wmmi .y, July 27,1990 *•&<#«*»?• «s|WM**> ^ .._ *-b »* *\i*SA«tos*. «h ^ -afc A •»• V -A*niT **&•% £ &*?•*• ^4 i "l&Vj&i * 'ms®* ': &t!& .f.„lB :fie£- «n* fe# * -sLfe* <•#***#1. ,v' " ," • yT« A TWpH ^ mK a »•> •(•»«*.>• f- <fr v-.* yj^y; <at wifai'^liiii •' :-<*.-:-:<•••• V », ,-r 'j.. * \ » . Vi*t% -if ^.V . • ' , ; SStft BEFORE IT'S t TOO LATE! JOHNSBURG Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller motored to Waukegan Friday. Miss Annabel Meyers and Walter Freund spent Wednesday in" Chicago with Mrs. Frances Lichte. Miss Katherine Pitzen spent the wekend in the home of her father, John Pitzen. Mr. and H1"8- George Zarnstorff of Woodstock were callers here Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Wm, J. Meyers and , SHERIFF'S SALS BY VIRTUE of an Execution on Transcript issued out of the Clerk's Office of the Circuit Court of Mc- Henry County and State of Illinois, and to me directed, whereby I am commanded to make tlje amount of a certain judgment recently obtained against Eliza W. Meister in favor of Chesapeake and Ohio Railway Com* ipany, a Corporation, for the use of son LeR°y, spent Wednesday evemng:Fidel'it ^ ^ ^ q£ atWaukegan with Mr. and Mrs. Irvin|MjkryUnd & Corporation, out of the Schaefer. viands, tenements, goods and chattels %3" ALL-WEATHER •OODYUTS MST-MWWN STEPPED UP IN MILEAGE -- -OIEPPED COWM 01 PUCE T« safel 1 bought 'G4* -adtawd wed atwrr LAST mrl BEST SELLKX - MIDI mi RIB • Hwrs'i a tonghsr, stronger, una tire--finer than th« famous "G-3" yon>« known in tha pat-nmr in dwrign end materials -- engineered to run thousands oi extra mites boforo wearing down--a tb ttat standi fust now as always--&• TCP VJUiiB Us fieldl -la raw sis*. DMI fw dCOMMC. Nw fal MM> VOLO or unaum mwi Let Jnpiaet yota liMr taku MWiHlkI AV '|!M•|| Wm- , |J|iA||MJn The*. *•" ride--ea Oii<|ii1i eaaJT^ ONC-A-MON1H HAN (OnMe SBMB payaMit mmm. 4be fat 4h* ML) WHEELS CORRECTLY g BALANCED > - SAVE TOU < Momri Out-of-balance wheels cause "shimmy.** rough rids, wasteful tin wear. Com* in and let us balance your wheels with our modern equipment. FREE INSPECTION! The Lady Foresters of St. Agmthajof ^ ^ Elil^ w Meister j have P,<^ levied on the following property, to. the home of Mrs. Frank Kempfer at , »* r j. Twin Lakes, Wis., Wednesday. About forty-wine sisters including Father Neidert were present. Mrs. Joe Frett motored to Woodstock Friday afternoon. Mrs. Alex Freund and daughter, Nancy, of Chicago are spending the week with her mother, Mrs. Stephen II. Smith. 1 Joe Schmitt and daughter of Spring Grove were callers here Friday evening. „ Mr. and Mrs. John Bohnen of Wflmette called on Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Meyers Sunday afternoon. Mrs George King was taken to St. Therese hospital Friday where she was operated on Saturday morning. She is improving very nicely. Mrs. John Smith and daughter, Leona, and son, Clarence, motored to Elgin Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Wegner of Volo called on Mrs. Wailiam Althoff Friday evening. Mrs. Ben Stilling spent a couple of days with her sister, Mrs. Jacob Justen, at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hoffien and children of Genoa, Wis., called on Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Thiel Friday evening. Miss Katherine Althoff of Elgin is spending a two weeks' vacation with her mother, Mrs Wm. Althoff. Mrs. Jack Bode and daughter, Faaline, and Miss Marei King-motored to Pell Lake Thursday. Mrs. Laurence Baer of Chicago was a caller here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Oertel of Chicago visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michels Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thelen. were Spring Grove callers Sunday. Lots Fifteen and Sixteen in Plstakee Beach, a subdivision in the fractional NE*4 of Section Id, Township 45 North, Range 9 East of the 3rd P. M. in the Township of McHenry, in the County of McHenry, and State of Illinois, according to plat recorded in the (Recorder's Office of the County of McHenry, in Book 2 of Plats on page 24; also that piece of property situated in the said North* East fractional quarter of said Section 19, bounded and described as follows, to-wit: Commencing at the South West corner of Lot 16 aforesaid, running thence South 2 rods; thence East parallel with the South line of said Lot 16 to the margin of Pistakee Lake; thence Northerly along the margin of said lake to the South East corner of said Lot 16; thence West along the South line of said Lot 16 to the place of beginning, situated in the Township of Mc- Page Three Henry, in the County of McHenry, in the State of Illinois. THEREFOR, according to said com. mand, I shall expose for sale, at Public Auction, all the right, title and interest of the above named Eliza W. Meister in and to the above described property, on Friday the 4th day of August, 1939, at 9:00 (standard) o'clock A. M. at the front door of the Courthouse, in the City of Woodstock, in said County, Dated at Woodstock, Illinois, this 7th day of July 1939. LESTER EDINGEt, Sheriff of McHenry County, Illinois. (Pah. July 13 - 20 - 27) My Neighbor Says:=z Remove all rust from pipes before applying new paint to them. « • * Cabbage and cauliflower plants should be transplanted in the cool part of the day. Late afternoon is a good time. * * * :'.v Kisses and tortes require long slow baking. Individual kisses ordinarily require about 30_minutejs and large tortes an hour. • • • ' • Dice leftover potatoes, add a creamy, white sjiuce and combine them with other leftover cooked vegetables or hard-cooked eggs, e e • A little vinegar or lemon juice will add to the piquancy of greens. It should not be cooked into the greens, but sprinkled over them just before they are served. ^ (Associated Newspaper*--WKU Service.) Rubber Stamps at The Plaindealer SAVE AT THE SNMf OP ^ THE GOODYEAR DIAMOND BLAKE Motor Sales Y ear Goodyear Tire Dealer Dodge - Plymouth Pearl and Park Strets -- Phoae 156 Miss Joanne Moody of Wauconda spent the past week with Arvilla Ann Fisher. G. A. Vasey and Charles Rushing of Belvidere called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker Monday. Miss Marion Wirtz is visiting her aunt, Mrs. B. Grabbe, in Waukegan at this writing. Miss Esther Mulch of Chicago spent the past week here at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wilson. Robert Dunker. Harry Case, Marvin Wirtz and Richard Fisher, accompanied by Mr. J. Davis, attended the dairy judging contest held at the fol lowing farms Thursday: Holsteins, Hawthorn farms; Guernseys, Kane's farm; Brown Swiss, Dr. Harry Hoag's farm; Jersey's at Druce Lake farm. Mrs. Jos. Passfield and sons spent Friday aftemcon with her father, Geo. Dowell, in Wauconda^ -- Mr. and Mrs;' Frank Gould and daughter, Donna Lee, of Libertyville spent Friday evening at the home ot Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Anderson aa£ family of Wauconda visited Mr. and Mrs. Dean Baseley Saturday. Mr. and Mrs Arthur Kaiser a$d son, James, were Wednesday evening guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Frank Gould in Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and Mrs. Sarah Fisher called at the home of Miss Edna Fisher in Waukegan Tuesday. Frank Anderson of Wauconda spent the weekend with his aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrf$t>ean Baseley. Mrs. William Wirtz and family, Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family, Mrs. Herman Dunker and family. Mr?. Walter Crook and daughter. Orpha, Mrs. William Dillion Mrs. Ray Paddock, Mrs. Russell Magnuse§n, Mrs. Howard Conversr, M is«es Beatrice Wilson, Esther Mulch, Betty Wagner, Joanne Moody and Betty Lou Anderson attended the annual picnic of the Volo unit of the Lake county Home Bureau held at Ray Brothers park at Diamond Lake Thursday. lift-, and Mrs. Floyd Ross, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Bretzloff of Crystal Lake were Tuesday evening visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker. . Mrs. A Ketel of Barrinprton visited M s. Herman Dunker Tuesday. Mrs. Leslie Davis and family of Slocum*s Lake visited her mother, Mrs. Sarah Fisher Sunday. Mrs. Frank St. George called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wright fit Lake Defiance Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Grabbe and family of Crystal Lake spent nesday evening at the hom and Mrs. Wa^er Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wagner and family, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Gibbs and family and Frank St. George at" tended the motorcycle races at Crete, 111., Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Helston and fam ily of Glenn Ellyn visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher Mon day. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ackerson and son, Robert, of Crystal Lake spent Sunday evening at the home of Mr< and Mrs. Walter Vasey. Mr. and Mrs. J. Balmes of Evan* ton, Mrs. K. Klemm and son, Robert, of Wilmette were Friday evening guests at the home of Mr and Mis. Frank St. George. SNAPSHOT CUIL BETTER CHILD PICTURES Your child pictures will be more interesting If they "tell a story." Show the child busy at something--euch ae this r too far back. repair je*. An«| don* eUM tTTRTUALLY every parent takes snapshots ot the children--and wpald like to take better ones. It's sot dlAcult to take a good ohild picture, and there's Ho subject more appealing.. Bat most ot these pictures can be made still better, it attention is paid to a few common, easily-corrected faults. The commonest faults ate: lack ot "story" interest, wrong choice ot background or setting, subject too tar from camera, and movement which blurs the picture. Almost any child snapshot will be better it it "tells a story." 8imply give the child something to dodress a doll, draw a picture, fix a toy wagon wheel, blow soap bubbles. Such activity adds interest to the picture--and also makes picture taking more interesting for the child. Give a small baby a rattle or brightcolored object to play with--It will arouse his interest, and you will get livelier, more expressive pictures. Be careful in choosing backgrounds. Look beyond the subject-- your camera lens will. Avoid a background that has a definite, obtrusive pattern, such as the side of a clapboarded house. And try for good contrast with the subject. For example, if the child is wearing light-colored clothes, a dark hedge may make a good background. A hilltop with the child against a. sky background Is also good. Cxamine the child snapshots you have taken. It the subject appears too small in most of them, you're taking pictures at too great a {Ustance. See if yon ?an't get closer.,|t's easy with a focusing camera, or an inexpensive box or folding typo that _ has a "two-point" focus setting. • ~ portrait attachment Is also useful fpr "close-ups" at three and one-half feet or even a bit nearer. Tou need not tear cutting off part of your sab- Ject, provided you locate the subject accurately in the view Under aad then do not move the camera when making the exposure. Movement--either of camera or subject--blurs the picture. Take care to bold the camera still at the moment you snap the shutter. And, with a box camera, pick a time when the subject Is not moving* rapidly. It you have a finer camera, use a shutter speed of 1/100 second or faster, with a correspondingly larger lens opening. Watch these points in taking chiM snapshots. They're all simple, BO trouble--and they'll insure you bit* ter pictures. John van Guilder . News Item: "85 per of the national income of the Unitajj States goes to workers and the self-employed," Wedof Mr. Heart Worms in Animals Heart worms are, as their nam*, implies, worms which live in this heart of the infested animal. They are transmitted through the bite of AMfR' noses at their creators. It has been charged that through their interpretations of the statutes these administrative bodies have gone beyond the intent of the legislative body. These Federal agencies have taken over many functions regarded as within the sole jurisdiction of the national legislature. Their abuse of power has resulted in a demand to investigate and the pending probe of the National Labor Relations Board is the opening gun. Other agencies which have displayed a high and mighty attitudb are wondering yfcen Congress will direct the searchlight on their affairs. If the inquiry is thorough, it is possible that their findings may renew the war between the C. I. O. and the A. F. of L. The Board has been accused of having pro-C. I.O. leanings and an intolerant attitude toward employers in their dealings with workers. Talk of the town this week: A number of Senators booking passage for Europe to gather first-hand information as a check a^inst the diplomatic reports to the State Department; close watch on the social activities of Paul McNutt in his new Federal job to obtain tips as to the political character of his callers; others keeping tabs on the travels of Postmaster-General Farley and the identity of visitors to Uvalde home of Texas Jack Garner for ditto reasons; concern over recess appointments of President Roosevelt because of bearing on the 1940 campaign; attempts to measure the resentment among organized farm groups for Administration:inspired criticism of their efforts to modify the Wage and Hour Act and questions as to how far Attorney-General Murphy will go in his prosecutions in an alleged plan to outstrip the record of Prosecutor Dewey, New Yorlfs youthful G. O. P. hopeful. * ' i's 5; ' / .J ii9;- msm Ceias ef Leather Leather coins were used iq parts of northern Europe in the Seventeenth century. Usually they took the form of oblong slahs, into which •ilver or copper studs were hammered. Washington, July 26--Each succeeding day finds our lawmakers packing and unpacking their bags in anticipation of an adjournment resolution. The fact that they are tuning to night sessions indicates the unwillingness of the solons to remain on the job during the balance of the summer. Practically all measures which the legislators consider worth passing are either in the final stages of enactment or dispatched to the White House for signature Or veto. The self-liquidating projects requiring an authorisation for spending on a large scale and the controversial social security amendments are the major stumbling blocks to closing the Congressional show. Only actual war in Europe before adjournment could possibly make the Senate change its mind about shelving neutrality legislation. Big politicians and the lesser fry alike are suddenly manifesting keen interest in the provisions of the Hatch-Dempsey bill passed last week after a bitter fight in legislative halls. A caption in the Congressional Record describing the debate aptly illustrates the subject covered as "pernicious political activity." The measure bearing the names of New Mexico's relatively unknown Senator and lone Representative was forced through strong opposition. It is unlikely that President Roosevelt would dare veto this bill designed to purify political campaigns should advisors seek this last minute strategy. r To one acquainted with the devices of politics the reform measure may have a wholesome effeet on practices which evpn seasoned campaigners have condemned. However, no observer is so gullible as to expect "purified politics" will be immediately forthcoming. The legislation has as its primary purpose the placing of a" halter on the army of Federal employees, and other relief beneficiaries of government largesse from controlling campaigns for Federal office. The question now arises -- "how will thia statute be enforced?". It is not at all probable that this Administration or any of its successors will go out of its way to encourage prosecution of loyal party workers seeking to perpetuate their jobs. Like the enforcement of the prohibition statutes the weakness of the law lies in the difficulties of enforcement. Swift, the English writer, once said, "Laws are like cobwebs which catch small flies, but let wasps and hornets break through." And this Is true of the new prohibition against political compulsion stunts. Flushed with the successful defiance of Administration pressure regarding neutrality, the Hatch political curb, and the House investigation of the National Labor Relations Board, our solons go in their final song and dance posing as economizers. They are whetting their axes for the colossal spending plan reported from the Sei*- jate Banking and Currency Committee. The bill has been dressed considerably since its presentation as part of the White House plan for assisting recovery by lending on easy terms. A major share of the loans will flow through railroad equipment purchases and developing farm tenancy projects which are now described by the happy phrase "recoverable assets." The anti- White House blocs in the Senate an4 House u^ill endeavor to prune the authorizations as an economy measure. .» The numerous government agencies created by Congress have for a number of years literally thumbed their 5J&T' a MNl OASOUNIS. . . (OUT! WITH ITMYl (pr,mwm priced) STANOAtO MD CIOWN frayUer prumd) JTAMOUMD (hr* priced) «iue AT ALL STANDARD OIL DEALEBS "I look Geo. •er 120,687 m ono Hien he got ° n*r. jfst usk him about V-g motors...for performance, economy, miles on 20 changes of oil with "•vor s drop in bo- M". Ho says ho never hod a car that 2 torn Y 10 •• miles „ Ion for 80,000 miles, ond up to 60,000 m'les I never him a drop 0. « changes! Kicks a gal. cost BUYERS^ from a used car lot! Oyer the country, thousands of Ford V-8's have matched the 3 real-life stories quoted above. Remember what they say, as you choose your new car. There's more to a Ford V-8 Hien the many exclusive fine-car features it gives you at its low price. There's also a matchless record behind every Ford V-8. More than 27,000,000 cars ago, the Ford business was started to give low-cost transportation at its best, and in the 1939 Ford V-8, it's doing fust that today! » ; : rVr Ww~Cv5T TrVISpWTITlVI it its best--row as always! FORD ¥8 PHONE 1 FOR A DEMONSTRATION Buss4 Page Motor Sales Authorized FORD Sales and Service Main Street. McHenry, 111