»v * * i 25*1-. I . >v . ; V rl * F-' > Page Six | ftt ™ W» .V ••' 1r * * ? * & . r ™ **H V* •* I, .,' ^'Av » • - ' \ ^ * r 7% tv f -r^ 11 14 * ** ' f'*; 'THE MCHENEY PUUNDEALEB - '<.M&Aj.Afa£ Ahfc.fc.tt* , » • . ' . . - J . , v - ; ; » v : « r * " v V > ^ l V ^ r > ; \ ' . /, ..'s\.>. . • «/-' " ; .' ^ Thursday, September 30, 1911, (idiigitssicmal Vic^s •y CHAUNCEY W. REED mMM •i "'.VTHJC Fl'LRRIGHT RESOLUTION: of any particular post war plan for Frobaby the most publicized action' anjnternational set-up, it could easily of Congress since its return to ses- be construed as a moral pledge for sion was the passage by the House support of any future proposition that of Representatives by a vote of 360 came within the realm of its broad to 29, of the resolution sponsored by terms. For instance "appropriate in- Congressman Fulbright of Arkansas ternational machinery" could include which pledged Congress to favor "ap- a league of nations, a world court or propriate international machinery • a-super state, sometimes referred to with power adequate to establish and as the "United States of the world.!' .maintain a just and lasting peace The very word "international" is susamong the nations of the world" with eeptible to many meanings. It may "participation by the United States mean the United States and all other therein, through its consitutional pro- nations of the world. It may merely cesses." . include those now united against the As one of the 29 who opposed its Axis! ft might; be construed to mean ^asfeajsre I am. hoWever;not nearly as prily our country. Great Britain, China alairmed over the consequences of the and Russia, or it might be narrowed House action as are many of my con- down to include merely Great Britain situenfs who wrote me. I cannot be-" and us: "Power adequate to establish li^ve that its pa$sage means "eternal and maintain a just and lasting" war' of "insuranceof- European far peace" is likewiser vague and uncer-< risks' ?or "entrance 'into- the Brit'sh tain. Urider this language authority Empire" or "surrehder of American could be asserted to establish an iniiulependenco." In my "judgment the ternational police force. Free and unineAs' 4r0 waswholly; "innocuous, and .lunited trade and the removal of merely^enunciated a policy to which" tariffs in order to standardise World any good^ American could conscieiW living Conditions rriight likewise be tiously subscribe. Its "terms were so urged as. authorized- by those words, broad that it might have been aptly Likewise unlimited immigration, inamended by a provision which en- ternational control of air routes and dorsed all goodness and condemned international allocation of raw mriterali evil. It was the very breadth of ials might with justification be conthe resolution which secured for it strued as having been endorsed as a such a tremendous majority. But policy by the present Congress. The therein, in my judgment, lay its de- United States was, in the resolution, f^cts. While a vote for the measure pledged to, .participation therein (lid not carry with it an endorsement "through its constitutional processes." These words, in my judgment did not Strengthen the resolution or narrow •Its precepts. All governmental.activities, all acts of Congress and all exercises of executive power are supposed to...be "through constitutional processes" so the addition of fthese Words was" a mere superfluity. ^Ho\vever, they emphasized the. inconsistency that Was manifest from the consideration by the House of the resolution its&lf. The -subject matter of the resolution is one, under the Constitution, to be determined by the President and the Senate. The House has no jurisdiction in those matters whatsoever.,, It therefore seemed rather capricious for it to pledge its adherence to the constitution and in the same breath assert principles that it j had no authority to determine. The j Senate, to preserve its dignity and | perogratives, will no doubt table the! resolution and forget about it. T%ken; all in all, it looks as if the House merely signed a blank check and left it to the President and thejj^natti to fill in'the spaces. >, , Kathleen Norris Says; No Husband Is Perfect ^ B*U Syndicate--WNU Featuhrt. Brazilian Rentals Low Brazil is providing factory workers with low cost dwellings at an average monthly rental bit lor :« family of six. ". v- v-:- German Marriages Up 3 Per Cent | The Berlin radio, in a broadcast k recorded by the United Press at New York, said that there were 639,770 marriages in Germany in 1942, an increase of 3 per cent *• compared with 1941. Calories From Meat About 40 per cent of the calories in the food we eat comes from meat and livestock products. Milk, dairy products, pork and lard make • up three-fourths of this group, 3 CHURCH SERVICEl 5 St. Mary's Catholic Churdji Masses:' , - ' -r- Sunday: 7:00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:80* Holy Days: 6:00; 8:00; 10:00. Week Days: 6:45 and 8:00. First Friday: 6:30 and 8»00. Confessions: ; • Saturdays: 3:00 p. m. and Thursday before First Friday-- After 8:00 Mass on Thursday; . 3:00 p. m. and 7:00 p. m. Msgr. C. S. Nix, Pastor. _ * St. Patrick's Catholic tharcl .. Masses: Sunday: 8:00, 9:00, 10:00, 11:00. 1 Weekdays: 7:30. • * 2 First Fridays: 7:30. . On First Friday, Communion dis>; 'tributed at 6:30, 7:00 and befortf and during the 7:30 Mass. ' Confessions: Saturdays: 4-00 to 5:0p p. m. and 7:00 to 8:00 p. to. Thursday before First Friday: 4:00 . to 5:00 p. m. and 7:00 tr 8:00 Rev. Witi. A. O'Rourlre, pastor. 1>R. R. DeROMi " • --':- --Dentist-- Regner Bldr., Green St. Phone 292J. McHenry ' v' Office flours: 9 to 7 Thursdays, by appointment only *er THE. ALAK^ IF J WANT" 10 dz-rree AT 4: ^<7 OO FI5HIN6 IN THE MC7^NIN6 \WNU Service) PAVE THE PATH OF INVASION *T1LL DEATH US DO PART . Strict adherence to the marriage votvs as a foundation for self respect and the respect of others, is the basis of this week's advice by Kathleen IS orris. She reminds a woman, who is about to bring tragedy to her child through divorce, that all men, even her hiisband, have faults, and that if she has a partner who is even 50 per cent iatisfactory, she has done as well as most women. In her letter, this woman writes that she and her husband "simply don t exist for each other." She believes she can find happiness by marrying another Everywhere our armed' forces are smashing the enemy back in the new aggrsssive war of INVASION. They are your sons, husband, brothers, sweetheart, father, relatives and friends. They ask only one thing:--that you back them up ALL THE WAY. With Victory coming nearer, you must not fail our boys--• your soldier, sailor or marine. You're not asked to give a cent •--only to put every dollar you can scrape up into the world's safest investment-- War Bonds. Buy at least one extra $100 War Bond during this $15,000,000,000 3rd War Loan Drive in addition to your regular bondbuying. Everyone who possibly can must invest at least $100. Some of you must invest thousands. .Take'it out of income, take it out of idle and accumulated funds. Start "scratching gravel" now! Carol reads his paper at breakfast; I read mine. We both keep an eye on luckier liti that he finishes his milk and gets off in lime. This five days a week. - By KATHLEEN NORRIS OTHING weakens a woman's will like a love affair. Nothing so completely turns reason topsy-turvy and breaks down the principles --the codes that have been years a-building. r When it comes some years after marriage, to a wife who has begun to doubt her own charm, begun to fear that her day of compliments and thrills is over, what a love-affair does to her spirits, how it brightens her eyes and renews her zest in -life! And what a terrible pity that is, for like strong drink, gambling, horse-racing, firearms and turnip in a stew, passion has to be used with extreme caution, or it ruins everything. That's the way civilization has worked it out; a hard way, but the only safe road to follow. One man for one woman, and fidelity from both, and no teasing and playing with love along the sidelines. If you have a husband who is even 50 per cent satisfactory, you've done as well as most women, have no more to endure than they have, and would be wise to draw most of your happiness from other sources. Illicit Love Causes Suffering;. It would be pleasant if an attractive wife could have an affair with a strange man--say a handsome young captain recently stationed in her neighborhood. Pleasant if nobody would be hurt. But the catch is that somebody is hurt--the other husband and wife suffer the tortures of Purgatory; children suffer, neighbors and families are disappointed if not scandalized, and in the end the lovers pay, too." Neither one, all the rest of his or her days, is particularly proud in looking back to those delirious hours of passion. -So make up youf mind before the affair really gets under way, that what has been the law for strong and self-respecting folk for generations is the right law; faithfulness to that promise made on a June day of radiant happiness and confidence so marty years ago. Here is a letter from a woman who wants to jump the ropes after 11 years of marriage. Of course I am going to advise her not to do it, but the chances are she'll do it anyway - She has only to look at the pitiful failures of some of the men and women who have done it to see whit she is letting herself in for, but no one ever does when an affair has gotten a good start. Husband* Wife Drift Apait. "We have one son of eight," writes Winifred. "He is our sole interest in common. But for Jackie, I believe Carol and I might go days without speaking to each other. There is no quarreling, although in the beginning of our marriage we did quarrel a good deal. We simply doiVt exist for each other. Carol reads his paper at breakfast; I read minei We both keep an eye on Jackie to see that he finishes his milk and gets off in time. This five days a week. On Saturday Jackie has sweeping, watering and raking to do; in the afternoon--he and his St. John's Catholic Church, Johnsborg Masses: Sunday: 8:00, 10:00. ' V Holy Days: 7:00 and 9:00.> ~ Weekdays: 8:00. First Friday: 8:00. „ Confessions: - Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:80. Thursday before First Friday: 2:90 and 7:30. Rev. A. J. Neidert, pastor. Office Honrs--Daily Except Thurs. 10 to 12, 1:30 to 4:30, Mon., We<L, Fri. Nights: 7 to 8. Other Hours toy Appointment H. S. VAN DENBURGH, DC„ PhC 120 Green St. Tel. 292-R. McHenry Vernon J. Knox t f t . - A T T O R N E Y A T L A W V; -- OFFICE HOURS ^ 1 ' Tuesdays and Fridays Other Days by Appointment ^ McHenry . - ^ ' . _ Illinojl m JDK. H. S. FIKSr ; •v 7 Veterinarian • Richmond Road Pfcoa* Si McHENRY, ILL. 4 Zion Evangelical Lutheran Otnrch Divine Service -- Nine o'clock. Sunday School -- Ten o'clock. • Rev. R. T. Eisfeldt, Pastor. Community Church Suiiday School: 10:00 a.m. Worship Service: 11:00 a. m.- Junior League: 6:30 p.m. Epworth League: 8:00 p.m. |tev. J. Heber Miller, pastor. McHENRY FLORAL CO. -- Phone 608-R-l -- One Mile South of McHenry on Route 31. Flowers for ,all occasions! St. Peter's Catholic Charcfc, Spring Grove Masses: Sundays: 8:00 and 10:00. Holy Days: 6:30 and 9:00. Weekdays: 8:00. * First Friday: 8:00. Confessions: Saturdays: 2:30 and 7:16. Thursday before First Friday: 2:30 and 7:15. Rev. John L. Daleiden, Pastor. A. WORWICK PHOTOGRAPHER Portraiture - Commercial Photography - Photo-Finishing Enlarging - Copying - Framing Phone 275 -- Riverside Drive McHENRY, ILL. '€ € O o father pick a movie; never one that I want to see. I hate bombing, zooming of planets, close small theaters. Saturday night poker club for Carol, and usually dinner with a school pal for Jackie. Sunday Carol drops Jackie and me at my mother's house, goes on to the country club. Mother is an invalid, very nervous, and if I can leave Jackie with some friend or send him on With his father, I usually do. My «ister, unmarried, .and very delicate, lives with my molhor ; there is no qunrrel between them and my hus- ; band, but he rarely goes 1c the house. I try to cheer my own people, lunch with them, and walk back to a quiet house to wait for the others. "About two months ago I met an army doctor of 51; I am 34. From the first moment we two liked each other, and now our feeling is something much stronger. Harry is married, has two grown girls; he and his wife have been estranged, though ; living together with every outside! appearance of harmony for many j years. He is commissioned, will go back to private life after the war, 1 and lives in a distant suburban town, j We want, I will say frankly, to get ' divorces and be free to marry; 1 to keep Jackie with me. The lawyer to whom I spoke about it said that : with a minor child that was customary, but I would have to make it very clear, as Carol has a sister with young children, who would gladiy take Jackie. j Plans Home With Doctor. * ' "My problem is, to find some place in the West where I could take my boy, and where we could live quietly during1 the processes of divorce. Meanwhile Harry would write his wife and set the wheels in motion there. Then, if he is sent, as he expects to be, overseas, I would go to his own town, establish myself and Jackie there, and begin at once to make friends and * prepare a home for his return. What do you think of that plan and where would you advise me to go? I have not attempted to tell you what this • inrush of new happiness and love means to me, how good life suddenly seems, how miraculously changed is the world; I will spare you that." And she signs it, "Joyfully yours." Poor Winifred, her letter is one of the most pitifully deluded I ever read, the most childishly blind. Does she imagine for one moment 1 that a doctor--of all professions!--is going, to re-establish a good practice in a suburbaV town whose every resident knows that when he went off to war he threw over his wife for another woman? Does she really think that, having completely ; failed to hold hef^first husband's interest and comp^fTfionship, she is capable of starting off with 6 new, almost unknown, husband, and mak- ; ing a success of it? If-she does she is heading for a terrible disillusion- I ment. For one thing. Carol, with a good sister to whom to send him, is very unlikely to give up his child. Pang firstTor Winifred: Then in Harry's unknown suburban town she has not a friend. She would be homesick and strange, disliked from the start and suffering a heavy handicap. More pangs. Then when she discovered that a dull life makes a dull husband, that Harry wasn't so very different from Carol, and that at least part of the trouble in her first marriage was her fault, she. would *£ally begin to suffer. Far better for her to change herself than ^change her situation. Change into someone amusing and intelligent, and above all, affectionate. Wonder Lake Ev. Luth. Church (Missouri Synod)- Sunday school--10:00 a. m. Divine services--3:00 p. m. , H. L. PFOTENHAUER, Pastor F,BB INSURANCE FlAiRfMe Grace Lutheran Church Richmond Sunday School: 10:30 a. m. Adult Service: 11:00 a. m. ( - John W. Gable, pastor. Ringwood Church Ringwood, III. Sunday--Public worship, 9:36. Church School, 10:30. Choir Rehearsals--Wednesday evening. Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, director. AUTO EARL R. WALSH Presenting Reliable Companies When yon need insurance of any Phone 43 or 118-M Green ft Elm McHenry * McHENRY LODGE A. F. & A. M. McHenry Lodge No. 169 meets the, first and third Tuesdays of each month ^ at the hall on Court street. i Telephone No. 300 S&offel ft Reihansperger Insurance agents for all classes of property in the best companies. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS Ceramic Heater Economical Tests show a lower average fuel> consumption in a ceramic heater than in an ordinary coal stove, and the ceramic heater retains heat longer than a metal one. Horses Wanted I B U Y Old and Disabled Horses. Pay from $5 to $14 •" ' ARTHUR W. WERRBACK Phone 844 439 E. Calhoun St. Woodstock, I1L ' • Save Metals With Wood In 1943 alone, a staggering total of about 6,000,000 tons of metal will be conserved through the use of wood, This vast conservation program will require about three trillion boatd feet of lumber. . Phone McHenry 677-R-l -- Basement Excavating -- NETT'S SAND ft GRAVEL Special Rates on Road Gravel and Lot Filling . . Black Dirt . . Powe* Leveling and Grading. J. E. NETT ; - Johnsburg P. O.--McHenry A. P. Freund Co, Excavating Contractor Trucking, Hydraulic ; and Crane Service. --.Road Building-- Tel. 204-M McHenry, ia S. H. Freund & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Our Experience is at Your Service in Building Your Wants. Phone 56-W McHenry WANTED TO BUY We pay $-~> to ?la for Old or Injnted Horses or Cows Standing or Down if Alive. Matt's Mink Ranch Johnsburg - Spring Grove Road Phone Johnsburg 659-J-2 CALL AT ONCE ON DEAD HOGS, HORSES & CATTLE We pay phone charges. TEL. WONDER LAKE 158 DR. C. L. WATKINS Dentist - Office Hours - ; Tuesday & Saturdays: 9 a.m. to 5 IMMU Evenings and Sunday Mornings by Appointment! Lookout Point Wonder Lake, TIL Poultry Require Protein Feed Poultry requires high protein feeds similar to those needed by hogs. The McHenry Plaindealer ^Finland Made Republic -- A MonWna-sized chunk of terri^ tory split off from the old Tsarist empire by the Russian revolution, Finland began its independent history with a civil war of its own. It proclaimed itself a sovereign state ia 1917 and emerged from its domoetic tucmoii as a repubtic in idlS. AT Seal Cracks on Forch Small cracks in the cement floors of porches often afford entry for ants which can be very annoying, especially in and adjacent to kitch- ~ens. In many .cases, a thorough painting will seal the cracks sufficiently to keep out the ants. Larger cracks should first be filled with a crack filler or calking compound before the floor is repainted. Subscribe for the Plaindealer Battery Power is Car Power! Have Yours Checked Now... When a battery stands idle it runs down--loses ^power --dies. The car owner who wants to keep on the road checks battery strength without waiting until an emergency reveals a dead battery--a useless car. We are equipped to check your battery. When itrweakens, give you a quick, safe charge with our Willard fast^charger. CENTRAI. GARAGE Phone 200-J FRED J. SMITH, Prop. Towing Johnsburg