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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 20 Apr 1944, p. 1

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TO LEAVE HIGH SCHOOL FACULTY POSITIONS AFTER PRESENT TERM FEW CHANGES NOTED IN COMMITTEEMAN POSTS IN COUNTY CWy change Will be noted im EMPLOYEE DIES JTHREE LIVING IN NEARBY VICINITY the Republican county central com. 1 of the week that- Captain Robert mittee when it organizes very soon.; "Bud" Schuren. 25, a former em- This change occurs in the second Mc-j ployeg of the Alemite, had been' kill- Henry precinct, with Gerald Newman ed in action over Germany. He had being the new precinct committee-1 received his captain's commission only a few days before the tragedy. e*»i>\7Tr<lPe Captain Schuren had failed to be * IL1.C1Q $6,100 LEVY FILED FOR THIS TOWNSHIP i DURING YEAR 1944 ANDERSON BOYS SERVE DEPART THIS LIFE Tlittie of eight townships, which have town levies on file in the office of, County Clerk Raymond D. Woods have no levies for poor this year. They are Dorr, McHenry and Che. nuunffr , It appeai-s that with - the FOR rtape ^a^or in industries, and There; are several changes, how-!!•. .Ia,,ea x V* * "nirnn on ^ that the care of poor has ever, ©n ,the Democratic committee.! ^"^P^d mt° the L. S. air corps after - MRS. HUGH MORRIS dropped in the past year. In Alden, William Bailey replaces enlisting, but was accepted by the /. ' ! Last year Supervisor Schmitt of oya ana lan , A meeting of the high school Garrett Fitzgerald; in Hartland, John K°ya* Canadian aaiirr ffoorrccee iinn JJaannuuaarryy,,;; . TThhee many friends in this comniun McHenry did not file a levy for town ^ Board Education was held on Mon-, J. iMcGuire will Serve in place of, For outstanding.performance, ity of theHugh Morris family weretax at all. This vear he filed a levy I m : e v e n i n g o f t h i s ' w e e k , a t w h i c h | J o h n H a l l i s y ; i n S e n e c a , M i c h a e l o f J u t y , h e_ w a s a w a r d e d t h e D i s t m g - ^ d d e n e d t o l e * r n o f \ t h e d e a t h o i v " o f ^ 6 4 0 0 f o r g e n e r a l p u r p o s e d ^ T h e :|!me faculty members were presented Collins succeeds Roy Andrews; in »»h«i Flying Cross, Air Medal and Tuesday, April 18, 1944, of Mrs> Mor- levies on file at present include: *7 . i: f%ith contracts for the year 1944-45. Richmond, Henry Greeley will re. 0ak '!***• Clusters.About six months.. j is; rtee Feile.who was 621 years of "'While, the Board felt fortunate that place George Weber; and in Hebron^ tj-apsfewred-' /irofc • The Morris fa mi h •st of- th• ei• r t• eachers wou.ld. agai.n Ed. ward Emerson will take the place. RCAF td the U. S. ai- forces, %;. / ....... sin McHenry next year, they were of Douglas Spooler. " vfapforry to learn that two were leaving. The complete ligt of These two teachers are Mrs. Earl mitteemen follows: . Tischler, better known to her pupils *f last year as Miss Jar\et Doian, MISS LUCIA RAUStfH Riley-- Roy Grlebel (I Wm. A. Giblin Marengo one-- W. L. Miller (R). Thomas Higgius (D.) Marengo Two-- Vernon Kays (R.) Earle Penny (D.) Dunham-- Claude Pagels (R.) George Whipple (D.) ^ Chemung One-- W. J. Heatley (R.) : Donald E. Palmer (D.) Chemung Two-- L.T. Peacocb (R.) Chas. T. O'Holleran (D.) Chemung Three-- Leslie Douglas (R.) No Democrat. Alden-- * Fred Smith (R.). Wm. Bailey (D.) •« Hartland-- . George Schneider (R.)v John J. McGuire (D.) Seneca-- Wm. F. Mueller (R.) •lid Miss Lucia Rose Rausch.' Mrs. Michael Collins (D.) "Tischler's departure did not come as coTal * complete surprise, for since het Charle8 H. Acgmaa *R. carnage on. Christmas Day it was Wm cla88eQ D) - expected that homemaking would qc- Grafton One-- *upy her tiW next year. | Frang Ferris ^ Miss Rausch's decision to leave, on w'm. Hubbe (D.) ' the others hpnd, was entirely unex- Grafton Two pected. T^ie many friends of both j g Bond (R.) young women learned of their res-! Democrat. ignations with regret and there is; Dorr One-- Wo doubt that both will be sorely A. B. McConnell (R.) 1 toissed in the various phases of work Thore Emricson (D.) •nd civic life in which they have Don- Two taken part. j Albert Pearson (R.) In June, Miss Rausch, whose home Osman Olson (D.) . Is Chicago, will finish her fifth year Dorr Three *t the local school. She received her Gordon Green (R.) musical training at Mount Mary col-j John J. Hayes (D.) lege, Milwaukee, Wis., where she re-'Dorr Four-- ftived her B. A. degree. She later i Grant Nolan (R.) . received her M. A. degree in English Arthur Freund (D.) #1 Chicago University. Dorr Five- Walter Reed (R. Robert Skinner, (D.). Greenwood-- • Fred Wendt (R.) j No Democrat. Hebron-- • - M. D. Brooks (R.) I Edward Emerson (D.) I Richmond-- | Ray Baithoff (Rl) i Henry Greeley (D.) * Burton-- 1 J. G. Wagner (R.) Ben J. May (D.) McHenry One- Earl Whiting (R.) . * Sibre Whiting (D.) McHenry Two-- Gerald Newman (It) Lester Bacon (I>.) McHenry Three-- IK:' R. I. Overton (R.) Henry J. Miller (D ) After three years of teaching in McHenry Four--; ttte Franklin Park grade school, Miss Joseph Frett (R.) • Rausch came to McHenry in 1939. No Democrat. Here she has capably handled the Nunda One-- vocal music in the school, as well as J. J. Barnings (R.) .teaching English I and IV. The past Robert Knqx (D.) year she has also taught the jour- Nunda Two ^ : nalism course. In 1942 sift entered George Ehlert (R.) the Boys' Octet in the state contest Joseph Feffer (D.) at LsnSalle, /where they-finished in \hnda Three-- •econd place. She also acted as Henry L. Cowlin (R.) F r e s h m a n c l a s s a d v i s o r d u r i n g t h e j 0 i ,n C h d r a n (D) past five yeara. * " {Algonquin One-- Miss Rausch has no definite plans Walter Schuett (R.) for the future but lias been offered Ceo. Lazansky (D ) •everal positiors pertaining to per- Algonqiun Two-- •Onnel work 2nd will very probably Harry Sniuda (R.) accept one of these. Having proven Vincent McCormicfc (D.) her ability not only as an instructor Algonquin Threebat also jn other lines, and by pos- c. Russell Allen*.(R.) sessir.g a personality which has made Stanley Pichen (D.) her popular with fellow faculty mem- Algonquin Four-- hers and students, she will no doubt Andrew Dianis (R.> ••cceed in whichever line of work Arthur Lanisng (D.) •he looses. j Algonquin Five-- v Mrs. Tischler has been at the' Fred Morgan (R.) local school only two years but in No Democrat. *nly that short time has proven herself a popular addition to faculty ranks. A graduate of White water State Teacher's college in •Wisconsin, she began teaching the commercial courses hei-e in 1942, MRS. EARL TISCHLER Official Democratic 1 in\ Primary Vote For SENIOR CiASS PLAY ; twenty-three years. .' Don't forget the arfnyal senior' Survivors, besides class play, "Wings Over Washing- rdude two sisters, B ton," to be presented at the high grover and Mrs.. Lo school auditorium tomorrow (Friday) deceased was a men night at 8:15. Even if you haven't Neighbors of America for many A1 . purchased your ticket and had it re- years. J ^Levies ifrom the other townships served, you may still get a good seat Funeral services will ; be held on are expected to be filed next week, by buying your ticket at the door Friday, April 21, at 10 a.m. from Friday night. !" Gen.= . Poor Dorr ...$r,.oo6 •. : none Hebron .... 3.836 $1.4iiC Alde'n;"* '... 2,000 - y" 1,01X1 McHenry ... 6,00b : * none Dunham, * ... 1,700 " 1,00'! Chemung ............ .!:* 6,00^ ; none Burton ........ ... 1,200 800 Algonquin ... 7,531 5,000 LATEST DRAFT GALL INCLUDES SEVENTY-FOUR ONLY ONE LISTED PROM ,MCHESNRY , (^ORP. GLENN ANDERSON , Se%tive:; Service Boarl V^- i fie past week called up seventy-four :t more men to, fill its latest quota. These men who were called for pr£- j induction examination are: MARVIN C. OERKFITZ, Ocegoij, III; EDWARD M. ZANQE.'Algttnquin.vIH; • JOSEPH R; FRAN'CEK, Aligonquin. Hi. •• . RAYMOND C. NORTHROP, WooJ- | stock. 111. LESTER L. BELDING. Kenosha, . i Wis.- • v; •"/>' ; • v ; - , i '/ MESSAGES FROM MEN IN SERVICE Dear Mr. Miosher: Like so many other fellows from NEWS ABOUT i The entire community, as well as CHARLES E. YOUNG, Crystal Lake, •_their large family at home, are protfd 111. < „of the service records of the three MARION ELMER TAYLOR. Algon- City, members of the John Anderson fam- quin. 111. ily now with the army. Corp. Glenn, JOHN GORDON, New York 2fi. is the only one of the three serv- New York. niin OrDWinriiril ine out of the United States. H% ROY JAMES EVANS, Aakiand, Gall^ 111 In \f K VlhrMr PI was inducted into the army on May fornia. Wll -wkll livmnyil 28, 1942:, and since that time has! HOWARD c! SCHULTZWalwortfe, been with the ground air crew. At Wis. ' ' ^ EUROPEAN vari°us times he was stationed in furlough cember I wL sent StaU>S wken °nly 6 years old and had to ad ffiiepljda iirn, MN orttKh resided in McHenry county for the fif w Carolina, where I „ * • ^ . , took some extra operated a farm m the Ostend overseas trainintr community> known »» the Harris From thprJ i Brothers' farm, for a number of sent to a nnrt nf years* Since leaving McHenry thir- L?: tee« ye«s ago, he had resided with j the chapel at 3807 Lincoln avenue to i St. Benedict's church. Interment will | Mount Carmel cemetery. \ ... John W.. Harris A resident of the Ostend eonunur.i ity, for many years, John W. Harris - died on Sunday afternoon, April: 16, 1944. at Victory Memonul hos- d ^ i ** o f . pital, Waukegan, following an opera- THEATER OF OPERATIONS-One ^efers?" Barracks Mo., Salt Lakejil. tion performed the previous week United States army engineer unit is f ' a"d later at Lansing,: JOHN R. GORDON. Denver. Colorado living in luxurv in ar,<;h;' ^«re he attended the Olds-; RAYMOND L. DROZD^ Dawney. an- English town, moblle School of Gunnery. In Sep- California. but is paying- for tember of 1942 he left for overseas.. LEO L. ROHR. Wauconda. Illinois, it with hard 24- aiI1^ing a few weeks afterward in SILAS W. FISHER. Culver. Indiana, hour-days' work on England, where he is still stationed. [ CARL J. STEINKE. Morris. Illinois, a secret militery*>"e ,s .abIe ,to ^'nt® 1,ttle of _cond_i- | NORMAN W. MICHAELIS. Huntley. "HEADQUARTERS, THOMAS C. KNIPFEL, CitstaLLake, „Mc tH, enry|, T ,h a ve fcin aliliy li andje dj over- Mr. Harris was born in England and at the ^ f h- death-68 After my years of age. He came to the United project. • Gas heat, electric lights, and 481-6 haPPy ,n the knowltdee that hf ^ bathtubs are afevF is safe and in g°0(i health. of the modern conveniences which embarkation, here M?u '^'7" w,"\ the soldiers enjc T u , , , , his brother, William, in Waukegan. r- •! L, J I boarded a boat B between working hours. Thev ai c Besides the brother, William, he billeted in an apartment house (• is survived by one other brother, the town's main street in what - Gilbert of Woodstock. described as formerly pretention The body rested at the Peter M. | British flats. . „ Justen funeral home until Wednes- The engineer servicemen, who woi k | have had hopes of meeting some daJ" when services were held at 2:00 around the clock in three shifts, » i l one from McHenry over here but the J P\ m, 1/ro i m home. Burial was in had lived in barracks and tents Dreand before long had crossed t)he A t l a n t i c . R i g h t •IMWv I am in a replacement center awaiting a -permanent assignment. best I could do was Chicago. Thought that once I was in the army I could forget about rationing 111. HARRY J. LAZARZ. Chicago, IIL MARTIN K.NELL. Woodstock. IIL ' GLENN L. RISVOLD. McAllen, Texas. GEORGE B. SANDMAN, Aurora, 111/ JOHN W. NEVIN. Kansas City. Mo. JAMES A. MELDRUM, Woddstock, 111. RAYMOND C GESKE. Chicago. IIL ASA I RATFIELD. MaFengo. Ill, JOHN S. PARKER. Woodstock. HL . ALVIN W. PINNOW, Crystal Lake, 111. WILLIAM H. ALBERTZ. Crystal Lake, 111. RAYMOND C. KOHL, Woodstock, 111. . PAUL D. HALDEMAN, CrysUl Lake, 111. • v:. / •; . SIEGFRIED E. BEAGER. Crfalal Lake. 111. JOHN J. KUDLACH. Chicago, III. Lieut. Clarence Anderson, 25, se. EARLE R. DEl'CHLER. Elgin. 111. , ... . t cond of the three boys to enter ser- HERBERT F. WHITE. McHenry, HI. Nearly jndiiCtea into service are vice, was inducted on July .9, 1942,1 KENDALL S. AUSTIN, Oak Park, , . , . • 3:30 o'clock from the Wolf -funeral '^aarles- Dow®' "Pw stationed with and for a time was stationed at III. which is supposed to hold forty men home in Blgjn Rev peterson officiat_ the navy at W .Ihamsburg. Va.. and Camp Swifti Tjxas. he was | Woodland cemetery. i viously. and now find it a-treat in Mrs. Ada Fulton be stationed in the heart of a town Mrs. Ada M. Fulton. 57. of Volo, 'n Stated rooms. On their off-duty but now that I am overseas I find died in Sherman hospital, Elgin, last hours they browse in the shops, <>r. it different. Articles, such, as candy Friday evening, Apiil 14, 1944, after take in t'ie cinWna. But there's no arid tabacco, are rationed. Back in a lengthy illness. She was born in limit to their recreational activity, the States we could go to our post Genoa. 111.,j on May 2, 1886. The Many of the men visit with families, exchange and buy all we wanted, but deceased was a member of the Elgin and attend local churches, dances and now we go to it just once a week and' chapter, O. E. S., and the Volo unit socials- Others on pass may see the buy all we are allowed. And I> of the Home Bureau. sights of the neighboring towns, have found that one candy bar a' RpoifW hpweek does not last very long. i is survtved by Anions; Staff SertJureau. <•»« neigniwring .01 husband, "William, she ride f 0Ut -bi A cf,cks the Engliai » ,, . . f, - . , u uy one daughter. Mrs. • C0Untry*!d<?' All in all, the engineer. In the short time that I have been James DiHon of E1(r,n; her mothe ^ee its a pretty good life. here I have had one experience I Mrs Sadie gt John of E, in one the soldiers injh.s unit is St will never forget. It was a ride on sister_ M,,s_ Rov i^rniix J VAvin. geant Henry B. Tonyan, 22, (11. WATES L. HARVELL. Crystal Late, HI. ALBERT W. BIER! Woodstock. IlL DONALD F. TAPPAN. Woodstbck; t 111. LeROY M. IvRUEGER, Woodstoclt, f t h M l- ^ T c n ^ . B t d Clifford of Aurora, and Otis of. ®enry- v . Elgin. Services were held on Monday at rh"Tiy «« funeral Charles Dowein Elgin, Rev. Peterson officiatthe French forty and eight. is, if they had the pleasure. When you travel and live in a box-car, son ot 1, Mc- LIEUT. CLARENCE ANDERSON r, . c . ^ -- -- --! CHARLES A. VODNANSKY. AUronir Gordon Schmitt of .T' xarkana, Texas. sent to Fort Benning, Ga., where he j quin. 111. . attended officer's training school,! LESLIE (J-.' WEDGE, Waupun, Wis- Albert Rodig has oeen transferred graduating on Feb. 10, 1943, as a' RUDY W. STRACKANY, Marengo, from Tampa, Fla.. to Savannah, Ga. secon,j lieutenant. At that time 111. r»TinT«»in« " w . Clarence served with the infantry. HERBERT fe' ^EHUROW, Cryatil' RESIGNED AS FARM We have received word that Walter but in December of last year was Lake, 111. ADVISOR IN COUNTY M . s « " i t h . a t t e n d i n g s p e c i a l i s t t r a n s f e r r e d t o S a n t a A n a . C a l i f . , | F R A N K T . W E N ' Z E L . C a r y , 1 1 1 . ; <• | motor transport school at Canip Ab- where he is ndw with the air crew.! LOl lS R. WOLFF. Tacoma, Wash. liot, Oregon. , Upon his completion, of the course, } HAROLD N. AXFRD, Los Angles, and eight is one experience I will *1 fa!'m a<,J'i?^r of' M'cHenry county,; \\yre sorry to learn "-that^ LeRoy Ne^MeXico h'e ' wHl "becom^a bom-1 ^LESTER R WEISS 'Chiraco III :nevvr forget. effective Jul^ 1 was announced with MeIsek arrived^" 4n.-^vVork .'last LESTER R. WEISS, Chicago, 111. My mail has not caught up with r?gie #>V^. Hoppt-. week" aboard a hospital phine. After riarence was emploved in defense me as yet but sooner or later jt will ^sident of the McHenry County beinK cbnfin,d. to a hospital some ^"-n ChlLgo He is the and with it I hope will ceme th^ ^ Bure^u- 0,1 that date h' - .-.. -•-.-r , work in Chicago. He .s the proud a"d iS f &b0"l haIf "«• Burial was in Bluff ^ty ceme-- the size of an American fi-eight car, : I doubt if one would call it euch. *•; - (Pleasure or not, I spent several days Jn„N „ RPOPV WAQ i and nights in one, eating nothing «"»'Xin *1. DrvULflV nAo I but. canned rations. We couldn't j shave, due to the shortage of water, | so we all looked like members of the1 : House of David at the conclusion of , j-the trip. Yes, the ride on the forty '"e" >eMgnation of John H. Brock m , .;S V'ih arm Bureau. On that date ju whei c in England for ligh[ weeks, he father of a neJ (laughter, born 3 Plaindealcr. . I enjoyed it very rnirch . .. ^ork. V•--th•. "th"e- ^was oonnee oofr tt'wveeilvvee mn.ttiieenn^'ss swe-^itt . ,:v^isr -k fpt!. -wo-o • ^ ^ i in the States «o it will be doubly ap- 1 • • Coun j Bureau, with head-1 that hospital'back to the States. His -- ;"preciated now. It really does a lot (,uar ,n * et' _ , [ friends are hoping for his speedy re- ; for us fellows. Thanks a million for--. or . Past nine^years Mr. Brock ic©ver>% " ! it and keep it coming. has '^Wed the 'fr.,end<,h»P and ' - -- j Next, to Eddie Buss, Jr., Mc- c^,v'® cooperation .of -a-majority i: A nc\V serviceman on out list is Henry's number one White Sox fan. of the "^rs of the county in the | M. Miller 0f Camp Haan, Calif. DON -SCI1AEFER many educational activities sponsored^ . -. • . ' < Somewhere in North Afriai. j l>y him as a representative ,of the'^ xhe latl.st of our flyers to see real extension seryice of the college of action overseas is Tom Harrison, who Agriculture, University of . Illinois. has been in Nort;hwest Afiica si"ce 3-operation with the McHenry Fphrnnrv ty Farm Bureau., *' Dear Plaindealer: Through the pine-studded, red hills 'V c°'r of Arkansas, across, the Great Plains *-'°"nty . tb the awesonie Rockies, and back Because of hjs i>ast experience and j . Vetn«h Howe, ihas been overagain to the unbroken expanse of ^r- Brock has been espec- seas for many months, is again back Kansas, your paper has followed me. ,a y cffecti\e-in projects dealing with jn tjje states and is visiting his Now it reaches me at a new home, da!rJ" ^ei'd Jrtipiovement association, many friends in this community. the University of Minnesota, where, wo ' dairy breeding, soil improve-! after surviving the bi'eak-up of the ment> er"slon control and soil Lieut. L. A. Blomgren is enjoying army specialized training program, I conservation, fa'"i management-pub- a leave at his home here. He has have begun the study of medicine. -»city, public relations, and the many fjggp transferred from Norfolk, Va., The fact that I've alreadv sj>ent wartin>e programs pertaining t<? ag-! Brooklvn, New York. nine months in studying enginee.ing "culture that have been assigned to; had nothing to do with the matter., the Extension Service and other ag- j pfc. Ethel Krohn of the WAC has But we've all learned that the army "cultural agencies. [been transferred from Canip ' But-. walks in unseen ways. Almost from the hrst after "e ner, No. Carolina to Fort lackson, I hope soon again the Plaindealer came to count> rock was in. gQ Carolina. ! will not have to he sent to me; that Omental in.expanding D. H. I A. I'll be able t6 walk into Bolger's and work 80 McHenry county has had | more cows and more nerds on test j than any other county in Iljinois. buy it Yours, 'jt^RRY TAXMAN, Minneajftlis, Minn. CORP. HARRY ANDERSON ROLAND H. ALM. W. Dundee. III. EDWIN F. PETERS. Dallas. Texas. JOHN M. QUINN. Crystal Lake, III. . fAMES R PIERCE. Woodstock, III. FRED C. LANG DON. Woodstock, 111. ROY C. BENTSEN, (Volunteer) Woodstock, III. JOHN B PETER. Akron. Ohio. GEORGE A. SCHROEDERa Union, 111.- . ; ,. - CHARLES C. P.HELAN, Kansas City, Mo. ' VVEMORY R TQOPS, JIL, Bertil^ California, : 1 HERMAN A. LOHNEIS, HtfaMey; 111. , JAMES W. FRISCH, Carv. Ill: ^ f THOMAS G. FUCHS, Woodstock. 111. THOMAS R. BRATTON, (Volunteer) :•Algonquin. 111. ROBERT R. KRAMKA. Elgin. IU. LEONARD H. LARSEN. Woodstoc*. 111. WAYNE E. TYRRELL. Crystal Lfcfcfe ^ 111. . ROBERT R. HOLTFRETER. Woodstock. III. , . DI ANE C. DIEDRICK. Hnntley. III. CHARLES L, GUMPRECHT, Crystal Lake. 111. THOMAS C. DECKER. Fox Rlrer Arriving in McHenry Sunday night w ^ was Lloyd Franzen, who just the Corp- Harry Anderson, 24, was in- KOBEKT D. WILSON, Woodstock, day before had landed in New York ducted in Feb. 4, 1943, and at firsf f , after spending seven days in Casa- was stationed at Fort Devens and - •"HARV E\ E. MEAD. Crystal Lake, blanca and other points overseas. The ; Camp Edwards, both in Massachu-' KENNETH A. W ESTPHALN, Crystal ^rst news that reached his ears on j setts. * He was "one of four selected Lake. 111. reflching the city was that his form- to attend water purification school _ LEMLEL P.. BECKER, Crystal Lake» ( . i - v ********** er homej an apartment in West Mc-jSt Fort Storey, Va., and was later sent IJ1- St&t6 Representative of the Plaindealer and you Can bet Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bennett are Henry, no longer existed, the entire, to Camp Gordon Johnston, Fla., ^ L^ LE T. ROONEY. Crystal 1-^ke. III. -- | my home town paper, in our bunk the parents of a son, born on Mon-1 building having been torn down a' where he was with the amphibious . STANLEY G. NIENSTEDT, Wood- The following figures are given as ! house, was the biggest and best news- day morning at the Woodstock hos-j few weeks ago. Lloyd reported con- engineering group. The past week stock, 111. Births ! Friend Mose: I just received the Mardh 9 taking the place of Mrs. George Mit ___ _ ehell. She has lieen Junior class the official Democratic vote in the paper in the whole United States, pital. They have two other children, J ditions in Casablanca as not ideal for Harry has received a new addresav advisor both years. Upon leaving race for state representative, be-' Don't believe everything you hear" of Ralph Jr., and Zelinda Anne. living and seemed glad to set foot that of San Francisco, in care of McHenry, she will return to her twreen Bolger and Ruesch. at the! the Aleutian Islands. We have nice Serviceman and Mrs. Roland Jack- j on American soil once more. How- the postmaster, which would indicate home in Genoa, where her husband prjrnar^es on Tuesday April 11. j days once in •ow resides. j Bolger As great as our disappoifitmc nf is McHenry Co. 1553 in losing two such popular citizens, Lake Co. ..i 2078 lie are happy over the sentiment Boone Co. -248 expressed by each of them, "that , -- if either were continuing teaching Ibtal McHenry ACCEPTS POSITION Sari Conway has accepted the posi- ' a while and at no son of Richmond are the. parents of ever, he noted some very interesting that he will soon leave for overseas tion as janitor at the public grade Ruesch : time was snowed in. Notice that a daughter, born on April 12 at the ! sights while in Africa, one being the duty. At the time of his induction, school, taking over the duties of the 318 Bernard Samec is also in the Aleu- Woodstock hospital. Mrs. Jacksonj sultans, who took their daily drives | he was in his senior year at the late Peter H. Weber. He had .pre- 2636: tians. Perhaps we are neighbors is the former Vivian Whiting of through the cities with their many University of Michigan, where he viously been employed at tte Me* 50 and if I found him I could tell him Ringwood. The proud father is at j wives in the back of the carriage. j was studying chemical engineering. - Henry Lumber company. -- 'what a swell town McHenry is. of present stationed at Fort Mead, Md.I ' | 3004! course not forgetting Wonder Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Mason of j Enjoying recent furloughs werer RE-ELECTED COMMANDER : eareers. is where they - ---^-^*7------- ! Well Mose, do hope this finds you DesPlaines are the parents of an 8; Wayne Smith of Nebraska,) The Carl Weber family. Earl Ca^k» weuld most like to continue them." i Mr. and Mrs. Tom McVicker and in good health and am looking for- lb. 3 oz. daughter, Eileen Rita, born and James McAm Patricia McVicker of Chicago were j ward to the next issue of the world's at West Suburban hospital on April Calif. Mrs. Ida C. Bremer of Hollywood,] weekend guests in the Herb Simon best newspaper. 15. Mrs. Mason is the, former Miss Calif., who has been spending some j home and attended the christening time in Chicago, is visiting her of the infant daughter of the Arthur brothers, George and John Scheid. 1 MeVkkers on Saturday. Regards to all. OTTO HEILMAN, Aleutian Islands. Rita Weingart. Mr. and Mrs. Peter S Weingart welcome their first grandchild. . ' NOTICE Lincoln, meorasKa, | TBe L'ari weoer iamny. tan Residents of McHenry are drc&rs of Fort Ord,. way and children, Jimmy and Shirley. ^ to clean up their back yards anil" (attended a meeting of the VFW vacant lots of rubbish and ash piles Drum and Bugle corps in Crystal and have them hauled away. This Francis Cox has been promoted to j Lake on Sunday. At the meeting j condition is detrimental to health the rank of corporal at Camp Chaf.j Mr. Conway was re-elected command- j BOARD Q,F HEALTH. fee, Ark. er for the second time. 43 fp CITY QJf >I^|lENRt'.,

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