McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Mar 1939, p. 2

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m K:. • v^-":;< 'k' "'" •" <% vr ;f^ ^ TO * * *l? * r ; Y>- 'V *«'. . - *v//V * Ff.AlimBiT.il '--•4/ rv BOWLING S00RE8 o. ...Stilling R. Hettermann Nature's Keenest M. Wilbrandt .. Rival LILT LABI Old TiaMrs •* v'- WcuhingUm Tmh two TOTAL ... Wilson' Adams Schmitt Barbiaa Bacon Team Two J) Brefeld 0. Preund y. Freund J. Weber TOTAL 2444 Team Three Wattles Perkins Rogers Freund Granger ,F. Freund, Jr. " Jamesway "EVENHEAT" ELECTRIC HOVERS The choice of better Poultrymon ;Verywhere--they're Air Conditioned. Chicks are Hardier and Featlv better when brooded this modern, easy, economical way. New Air and Heat distribution principle prevents hot and cold spots -- chicks make use of entire We also carry "the coniplete line of piling tip. , If. you • have., "fel^tricity•. will Waritrto see-tMs^iiew -hWerv';' We also carry the complete^ line o: Jamesway brooding and laying equipment. «, J. J. VYCITAL HARDWARE Phone 98-M Green Street MAKES FOOD ENJOYABLE Baby can't eat dry food without the help'of milk to soften and moisten it. To be sure baby has a quart of milk a day we deliver to your door. c Be sure that you get GRADE A MILK Pasteurised and Delivered by the -- M'HENRY DAIRY P H O N E 2 7 1H5R0DUCI0M SERVER coRTUHE 25< TUDOR PLATE By Oneida Community Silversmiths 34-PIECE SERVICE Imagine! A complete .service for eight in free solid wood, tamish-proof chest. backed by Wear-Proofed guarantee. Available fa# the new "Fortune" and other popular Tudor Plate patterrfs. NYE JEWELRY, MUSIC AND RADIO SHOP $I9.7S Phone 123-J Main Street Washinton, March 29--Renewed activity by the organized farm groups, coupled with the bitter debate this week over a billion dollar appropriation bill for the Department of Agrir culture to use during the fiscal year of 1940, lends color to current contentions jthat the farm areas will hold the key [to the next Presidential race, The . powerful farm lobbies are obviously seeking to re-establish the prestige of the "farm-bloc" which was rampant in Congress in 1922-23. The Administration Venters with a quarter of! a billion gift to, farmers' handling wheat, corn and cotton crops called "parity payments." Economy hopes have flown out of the window with this largesse to the farmers and another relief defiicinecy bill of $150 million. It is hard to determine where rieces-. sity ends and politics begins in appropriating Federal money. Our international relations daiiriv j tfie attention of many government departments. The advocates of.-spend- I ing and saving are battling away with the spenders having the upper hand as budgetary controls are ignored. The current proposal in the Senate for a steeply graduated income tax in event this country is involved in a war is so drastic that it is making a deep impression thi'oughout the coun- • try. The idea of equipping the Administration with a law taking the profit out of war and practically confiscating capital in an emergency is : something provocative of concern for all clases of citizens. As to the im- \ mediate problem of restoring employment; .there is a growing division within the Administration ranks as to what is needed in government policies to get the wheels turning again. This talk of "appeasement" apparently has been overplayed for Mr. Roosevelt 'deeply resents being driven into any compromise by forces within or outside his official family circle. There is really nothing new-fangled about the coalition of farm organizations moving into the picture at Capitol Hill. Their influence has been eclipsed in recent years by the sudden rise of organized labor to power in the political firmament. The farm crowd is emerging from relative obscurity with demands for exemption under the wage and hour laws. These tactics may shove tlfem into combat with labor unions who are vigorously opposing removal of any class from the [new Federal law, which is one of their legislative offspring This clash will inevitably posfcjapne quite efforts to co alesce the farmers and trade unions into a political force*to plague political parties with their demands. Prejvious efforts to combine these factions have failed for a variety of reasons and is now more remote than ever. .High relief wages at the insistence of the unions makes it well nigh impos sible for a farmer to obtain workers |at a wa-^e he can afford to pay--a fact (which aggravates the farmer-unionist situation. It was not so many years ago when the total appropriations for all government departments seldom exceed ed the billion mark and folks were highly critical of what they consider' ed extravagance. Now one single agency, the Agriculture Department, has at hand the same amount which rivets the attention of the political astrologers with an eye to next year's elections. A House member from Kansas, a farm state, told his colleagues that farmers would be content with a program of soil conservation, cheaper interest rates and restricted competition from foreign countries without providing this new bonanza in parity payments. Republicans insist that the enormous sum is a deliberate at tempt to cover the alleged failure of the trade agreements which so far have been construed as detrimental to domestic farmers. The parity question is confusing the farmer and legislator alike. The official explanation is that "parity price means in effect that what the farmer has to sell will buy as much of what he has to buy as during the years used as a base which is the average prevailing from 1909 to 1914--when it was presumed that the farmer was on an equality with industry and labor." And, few will smack a gift-horse in the mouth when government checks come rolling into the till. As the legislators in Various state capitals prepare to close up for the season a survey shows that the best laid plans of Federal agencies for extending their powers were in the majority of cases deliberately side-tracked. Relatively few commonwealths adopted laws designed to insure uni formity. On the average the central government lost out in its campaign for standardization of statutes. Eleven state legisuatures have already adjourned, twelve more are expected to ring down the curtain next month and the balance to end their' deliberations by May or June at the latest. Despite the encouragement offered by the Wage and Hour Administration through offers of financial backing many legislators shied away from state laws regulating wages and hours within their borders along the pattern set by the Federal Act. The same unwillingness to adopt statutes drafted under instructions from Washington bureaus marked the fate of model food and drug acts. Word from the states indicated that they wanted the Federal law perfected before writing them into state statutes. APPEAR ON STAGE--~~ The Adams Bros, of Johnsburg and Miss Evelyn Anderson* of this city, who are broadcasting each Saturday from Aurora for a month, and doing very nicely, appeared at the Roxy theater in West Chicago Sunday. Their three stage appearances were made between shows and consisted of western guitar and song arrangement*. TOTAL .. Team Four Weber Covalt Page Meyers Hughes"-' .......4412 .447 1 461 •,...... 421 471 452 TOTAL 225$ Team One Karls Goodell Schaefeip Sayler Smith .... 437 .... 450 Sll 455 462 •TOTAiL .2322 Forester League Weingart ... Herdrich. ..... G. Freund ... G. Justen ... Smith TOTAL Heimer Knox Unti H. Weber ... Winkel ......... Lf&tu. Nye ............ Thies ........... A. Justen ..... Gus Freund . G. Weber TOTAL J. Thennes . Rothermel ... H. Schaefer E. Thennes . H. Simon 448 583 ....... 426 ............. 494 ..;.v....... 568 ...<........2519 445 456 ....... 519 471 ............. 598 ...2489 ... 447 ... 391 ... 424 ... 543 ... 594 TOTAL team Four B. Vogt C. Dowe C. Weingart .. R. Justin Jc^ Weber Team Oiie E. Tonyan E. Bohr mv J. Schaefer B. Frisby E. Steinie ; TOTAL ...........,i......~.«.......2164 - Team Thre* . ' W. Tonyan" 474 C. Schaefer, 477, B. Althoff 411 G. Frisby 438 .*..2276 Ui 494 H. Schaefer, TOTAL Ladies' League Team One R. Marshall ..i M. Kinsala... A. Freund ..... B. Thennes ... M. Green ....A. L. Thennes ... e-e e • • TOTAL ,. Team Two L. Krause ...... A. Froehlich J. McLaughlin H. Conway .... F.AFrothlich V. Diedrich 539 ..2339 hi ... 491 ... 396 499 „ 351 £ 286 ~....2517 460 ...... 472 425 ; 386 449 315 TOTAL .......2399 441 458 410 458 481 2248 Ctty Leaftte K. of C. Freund's A. Tonyan . Fitzgerald ... E. Sutton ... M. Schmitt . B. Freund ... TOTAL Sutton's A. Schaefer Regner Weber ........ Sutton ...... Stilling ....... TOTAL Frisby's Frisby, Jr. . Nye Yanda ......... Conway ....... J. Frisby ..... TOTAL Green'a Whiting O'Shea Knox Martin Green ............. 487 474 443 435 507 Ml t r- 501 452 ......... 508 ......... 542 514 .........2617 TOTAL .... Team Three M. Krause ........ M. Schiessle i... V. Brefeld ........ S. Covalt . ....i... K. Brefeld ........ A. Thennes .....; TOTAL .... ...2516 363 381 443 .. 374 .. 313 „ 292 ,2164 419 465 405 489 555 465 534 490 506 504 i«>TAL .2428 Mixed Nat Letgna Herdrkh'a Gert Barbian ... Evie Schaffer ... John Stilling ... Harold Freund John Herdrich . ...rtl.i........... 450 426 405 414 515 TOTAL Barbian's Calla Freund Vera Herdrich Pearl Schmidt A1 Wlilbrandt George Barbian TOTAL _ Britz's P. Schaffer . M. Stilling F. Freund ... Britz ..... Conway TOTAL Stilling'g "Deering I*. Cwnray . ........2210 801 378 373 ... j.., 393 ........ 509 .......1954 431 839 451 128 461 ..2070 .... 408 .... 8W TOTAL Crystal Lake Oerkfitz Koch Roawer Knipfel -- Scott TOTAL McHenry Krause Anderson Schaefer Frisby .. Conway TOTAL Canadieng Adams Conway Freund.... G. Weber Bacon ,2432 :. 504 . 515 ,. 531 . 550 . 451 .2551 500 . 473 . 467 . 530 . 467 .2437 581 518 534 539 488 TOTAL Woodstock Swedes Krause V. Johnson * Clausen Kunda Johnson . TOTAL .2660 . 464 . 481 . 548 . 538 . 525 .2556 McHenry Palaee Bruno Granger ... Winkel Bacon Smith ............... TOTAL \f- Palatine ; Schwobwo Sanborn .. Prehm .... Dimse Weinch .. ...w ... 560 ... 557 .... 548 ... 552 685 515 587 495 564 TOTA L Mr. and Mrs. Hjlitt and sott and daughter of Chicago spent Sunday at Lily Lake. Mr. and Mrs. E. Draper parents of a son. ' Mr. and Mrs. William Bender and son"of Chicago visited the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Swanson Sunday. , Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dosch attended a piano recital of twelve-year-old Joan Bishop in Barrington Saturday afternoon. They were also Chicago visitors Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Cusick. Visitors in their home Sunday at Lily Lake were Mr. and Mrs. C. Eccardt. Mr. and Mrsr P. Stern of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Hiarfy L. Miller of CiCero. Mrs. J. Boyko of Chicago spent the weekend at her home at Lily Lake. ^ Mrs. Lottie Bransfield was a Chicago visitor Thursday. Mr and Mrs. Harry Miller of Cicero spent Saturday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George J. Wegener. < Mrs. B. Lavin and daughters of Chicago are having a new home built at Lily Lake. Thomas G, Klabough announces the marriage of Miss Marjorie, Spence of of Lyndon, Wis., to his brother, James Klabough, formerly of Mauston, Wis. The marriage took place at the home of the Rev. Bruce Gillis of the Presbyterian church of Woodstock. The couple are residing at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Klabough at Lily Lake. Visitors in their home Slunday "were Miss Margaret Farrell, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Driscoll, Mrs. Nora McCalla (mother, of Mrs. Thomas Klabough,) all of Chicago, and Roy McCalla of Mount Vernon, Ohio, brother of Mrs. L. Klabough. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Weisbaum and soii, Donald, have returned from Miami, Fla., Sunday, March 26. They visited many cities of importance ehroute, including Lookout Mountain, Silver Springs, Nashville and others. . Vital Statistics Not Recorded The world is still without vital statistics--name, age, sex, marital condition and occupation--concerning one-third of the human race, according to Collier's Weekly Smith's Match Games Wagner a' 484 Ml Schaefer .. 507 "•vli(fflenry J. I Lenzen ................................ .. 462 Gert Barbian .. 408 J. Sompel .. 474 R. Hettermann £ 439 H. Smith .. 546 Marie Wilbrandt ................. 427 . v. --- Dot Schaffer ...493 • TOTAL ..2423 Fanny Freund ... 407 Freund's . v n"^* '* M. Schreiner ..„„;......i.....,.„.... .429 TOTAL .„2174 J. Wagner .. 466 "I^ertyviU# Gorman .. 450 Jessie Stauber ..............i....... ... 462 E. Thennes ............................ .. 558 IHelen Gratz ........................... ... 447 Gus Freund ..500 Mabel Meyer ...........~..,....'t..... .,. 403 Madeline Lill ... 479 TOTAL :. ..2403 Irene Boehm _ 441 - Schretner's - v'i'/ -- -- ~ B. Kreutzer ...498 TOTAL ,... ...2232 W. Kreutzer ...500 W. Schreiner ......... ... 534 Woodstock Pin Boys J. J. Wagner ... 504 Rohn ... 501 B. Green ... 515 Rogman ........ ... 427 ---- Trumble ................................ ... 433 TOTAL ..W...M*. ...2551 Hanson ................................. ... 445 Bruno's • • likerson ......... 496 Hobbs ... 436 •' . ^ *• "V Pries ... 442 TOTAL ...M.............*.M..... ....2302 B. Justen ... 512 McHenry Pin Boys L. Lockwood ... 416 Mansfield .;. 567 Bruno ...580 Sutton ..r............. ... 440 ' ' .' v" : ---- Wesson ..m,...... 454 TOTAL ...2386 Eddy 502 .ifeiiknin ... 469 Patent for Wireless In 1896 Guglielmo Marconi, then" a young and unknown Italian inventor, went to England and took out; the first patent lor wireless telegraphy <by means of Hertzian waves. Millions 'Speak English There are approximately 200,000,-< 000 persons who speak the English language. Books Inscribed on Bones Hooks inscribed on bones are ex> hibited in the British museum in London. WEST M'HENRY STATE BANK MEMBER FEDERAL RESBK+B SYSTEM ember Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Even when vou add transportation, state and local taxes (if any) delivered prices are lower than you think! So the smart step is value of the year The more you look around the surer you are to see that at •|894 and up, delivered at Flint, Mich., this big, bright, brisk Buick is the car and the BUICK DEALER! many USE THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS FOR QUICK RESULTS You're SAFER on NEW "Firestone CHAMPION TIRES The Only Tires Made With the NEW SAFETY-LOCK CORD BODY and GEAR-GRIP TREAD .. Stronger Cord Body--More Non-Skid Miltagt YOU'RE safer on any road in any weather when your car is equipped with new Firestone Champion Tirea, They give you greater protection against blowouts because of th* exclusive Firestone Safety-Lock Cord- Body and they give you greater protection against skidding because of the amazing new Firestone Gear' Grip Tread. The sensational new Safety-Lock Cord Body is the result of a new and revolutionary means of locking greater safety into the cord body of the tires. This is accomplished first, by the use of a new type of tire cord called "Safety-Lock," in which the cotton fibers are more compactly interwoven to give greater strength. And then the fibers in each individual cord, the cords in each ply and the plies themselves are all securely locked together by a new and advanced Firestone process of Gum-Dipping, which provides amazingly greater strength --»and greater strength means greater safety. The neW"Safety-Lock cord construction gfoes added strength that makes possible the use of the new, thicker,,tougher, deeper Firestone Gear-Grip Tread, which provides remarkably longer non-skid mileage* This sensational new tread is called "Gear-Grip" 'because of its unique design which has more dun three thousand sharp-edged angles that LOUIS UNSER 1938 PUfr't Peak Wlaaer for 12 coosecvdTa races, ererr winning driver in the Pikes Peak Cunl), where a site mans grip the road with a sure-footed hold to pr®» tect against skidding and to assure a safe stoft In good weather or bad, in winter or summer, you need all of this extra protection -- and you need it NOW! Let us equip your car with a set of new Firestone Champion Tires -- the only tires made that are safety proved on the speedway for your protection on the highway. ** Tirestone CHAMPION Tlretlont HISH SPEED f)r est one CONVOY S.25-I7.tl4.*5 5.50-16. 14.15 3.50-17.' 14«*5 6.00-16. 1S.9S 6.00-17. !•.§• &00-18.017*TS 6.25-16. 17.9S 6.50-16. 1«.»S 7(00-15. M.SS 7.00-16. S1.9S 5.50-16* I*«7S 5.50-17. 6.00-16. 14.15 6.00-17. 14.D5 6.00-18.015^5 6.25-16. 1*. 15 6.50-16. 17-4« 7A0-15. 7.00-16. 19.75 4.50-21. tS.SS 4.75-19. •.*• 5.00-19. 935 5.25-17. 9^*5 5.25-18. 5.50-16.919^# 5.50-17. ll.«9 6.00-16. 11.95 6.25-16. 13.4S 6.50-16. 14.99 • "TRUCK TIMS 'AND OTHER PASSENGER CAR SIZES PRICED PROPORTIONATELY LOW U.>.. H Tt. V.le. .< fIr.«f... wH* «l.».rd C™h. I Kffred Waffeasteia. Meaday evMlafls ever Mm*leawM* M. B. C. Wefwor*. , Walter J. Freund Tire and Tube Vulcanizing', Repairing, Battery Charging, All grades of Tractor Oils and Greases Spark Plugs, Fan Belts, Etc. Kii(rao>294 ;--. ^ West McHenry -

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