1 v* . ruma ffcmsdsy «t I f, m, by Charles F. ReaWi. A-«- Mid •ntered as MO»4^(>M matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., tmder the act of May 8, 1879. One Tear Six -.41.00 ...$1.00 McCULLOM LAKE h&ti -mX: fe-flS Mr. and Mrs. Fred Page and Mr. and Mrs. Roller of Berwyn spent Sunday at the Arthur Thompson home. Mrs. W. Gibson is spending a week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Miller of Chicago spent a three-day weekend here. Miss Margaret Ohier of Chicago is spending a week at the Jonepk A. Schaefer home. Ifrs. C. Anderson and daughters of Chicago are spending a week here. Mr. and Mrs* Joseph Bald and daughters, Joan and Lorraine, of Chicago spent Sunday at their summer home. Arthur Thompson of Berwyn spent Sunday here. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Green and son, Frances, of Evanston arc spending two weeks here. Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Anderson of Lily Lake spent the weekend at the C. Anderson home. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pardell and friends are spending a week here. Mr. and Mrs. F. Chellerstrum of Chicago spent Sunday here at their crammer home Mr. and Mrs. Warren Barber spent Saturday evening at Woodstock. Sunday guests at the J. A. Schaefer home were Millie and Susie Frett and John Freund of McHenry and Mrs. Mary Bowler of Chicago. Chester G. Hauri of Grayslake was a caller at McCullom Lake Tuesday evening. Elmer Thrope, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Thrope, left Monday morning for the U. S. Army. Anton Petroskey of Chicago spent Sunday with his wife and son here. Duane Barber of Chicago spent Sunday here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Warren Barber. Mr. and Msr. Gus Milner, Diamond Lake were callers at the John Win* krantz home here. Bert Maclntyre and Frank Ritser of Chicago spent Sunday here. Mrs. Betty Ki^fether and son, Joseph, returned this week after spending a month with relatives in Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Arthur Thompson spent Wednesday in Maywood at Hines hospital delivering cigarettes, matches and shaving cream to World war veterans under the auspices of the American Legion Auxiliary. ^ ; Saed the Want A* TOR BALM FOR SALE--Six xooaa house on John street, near seliools. Reasonably priced. Also double garage on lot. Inquire Mm JBill Blake. Tel. 611- W-l. - 4-tf FOR SALE--Dining room table and chairs, day bed, rugs, dresssers and other household articles. Mrs. F. O. Gana, Park Street. Tel. 127-W. 12-tf CHOICH BUILDING LOTS -- 66x132 ft in McHenry. City water, sewer, sidewalks, gas and electricity. Priced at less than cost of improvements. Howard Wattles. Phono 820. *12-4 ? JM&AL NEWS! JOCKEY OONTOUl® Shirts are short in front to ft$ rjd of useless hulk, long in back to stay down. The perfect undershirt, „l£ade by Coopers. 55c and u$v McGSS'S* Green Street, Mc Henry, ; *4 A yfi£~KlaiT is U FOR RENT--/front bedroom and use of sitting room; near the river. Write Bo* "it," eft re Plaindealer. 12 FOR RENT--About Aug, 15, 4-roora flat, newly decorated, hard and soft water, no bath. Ideal for couple or three persons. Garage if desired. $11 per month; F. N.. Many, Ringwood, 12 FOR RENT OR SALE--9-room, yearround house, hot water heat, Fox river frontage. Write Box "S," care of The McBenry Plaindealer. *12 i%V-•• 'ife, Colony McHenry, Illinois FRIDAY -- SATURDAY - Aagaat'S.- 9 John Wayne (1) "LADY LO|l!BI4pfc" Q l&E P'VMONSTER' 77&» SUNDAY - MONDAY August It - 11 Merle Oberoa Dwis Morgaa Rita Hajrworth (1) 4' ATTBOTIOirATSLYT XOUKS" Jast Withers Jacfcfe Oiipw (2) "HER FXK8T BEAU" Also -- New* Biarti Banday MaHast--S:4I Cwtiann RELIABLE PERSONS WANTED -- to call on farmers in ?iorth half of McHenry county. Steady work, good pay. No experience or capital required Some making $100.00 in a week. Write McNESS CO., Dept. S., Freeport, III. w - . . . * 1 2 -2 WANTED "txTSSW--Apartment or year-round cottage in or near Mc- Henry. .taavpre SOS Riverside Drive, McHenry^ V ' .. t V *12 Dr. Barton L08T IX)ST--Pair of bifocal glasses in case. Return fayA. Jy Kanaholtu Reward. 12 LOST--Bunch of keys on wire and two looa# fcfegri. Finder leave at The Plaindealer. Liberal reward. *12 jLL fOQID found3^eS reclaim same ideni bought Call S Owner may satisfactory tying for this ad. reen Street, Mc- 12 We have rbage rout* nding terridaily trips, nry 6S8-M-2. *11-7 DEAD OR 9100 to Wi Cows - No goaran - New Drive, Phone ~ ios and elec- All work WILSON, 9-tf --Let us each week, Reasonable ind route. Beta J. [-1. 11-t# m * * r xv m (1) (2) " TUESDAY -- lie Bride Wc Crutches" Scattergood Pul|i'* the Strings" ? WB1NHBDAY -- THURSDAY Cku. Wfamincer Rabt. "THE GET-AWAY' t\i ifv MW '"4 Relax at Hii BemmtIfut 1.000 Wood stop! block n< your city at " b cruiser. l*iy 120, one limits. *12 Am attended fYeund (ifttt-of-town who for Mrs. John S. y were: Mr. and i;i rovAij '•Mi CRYSTAL LAKE, ILL. McHenry Co'*. Leading Theatre C - O - O - L E D FRL Jaae SAT. -- AUGUST 8 - • -- Doable Feature! -- Withers - Jackie Cooper in "HER FIRST BEAU" Also • Basil Rathbone - Hugh Herbert in "THE BLACK CAT* SUN. - MON. -- AUGUST 10 - 11 San. Cont. from 2:45 p. m„ 2Sc to 6 p. 30c after. Children, 10c. Robert Tay ior as g -BiILLY, THE KUV -- with -- ;• Brian Donlevy Mary aoWKrd Mightiest Outdoor Picture ever Filmed ... in technicolor! TUESDAY: - Special •; lfe ? v BKchard ArTen . Jean Parker in "POWER DIVE" with Roger Pry or - Billy Lee Also -- Edgar Kennedy Comedy! WED. - THUR. -- AUGUST 13 - 14 Fred MacMurray MI ia deleine Carroll la "ONE NIGHT IN LISBON" -- with -- Patricia M orison - Billie Bark* Mrs. R. r. and Mrs. Chas. Prt-tx-holfflM 81Hi|IRefs, LaVerne and Audrey,^lrs. Barbara Pretchold, Mr. and Mitt Joe Simon, Mr. and Mrs. John Simon, ' |4r. and Mrs. Mike Gottechlich arid soft,' Leonard, Mrs. Joe Brick, Jr., and son, Jdrs. Joe Brick, .^rkk, Mr ^nl kwwkdfe «t least, dandruff and Mrs. BertCossey, Mr. andUrs. A.Tnot mteTy'Sue to (lie ortitolim tt Andenen and daughter, Marjorie, Mr, and ? Mrs. Art Oberdiek, John and Marrahret Bauer, all of Chicago; Mrs. Cf^mine McGroarty, Mrs. Fred K^niarer, Miss Hd^n Gallagher of Peoria; Jacob Mi$er of Zenda, Wis.; Good Posture Help to Both Body and Mind By DR. JAMES W. BARTON kv Western Newiptptr Union.) ISPEAK often about good posture--erect position of the body whether standing or sitting-- because of its value both physical and mental. The erect carriage of the body means that the shoulders are well back and the chest well forward, giving the lungs plenty of room to expand, and preventing any crowding or pressure on the heart. With the lungs drawing in the pure air and, What is more important breathing out the impure air, the blood, pumped by a heart free from pressure, will carry more nourishment to and more wastes from every cell in the body. The erect position calls also for a drawing in (or backwards) of the abdomen and the development of the abdominal muscles by keeping the abdomen drawn in or back holds the abdominal organs up in their proper positions, thus aiding digestion and preventing constipation. Dr. Philip Lie win, New York, in Clinical Medicine and Surgery, gives 10 commandments of good posture. 1. Stand tall. 2. Sit tall. 3. Walk tall and "chesty," with weight of the body on the balls or front part of the feet. 4. Draw in the abdomen, pulling it backwards and upwards. 5. Keep the shoulders high and square. 6. Pull the chin downward toward the collar button. 7. Flatten the hollow of the back by rolling the hip bones downward and backward. 8. Separate the shoulders from the' hips as far as possible. Do this more by drawing hips down than by raising shoulders. 9. Lie tall and flat. {Don't overdo this as having elbows and knees very slightly bent helps to relax the body and so invites sleep). 10. Think tall. • • • X7?-*# What's to Be Donel ^ ^ About Dandruff? DERHAPS you have been reading 1 about various cures for dandruff or have tried some without obtaining a cure. That dandruff is a forerunner or cause of loss of hair is not true, according to many research' workers. THe federal trade , commission of the United Jftatep, after an inveptigation'of dai^iff, stater that there is no proof that dandruff is due to any infection. In Public Health Reports, Washington, D. C., Dr. C. W. Emmons states that while a small yeastlike organism is always present in the dry or greasy scales of dandruff. This little organism is known as the "bottle bacillus" and many investigators haye tried in vain to cause it to grow as other tiny organisms are made to grow. Even those research workers who have been successful in growing this organism admit that they have not been able to cause dandruff in way scalps by inoculation with it. Instead of trying to infect a normal scalp and thus perhaps cauae dandruff, it was decided to inoculate an individual who already had dandruff and to measure whether this inoculation caused any increase in the time required to divelop dandruff in places where dandruff was extensive as compared with places in which dandruff was absent or scant. The dandruff did not appear any sooner in the inoculated spots than in the other spots.: *• This proves, that, with our p: that r© ' >" s jrV? By L. L. STEVENSON Faces ft Figures: A1 Smith, hale, hearty tad gray, being greeted by a throng as he enters a Forty-fifth street theater . . , Horace Heidt buying time of those golf clubs that can be justed into anything from a driver to a putter . . . and remarking, "It should save wear and tear on the caddie" ... "Hellzapoppin" Olson letting two Seventh avenue bootblacks shine his shoes at once . • . Because he doesn't want to show partiality . . . Don Voorhees stepping before a Forty-eighth street pet shop window and a kibitzer starting to ten him "all about ScoMies" . < . The loquacious one does not know of course that Voorhees is an expert an the breed and frequently is a J«d«e at dog shows . . . Peter Arno, cartoonist and "best dressed gent/' ia&fng easy prey to a Fortysecond street panhandler who begs a "dollar lor a necktie." • • • A Broadway street corner prestidigitator, while baffling spectators With his thimblerig and sleight of hand, sighting an approaching officer and remarking, "Watch me do a Houdini" . . . and in an instant, he's gone-. . . Lyn Murray, choral expert, hurrying to the Battery to see the old Aquarium before Park Commissioner Moses has it torn down ... A friend asks him if he is sentimental about it because Jenny Lind once sang there ... and Lyn relying, "No, I just like to look at fish" ... A decrepit Model T coughing past» stalled, sleek, chauffeured limousine on Fifty-seventh street . . . and the driver of the ancient vehicle sticking his head out of the window and shouting triumphantly, "Age before beauty" ... Waiting for the light at Broadway and Forty-fifth street to change in her favor, songstress Jean Ellington, a wary canary. • * • Passing on Fifty-seventh street, Edward Johnson, Metropolitan impresario, and Basil Ruysdael, radio commentator . . . Ruysdael was a leading basso for the Metropolitan Opera company for eight years . . Dr. Hereward Carrington, spook hunter, going in for some "spirit" gazing at a spectacular whisky sign on Broadway . . Queried on the possibilities of real, honest-to-goodness ghosts, he shrugs his shoulders and replies, "Who knows?" . . . Claudia Motgan (Ralph's daughter) and Monty ("The Man Who Came to Dinner") Wooley watching a Central park nfarble game . . . Miss Morgan joining in and displaying prowess with an "aggie" . . . Olga Baclanova Sipping tea from a glass in a BiWiliit tearoom and speaking but Rn|W«K to hyr nnrnpnn. •• t: ; •Ji-'sfci-. '• Thai? - White-thateh*« tsetettrtl&l playboy, Toirfmy Manville, displaying a novel conception of spring styles by walking into a Cafe Sutton wearing a bhie dinner jacket, Inverness cape and peaked camel'shair cap . . Ted Collins radio producer, window shopping at a Fifth avenue spotfihf goods establishment . . . Collins is one'of the country's greatest sports enthusiasts ... He will travel hundreds, even thousands of miles, just to witness some outstanding event ... A common saying among' his contemporaries is that it is eagier to do business with him at a spirting event than in his lavishly appointed ofinjea oa Colwnbus circle; •' • • • . • •< • ~ A young man darting across traffic burdened Broadway and narrowly escaping being struck. . While an irate motocistTyells,^ "Hey, don't forget your country needs you" . . . Madeline Gray, entrepreneur of the "Bright Idea Club" for kids, getting vocalizing offers from bandsmen .. . Because thi^re is another Madeline Gray who siqgs for Mid Hallett's ork . . . Thoughtfulnesa: While down in Florida as her New York friends were shivering in the recent cold snap, Bess Johnson sent postcards NOT showing palm trees and silvery but NeW^ England Winter Bauen of Savan- W'Mrs. E. H. Peter- -VsnHeirselee, Waukee Miehels of Kansas Mr. and?M nah, IP*-1* sen, R *an, City, Mo Mr. and Mrs. Lewi* McDonald of Woodstock spen^S<mday evening in the homfc. of,Jungs'1?. Newman. Raymond Van Heirselee and sons of Waukegan called in the home of Mrs. Elizabeth liMuda iest Wednesday. JertyJK* and Albert Vales, Jr., of Cb*ag$. ^re guests this past weekend in the Albert Vales honafc. 'blris With Green Eyes A vote recently taken showed that 65 per cent of the men questioned preferred girls with green eyes; only 20 per cent cared for blue; 10 per cent for brown; and but 5 per cent for gray eyes. .f bualin Adis t« iitfe A 20-year study by New York city reveals that the use of insulin adds five years to the life of diabetes sufferers. The median age at the death of these patients has been extended tp fi&Zf . WhaBag license A federal whaling license costs an operatw with «a» boat $1,000. The charge 4^ Mfib additional beat is 1250. hitherto has been blamed for it The above information dees net mean that something should not» done about dandruff. Until the cause is found, the frequent use of soap and water on the scalp, or the use of various proprietary preparations should be continued. The cleansing and rubbing of the scalp in itself is helpful in that it not only loosens and removes scales but stimulates the circulation of the blood in the scalp. • • • QUESTION BOX Could heavy smoking (sew discontinued) have any dined cmtnection with my feeling sure I have heart disease? A--tt is net likely that year heart was panaanestly damaged by smoking. Symptom leek mere Hbe gaB bladder dislarbance. Bvemr, an examination by your physician wiB shew whether «r net symptoms «** dae t« a heart condition. Q.--How can I stop smoking? A*--Eating candy before smoking and engaging in sports wffl hela. Superintendent and Mrs. C. H. Duker and daughter, Marjorie, left Tuesday for a visit with relatives i: Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Kane and their guests, Mrs. John Stanton of Belvidere, Miss Irma Fivey and Wjl« liam Boyer of Chicago attended a milk association picnic near Union Sunday. Eddie Miehels and a friend of Kansas City, Mo., spent last Tuesday with the former's mother, Mrs. Eliza* beth Miehels. . A mid-town, traffic cop used to be a~taxi drivef . . . an#**# had to take theT^ame oiilMts he o6w 4iishes out . . Tommy Defrsey demons trating to draftees that bugle call* can be blown on a trombone . . . At Fifth avenue and Fiftieth street, # Jovfely looking blonde staring aghast at another girl wearing an identical outfit . . . Her aoowling face indicates disaster for seme mleslady in the immediate future. »^ (Bell SjirtEf *» WW! Sanrfcft* Mary's Little Lamb Black-Sheep Toper HARTFORD, CONN. If Mary wants her little lamb to do well in a stock show she should take him to a tavern rather than to school, says Guy Hilton of South Hamilton, Mass. He told the Connecticut Sheep Breeders' association that a bbttlr of beer often seemed to bring om the best performance in a snec-» eeeeeeee Retmfced as Truant, Richard IiOI Aftta; Hideout Foib Search. > NSW YORK.--Crisp air Mid brilliant siinshihe'bred independence in Richard Marvel, five years bid, as he left hig home in Port Richmond, S. I., bound for school. The school room onyneriijkofdy mildly boring, loomed ftoddenljr in his thoughts as stuffy and thoroughly distasteful. He dawdled along, his thoughts on the neighboring j&ll van Kull and the fascinating craft whioh gjHfcd its waters beneath the span of tee Bayonne bridge. Finding suddenly that his feet already had taken him toward the strait and away from school, he brightened perceptibly and mended his pace, school completely erased from his mind. fifs trustworthy feet, responsive to an appeal from his stomach, brought him back home somewhat > early for lunch. In fact, it was only 11:30 a. m. when hi* mother, Mrs. William Marvel, looked out the window and saw Richard sauntering homeward, apparently in deep thought, kicking a tin can aiong ahead of him with a preoccupied afr. She opened the window. Mother Scolds. "Richard," she said, "why aren't you in School? You know what your father will say." Mrs. Marvel went on and on, ard her voice penetrated at last to Richard's submerged consciousness. "Hey, look, mom," he said. "I've kicked this can all the way for five blocks and never missed once." Mrs. Marvel, realizing that a lot of sound advice had been wasted, began repeating it and Richard somewhat resentfully gave his can a final kick and retired. So did Mrs. Marvel, confident that her erring son would show up by the time food was on the table. He failed to do so, however. At six o'clock, when dinner was ready, Richard still was missing. His mother telephoned the police. Motorcycle patrolmen, an emergency squad and two carloads of detectives, about 30 men in all, were dispatched from St. George, S. I. Mrs. Marvel had told them that Richard seemed fascinated by the Kill van Kull waterfront, so they looked there first. They investigated the boathouses and they beat through the patches of woods near the approach to the Bayonne bridge. The light began to fail and still they had not found Richard nor had they found anyone who remembered seeing the boy. Keeps PeHee Basy. The police got their searchlights and began hunting through buildings in the vicinity. At 8:20 a patrolman of the emergency squad flashed the beam of his torch into a dog house in the rear of an unoccupied house five blocks from Richard's home. Something stirred in the salt hay on the floor of the structure and a startled small boy took form, rubbing the sleep from his eyes. t "Hey," said Richard, "you woke me up. What do you think you're trying to do?" The searcher explained that he was a policeman and that he was looking for Richard. "My mom didn't have wiy right to call the cops," said Richard indignantly. "I had just got to sleep and you woke me up. I suppose now I got to go home." The policeman agreed and they went. Richard grew mere cheerful as he became wider awake and admitted that a hot meal wouldn't be bad. Boasts It la the Safest Town in State of Texas ITALY, TEXAS.--Some sort of national, perpetual safety record is claimed by Italy, town nf 1.300 population in Ellis county, Texas. Italy has never had a death within its city limits caused by an automobile accident. Furthermore, no murder has ever been committed among the white citizens tince the town was organized 65 years ago. He Doesn't Care Who Wins War; So Stays an Allen CALGARY, ALTA Because he had strange but firm convictions about the war, a citizen of Poland had his application for Canadian naturalization quickly refused. When he appeared before a supreme court judge for consideration of his case, the applicant said be wasn't particular who won the war. Buys Auto With Dimes, ' Nickels and Quarters NEW BERN, N. C.--A customer here traded in his old car and cold cash for new one. The amount of cash--don't stop to figure the total--consisted of 13,000 nickels, 2,000 dimes and 400 quarters. Salesman A. J. Flowers Jr. knows because he counted them. . Music "teacher Relaxes By Aiding Ventriloquists ST. JOSEPH, MO --C. Turner, a music teacher, isn't a vindictive soul, but-- "For 15 years I've been spending two hours a day making ventriloquists' dummies," he said. "The idea is to get my mind off my music pupils." William Tinijtrn and Rita Ana Conway underwent tonsillectomies last Thursday at the Woodstock Public hospital. Adolph Doberstein is critically ill at his farm home near MeCallom Lake. He retaupsd list week from a Chteago hospital where hi was under observation ftr toverat days. Bobby Mi|ler, son cl Ifr. and Mrs. is seeMprfaig from a jifj;fyi^gattte Woodwith blood a cut te his m € dkion at he is oning incurred linger. Mary Ann Bolger, the little daughter <rf Mr. and Mrs. John Bolger, is a patient at Victory Memorial hospital fn Waukegan. She was returned te the hospital this pqst week whfcn she suffered a relapse. Mrs. John Kilday is recov&ing front an operation which she underwent in the Belmont hospital, Chicago, last week. Sister Venard of Wnuwatesa, Wis., and her sister, Mrs. Jack Geary of Island Lata, were gnetts in the Mrs. John R. Knox home Wednesday after- " •••%*. A >• „v -*4 f •• $ i i > " 'If- ««t». Hit SCREE* CLOTH; Itr heskfc aai. eearfbn--dies and i k*kspt sot. Bad. : Mi r that «ahs db* , eost of labor it* i* he ame" duuft ' yt af miianiisl kad£ G««ll*dE<te*- v Cloth an* asv» yoanalf th# •d saptasaef leecnmia#^ 3 hiada---Sus-Ksd 1 Nickels'Hardware Phone 2 West MeHaagy Sabceribe foe The Plaindealer i If. Paul 1 Schwabe mfwmasT : Mdbary 1114 THURSDAY MORNINGS Weedsteck S74 BT iironmoMt ONLY ' • Visit Freund's New Modern Dairy Plant ' i On Boute Slf two miles north of MeBeny ^ The public is invited to call and inspect this modern plant We will handle all kinds of Hftiry r , milk, cream, butter, eggs, ice cream, etc. . " " " Dally delivtrieg will bemade inllcHenry and snrronnding t e r r i t o r y . ; , i . j i 4; „ v v t ^ ? JOHN FREUND ^KLSPBOin 6S4-W-S -- Defense Bond QUIZ Q. In what denominations are Defense Savings'Stamps available f A. cents, 25 cents. 50 cents, $1, and $5. An album 1 'V is given free with first stamp purchase to mount 'v f stamps of 25 cents up. 1b what denominations are Defense Savings Bonds available) Q* •V£ A., ft:- You can buy a Series E Bond for $1&75, $37.50, $75, -m $375, or $750. The price* of Series F Bonds range from $74 to $7,400; Series 6 Bonds from $100 to $10,000. ^ ~ --• To purcRase Deiense BOIias ana ottanps. go TO the nearest post office or buiik, or write for information to the Treasurer of ,4he United States, Washington, D. C. &ARRINGTON BAND Td «IVfi TONIGHTS McHenry Band exchanged places with the Barrington Band this week and last night the local people traveled to BarringWi to offer their eoncert. Tonight, Thursday, in the city park in McHenry, the Barrington Band will turn out to present several selections for the entertainment of music lovers in this city. x ! ,,, Mrs. Walter Walsh called en Huntley relatives last Thursday. i Charles Leonard, Auctioneer Ganlke'i SalMillarn &Kr • ; Itonto 47, Woodstock, Bt Commencing at 1:00 o'clock^ Daylight Time Will Have ... Head of Dairy „<3gWS /•' Close spongers and fresh r ^ A , • 10 Head of Heifers ^ * 5 Bulls Plus many cattle, Veal calves, hogs, sheep or horses that are not consigned at this time. Come to the auction if you want to buy. Consign your livestock if you want to selL All consigned cattle must be delivered to Sale Bam by Tuesday at 2 o'clock unless they have T. B. chart accompanying them showing test within six months. All consigned stock settled for night of sale. TERMS -- 25* down, balance from 1 to 6 mos. time on monthly payment fras>% jjia 7|fc ance. . »^ v• Woodstock Commission Sales Co. Tfc&fpFfiiinM*, Clerking WM. E. aAUUCZ, OwMff ^ Phone 572 "ffsN*: J -ft " V»» vr •; y&a -.-v v •