McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

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

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_ >1 v w~T f J rn\ • *0 •1°"' ••. '". . i'.--!• ' ~ •'"• .-v';£ " ^ . «-v; K#fe' i, '• PERSONALS i Marguerite, son, "George, and Val« I Adams were BUa visitors Saturday. Malvina and Ted Breyer spent the -weekend at the Breyer cottage at Me- Collum Lake. Weekend guests in the CSeorjfte Kramer home were Mrs. C. Kramer, son, Milton, June Rose, Ralph and Randolph Heide, of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. John Larsen and family of Tecumseh, Mich., spAit the weekend at their cottage at Orchard ™ ---- -- -- |Beach. elyne^etaguC. , | Mrs. E. J, O'Connellof Bvanston, Mr. and MrV Prank Welngart and ( j^-b. Minan Dunne, of North Edge- Mrs. Ettabeth Laurei aftteigfed tiurjwater, ~ Elgin, visited Mrs. William Bonslett Saturday. Mrs. Bonslett returned home with Mrs. Phelan for a few days' visit. Mr. and Mrs. John Keg visited their daughter, Mrs. L. T. McChesney and intent son at Edgewater hospital, Chicago, Tuesday. They also visited Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Cobb who recently moved to Hollywood avenue, Chicago. Nick M. Freund returned to his iffv Ben Wegener of Chicago spent the IV weekend with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. James .Fay of Chicago visited friends here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Freund were Woodstock visitors Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Schmitt visited in Crystal Lake Thursday evening; Miss Elnora Mathiesen of Chicago spent the holidays in the home of Ev- Pepping-Nelson wedding at Crystal < Lake Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. George Heelscher of 3 Wheaton and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hoelscher of Oak Park visited relatives here Monday. Mrs. E. R. Sutton, sons, William and. Charles, and Mrs. Eleanor Nye, were Harvard visitors Sunday. Misse Elsie Maedge and Lillian ' * yc . "i^r ' ^ t ; ? j '/ v Reutell have come to spend the sum-1 home in St. Louis Tuesday, after a '* i. mer at their cottage «at Fair Oaks. Miss Marguerite Johns ;on was home from DeKalb for the weekend. T Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and X family of Elgin were McHenry visitors k/Ci Decoration Day. Mrs. E. R. Sutton and Mrs. Eleanor Nye accompanied Vincent Martin and son, Arthur, of Wbodetock, to Wauconda Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ernst, daughter, u' ' - ! r * Y ' visit with relatives in this vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Bauer of Peoria spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. John S. Freund. Mrs. Bauer" remained for the week. Mrs. Violet Woodward andi friend of Chicago were weekend guests of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. VycitaL Mrs. Kate Boger of Chicago is spending a few weeks in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. George. Adams and Mary, and Mrs. Hansman and daugh- children were visitors in the John Nett ter, Rita, of Chicago were visitors in home at Wilmot Tuesday evening. the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. L Frochlich Monday. Miss Jane Durland of. Joliet spent Mr. and Mrs. Ted Shelton of Peoria spent the weekend here. Dr. George Carlin of Joliet and Dr. the Decoration holiday with her par- Fred Simpson of Dundee are guests ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Durland, Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Burns of Oak Park entertained a group of friends at of Jack Purvey today (Thursday). Gerald Reed and Paul Yanda enjoyed a trip to Wisconsin over the week- U. S. Tuinod Down Offer of tho Fiji* for Song Bad Uncle Sam been a good debt collector more than 60 years ago he might hav* had the Fiji islands for a new thousand dollars, and thus added advantageously to the number of American-owned lands of sunshine in the South Seas, asserts a writer in the Philadelphia Inquirer. .The home of an American named Williams who was acting as United State* consul to Fiji,, was pillaged andTlmrned, the Fijiana taking the furmture*ind Uteres of food. Wil- Hams demanded ~ $3,000 damages. Thakombau. king«afMfee F$a, refused to pa^f. ^illiams wrote to Washington about tine matter, and his losses, with delays, grew until $45,000 was demanded. Thakombau had no means of paying such a sum. His subjects had no money --needed none, as food grew wild on the trees, and houses cost nothing to build. Australian money-lenders offered to settle the claim for 200,000 acres of the best land. The king accepted. Here was a chance for a stroke of bold American diplomacy, but for some reason it did hot materialize. Uncle Sam might have had the islands outright for the debt. When the news cf the Australian offer reached England that government would not permit the consummation of the transaction. In a moment of fear and excitement Thakombau agreed to cede the islands to. Great Britain if that country would pay, the debt. At first the British declined, but finally relented, annexing the Fijian domain. : It seems that Williams finally wearied of trying to collect his claim, and So the money never was Human Alarm Clock • Wakaw Whole Town Baxter, Tenn.--In this mountain town of 000 inhabitants there's onlyone alarm clock. It's Charlie Hughea. For mm than 13 years Charlie has been awakening folks here by sounding reveille on his bugle from a perch atop a 20-foot pole in his yard. Fofty-ninc years old and unmarried, be lives on the outskirts jEuf jfib is cutting stove wood ana hauling it to folks in town. uSO I HEAR" EARL WALSH Dear "Mose": ,, And I don't mean dear either* JOHiamaBBBR|CK8 IN THRU RUNS Uf NINTH TO ifSFfeAT HALF DAT J oh: in the >ming rally out a Dec- Are Carnal ltarcissus is the botanical for a family of bulbous plants "daffodil" is the English nam# it. They both apply to all of many sub-groups into which oration Day -vistesfuover. Half Day by * WbdiTjdeL T*1*? a 3 to 2 score I * ether you use the botanical • a to i score. , "narcissus" or the English The Lake Couty team scored a run daffodil you are cvrect. P " • J PageFh* Ana l aont eitalfc ' {, * mn uauoau you are cvrect, even How do you get that way and what's !" the thir<! ""f ir> the fourth though you may be lAldhr at the BUILDS CATAMARAN FOR WORLD CRUISE Former Sea Captain Constructs Odd Craft for Trip. a house party at their summer home end. at Hickory Grange over the weekend. I Stanley Hill of Chicago was a local Mr. and Mrs. Renard Bhim of Chi- visitor Sunday and Monday. cago were weekend visitors here. j Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Martin of Grays- Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Winkelman and lake called on friends here Sunday, so, Jimmie, o£ Springfield, spent the I Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Stevens and weekend with her mother, Mrs. Anna1 daughters, Alsena and Portia, of Knox. Mrs. Math. B. Laures and son,jWaukegan were McHenry visitors on Jack, who have been guests in the Monday. Winkelman home, returned to McHenry with them. Mrs. Catherine Young and daughter, Mrs. Alfred Johannsen, daughter, Marion, and son, Sherman, of Evanston, spent Saturday and Sunday in the Rosina, were weekend guests in the Robert Thompson home. The Johann- Arnold Reinert home in Elgin. | sen family expect to leave about June Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Frisby and 15, for New York City to make their Mr. and Mrs. Robert Frisby of Chi-!home, where Mr. Johannsen has a cago visited relatives here Saturday. | position as General Agent for the Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wheeler and Northwestern Mutual Insurance Corn- Mrs. William Bacon were Belvidere pany. " Malden-on-Hudson, N. Y.--Captain William Sallsten is building in this little village near Saugerties a sort of catamaran in which he expects to set sail for a two-and-ahalf- year trip by. himself around the world. For twajve years the forty-sixyear- old former $ea captain has cherished the idea of making such a trip. Unsuccessful in persuading a the big idea? Last week I mite • column in food i'"""'!'; , •'!?? "!' j just like the other Mtvo.c ^ "ottMnt. 1«4 «•» f" «eto -m the year W ,o« home, it ln> W in the waste basket, furnace or what have you. Anyhow, you don't print the d - - - thing. , . You must think you're the Editor or ' 30 oWo^k^ something on this newspaper--which I gotta admit maybe you are. So far, all I can catch 6n to is that you had twenty pages of golf, advertising, etc., which was more important than old "So I Hear." I catch on slow so am writing to you this week, will write again next week, then if to carry into the ninth with a 2 to 0 large trumpets, barii, leedsi, po- •i'ii':" margin. That's when the Johnsburg, *ts, poetaz, jomjiiils, or some of 7 - ,^4 ^ members is a I" small, deep-yetbw, |ragriit member of the daffodil family, whoae you still throw my stuff in the waste rf basket, furnace or. what have you, don't throw a brick--I'll catch on. From then on, Im writin* to Public I Pulse. ••• The boys aroXind town give me plenty on account you give "So I Hear" the bounce last week. To some guys, I ; say that I bounce back. To others, B M . , ' I say "He can't fire me--I quit." To „ „ yerV ~£ myself, I say things about you, but win for themselves. Greenwood, will appear on the! «_u . _ - • M.n.b„r, «*mo„a the others is flat. v : » H. Gleaion, 2b B A. Calanca, lb 5 Wijdhagen, cf 4 Lidthissen, c a Blatu, rf a . • 1 V. Schroeder, 3b *....,3 Mehner, If $ Boegert,- ss 4 D. Schroeder, 4 . m i , /; ' %• 0 0 0 0 I K 0 0 •i^ ,0 0 B 2 0: 0 ol t Tree, Babber Pradaat# Most of the world's supply of raw rubber comes from the milky juice of the hevea tree that grows wild in the jungles of Brazil. Although many vines and trees contain rubber, none equals the quality or quantity of the juice of the hevea ^ ^ tree. Unfortunately, it has not proved profitable to cultivate trees anywhere except in this and other restricted regions. .4 crew of Filipinps to sail a catamar- i ^^ere 8 no need of going into that on ^ pv. _ j ok an across the Pacific to the United ; f.cc?^nt >/ you wouldn't print a ™ild lV.' Freund^ ss Totals Jeluistniiqr f ' /y^ ;-'AB -- ' 5 i' ;• 4: vo- + H. Freund; c N. Smithy 2b . States, he built four-foot model, column week's, West and East Indies and along the masterpiece of last week where some B. Mill visitors Monday. Miss Elsie Steinsdoerfer was a visitor at Arlington Heights Monday. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Kimball of Chicago were callers here Monday. Ben Aicher of Oak Park was a visitor in the home of his brother, Dr. F. J. Aicher, Sunday and Monday. Mrs. Bernice Sherman of Harvard called on friends here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. W. Freund celebrated their forty-fifth wedding anniversary, which occurred <m Tuesday, by spending a few days at the Dells of Wisconsin. Mr. and Mri. Harry Lawrence of Chicago spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. Mollie Givens. ' Among those from a distance who called in the home of Mrs. John R. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fenske and,Knox and attended the funeral of her children and Mr. and Mi's. Herbert,father, Henry Geary, Monday, were: Feske and children of Chicago spent a'Mr. and Mrs. Frank Murray, son, Wilfew days the past week in the Charles lard, Patrick Murray, Sylvester Mur- Rietesel home. |ray, Mr. and Mr. Albert Murray and Miss Mary McCabe and brothers of .family, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rooney, Norwood Park and Mrs. Mary McCabe John Rooney, Mr. and Mrs. John of Oak Park called on friends here O'Sshaunessy, Mrs. James Corrigan, Monday. : Buddy Liston, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dr. and Mrs. F. J. Aicher visited Murray, son, Henry, Miss Nettie Murrelatlves at Peoria Sunday and Mon-iray, of Chicago; Mrs. Mary McCabe, day. |Oak Park; Miss Mary McCabe, broth- Miss Doris Pilcher of Elgin called ers. Edwin and Daniel, Norwood Park; on friends here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Zuelsdorf, Barrington; Mr. and Mrs. Victor Brasen of Chi- Mrs. Wm. Smith, son, Dell, Round cago were weekend guests of Mr. and ; Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Wagner, Mrs. George Kuhn. Grayslake; Mrs. Frank Stanton and Memorial Day guests in the home Mrs. Brandstetter, Long Lake. of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Vales were The John Unti family moved Wed- Mr. and Mrs. John Klilca, - and' Mr. nesday from the Pries house on Elm and Mrs. Wm Vales and Miss Lillian street to the Youngberg place on Cen- Valeg of Chicago. Miss Lily Breyer of Milwaukee visited McHenry friends this week. Theodore Bethke, Sr., Theodore Bethke, Jr., and wife and Miss Maria Block of Dundee were Memorial Day visitors in McHenry. Mrs. F. C. Feltz went to Chicago ter street, vacated by Mr. and Mrs. Iliwuippi'i Mouth Sea Level; Sourca Above According to Stimpson's "Popular Questions Answered," there are certain small streams which occasionally reverse the direction of their currents. One example is given, the river Crossing, a small stream in Penobscot county, Maine; this stream sometimes flows south and sometimes north, depending on the flood conditions in the Soudabscoot and Kenduskeag rivers which it connects. The same authority deals with the common belief that the Casiquiare river in Venezuela sometimes reverses the current direction, but this is stated to be incorrect. The question is often asked with regard to the Mississippi, the idea being that because the earth bulges at the center and is flattened toward the poles, the mouth of that river is about four miles farther than its source from the center of the earth. In measuring elevations, however* all of these are referred to sea level, not to the earth's center. , Surface measurements have shown the Mississippi's source to be several hundred feet above sea level, while its mouth is at saa level. 1 coast of South America, a catamaran is a kind of raft or float, consisting of two or more logs or pieces of wood lashed together and moved by paddles or sails. Captain Sallsten's craft 'differs in that ft consists of three canoes lashed side by side. Covered with copper and the tops decked over with ply-wood, the two outside canoes are sixteen feet long, and the middle one twenty-five feet. The middle canoe has a tiny cabineight feet long, forty-one inches, wide and twenty-four inches highjust enough room for Captain Sallsten to lie down in. The craft will carry 350 square feet of sail. "With this," said Captain Sallsten, "in a good stiff bracer, she should make twenty knots." Where there isn't a "good stiff bracer" and when it does not ?eem absolutely futile, he will skull his craft, wiggling an oar much in the manner of-a gondolier. So. confident is he of his venture that he is not even taking a life preserver. Captain Sallsten will have only a couple of books, a violin, a mouthorgan and a toy monkey mascot to amuse himself while tossing alone on the seas. Meaning of "Public Schools are not "public" in the sense that they are open to the public, says London Answers Magazine. They may take a certain number of "scholarship" pupils and so qualify for a grant from the state, but they are usually endowed with private funds. However, any school which is represented at the Headmasters' conference is usually §cceR)* d as a public school. Many of the older schools were formerly connected with some collegiate church t>^„i d/i j t , « , . aemndu,, uuniutiili wweelnl iinntwo tihriec mNinnceitcecennuthi ™ u®!!! m°^ thei5i century, the church had complete new home on Washington street. BUSINESS MAN 1WITBS A LETTER TO HIS CREDITORS tontrol over them. The usual age of admission to a public school is about fourteen, and the leaving age eighteen or nineteen. Most of them are boarding schools. Among the (most famous public schools are Wednesday to meet Miss Elsie Harm- j Friends: Winchester, founded in 1381, Eton sen of Jacksonville, who will spend' In reply to your request vto send a!. (1440), St. Paul's (1500), Christ's the summer in the Felts home. check, I wish to inform you that the Hospital (1552), Westminster (1560), present condition of my bank account makes it almost impossible. My shat- Mrs. A. J. Kamhols and son, Robert, spent the weekend in the William Dreyer home at Forest Park, where tered financial condition is due to Fed' they attended Field Day at Concordia College on Saturday. Miss Verena Justen of Pittsburg, Pa., and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Marum eral Laws, State Laws, County Laws,1 City Laws, Sister-in-Laws and Out-. Laws. I Through these laws, I aim compelled Rugby (1567), Harrow (1571), Charterhouse (1611), and Marlborough (IMS). ' Totals 77 ?. very important problems were dis-J cussed. j That can't do that! That's what I • Score by Inn'ngs said about those fellows in Chicago ?, , y ®^1 00®--2 H who want the pool* school kids to go Johnsburg-. ©00 000 003--3 11 to school twelve months a year. 1 Two-base hits^Gleason, V. Schroeder,' But, maybe you dont care about ?• Schroeder; Struck out--by Miller, that? |2; by Schroeder, 7; Bases on balls-- As I was saying, there are enough |°* 2; off Schroeder, 0. of us dumb yokels to fill all the jobs -m .--p, -n ---- in the country so why hurry those kids FOBMEK McliENRY BUMS out of school. - For one thing, there is no need of leading those young sprouts to the slaughter at the age of eighteen when it can be. stalled off 'til about the age of twenty to twenty-five. LOS* 4 TjQ 1 GAME TO PRESENT DAT PLAYERS Hit "Pal" Jailed; Friend There was a pack of fun in the ball ™ 1*?me la v 8t Monday when the old Mc-1 For another thing, the first thing Henr.y *acl0*.d *nd ,ost to the you know they'll have those Itid's reffu McHerirjr nine of today. | homin' in on the W. P. A. jobs. "Spots" Thurlwell and Bill Kreutzerj I'm agin the idea. j hooked up in a pitching battle and But, maybe you don't care. I gave good accounts of them- As I was saying when you so rude- 8e'ves strtrck out 14 batsmen ly interrupted (meaning said bounce w^'l® "Spots" Met down 8 men by the to waste basket), can't those fellows 8arne method. ... I remember when they gazed through ^ course, there were some errors ,in . school windows, counting the days 'til game, but why go into that. school would let out, Most kids runj r " •-- home from school on the last day like McHenry -si young colts turned out to pasture. •' * s AB No sir! They can't do that! (That's J™?1* what I thought about "So I Hear" last Kreutzer, ssweek, but look what happened.) Kreutzer, p 4 Maybe you didn't read in that rub- n» ® 4 n _ | ;i c Ibish you bounced in the ash can, or „ nlt' 4 and. a L ke Sentence j wh«tev«r, that your so ..called sports Hughes, If 8 Pittsburgh.--A display of friend- department covered the game or Johnson, lb 3 ship that is seldom equaled and games on the previous Sunday. .Rietesel, rf 4 rarely surpasse.dj was dje monstrated Anderson, 2b M.^„. here when eighteen-year-old Robert Stigerwald had a brush with the law. Stigerwald was arrested on a charge of driving without a license. His buddy, Robert Reddy, also eighteen, calmly told Riverview Park Patrolman T. Kotula: "If you pinch my buddy, you've got to pinch roe, too." The obliging officer, did so, taking both youths to th$ police t station where they spent the night. Haled into traffic court, Stigerwald was fined $10 by the magistrate. Reddy demanded the same sentence meted out to him. The magistrate refused so Reddy dashed out, scraped up enough money to pay the fine and arm-in-arm he and his pal walked from the courtroom. -- land, many of the rivers of this tropic paradise never reach the sea. As in the cave regions of Kentucky and Tennessee, so in Jamaica, there are many streams that disappear into cavernous openings in the earth, eome never to see the light of day again, so far as is known, and others only at considerable distances and under new names. Lost Rivers _ In spite of the fact that Jamaica and family of Edison Park visited P®y * business tax, amusement tax,1 jn the British West Indiee is an istheir mother, Mrs. N. J. Justen, overttax> school tax, gas tax, light the weekend. jtax, water tax, sales tax, liqunr tax. Mr. and Mrs. William Dreyer and,carpet tax» income tax, food tax, furson, Billy, of Forest Park visited rela- n*ture am* excise. Even my brains are tives here Monday. {taxed. I am required to get a husi- Mrs. Christine Breyer of Chicago n.ess license, truck license, car license, was a visitor in ihe home of Mrs. <liQuor license, not to mention a Elizabeth Buss, Decoration'Day. * riage license and dog license. George Meyers has returned to his] 1 *m *lso required to contribute to home in this city, after spending the every society and organization which winter with his daughters in Chicago.! t^ie genius of man is oapable of bring- William Martin and friend of Chi- ,n8 to life; to women's relief, the uncago were visitors in the home of his emPl°yed relief, and the gold diggers ; parents, Mr. aad Mrs. Clarence,Martin Felief- Als°. every hospital and char- Saturday. • itable institution in the city, includ- Mrs. Sayler Smith of Portland, Ore., I Cross, the Black Cross, visited relatives and friends in this Purple Cross, and the Double vicinity the past week. .Cross. Mrs-. F. E. Cobb of Chicago spent' For my own safety, I am required the weekend with Mrs. George Lind- to carry life insurance, property insay. | surance, liability insurance, burglar Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. insurance, tornado insurance, accident and Mrs. Robert Thompson were Mrs. Ada Smith, son, Granger, and wife, of Elgin, and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alexander, of Hebron. Jacob Buss of Chicago visited relatives here Decoration Day. Miss Eleanor May of Wllmette visited her mother, Mrs. Margaret May, over the weekend. Her sister, Gertrude May, returned home with her for a few days visit. Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy Tansy add chil insurace, business insurace, earth quake insiuaace, unemployment insurance, old age insurance and fire insurance. My business is so governed that it is no easy matter for me to find out who owns it. I am inspected, expected, suspected, disrespected rejected, examined, re-examined, informed, required, summoned, fined, commanded, and compelled until I provide an in exhaustible supply of money for every dren of Chicago spent Sunday and known need. Monday with her parents, Mr. and Simply because I refuse to donate Mrs. George Steinsdoerfer. 140 something or other, I am boycotted, Mrs. Jacob Freund is spending sev-l4*^^ shout, lied about, held up and eral days in the home of her daughter, i held down, and robbed until I am ruin- Mrs. Ben May, at Spring Grove. ®d- Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Schaefer at-J 1 61111 you honestly that except tended Commencement exercises at f°r the miracle that happened I could Wauconda High School Friday wen-( not enclose this check. The wolf that ing, May 27, their son, Earle, being comes to many homes nowadays just one of the class of twenty-six gradu- j had pups in my kitchen. I sold them ates. Following the exercises a group and here is the money. rof rebtHvog and friowda wpyg gntgr-l tained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earle Broughton. Mrs. George H. Johnson, daughter, Kipling Lived in Verm sag Rudyard Kipling lived for four rears near Brattleboro, VtT Mysterious Tulips Near the sites of many of the ancient Roman camps built by soldiers of nearly fe,000 years ago in the south of England, tiny red tulips make their appearance each spring. They are quite different from any other tulips seen in that country and are found nowhere but in the neighborhood of the Roman camps, the htiHr ^»|Tig fmmri dfpthff gf fjyg feet. Removes Wife's Shoes on Town Square; Jailed Paris, 111.--Archie Shawver's novel method of making bis wife obey landed him in jail on a disorderly conduct charge. The warrant, sworn out by Shawver's father-in-law, Robert Gwinn, charged Shawver with having forcibly removed his wife's shoes on the town square during a band concert. MILLER FRIDAY - SATURDAY Hurry! Just) Two Days Left FOR " S H O W W H I T E and the S E V E N D W A R F S ' ' SUNDAY - MONDAY Continuous Sunday 2:30 to 11 The Greatest Tluftl Romance 1- Ever Produced - ! Critics Everywhere Say "See It By All Means" CLARK MYRNA GABLE LOT SPENCER TRACY " T E S T P I L O T " TUESDAY The Comedy Of All Comics 'SWING YOUR LADY" It's Bargain Nite WEDNESDAY - THURSDAY It's Too Funny For Words "MERRILY WE LIVE" Constance Bennett Brian Aherne AUCTION i g R 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 . Maybe you don't care about that. Anaerson, zt> 4 As I was sayihg. McHenry got alii _ , . -- mixed up on schedules and there were Totals •«•••••«».••• 84 three teams on the field. Anybody McHenry Bums --.1 knows that only two teams can play r * AB one game of baseball, unless in Brook- Anderson, cf 5 lyn, but it looked like a "Two-Out-of- Anderson, 3b ................ 4 Three Falls match for a while. Bennett, ss ....... When things cooled off, McHenry Schroeder, 4 played three and a half innings with zf1'r» 4 Spring Grove. The locals were out S in front 12 to 0, so said, "Aw hell! ^*mholt, 2b 4 Let's play somebody else for awhile." ^an i nen*till, Tf \/.„.....U... 4 That's where they made a mistake. Tnurlwefl, p • Marengo took the field and took our; . ' . . team, too. Final score fl to S. j Totals 85 1 v^ ^ Some things happened in that gama, ' : but maybe you don't care. |j frai wipe lug "Culinary** Locke stole second with the bases The wjord. .""culinary" la pro* loaded--ala Babe Hermann. | nounced kiu^Uivair-ee, with first ay]- Bill Kreutter and George Larlun l*ble accented. ; ^ were on base all afternoon, but that's long, long ago. | Alderman George Freund may nev-i er know it, but that waste basket manuscript carried a challenge for a golf match. It was all in the spirit of the big golf issue. Maybe you thought you were doing the course a big favo"? Chaa. Leonard, Auctioneer Phone 478 Word "Horde:' FrM the Freneh The word "horde" comes from the French by-way of the Turkish, which got it frdih the Tartar language. l-1 V • The present day- Ml players rep* resenting McHenry crossed bats with by^ keeping us off-and maybe you the former McHenry Bums list MonhhaaHd sBoAmmeatthhiinnig» fthhnerrhe • * Went into Walt Freund's the other day and before he says, hello, or anything, he says, "Come out here in the day and a vesy'nifty ball game re- • . . . • > . i Gwinn complained that it was Shaw- u if' t> *. • . . second inch offuM "public, ve *»t •ometh.n* yo» m.y be Q_. , , K v , needing soon ." He was building Shawver pleaded that he had suited. The "Spots' I&eieM" «r*jjr%ofi 4 to 1. ' Thariwell hurled for the , , . Bums with Kirk Schroeder receiving, toufht fait wifrt .hoe. and M*i,be h* h,d Bill «ul Gewp her conduct justified his attempt tc take property belonging to him. Sailing Forty Year*, He Still Gets Seasick Berkeley, Calif.--After trying for 40 years to overcome seasickness by sailing -around the Horn, sailing his own boat to Honolulu, and backin fact, by sailing whenever he was able to--W. P. Bennett has weakened. His boat is for sale. He admits that he Has never made a sea trip without hanging over the raiL Whales Named for Appearance The bottlenose whale and the humpback whale are named for their appearance, but the largest creature that ever lived orfiearth, bigger than elephant or prehistoric monster, ia the blue whale or Sibbald'S Rorqual, named after the Scottish naturalist, Sibbald, who first described it. It sometimes exceeds one hundred feet. ••MM of Petriied Weed Some of the prehistoric Indian houses in Petrified Forest National Monument, Arizona, were built of petrified wood instead of ordinary stone. One of these is known as Agate- house. ttgaed CwslHnikw, Declaratisa George Washington and James Madison were signers of the Constitution, and Thomas Jefferson and John Adams signed the Declaration Wf Independent Ashes Sent 1S.SSS Miles Gerrigong, N. S. W.--In accordance with the directions in his will, the ashes of George Herbert Bennett, Gerrigong surgeon, have been buried secretly 10,000 miles from the aeene of his death. ------ "SO I HEAR.*' (Waste basket department) - -I- 1 Now that we are through blasting Maybe-,ve «an gpt. ft box score for you. •• From the number fishermen in ii «», ^ it««»»th.. Oscar" and' "Fenny" ere in for a Out of Order Seattle.--The burglar alarm didn't work, so Grocer Perry Biggs ,decided to fix it. He puzzled over the apparatus until he felt a pistol thrust against his back. The bandit robbed him of $270. Maker, Cnmakar ef Kings Born in 088, more than 1,000 years ago, Gerbert, Bishop of Rheims, was a savant and diplomat whose prestige and influence was so great that ha waa known as "the maker and unmaker of kings." He also was a poet and writer. Marines Established fa M The marines are the oldest branch of the United States armed service, to pick up an item or two to round out this column. . --IT Haven't had so much fun in a long time as visiting with Jake Buss on Memorial Day. --H-- Like many Old Timers, Jake Buss thinks McHenry is the greatest little city on earth. He was high in his praise for those who put over that Centennial with flying colors. What's more, he thinks another reunion (on a smaller scale) would go over big. We think so, too. McHenry likes to have the tikes o' Jake Buss come liome. [ I Mandrake, the Magician, has a cape and magic wand, but that's all he has on Petie Schaefer. He has an eggtwirling trick that's good. j --n-- After thought: Bet Jake Stoffel was njwsed after his uncle, Jake Bus#- Bet Uncle Jake is proud of that boy. --I-- i If there is a better third baseman in baseball than Stan Hack, you name him. I --I-- » I It may be old now, but most of you probably haven't heard that Herman Schaefer and "Speed" Stilling wound up the bowling season at Elgin recently by winning first place in the Booster Division of the tournament with a 1227 total. Pretty fair bowling for country beys ia a-bif city* merry'chase. Just' imagine pulling a thousand dollar fish ^mt of the water I " " --<§**»"' t's all. V By order of the | U. S. District Court of the J~ Northern District of Illinois 1 I will sell at Public Auction on the ipremises at the Colemar Country k V- J: Club, 1 mile east of Spring Grove, off Rt. 12, 8 miles north-west of Foes : Lake, on ^ | MONDAY, JUNE 6 Beginning at 1:00 p. m. D. S.IR 200 ACRES I STANDING , I.' Alfalfa Hay ^ No. 1 Quality Idaho Grimm ^5 Will be staked off in 5 acre tracts* _ • J Purchaser will have privilege of bid* •; i ding and buying 5 acree or more he wishes in 5 acre tracts. ' <" ' This Sale Will For the ' , First Cutting Only * Contract cutters will be on th* - - ^ 1 grounds whose services will be avails1 aWe to cut and bale for any pur*; chasers desiring their services. Last year's crop was baled and handled id the same manner, yielded over two tons to the acre on the first cutting and this year's crop is in still better stand of Alfalfa. This sale is called early to give) purchaser time to cut and removed without interfering with starting a#, second crop growth. TERMS OF SALE: CASH If you desire credit make arranged ments with your own beaker prior tar-* the sale. . ' Lunch wagon will be on tha grounds. Come early as sale will start promptly on time. Ohas. Leonard, Agent • First National Bank of Woefeteefc. ij# Clerking FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SPECIALS Fresh Ground Meat Tender RolledRib Roast. 2 lbs fw 43«fc Lean Small Wg Pwk Loin Roast lb. 27^ Pillsbtiry'* Sno-Shetn Cake Flour, S^-lb. pkg. for 27^ Kerber'sLard : -• 5 lbs. for 55^ Lean. BoiUng B^ef lb. 12c Fresh Peas, Oreen or Wax Beans 2 lbs. for 23^ Celery •- * large stalks for 15<^ Fresh Bpinaell^ J2 !bs. for 19^ New Cabbage 3 f°r 13c FRESH VEGETABLES AND FRUIT-- Oranges, Pineapple, Bananas, Grapefruit, Apples, Peas, Beans, Spinach, Ra&sfcef, Green Onions, Carrots, Celery, Head : BBOCtHt 4 m«tn * Phone v Wert m

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