Page Eight THE McHENKY PLAINDEALER. Thursday, July 29, 1943 ., , / 1 i 1 »>* _ * 'j, IK) YOU REMEMBEt* Each week for more than two year*; the Plaindealer has been carrying a picture of a McHenry serviceman, most of these being of our young men more recently inducted. j Nov that our weekly paper reaches lover 300 soldiers, sailors and marines, 8t. Clara's Court lily and Rev. Father Walter ConWtjr, The members of St. Clara "a Coort, l>ady Foresters, wish to thank all who attended their public card party re cently, the committee for their untiring efforts to make it a success, and Mrs. Elizabeth Pich for her donation of a special prize. s the latter from Notre Dame, Ind. On Sunday Mrs: George Miller entertained the Meehans at a chickes: dinner held at her home east of the river, and on Monday evenir t they were entertained at the Dan O'Shea home in Grayslake. Achievement D»jr Parents and'•friends are eordteliy invited to the 4-fl ifluK local achieve- Hient day to be held at St. Mary's-St. Patrick's school hall on July 30 at 7 Circle 1. W. S. C. S. , | Circle 1, W. S. C. S., is sponsoring h a public card party to be held on"Friday, August 6, at the McHenry Country Club. Tickets are now <)ij:, t) jn All 4-H girls are asked to be sale and it . is hoped that there Will at th'e Jiail at 6:30 Friday night. be a good attendance at the party. j Party For .Serviceman _ w_... ?i|$6land JackSon, of Richmond,'-who Ml East River Road Pinochle ' jMrsv George G-lbs entertained entering service, was guest of honor; mejpbcre of the East River Road Pinat tj,e E E ophle. club at her home last Thursday Johnsburg ljast a*tern™n- m"ited 'hX Satujjiifty eVenin^. ^ Mrs. Jackjsdii Was Wrs.: Ben J.Dietz, Mrs, Gloss and • the. tornier/Vivian Whiting? • at a gathering- Whiting. home ° near •; . '• Enjoy Picnic % Justen, Jack MpCarrolJj John oKiiday and William Doherty families enjoyed a weiner roast ."it the latter"? home one evening this week Games and visiting provided entertainment for the group. * * * • • , ••• . Lady Forester Picnic The juvenile members of the Lady Foresters will enjoy a picnic on Thursday, August 12. All who plan to attend should meet at St. Mary's- St. Patrick's school hall at 11:30 a. m., August 12. On August 19 the Lady Foresters will enjoya pot-luck picnic lunch. v-;; - Reunion . A reunion of the Stephen H. Freund family was held at the Bernard X. Schmrtt home last Sunday, honorinc Mrs. Freund on her seventy-sixth birthday. A picnic dinner and supper Were enjoyed and a happy day spent with various games and« visiting. The gue«t of honor was the recipient of a variety of lovely gifts. In attendance were the H. E. Buch family. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blake, the Wilford Blake. Anton P. Freund. Carl J. Freund, Bernard N. Schmitt and Herbert Freund families and Miss Bertillav Freund. Christening * The infant daughter of Mr. an<| Mrs. Edward Thennes was christened Martha Kathryn by Rev. Father Clarence Thennes of St. Charles at St Mary's church on Sunday. Sponsors were Corp. and Mrs. Frank Gende, the former of Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. Following the ceremony a reception was held at the Thennes home. In attendance from, out of town besides those already mentioned were Mr. and Mrs. James Garren and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Peterson of Libertyville and Kay Garren of Chicago. : Mrs.-M A, Sutton. The next meetingof the group will be with Mrs. Dietv. on August ,'5i? . MARRIED JULY f MESSAGES FROM P LOCAL MEN III , THE U. S. SERVICE 5P§! (Continued from Plage OM) INTEREST1N6 NEARBY NEWS WASTE PAPER IS LISTED AS ACTUAL WEAPON OF WAE r -yg 'A critical shortage of labor in the officials three CASH AND BONDS ARE ' TAKEN FROM H6ME Off THOMAS WILSON, JR. One of the boldest burglaries ever pulp industry has created a heavy committed in the Wauconda comdemand for waste paper to be con-1 munjty htffrpened during mid-after.- verted for war use, the conservation; noon one day last week when the home busy training that we don't hnve much tifne for anything. j :-i" • You see the -$& Bees get only! Posing as police -- , twelve weeks tracing and in these hoodlums, believed to hail from Cook committee of the Illinois War Coun- of Mr and Mrs. Thomas Wilson, Jr., twelve weeks we get commando, rifle, ! county, made a raid on slot machines c'l has announced. formerly of this city was ransacked bayonet, ju jitau and hand grenade >n taverns and other roadside stands! Lieut. Gov. Hugh W. Cross, chair-; an~J0(?te, .. .. » ; practice. \ Jin three different locations in Lak* ] man of the committee, reported to I burglars entered by way of .the Beside all this my brother, Roy, and county Thursday morning. Egtab- Gov. Green that he had urged the 1 the cottage^fn^thefr m^s't^f10* 1 I went to anti-aircraft gunnery school Hshments in the extreme southern end Corwnafttee's advisory group and coun- ableg succeeded in locating to become first class gunners so all of the county, in the central section ty and local salvage chairmen to be- bankroll of nearly $100 in currency* this kept us on the run ever since we near Libertyville, were visited by gin campaigns for collection of waste together with fifteen war bonds On began our training in March. .the hoodlums who although apparent- , paper. Topping the list, he said, is departing, they threw the bonds into My brother and I have been fortu- ly operating nonchalantly neverthe- the demand for old brown boxes, a bush near the home, evidently de.* less made record time in traveling paper bags, heavy wrapping paper, ciding they were of no cash value. " from one to the other of the three corrugated boxes and brown waste-; By this last act they were traced, sections, and then out of the county basket paper. for a small boy pickedSip one of the before their presence, was kiwvn to jje urged organization of. vacation- j bonds and took it to Chick's tavern, local authorities. ' ing school children and Boy and Girl I owned and operated by Charles Barth, ---« Scouts for collection crews. j a brother-in-law of Mrs. Wilson. The Matt Stiglich, of Barrington is in Paper has become an actual weanon Ji*u-^ere not &reatl.v alarmed Botort Bnrm .•*«« & Chk*>; £T. £« «C*kff • ; We have been in this camp only suffering from -sewre shock; and . waste paper is being made into bomb; Realizing that something must be 1 five days, having moved in from ^rmses which he sustained last Thurs- bands, blasting powder kegs, airplane ; wrong, Mr. Barth hurried to the j Camp Endicott, Rhode Island, whieh day morning when he fell thirty-five parts, overseas cartonsanid.othfir. es- j Wilson cottage and learned at once ; took us six days and nights. feet With the scaffold on which tjieefa. ./ I'-timt the place h«d been burglarized. ! . The weather here is grand..because was working. The accident occurred ; , • --. , •.......'..T;- 1 Police were notified and began an inrihis camp is .built Up in the mountain» t in yhicago at the edzie avenue audi-1 < "• >yi > restigation at once, no ; and so it is very cool throvigKout the torium of the Chicago Surface Lines, ' Ready for Early Harvest | evidence b^n^nobtained. ' , / ] entire days and even cold during thp ^^ere he wag painting. He had no . _ Parsley, New Zealand spinach arifl Wasted . Meat Much of the meat of muskrats, opossums and raccoons has been wasted. The annual take of 15 million muskrats, one million raccoons and 500 thousand opossums could also supply much protein food as well as the furs for which the animals are trapped. natc so far in staying very close t(*- | gethert W'e were both put in the | same battalion and the same <?omj pany. -This means we are even in the i same barracks, something very un- 1 usual because brothers are usually split up and putk,even in different b«t- ; talions. i nights. We^usually turn^^on the steam ; frscvtures, except ,a. sijAali.'^om;! chard begin their growth SoTi KENNETH FRANZEN heater at night and sleep under tw<j ^internil injurieswoolen blankets, somthing I have_ ' . " ' never done before during the month A larjfe barn and its contents on the of July. • Arthur M. Casey farm, two miles Well, we-certainly appreciate the of Libertyville, was destroyed McHenry Plaindealer. It makes a ^ e $aturday night, July 7. Loss fellow feel kind of close to home to w*s estimated at over $5,000. Origin read all about the happenings and e blaze was not determined. Connews about the good little city of Mc- ° , ? barn included grain, Henry. straw, two binders, discs, seeders and i We are now waiting for the word ® variety of other farm equipment. | to be sent out to our Island X, so I Tra».a ,oss- The only animal j hope the paper will follow us even if !n .e j ar" waf a saddle horse belt -talcs* * few weeks to reach us.' >' Wrigrht, Liberty- Sincerely, ; j^sHe banker. The horse was released from the barn, but later became the spring and are ready for their first harvest in early summer. The: period of harvest lasts throughout the entire summer and fallv At the end of the season, a few parsley plants may be taken up and potted. Under favorable conditions these will be sufficient for garnishing purposes during most of the winter. we wonder if perhaps we haven't let, slip into hazy memory the names and faces of some of our boys who have served the longest. Even though we ALVIN P. BLAKE, Camp P^rks. Calif. Dear Mr. Mosher: "<r I have been receiving your highly haven't forgotten them, we certainly »esteemed paper, the MdHenry Plain so [.frightened it ran into a stump in a jWearby orchard, breaking its leg. It fifas necessary to destroy the animal. Early Monday afternoon, July 19, ,, , - , - , T . , A x.j. • firemen answered a call which took have found ourselves unable to keep dealer, and I wish to extend my sin- them to the ThompSon cottage on the informed on the location of many of cere thanks to you and to tell you north sh0re of Bohner's Lake, near them and must wonder now and then that the paper is a welcome visitor Burlington. The fire, starting' from a faulty oil stove, totally destroyed the fifty-year-old structure. how they have been faring these last here as it keeps me in touch with few months. •.. - happenings at home. For this reason we have decided to I Hoping for your continued success revive the memory of our. . readers i in your patriotic endeavor to make Betty Lou Jenkins, 14, daughter of by presenting each week, in addition i things pleasanter for the«boys in ser- jyjr an(j ]yjj.s John4 Wa'ndell of Heto a picture of one of our more re- vice, I am . bron, is a patient at the Harvard hosnrn Tm°V!S uon^ '., wllere she was taken late Satur- • WILLIAM O. HOPf^, <jay afternoon, suffering from a se- Camp Crowder, M®j j Vere skull fracture, bruises and shock, : the result of a fall from CLARENCE'S SHOP, Johnsburg Reduced prices in lawn chairs--pier and porch benches, $1.30 and up. Full line of barn and house brooms. Genuine leather men's, boys' and ladies' belts and billf o l d s ' : * • , Hand-woven wash, shopping and market baskets. CLARENCE J. SMITH JOHNSBURG, ILL. cently inducted servicemen, a picture of someone whose likeness appeared long ago in our paper, some of these I even before Pearl Harbor day. We * .. ------ are sura these "Do You Remember". Dear Sirs: (Photo by Warwick) pictures will be a great help in keep- I am sorry that I always have to MRS. DANIEL KENNEBECK "•insr informed on our old and new ser- bother you with a new address so St. Joseph's church. Richmond, was vicemen. 0,fte"\ At the present time .1 am at the scene of H beautiful nuptial cere- This week *we present Kenneth the Fleet Marine KOICP Training Genmony on July 7, uniting in marriage Franzeh, the second son of Leonard ter, here at Camp Elliott, San Diego, Miss Darlene Miller of Richmond and Franzen to enlist in service. This " " ~ Daniel Kennebeck of Johnsburg. The picture of him appeared in the Plainyoung couple is residing in the Town dealer on Sept. 4, 1941, when he was moving truck. Miss Jenkins, with several friends, was riding in the back of a pickup truck. As the vehicle neared the Spooner garage, on Highway 173 in the village of Hebron, the girl, in trying to step from the truck box ! Calif. I- hope to keep on leceiving , to the running board, fell froiji the House. McHENRY FOLKS ATTEND AURORA WEENDING SUNDAY I serving at Fort Bragg, No. Carolina. Accompanying the picture of ' Ken'* [ was a letter he had written to his folks on the first anniversary of his entrance into service. He entered the army in September, 1940, when he ! was 19, to' serve f©r a three-year pethe paper at the following address Sincrely, PVT. HOWARD VOELTZ, San Diego, Calif. A wedding of interest took place. riod. . Rum.™fge j . ' ^t Sunday afternoon, July 26, in Since his entranca into service two A rummage_sale sponsored by the , St. Mary's rectory Aurora. At that other brothers, Lvle and Lloyd, have 51?; n0tJe f rK ao t!rm« I ra an Gl s' daughter enlisted. Anothe^ brother, Russell, will be held at the Buch building on of Mrs. Rose Van Gils of that city was the first of the family to enter< became the bride of Corp. Arthur 'Aircraft Carrier' In India an "aircraft carrier" refers to the 60-foot salvage trucks, dispatched to recover bombers and fighter planes that have crashed. truck, striking her head on the pavement. Laehine, Manning Depot ;r Laehine, Quebec province, at the western end of the Laehine rapids, is now a great manning depot for the Royal Canadian Air force, with barracks stretching for acres on its outskirts. FITZGERALD'S r-,Open Sunday Mornings-- Phone 19 West McHenry Riverside Drive on August 4, 5, 6 and 7. Donations of clothing, furniture, dishes and other articles which might be used, whether old or new, will be appreciated. • The committee in charge is composed of Mrs. Carl J. Freund, Mrs. Harvey Nye, Mrs. Edgar JLandgren and Mis. George J. Freund. Anyone donating articles who are not able to bring them to the .place of the sale should Call 1^4'R or 129-R; Brown, who closed his floral shop in Aurora last spring to enter service. . , He is the son of Mrs. Maud Brown of e P 8 m e Aurora. Following the ceremony," the new bride accompanied her husband to Camp Ellis, near Peoria. She has previously bt\n employed by the StfS. Sensenbaugh company. Among those from this vicinity who attended the nuptial ceremony were Mr. and Mrs. George Schreiner, Mr. and Mrs, Nick Pitzen, Mrs. John M. Pitzen, , Bernice Pitzen, Lawrence Pitzen, Mrs. Louis Adams and Mrs. John Pitzen. 'way back in 1939. Kenneth now has a San Francisco address, in care of RESIDENCE CHANGES Marriage Licenses Mr. and Mrs. John Samek have moved from the north,\yest part of Chicago to a house recently vacated by the John Unti fami'v at 715 Center street. The Sameks have purchased the property from the owner, Mr. Ljungberg. They halve four sons and a daughter. Two sons reside in Fox Lake with their families, Capt. Bernard Samek is serving overseas and Pvt. Albert Samek is stationed in Savanah, Ga. Mrs. Pearl Stratton--antifamily Lily Lake P. T. A. ' The last meeting: of the Lily Lake P. T. A. was called to order at 8:30 p.m., July 22. at the Lily Lake school. The mettiri;- was op?ned with a salute : to the flag , fol'owed by the reading of the n.inutes and t^e tieasuiei s re- Henry E. Howe, Chit|g^:#.|3icift'.have moved from a place east of the port. flattie Etnspar. secretary, Tappah, Woodstock. • v ^ iriver to Woodstock. graciously consented to take oyer tho ; ; George P. Daleiden, Aurora, to ~ publicity of the group. : ^Catherine Myrtle Waltz, Batavia. A motior, concerning a dance„ to; he \ William, H. Liddle, Crystal Lake, to held bn August 21. 1943, with admis- Helen B. Boyce, Woodstock. Julv ^ sionof thirty-five cents, including tax Fred J. Strang, Crystal Lake, to ; Achievement Day-4-H Club-7 D m was pass.-d and approved. This will Uuthella J. Latham. Woodstock. I St Marv^ St PatrirW H»1 ' beheld at the* Lily moor Country club. Worry G. Schalin, Chicago to Jose- y The meeting was adjorned by the phine Parizek, Chicago. president, Mrs. Florence Svaboda. Max Heugen, Woodstock, to Ger- COMING EVENTS Altar and Rosary /£ large crowd of ladies attended the 1 .public card party sponsored by-the trude M. Hughes, Rock Island. Carnival Peters 'Among the Sick who has been ill at the home of her Altar and Rosary sodality of St. Patrick's church last Tuesday afternoon Oil the lawn of the home of Miss Kate McLaughlin. A prize was awarded at each table and special prizes, one ia . basket of by Miss McLaughlin, v..c _ an angel food cake, made by Mrs. Pe- uane Harris of West McHenry unter Freund, were awarded to Dorothy ®erwent sur£®fy at the Woodstock Doherty and Mrs. C. C. Hoyt. An- ho»Pltal jast Thursday.• ether special prize was merited by Mis. Celia Winkel entered the August 1 and Chicken Dinner--^St. Parish--Spring Grove. August 3 Circle 1,. W. S. C. S. -- Mrs, Fred Heide. Fox River Valley Camp, R. N A- • Meeting. August 5 Mr,. Tremerc of Belle.iow, J August 4, 5, 6. 7 0 bakery goods, prepared ^!"S' ^!n*4>n Martin, is now ^Rummage Sale--Buch Building, River-' ^ Laughlfei, and the other a be about in a wheelchair. ; side Drive--Sponsored by Christian ^ •$ MILLION DOLLAR CIRCUS Mrs. Celia Mrs. William Rothermel. Woodstock hospital as a medical pa The sodality is grateful to Miss tient on Tuesday. McLaughlin and her brother for the use of the beautiful, spacious lawn ' and to Miss Ethel Jones for her domination of prizes. Much credit is also due the committee for its fine work in making the party a success. On Sunday, August 1, regular Com- ! munion Sunday will b^ observed by > the sodality. Members are asked to • meet in the church vestibule at 7:55 ". «. m. # • • • Honor McHenry Visitors , Mr. and Mrs. John J. Meehan of f^acksonville, Fla.. who are vacationing at" the James Doherty home here, have been honored at several gatherings during-. their short stay. j; Last Thursday evening Mrs. Me«- f!'H»n was entertained by members of the Linger-Longer club at a dinner |Wrty held at the home of Mrs. Stewant Barlow in Elgin. Mrs. Meehan, „ the former Irene Conway of McHenry, was a member of the club during her ^ t*sidence in Elgin. If On Friday evening Mr. and Mr#. Meehan and family -were guests of lionor at a dinner given at the home" of Mrs. Kathryn Conway. Others % present were the James Doherty famyv 1 , & TLS I L'J : Phenothiazine Is Versatile Drug "The ideal anthelmintic of worm remover," says art article in the current Yearbook of the U. S. department of agriculture, "would have no injurious action whatsoever on the host and yet would kill all or practically all the parasites harbored by the animal. Such a has not yet been discovered, nearest approach to it is phenothiazine, developed by the bureau of animaL industry during the last three years, which appears to be the most useful anthelmintic yet discovered. "This drug, administered in proper therapeutic doses in a capsule, in a drench, or in feed, is efficacious for. removing stomach worms and relatf ed trichostongyles, as well as hookworms and nodular worms from cattle, sheep or goats; palisade or red worms, and related strongyles, from horses; and nodular worms from swine. No qther known anthelmintic removes so many different kinds of parasites from the host animals mentioned as does phenothiazine." Mothers and Altar Society, i August 6 Public Card Party -- Sponsored byP ! Circle 1, W. S. C. S. -- McHenry Country Club. Christian Mothers and Altar So cjety--Meeting. 5 August 9 >0. E. S. -- Regular Meeting, Legion Meeting. August t12 Picnic--Juvenile Lady Foresters. • Group 4, W. S. C. S.--Regular Meeting. * August 14 drug Bake and Fancywork Sale--Sponsored The by Group 4, W. S. C. S.--Central Market. August 18 Public Card Party--McHenry Country Club--Sponsored by O. E. S. & p. m. « v.' August If . Lady Foresters Picnic. Build Liberty Ships N Seventeen yards now work almosf exclusively on the" construction of Liberty ships. Each of these yards was especially designed and laid out for the express purpose of making Liberty ships. The production records of our American shipyards has been due, in a considerable measure, to this factor. 4 Starts Thursday Night, July 29th MATINEE DAILY 2:15 1fe»d the Want Ads! At ROUND LAKE Auspices Round Lions Glub Internationally Known - CIRCUS STARS - Subscribe to The Plaindealer! - , : t t i i $ t i i i t r i $ t i t t t $ t $ t t t i t t t $ t t i t i i i J t i t i t I i NIGH^S^:15 I