening. EHec tion of officers elected for the coming; year are as follows: Mrs. D. L. Hall, president; Mrs. Lester Carr, vice president; Mrs. Ray Merchant, sec-< retary and treasurer. The program consisted of a duet by Miss Hazel Carlson and Albert Spitzbart; Readings by Marion Hawley, Amy Harrison, Audrey Merchant and Shirley Neal. Mr. Yanda of McHenry pre sented Dean McCracken and Charles Page in a coronet duet; Freund broth «rs in a cornet and saxaphone duet; quartet, composed of Dorothy Lay and Gerald Miller, cornets, Richard; Williams and Herbert ReihanspergerL trombones. Barry Taxman also rend-.; ;#red a piano solo. The live wire merchants in Ring* *rood are having a large sigtl erected ton Route Si. It will read--"Wonder Lake Road, Ringwood is your nearest chopping center. Our merchants call; Supply your needs." Mrs. Dimon and daughter, Ethel, of Ostend spent Friday afternoon in ths ck Olson home. Rev. Collins attended a county min ister's meeting at Richmond Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison wer» lyisitora at Woodstock Saturday even^1 ing. ««L?erfci,ns y gather the loo.e end. < m angled of ^ Admini.tr.tTon, _ M . .? , „ _ t „ Lawmakers who have opposed the The factthatthe House RulesCom-^^ House on various issues art mittee again tied a can to the Adrpih-' n&rtieularlv detiirona istration's wage and hour bill added, ' «*8irvus fresh complications. The attempts of proponents Of a Federal wage standi ards measures to-obtain enough signatures for a petition to discharge the Rules Committee from its blockade seems unavailing. Assuming that this militant House wing could master the necessary 218 signatures, the parliamentary situation is such that they could not force an open vote before June 13. Yet thq active figures have taken courage from the recent action of the railway executives in ordering a wage cut of 15 per cent effective July 1. Reports of wage slices in other industries as a means of staving off depression effects presents a grave situation. The wage curtailment is the railroads answer to' refusal of the Interstate Commerce Commission to authorize manted increases in freight and passenger rates. The reaction of the employees as represented by the potent brotherhoods is closely watched in political circles. Business leaders are in a quandry as to what to do. With the latest recession at its lowest level, as measured in terms of sales, it is to the interest of management to utilize every means of keeping purchasing power at a high mark. The stock-holders, anxious to protect their investment, have forced managers to take a more tolerant attitude toward political factors. Yet industrial chieftains find it hard to steer a course in the absence of green-lights. Somewhat dubiously, a number of nationally-known business moguls have agreed to work with the Administration only to find that their companies are among those listed for drastic government controls under the President's newest message to' Congress dealing with corporate enterprise. Congress is also befuddled as to what the President really has in mind as to governmental policies. As a consequence, they are likely to take the safest route--long study of various proposals during the summer and fall. The subject will be vitalized as the Department of JusticJ^ntends to supplement its customary legal procedure with a new style of trying Snndays and Mondays at my Biiyr Hone, Riverside Driv* McHenry, Illinois & Glasses Had« from $3.00 II AH Kinds of Repairs -- Telepllone attaching , V ; . 0 , ON MOTHER'S DAY AND IVMY SUNDAY YOU CAN TILIPHONI 100 MILES 140 MILES 220 MILES 300 MILES • • • • • • t f • t #' > • • : t;;t #• I t # t FOR ABOUT 3S CENTS FOR ABOUT 46 CENTS #OR ABOUT 60 CENTS FOR ABOUT 76 CENTS ILLINOIS ^BiLL TELEPHONE COMPANY TMm mr» itttlon-teMtotlori rata*. They «Im apply after 7 P.M. way wnk> « wall m all tlay SmimMv. ; v;t • - Mr. anA %rs. Harvey Nye and Johtt Blake returned from Florida last Wednesday afternoon. Need Rubbet Plaindealer. Order at Th* B\G 6 C\)^C fOO£ V i We've secured just 12 BRAND NEW 1937 KEIVINATORS We're selling them as we bought them--at BARGAIN > «--• Regular Standard 1937 Kelvinators -- BRAND NEW! BEAUTIFUL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS! Covered by all die usual warranties! /-"Vf YOU COME IN-ASK TO "SEE THE BARGAINS" AND YOU'D BETTER COME SOON! 'Main! West e?

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