Pinochlc Clak In. John Miller of Johnsburg entlL ' tertained her Pinochle club last Frir4r^" day afternoon. Four prizes were .'. awarded as follows: Mrs. Elizabeth ' Michels, Mrs. Rose Freund, Mrs. Clara . Miller and Mrs. Emma Freund. Pinochle Party The PinochlQ club met at the home of Mrs. Josephine Heimer Tuesday afternoon to spend a few enjoyable hours at cards. The awards were received by Mrs. Minnie Schueneman, * Mrs. Albert Srause *nd Mrs. Celia Blake. • • &nrfly ItMUiMtt •r-ffci Dwyer family held a reunion Sunday at the Walter Walsh farra south of McHenry, numering forty-' one members in all. Dinner and supper were served and the afternoon spent at visiting and taking pictures, • The quests were present from Elgin, f-Gilberts. Huntley. Rockford, Evanstoi* ^Chicago and McHenry. * * * Birthday Surprise Mrs. Peter Weber was surprised Friday evening by the members of her family at her home in the Northwestern hotel, the group coming to honor her on her birthday. A few grames of pinochle were enjoyed and a lunch •was served. Those in attendance were the Earl Conway, Robert .and Carl Weber families. • * * Evening Bridge Clak .. |V Evening Bridge club met last Thursday in the home of Mrs. Paul Schwerman. The awards were merited by Mrs. Thomas Phalin and Mrs. Schwerman. After cards the ladies enjoyed a lunch at the Hi-Topper. An outing has been planned for the next meeting. MfcHenry Ledge Ne, If®, A* ^.4 A.H McHenry Lodge held a special meeting Saturday evening for the exemplification of the third degree. Twenty- one members of this Lodge were in attendance and forty-eight visitors, members of other lodges'. Fifteen Chicago lodges turned out for this occasion and a fine time was had by all. Dinner was served after the meeting. • • » PeMic Card Party The Christian Mothers society and the Women's Catholic Order of Foresters, St. Clara's court, will sponsor • card party on Wednesday, July 23, to be held in St. Mary - St. Patrick hall, beginning at 2 p. m. Refreshments will be served and prizes ' awarded. The public is invited to at- • r ' • youngest daugl Walter W. Bank# married TTiu Vegas, Nev. A odist church was ding. A short J at Boulder Dam; d Mrs. da, were 'M. " tie Methe tibind of the wedneymoon was spent fore the newlyweds returned to Santa Monica, Calif., to make their home in an apartment 'at 1433 Twenty-fifth street. a Mr. Hughes has &aen in California since last Noveraier where he has been employed wjtL,the DonglAs Aircraft company. lH$.l£ide left Wauconda June 26. , . f, ty, 17. istt HKATT OHKHSr DnUKD THXUTEHS ILLIHQIS WITH MILK SHORTAGE A milk shortage foripsay Illinois cities is imminent, according u> Wilfred Shaw, director oF mflk marKeting for the Illinois Association. Shaw sa^j^b«sMd%emandg for milk and riaigfffpBadaete• w; cities, due to larger consumer incomes, coupled with he^vy purchases of cheese, evaporated milk and dried milk under the lend-lease.program for shipment to Great Britain, .have combined to bring about this situation. The purchase of eleven million pounds of cheese , during June by the government, he said, and the further need for larger quantities have caused cheese prices to increase to higher levels than prevailed in 1929. Current cheese prices, Shaw said, approximate twenty-one cents per pound at Plymouth, Wis. Purchases of evaporated and dried milk by the goverranent, also for shipment to Great Britain, have pushed prices for these products appreciably higher, according to Shaw. . , .• t The need for increased amounts of cheese, evaporated and dried milk for shipment under lend-Jeasfe* coupled with their higher prices, has created a situation where manufacturers of these products are paying more for milk to their producers thpn is being received by producers supplying fluid milk on many Illinois city markets.' As a result of this unusual price situation, Shaw said farmers through* out Illinois in increasing numbers aru leaving city milk markets and selling their milk to cheese and manufacturing plants. An added factor influencing producers in their diversion of milk to cheese and evaporating plants is that milk produced for sach purposes is not subject to the stringent city milk ordinances. Illi--is Is particularly affected by lend lease jfcrrchases of dairy products the second largest prrattcer of pressed to One version explaining tt> signs painted to geometric designs on the barns in eastern Pennsylvania is to the effect that the idea was derived from the ancient Egyptian^nd that the signs are supposed produce fertility of the soil and maKF the live stock prolific. A Mennonite historian says that the designs were used by the early settlers as an expression of their religious freedom. They took literally Christ's statement, "I am the Morning Star and the Rose of Sharon," and the aymbols nearly all are derived from the star, or tulip design, the latter being a simplified version of the Rose of Sharon. Snow Surveying An army of more than 2,000 men moveS every winter over the high mountain peaks of the West, measuring sample snow depths to determine in advance how much water will flow down Western streams through the following season. The department of agriculture recently issued a publication which tells the story of snow surveys and how much they Mean to Western irrigation. / w.c.ouF. About forty members of St. Clara's Court, W.C. O. F., enjoyed an outing last Thursday, July 10, at the Oak Lawn Grill, about a mile north of McHenry on route 81. Rain terminated the outdoor party, bat the ladies were not to be discouraged for they •continued their fun in the parochial school basement. * • • WflHag 4-1 Workers The Willing 4-H Workers met July 11 at the home of Mrs. Elseda Fuchs, the leader. After the business meeting- Alice Thompson gave a talk about "Posture." Laura Sherman then demonstrated "Pattern Altering" and another talk, "Pattern Markings," was given by Edith Sherman. Refreshments were served. The next meeting will be at Mrs. Dorothy Benny's home. • • • McCuIkwn Lake Party About eighteen guests attended a party at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Leiser in Colby's subdivision at MeCullom Lake Sunday in honor of their daughter, Helen, whose marriage to Mr. Ernest Harth of Chicago was announced recently. The marriage took place in Iowa on November 23, The party was a combination party and bridal shower. Mr. and Mrs. Harth will go into housekeeping in Chicago. ^ li:. • • • *•""» East River liosA 14nochle - The trip which the members of the East River Road Pinochle club had intended to take last Thursday was ~ postponed until after Labor Day and : instead the ladies met at the home of Mrs. M. A. Sutton for an afternoon of cards. Prizes were won by Mrs. Albert Vales, Mrs. Isabell Kellner and - Mrs. Hugh Kirk. Mrs. Kirk will entertain at the next meeting on July & g. ,;:.V --- At the meeting of the Order of the Eastern Star Monday night an invitation to attend an Official Visit at Nunda chapter at Crystal Lake oh July 24 was read. Practice will be held at the hall this Thursday, July 17, at 7:80 sharp and the initiation will be at the next meeting on July 28. The organization will sponsor a eard party in the city park on Thursday, Jul® 31, beginning at 2:30 p.m. shai«K Admission will he thirty-five cents. '78 Years Old f fllr. and Mrs. Theodore Miller, Who reside on Richmond road, entertained a group of relatives Tuesday noon at a luncheon in honor of her mother, Mrs. John Stoffel, who was celebrating her seventy-third birthday. Those present were Mr. and Mrs. John Stoffel. Mrs. Henry Dowe, Mrs. Jacob Stoffel and daughter, Bonny, all Of West McHenry; Mrs. Marion Thurlwell and sons, Jimmy, Dicky and Billy, . of McHenry; Mr. and Mrs. James Garner, Mrs. Louis Uecker and son Wayne, and Mrs. Elizabeth .Wiswall of Chicago; Mrs. William Ford of Fort Sheridan; Mrs. Frances Garner and son, Buddy, of Slcokie, and Mrs Adela Warner and daughters, Margaret and Ethel, of Arlington, Va. cheese in the U. S. anrf thf fMh largest producer of condensed 'add evaporated milk. leoMOfc In order to counteract this diversion of milk from the cities, Shaw said many Illinois markets have been forced to increase retail milk and dtfry products in order to increase the #Hce to producers and thereby obtain the volume of milk needed. •••§•» Anion* the 9kk Marilyn Goldring underwent surg* ery last week at the Woodstock hospital. Alice Obenauf, daughter of the Martin Obenaqfs of West McHenry Is *•» ceiving medica! treatment at St. Therese's hospital in Waukegan. Charles Gies of McHenry submitted to surgery Tuesday at the Woodstock hospital. Jacob Thies is recovering from an operation on his eye which was performed a couple of weeks ago at the Illinois Central hospital in Chicago. Katherine Freund underwent an operation ai the Woodstock hospital on Tuesday. A one-armed paperhanger has been found in Pasadena, Calif., and lo, he is hardly busy, at all, Explained Paul Cardinal, who can paper a ceiling one-handed in a twinkling: "I start in the corner, get the first two inches straight, and then give it a swish with the brash. The cast of the roll will bo straight." 0. t. lipsrh Cefte£ • - Nearly three-fourths of lbs coif so exported by Guatemala last yew weqt.tothe United States., ,.^ ¥ . V -- i - . - . m / u •bpaaioift The Republic of Haiti and the Dominican Republic are the two republics on the island officially known as Hispaniola. Hughes Nuptials Word has boon received by Mr and Mrs. Frank Hughes that their son, Raymond, and Miss Beatrice Banks, Qabby Qertie IMk hi* mm- J'*-tV Crist Mills * North Carolina probably has more water powered grist mills in operation than any other state. Mills ere especially numerous in the Blue Ridge mountains and the Smokies. One reason may be that-old-fashioned southern corn bread, according to experts, can be rightfully made only with "water-ground meal."' Flying Cures Qfr! A 12-year-old girl, in Gothenburg, Sweden, for whom doctors gave up hope because of a persistent, apparently incurable cough, was cured recently when as a last resort, an aviator loaded her into a plane and flew for an hour at 4,000 feet and brought her back cured. 'Age of Mahogany* Responsible for the wide use of the term, "Age of Mahogany," were the Eighteenth-century designers of England--Chippendale and the other great Georgians, Sheraton, Heppie white and Adam, all of whom used mahogany for moat ei ihek styles. .'1 Salt Water and Gerntt ' The theory that "salt water kills germs" is false as proved by la oratory analysis and recent chi ical tests of salt water on the eastern Atlantic coast and the fresh water of Lake Michigan. The bacterial content of both places was about the same. Ancient Clock Still Ins A shelf clock, 125 years old, owned by* Mr. and Mrs. Tom S. Adams of Holdenville, Okla., still keeps perfect time. The clock was made in Vaughan, Wales, in 1818, by Anthony Pfloss and was brought to this country bgr Mrs. Adams' grandfather. AUstof famous philosophers of all time should include Rudolf Hermann Lotas, WIBiawii James, Arthur Schopenhauer, John Locke, Herbert Spencer, Immaniel Kant, George W. F. Hegel, John Stuart Mill and John Dewey. "The Prince of Parthia," a fiveact tragedy in blank verse, written by Thomas Godfrey Jr., in Wilmington, N. in 1790, was the first play written and produced profession ally by MI American, in this country. Pretty Pink Icing The vogue of cakes with pretty pink iciqg vanished in the early Eighteenth century when science discovered that the source of the coloring matter was not a plant but the cochineal insect. Oh Monday, July 7, 1941, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Lawrence, pictured above with their grandson, James Nimsgero of McHenry, two years old, celebrated the sixtieth anniversary of their marriage . Mr. Lawrence, 80 ysars oJd, a retired mason contractor, and his wife, 79 years old, were both born in 4h<- vicinity of Ringwood and have remained there during these past sight decades. The Lawrences have three sons and one daughter, nine gftgwIcliildreB and their great grandson. MISS BSBTHA J STKN MAMtmft SATURDAY TO H. P. SKOW, WOODSTOCK In 8t. Mary's rectory, McHenry, Miss Bertha Jnsten, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Jusfeen of Ringwood, and OF >BT Material in Ark According to Genesis VI: 14 God said unto Noah: "Make thee an ark of gopher wood: room ihalt thou make in the ark and shalt pitch it Within and without with pitch." "When a girl brags about having ne eight-bulb set shs's taltin* about gladioli, net radio." Glased Pie Crest Here is advice to anyone who wants to achieve a glazed pie crust: Brush the pie over with egg yolk mixed with a little milk, when nearly done. Less Nicotine Burley tobacco has less nicotine in it than any other type of tobacco. This is the variety from which chewing tobacco is ordinarily made. -ftfcoloirWleliM MR. AND MRS. HAROLD SKOW Mr. Harold P. SkvSfc ssn of Samuel Skew of Weodstoekajrae married befor » a small group e#«riathfcs. Ksgr. C. S. Nix performed the ceremony, "which took place a|"2:80 p. m. Saturday, July 12. The bride was lofrfi hi .an afternon formal of whiWfpt and organdy, with a tulle veil a0 she carried a shower bouquet of JvUle roses and baby breath. Her atl|ttdant, Mrs. Ami Gowel af Ghieago, 4hoie a gown of poodre blue uilsilllii de soie. Johanna Hill roses ind baby breath were contained in he# fro*quot. Lester Sullivan of Walworfili attended the groom. The bride's! atojhor was attired in a gold color^ Sffit with British tan accessories. Jfes wore a corsage of tea roses •nf HLFT'J breath. Woodstock for sevexfl years and for the last two years in' the office of the Alemfte Die Casting jdattt. A dinner and were held following Liie cereampe in St. Mary- St. Patrick hall. 'AAsr July 86 the newlyweds will resiw.lfM Lake avenue in Woodstock. They ii» now enjoying a honeymoon in the Jjfarth. The bride attendpT Josephenium academy and McHeaWy High school and is a graduate of pb Metropolitan Business college, ChlftgQ -She has been employed in t%o offlee of the Woodstock Typewriter oosspany in Woodstock for sever<8 yoars. Mr. Skow, a gradngds of the Woodstock High school, is sn Oakside Dairy company employee of Woodstock. Optimist Aa optimist is one who looks out in the dark and sees a light which Isn't there. A pessimist is one who blows the light out. Log Deterioration are liable to deteriorate through attacks of insects and worms in the coldest months of the y«v. . «" »•*' Opportunist /> -An opportunist is one W the wolf at the door and the next day appears in a new fur coat. Skilled Weavers . The Jicarilla Indians of New/Mexico are Apaches skilled at making "Jicaro" willow baskets. ^ An Aristocrat An aristocrat is a member of a family that has long been descend MRS. (hrttWVtnM) HENRY WEBER Miss Agnes Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Smith of Johnsburg, became the lovely bride of Mr. Henry Weber, son of Mrs. Peter Weber of Johnsburg, at St. John the Baptist church last Wednesday morning, July 9. They are residing with the groom's Before the end of July the dredging of the'Not river between AlgoiXfUin and the McHenry dam will have been started, according to information received by the Algonquin Boat club, sponsors of the 'project. Gov. Dwight Green recently approved a 825,000 appropriation for this project after it had been passed by the state legislature. When this is completed, a five-year fight by boating enthusiasts wUl have been triumphantly concluded and the river will be navigable throughout tbe season for crafts of all sizes. Construction also of a "marine devalor" at the Kct|enry,d»m is promimd ty state^pttorittertss the-pmsent eUdhner and W' faiyitis expected that motor boats will be able to travel from Algonquin to Wilmot, Wis., a distance of sixty-two and one-half miles, or a round trip of 125 miles. "As soon as this is accomplished we most turn oar efforts to making the river navigable from -Algonquin to Elgin," commented W. Hale Tieadwell, orgsateer and one of the most active members of the Algonquin Boat culb. The cruising territory to be opened up for motor boat owners with pieranchorages in the Fox river above Al; gonquin includes Fox Lake, Nippersink lake, Pietakee lake, Grass lake, Petite lake, Bluff lake, Lake Marie, Channel lake and Lake Catharine as well as a dosen small hays adjoining them. According to unofficial word reaching the Algonquin boatmen, the state has already practically closed for the dredging with a MeHenry contractor. The principal dredging must be dons in the neighborhood of Burton's Bridge, where at low water, only boats with a very light draft can pass over the bars. There are one or two other places where a small amount of dredging will have to be undertaken. MARGARET WAGNER, 17 ^ARS, DIES JULY 18 jAFTER LONG ILLNESS An illness of over a year's duration was terminated Wednesday evening, July 16, 1941, in the death of Margaret Wagner, 17 years, 7 months and four days, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John J. Wagner of Volo. Her death occurred in St Therese's hospital, Waukegan. Although she was unable to attend the commencement exercises at the McHenry Community High school, where she hid been a student previous to her illness, Margaret was awarded her diploma with the class of 1941 and the rest of the class paid tribute to the absent member of their class. Surviving besides her parents (her mother being the former Josephine Kraft) she leaves two sisters, Dolores and Bietty. Funeral services will bo held from the late residence to St. Peter's church, Volo, at ten o'eloek Saturday momfaig, with burial in St. Peter's cemetsry. 4 Wsight «f Oravsl A cubic yard of |NMl 8,700 pounds. Word Cork The word "cork" is MU«*ad to bo the form of Arable "aloorqpio," moaning cork, and possibly derived from Latin "quercus," signifying oak and the name of the cork tree. MARRIAGE LICENSES Harold Skow, Woodstock, Il» '-ts Bertha Justen, Riugwdbd, OL, July 10, 1941. Douglas Fay Merwin, Harvard, 11L, to Emma Martha Morlodc, Harvard, 111., Julv 10,1041. Donald Boehmke, Marengo, 111., to Marie Gustafson, Woodstock, HL, July 10,1941. Quetin W. Nelson, Marengo. IIL, to Helen E. Rosenberg, DeKalb, 111.,' July 11, 1941. Albert Leo Pasholk, Alden, m., to Sarah Ellen Banks, Alden, III., July 10, 1941. Ervin Joseph Sedlack, Chicago, IIL, to Mabel Marie Mehmert, Chicago, 111.. July 9, 1941. Lawrence W. Becker, Genoa, III., to Vera O. Boric, Marengo, H, July 9, 1941. Sam Tardio. Chicago, IIL, to Marie Buttre, Chicago, 111., July 1ft, 1941. LaVerne J. Gregory, Alden, IIL, to Gladys E. Anderson, Harvard, HL, June 28,1941. Mr. and Mrs. William Klapperich, who reside on Riverside Drive, MeHenry, celebrated their silver wedding anniversary Sunday, July 13, at a dinner and reception which was held at the Bridge ballroom. Sixty-five guests were present at the affair. An account of the wedding of twenty-five years ago appeared in The McHenry Plaindealer as follows: • "Miss Lena Lay and William f, Klapperich were united in marriage last Monday, July 10, 1916, at 8:80 o'clock in SV John's church', Johnsburg, with the Rev. Father Weber performing the ceremony. "The bride was attired in a gown of white ntousseline, trimmed with chiffon and pearl heads. She wore the customary veil and carried bridsl roses. "The bride wfcs attended by fter cousin, Miss Anna Freund (now Mrs. Anna Amann of Round Lake) who was attired in white and carried an armful of whfte roses. Rosa (Mrs. Al Weber of Milwaukee) and Clara ^Irs Nick Miller of Milwaukee} BappeHch, sisters of the ^T.>om, scted as flower girls and were attired in blue crepe de chimf and curled white carnations. The groom wore the customary black and was attended by his brother, Joe Klapperich of Johnsburg. "The bride is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Lay, who reside only a short distance from Johnsburg. The groom is the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Klapperich. "Only the nearest relatives partook of the reception which was held at the home of the bride's parents. The young couple left for North Dakota where they will stay for some time with the bride's sister, Mrs. Steve Justen." Among tiie guests at the twentyfifth anniversary celebration Sunday were: Mrs. Anna Amann of Round. Lake; Martin W. Freund, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosing and Jerome Tonyan of Ingleside; Lorraine Lay, Mr. and Mrs. GoetSche, Mr. Libusewslri and Roseal Lay of Chicago; Marcella Lay of Fox Lake; Mr. and Mrs. Math Lay and Mi. and Mrs. John Lay of Spring1 Grove; Joe Lay of Mundelein; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Smith, James Freund and friend, Donald Freund, Delma and Janette Thelen of Johns* burg; Mary Heelein and Anthony Smith and son of Richmond. Those from McHenry who attended were Msgr. C. S. Nix, Rev. Paul Tuchiinsky, Mr. and Mrs. Ray McGee, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Fleming and too,, Mr. and Mrs. George Worts and son, Mrs. Roy Kent and son, Mr. and Mrs. Al Borirfan, Mr. and Mrs. George Wirfs, William Kreutxer and friend. All of the Klapperich children, with the exception of Mrs. Anna Marie Scarbrough, who is a patient at the Woodstock hospital, were able to be present at file celebration Hiey are, Mr. and Mrs. William B. Klapperich, Lawrence, Ddpidn, Martin, Johnny and Catherine Klapperieh. •• $ ' . ' --*7 t,'"' • -v.- h "* --:• r#- i i • • ; if#1 Oeteber Originally EigMft October is derived from the word "octo," meaning eight. Originally it was the eighth month of the Roman calendar, which bag--t ttap year in March. MRS. CLARENCE HARKlSON The wedding of Miss Marion Freeman and Mr. Clarence Harrison, the latter being the son of the Roy Harrisons of Ringwood, took place Saturday evening, June 14, at the home of the bride's mother, Mrs. Mary Freeman, at Greenwood. The newlyweds are residing at Wonder Lake. President Taft Waa Right Criminal lawyers, who have wide experience with a woman witness# agree that the greatest difficulty with the female is that she is willing to tell more than her attorney wants her to. So marked Is this tendency that the late William Howard TafV immediately after being nominated for the presidency, was quoted as saying: "Get a woman off the witness stand as soon as you can. There seems to be something in the feminine makeup that causes her to tell more than her lawyer wants heir to tell." IWiafsalesIs Oeet in Japan coat* Japan nearly $878,fQ8M<0 annually, wfaiah is enough to construct a tunnel between Japan and Korea. [• *'•* ,f * -- *•. MRS. STANLEY CHARLES Mrs. Stanley Charles is the former Miss Yvonne Benwell of West McHenry, who chose the garden of the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd C. Benwell, at West McHenry, as the scene for her mSfKagS They will reside with the groom's parents , at tfyftijr fayy hopny Hitler SamslHIsi Bee* Hitter is oatremelj Stttlous. Signs, symbols, and horoscopes are $onsultod osf Fuehrer launehss any of Ms sup* Haiti sdtlinslsslts 1W odSee crop at 48,000.000 pounds " '7 -"v " < <• NEW SIZE Yeull say it's the ever^rtUdl ^Whyt seme "etsy-on** ksaaty that smhso NslEassMd fa lee flagsftly new Mm yoer lowly Bps end is? AriMy psleod in Als mwt ww esse* 1 • tm eeiy 00#! (Revloa Js^e She| r Upitt nm a- ^ A hobby 'of 80 years standing has -. 2X' S-f netted Efanit E. Buyer of St. Clair, Pa., mora thm 1,500^)00 stamps. HAlOfrt Tjr%igr Boyer claims that his collection JIWIf repreeents 14,000 varieties. Why Wait? TUBES and BATfKKIBS will poemvely in ctbmo in prioo in the very bmht fRtsn. Thin is a possibility that thm it going lo bo a short • go im firm, esptci& lly truck. WISE MOTORISTS WILL HAKE AEEANG*- MEKTS TO HLLTHEIE HEEDS WOHTHO^ -- Present prices are subject to ohaago without nofcilt -- You are cordially invited to oome in and see what prices we can allow yon for your old tiros oo mm. : vV. - . v CHAMPIONS' HI-SPEEDS, STANDARDS OR CONVOY TIRES FIRESTONE BATTERIES - as tow ai .$3-»6 58S Main Street -- Phone 294 -- West McHenry s i1 • v-V.\