q£r/i % ' t,i 4'.; WWt<¥z;*'^ • • . t V>('v . v< ^ /'..r .S¥\r^>' ^v-L! Society Not|es iff - •> •~T£ MOTHERS' CLUB The Mothers' club meets with Mrs. Wallace Dobyns on Friday, June 14. Mrs. Marian Hunt, the guest speaker, •Will talk on antique glass. P&AST RIVER ROAD PINOCHLE 'Mrs. M. A. Sutton was the hostess fit the last meeting of the East River Road Pinochle club on Tuesday afternoon. The awards went to Mrs. E. Drucker, Mr*. Jgii^Uam Freund and Mrs. Ge^plttBpn^Mrs.. John Craver June 19. - The^^^wdckthe telephone office honored Mrs. Tad Miller, the former Emily 6toffelr at a chickeit dinner which was held in Neisen's cafe on Monday night of last week. They presented their (guest of honor with a •et«fdi*ies. - ®I:J ' : r • CHRISTENING . The infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Gharles Martin, of Woodstock, former McHenry. residents, was baptized Raymond Charles at . St. ?<fary's church, Woodstock, Sunday. The sponsors were Vincent Martin of Woodstock and Mrs. Peter M. Schaefer of Johnsbnrg. m m m I ETVERYIEW CAMP Itiverview Camp, R. N. A., held a shortbusiness meeting Tuesday even inff at which time invitations were read to attend Guest Nights at the Woodstock chapter this Thursday night and at the Algonquin chapter next Wednesday night Some of the Officers of the Riverview Camp will fill stations on these two nights. • • • BAKE SALE The Mothers' club is sponsoring a bake sale on Saturday, June 15, in the Jacob Justen Furniture store On Ureen street Th* members of the club are asked to bring their baked goods not later than 10:00 a.m. If anyone hasn't a way to get her goods to the sale, call Mrs. George Stilling and she will pick s the articles np. m m 9 EPWORTH LEAGUE . Last Sunday night the Epworth League was entertained at the home of Gordon Scholle at Pistakee Bay. The devotions were led by Rev. A. W. Blood and the topic for the evening was "Hobbies and Their Value." Hot chocolate and cake were served at the close. Ray Page-provided the transportation for the members who attended tike meeting. They wpre: Laura and lEdith Sherman, Betty Kramer, Esther Orr, Bonnie Page, Lon Smith, Beryl Colby and the host. These young peo- 0te have been quite interested in this dub and manage to have a good time •very week. • • • t'7^ MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED Mrs. Clyde Kinreed of Marengo, announces the marriage of her daughter, Florence, to Carney Gilkerson of Crystal Lake, son of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gilkerson of McHenry in Dubuque, I&wa, on March 31. Attendants Were Miss Barbara Gilkerson of McHenry, sister of the bridegroom and Elroy Burkley of Crystal Lake. The bride was graduated from-Marengo Community High school with fbe class of 1935, and the bridegroom . from Crystal Lake High •ehool in 1937. The young couple will reside ait Crystal Lake. • • • , SHOWER BRIDE-TO-BE Twelve - persons were present at a ihower given Sufiday afternoon in Hie home of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Ton {an on Pearl street honoring Edna [ae Miller of McHenry who is to become the bride of Herman Joseph JBehm of Grayslake this Thursday af- <|ernoon, June 6. The mass took place •this morning at St. Mary's church, . Tremont, and they will exchange vows , Shis afternoon. v . The guests spent- the afternoon at Ikunco and a delightful lunch wa* " Std. AV<" W1AHDA BOYKO AMD CHICAGO MAN VISIT ULKES ON HONEYMOON On the first day of June, a lovely marriage ceremony at St. Sylvester's church, Chicago, made Miss Wanda Boyko, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Boyko of Lily Lake, the bride of Mr. Douglas Hales, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hales of Chicago. The nuptial high mass took place at 9:00 o'clock Saturday. The bride and her attendants were The Junior League of the Communi j jn colonial gowns, with Juliet caps and ity Methodist church met Monday j blush veils as headpieces and carrying night in the home of Dick Baum. i colonial bouquets. Each wore a string Beryl Colby led the devotions and the!of pearls. All in white, the bride's o. E. a There will be a regular meeting of the Eastern Star on Montto evening, June 10. ,1 - JUmORLEAGtfis members enjoyed a variety of games after the business meeting; - = * • * FOX RIVER VALLEY At the meeting5 iof the JFox River Valley Camp,- R.N. A., .on- Tuesday evening, an - invitation was read to visit the Crystal Lake camp on June IS. v On Tuesday evening, Frances and Elsie Vycital, Mrs. Ray Spurling, Mrs. Ethel Holly, Mrs. Minnie Martin and Mrs. Alice Lindsay attended Friend's Night at Goksen Star chapter, Genca, 111. Elsie Vycital took the part of Esther. A very interesting program wa3 presented by a number of persons from the old fblks' home at Koekford. CLEMENIS SCHOOL PICNIC Sunday afternoon,, about ninety guests attended the annual school picnic at Clemens school. The pupils presented a program and ^here was community singing. William E. Whitinfc, director of the school for fifty-two years, and chairman of the McHenry rural school board, was presented with a beautiful bouquet of mixed flowers by Mrs. Ethel Munson. Miss Lorraine Erber was also presented with an award for not having been absent or tardy for five years. Another high light on the program was a talk by Carl Pomrening; his topic was "Oxygen and Its Uses." Miss Eileen FitzgertW wHl return again to the scnool to teach in the fall. T^e Parent-Teacher association held a business meeting in the parochial school hall Wednesday> afternoon and the mothers of the second grade pupils were hostesses. Mrs. Otto Adams was the chairnvan. , The second grade received the prize for paying the most mothers present. . . Plans were mad? rpr. tibe picnic which is being held today at Walkup's Woods, Crystal ^ake. The summer athletic program which is to be under the supervision •# i/MHhld IfcCracken at the high s«typl, At discussed and it was decided Hjtt'astttmy children as possifajft.#- >n these various sports. The association is to hold a gardett party at the home of Mrs, ,Wallac«| • Dobyns on, June 2t, Mrs. H. E. Dur-* land was named general chairman of a party which will be held at Mrs, Pink Harrison's at Pistakee Bay oif Aug. 1 for the benefit of the P.-T. A, The annual reports were read at this meeting and there was no musical program. gown was of white satin and she carried W •JMPUMCSs»S* SWT ««U«ay ... Hi* V. • W4 JUrystal La^e in the Memorial Day parade. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Morris of Chi- Miss Mary Kinney spent a few days c^.° 9Pent « days the latter part this week with her sister, Mrs. Earl. °f Iast ™®k- their ««mmer home visited friends here Saturday. Mrs. tj. R. Sutton, Mrs. Eleanor Nye and Arthur Martin were Harvard and a bouquet composed of sweet j Woodstock visitors last Thursday. ( peas, lilies of the valley and white The Harold Fretts of Chicago were roses. She was given in marriage by Sunday guests in the Ferdinarfd Frett her father. The maid of honor, Miss home. Connie Boyko, sister of the bride, and The Linus Newmans were visitors the bridesmaid, Miss Olive Hales, sis- in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. ter of the groom, wore dresses of Colby at W&ukegan Monday afterpastel blue with darker blue acces- noon. They spent Tuesday afternoon sories. They carried sweet peas and with Mrs. Walkup and mother, Mrs. carnations. Anna Mollohan, at Ridgefield. ? The best man was a chum of the William Vales of Cicero and Al« groom, Joseph Joyce of Chicago. The bert Vales, Jr., of Chicago were men were in formal morning attire. weekend guests in the Albert Vales The wedding breakfast for twenty- home. at Fair Oaks. Mrs. May Lester of Elgin visited Mrs. Mary O'Flaherty Sunday. Marie Kinsala of Chicago was a guest in the Henry Kinsala home on Sunday. - George Johnson,, of the University of Illinois, came home this we4k fol- Miss Loretta E ichman of Rockford Mrs. H. J*.l osP*o ?ile of Chic'a go .is enjoying the week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman. , Mr. and- Mrs. Fred Colbyt of Burlin McAndrews, before leaving for her home in Mankato, Minn., where /she will spend the summer. Edwin Michels has been transferred from Fort Dodge,' Iowa, to Aurora. He spent the past weekend with his mother, Mrs. Eilzabeth Michels, before going to his new location. game, Calif., are spwnding this mohth at their cottage at .McCollUm Lake: Mrs. Kate Stoffel and Mary Lou Stoffel wilt leave tomorrow for Milwaukee, Wis., where they will be the guests of relatives for a few days. Curtis Newman returned to his home -here Monday for the summer, having completed another year at the University of Illinois at Champaign* Billy Kinsala left Tuesday to spend several days with Chicago relatives. Mrs. Ada Smith and son, Grange^ of ,E?«in called on McHenry relative! iast Wednesday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Ray McGee attended five g-uests,. members of the immedi- William Aebischer and son of Chiate families, was served at Betty's cago, the Charles Stoffels and Mrs. Place in Lily Lake at 12:30. The din- Harol^ Sfceber of Milwaukee were j the graduation exercises at St. Mary'it ner and reception at 6:00 p.m. was giiefets.in the Louis Stoffelbome Sun-j school, Woodstock^ on Tuesday night for 150 persons. The tables were dec- day. " of this week. Mrs. McGee's niece, orated with bridal wreath and lilacs, Mrs. Simon Stoffel, daughters, Lena, Jean Francis Conway, a member of while white crepe paper bej^s and and Clara, and Miss Clara Schiessle' the graduating class, was awarded 3 other decorations hung from the ceil- were Elgin visitors last Thursday. /our-year scholarship at St. Mary's; ing. . | Mr. and Mrs. William Scheid and Notre Dame, for her high scholastic The young couple left on a two- son, William, of Chicago, called at the t standing. Mr. McGee's niece, Mary week honeymoon in the Wisconsin lake George Scheid home at Griswold Lake Harriet Bennett, was also a member region and after June 15 will be at and the John Scheid home at McHenry of the class. ^ home to their friends at 3329 Belden on Monday. | Mrs. Grace Wise and daughters o£ avenue, Chicago. The bride was Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman, speqt; Roseland, Fla., were recent guests in graduated from the McHenry Com- last Friday at the home of Mr. and j the home of Mrs. George Lindsay, munity High school with the class of Mrs. Frank Chapman at Wonder Lake. | Mrs. Etta Reed of Berkeley, Calif.(> 1034. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Anglese and . who is spending a few weeks with daughter expect to move to Evanston relatives in this vicinity, visited her the latter part of this month where sister,- Mrs. George Lindsay, the past Mr. Anglese./Wjill enter a summer week. Self-Acting Extinguishers. A Are in a grocery at VarftVffle, S. C., was extinguished when soda pop bottles were heated by the blaze. The tops popped off and the liquid squirted out. The first thing the owner knew of the blaze was the next morning when he opened Ilie c,-found the burned place and the floor wet with zzf.z. ~ - . " s - r / faker Chip Trouble Ifl no news for poker chipsf to causing trouble, only in this casa the trouble comes even before they are put into play. Paper Mill Workers union, Local 215, of Milwaukee, has sent a letter of protest to Washington asking that each Japanesemade chip be required to carry the label "Made in Japan." school course at Northwestern university. Mrs. Anna Karls has been a guest in the home of her sister, Mrs. George Scheid, at Griswold Lake. Vale Adams returned home this week to enjoy the summer vacation froir. hi? "*'^ics at Lake Forest. Mrs. E. J. Heimer and Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Craig of Chicago were guests of Mrs. Josephine Heimer on Decoration Day. Mrs. Simon Stoffel and daughter, Clara, spent Tuesday in Chicago. Harry Lawrence is a guest this week in the home of Mrs. Mollie Givens where he is recuperating from a recent operation. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wleber and son, Mrs. George Lindsay and her sister, Mrs. Btta Reed of Berkeley, Calif., accompanied Mrs. John Heisler, daughter, Lorraine, and Mrs. Leonard Heisler of Crystal Lake to WuakegaiJ last Friday where they visited the former's aunt, Mrs. Herbert Nelson, who is a patient at Victory Memorial hospital with a broken leg. On Satur* day, Mrs. Lindsay and her sister called on their sister at Richmond, .Mrs! Robert Sutton. Kathleen Justen of Evanston spent several days last week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Justen. Lucille Weingart is a new employe at the National Tea store. Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Thomas and daughter, Joyce, of Toledo, Ohio, spent a few iays the past week with his sister, Mrs. Charles Ensign and family. Mrs. John Lawler and daughter, Elizabeth, of Minneapolis, Minn., called on Mrs. Edith Hayes last Thursday. Mrs. Lawler had picked up her daughter, who is a dancing teacher in North Chicago, and the two were enroute back to Minnesota. The Lawlers were formerly neighbors of Mrs. Hayes when she lived in Minneapolis. Louella Smith and Bill King were recently employed at the Hi-Topper on Green Street. Sunday guests in the William Justen . home were Mr. and Mrs. Pete Hoffman and family of Wilmette, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn WWller of Antioch and Miss Dorothy Rauek of Evanston. NTA Aid to Studente ItvjMfege monthly assistanerghren colttie students by the National Youth administration last year was >12. Graduate students received about $18. Miss Dorothy E. Winters of Crystal - Lake and Mr. Clair Kinsey of Me- 1, Henry were united in marriage at a ' , quiet ceremony performed Saturday ' in the Methodist church parsonage in * ' McHenry. Rev. Albert Blood officated li-' at the four o'clock ring ceremony. J The couple were attended by Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Winters, the brother * and sister-in-law of the bride. The bride and her attendant wore blue; ! dresses with white accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Both the bride and groom are employed in Crystal Lake and they will make their home in that city. t" - Need Rubber Stamps? Order at The £ Plaindealey. *t • --" ' '• '• - Buy your Baby Chicks at the Farm- i?~ "" ers Mill, the Hoimfe of Good Chicks. Phone 29. 38-tf-p8 FLAT WALL FINISH are always lovely and livable • You can obtain all sort* of beautiful and artistic effects with Pat-Co painted walls and ceilings whicfe set off the contents of any room to die very best a|>. vantage--and enable you to get the «*!••«•«rr^nm amount of light from your fixtures without glare. Pat»Co lb suitable for rough or smooth plaster, composition board, and all other interior surfaceshas a fine velvety finish which is readily washable-- and always sanitary. Pbone 40 iXnL(-u-uxruTi-tri-in-n-riAn-ruT»vw'»nr><T><'>r«r>f>rinrwn<-'n iiSrt' Green Street mong the Sick Richard, 13-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher of Volo is recovering nicely after an operation for a jruptured appendix on Friday, May 24, He was iij a very serious condition after the operation, and it is reported his life hung in the balance until the following Monday. • -4 . Mrs. .EJjrie Tonya** of l*istakee Bay is a surgical patient at the Woodstock hospital. Shirley, the six-year-old daughter of the William Glossons, who h*s bee» critically ill at her home on the Woodstock road, is on the gain. Carmen Freund is caring for her. Barbara, the daughter of Herbert Freund, tore the ligaments in her leg as a result of a fall while at play. She is getting around on crutches. Mrs. George Scheid has been coq? fined to her bed at Griswold Lake the past week. Mrs. Theodore Winkel is recovery LADIES' AID "Too early to buy Christmas presents," you say? We know you will think differently /, about it though, when you visit the summer bazaar at the Methodist church Wednesday, June 26, and see the beautiful display of aprons, fancy work and useful articles that will make the perfect gift for someone. Equally appropriate,, too, for bridge prizes or to beautify your home, these articles will be priced so reasonably that you cannot afford to pass them by. The ladies of the church are hard at work preparing for the bazaar and are planning to make it an outstanding event of the season. In connection with the bazaar dinner will be served to the public at 5 o'clock. This menu will be announc ed at a later date. The ladies will meet every Thursday afternoon before the affair to accomplish the great amount of work planned. Meetings will start" at p.m. Yotrr assistance will be appreciated ing from a heart attack wiu$b suffered last week. ' ' THESE ELASTIC STOCKINGS ARE SO LIGHT AND COMFORTABLE; YOU CAN'T TELL THEM FROM FINE HOSE / "who"need the rapport at •lactic stocking*. Von *«« •sing newu BnnaooatircfeeB dl ack - ****** oacoafaad comfortable, too. Yob &S2SZ BOLG3&'3 D&UG STORE Phone 40 . Green Street ^DEBUNKER By John Harvey Fttrbay, Pkl>. EARLY ENGLISH DID MOT SAY "YE'IN PLACE 0FTHET -V> • ;* _ 'Ui ES sir, what you're looking at is the biggest-selling Buick of alt time--which, in times like these, is certain proof that here's the best* built Buick of all time. < 1 * ; (V K But why just look at it? W hy not try it? Why not go find out what this car's got that has made more people buy Buick this year than even back in the easy-money days of the twenties? See what there is about that big, hundred- plus horsepower Dynaflash straight-eight that gets people--what it's like to have plenty-room all around and style that has the highway eyeing you Springing ride--it's not only gentle fpd easy, but these soft steel coils • \v i ' When one reads "Ye Olde Englyshe Fayre," it Is correct to pronounce the "ye" as though it were written "the." In Anglo-Saxon, or Middle English, there was a symbol represented by the letter "thorn," which is now written "th." In the usage of that day, it was represented in writing by the letter "y," but pronounced as though it were "th." So the word "ye" was actually not something different from our present "the," but was pronounced the •ami way. (Public Lad«a*-WNU Sanrtaa.) Spoon Fish Story What is believed to, be a world rceord for spoon fishing has been established by a Durban, South Africa, angler. H. Robson. who landed a 700-pound sliway gray giyrir attar a five-hour battle. SOM. TH.NOS YOU CAM't •« WtWHI.. ««'T H - --'-- CAUY aAtANCiO WW A # owoiNAi AU ABOUND PtU, ">^^ pRESSUat-MAiSD coot- . >UK, „ou. ~*~- ^UTOMM* «T Of. WCK eliminate a lot of fuss and care about lubrication. And you ought to have the straight dope about prices--prices that make this Buick the yardstick of up-to-theminute car values. This much will give you an itteftit!5irrent pricesf begin at $895 for the business coupe, delivered at Flint, Midi. •Transportation based on rail ratesi' state and local taxes (if any), optional, equipment and accessories are to be added. What the total amounts to is a surprisingly low figure--one your Buick dealer will be tickled to shovf you,^?^-^4#^-" ~fr 7 • fPrfcts subpet l&chang* wtttiout notice. iXSMPlAK or OSNCKAl MOTOftS VAMU Northwest The present bo northwest portion of States were fixed by Great Britain in 1848. of tin the United treaty with mtfmatihii- R. 1. OVERTON MOTOR SALES front Street, West McHenry, I1L 216 Main St, Crystal Lake, HL s. SEC THi GENERAL MOTORS EXHISITS AT INK NEW YORK AND SAN FRANCISCO FAIRS -.J