lift i> m n in* m r» iii t m m Uk« tea nuklli tfcat no plan in propees will be adopted. PeAape another dieadftil conflict is to k mtiiBti If, to pi---- ihe people, *• offer what we ooimItm disapprove, how can we afterward defend our work? Let us raise a standard to which the wise and honest can repair; the event is in the hand of Goo." Those words might hare been written by a present day statesman concerning the documents the U. N. rreat organisations are (By Vanesse Sells) the first United State Congress W/' " wash eld in March of 1780. They I., * . | brand new Constitution to go - Jby. Those, who are afraid for the ."V new United Nations Organisation ' fhould read of the difficulty and itravail which preceded the birth of that wonderful document, the Constitution of the United States of r ~ u • *«__s vr_ iSi ^"America. Do you think that the sters, Donald and Virginia. A big hi5" 'fifty-five men Withered to compose drew up to fteir l«t the constitution were in complete 7J?k "SgJlSlSld ™i! O. are trying to formulate. Perhaps all great organist born ofg rest disagreement. J# Spring brought two gifts long awaited to the two Audino younpwasa book review on "Against These Three," by Stuart Cloete. The Wonder Lake Gospel will take all of their ten to twelve-year-old members to Chicago on Saturday for a rally of the Youth For Christ movement. Families in Chicago who are interested in the movement are opening their homes to the youngsters. Mrs. M. T. Ness of Wonder Lake and Mr. Hanson of Chicago will drive the youngsters into t^e city And back again on Sunday. Pvt. Walter Stromski, Jr., arrived home from Italy just one week too late to see his father, who passed away recently. Ours ympatny to this young man. complete . --j „ There is a new lamily : ' . rj/wo'tat^t and^erpS 7h« ««,,«>» >*>'»•*'• T° th.m-We,com„ «" greater men who were engaged in r ^ntnth* V • \.' debate and discussion. However, ,fondhng-until., the roads dry up. < * . * their objections may have exerciseaj wholesome influence on the con Find Milder Type Of tAtomic Blast t* • Second Process Seen Safer ifc-1 For Peace Uses. The mud didn't keep any of the fonder Lake ladies rfc Mrs. Dorothy Powers returned home on Wednesday and received 'an overwhelming welcome from her 'om attending! family and her two young sons. She ^V'* It has been generally assumed that the regular meeting of the RingwoodiJ"11 ** °+5 '" George Washington took no part in Unit, Home Bureau, which was heldj to come, but is able to be up and The dib,t£ but ,r.utho£tative .t the AmericanW in Mc-i «£»t £ tat Vmtor. are w.W A;.,: source say that when -"It was sug- Henry, on Tiwsday, with Mrs. Sen Mp.Fowers T®"ld J.llk?.V) "JJJJ ^ gested that palliatives and half-mea- Justeri and Mrs. Nick FreuwT as i«" "IP «» h™au? V sures would bef ar more likely to hostesses. Mrs.Walter Troxell, Mrs. ' ° h^italinEviniton ThI j/ Vifind favor with the people than any J. H. Nixon, Mrs. A. Grill and M™.,™ the hospital in' Evanston The thorough-going reofrm, when Wash- I. Jacobsen wer among the regular: ion_i.ou_H - . h h. * • inurton suddenly interposed with a members from Wonder Lake present.; P ?• I. ? J i., .- i.l 1_ u T Colo/In*# in/l Un T P.: 1 On St. Patrick's evening the Comsuddenly - . ,r - m n " brief buti mmortal speech, which Mrs. J. Selsdorf ^ and Mrs. T. r. : - -ought to be blazoned in letters of Mathews were visitors from Wonder, •- , " gofd and posted on the wal of every Lake. The major lesson was on ^n»ty._club ^ sponsoring a card American assembly. He said, "It is ' Living With Yourself. (POLITICAL ADVERTISING) J. G. "Curty" STEVENS The minor Partv in the school for the district at 7 p.m. Everyone is welcome.--A donation of 50 cents per couple is being asked and prizes will be awarded. Sixth grade mothers are the hostesses. Respectfully solicits your vote and support as a REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE for the office of OF McHENRY COUNTY at the Primaries of r APRIL 9,1946 j Small Carolyn (Fuller is home ill •with a cold. The children in the {first grade will be glad to wecome 'herb ack to school. Miss June Ericson of California ; is a visitor in the home of the ; Fairchilds. j I had a bad scare this week when ; they called from the school for me i to come and get my oldest daughter ! immediately as sheh ad had a bad fall in the school vard. My husband dashed madly for the car, I | began to make up a bed on the couch,* land to imagine everything from a .broken leg fo a fractured skull. Was j she a sight--the bad fall had been I in deep mud--and the only damage ; was a slight cut on her knee, but j sheh ad to have a complete change ! from underwear to coat! It's so |peaceful in the country! Mrs. Mary Lou Merritt had a bad i fall this week which resulted in a sprained ankle. As chairman of the Community Club and also of the Red Cross she just HAS to hobble around--both are jobs that have to be attended to. Mr. and Mrs. Andy Kunz are back f r o m t h e i r C a l i f o r n i a v a c a t i o n . Everyone will be happy to have them back home again. . Do you suppose that they say there is no fool like an old fool is because he has had more practice? Goodbye now-- Between Classes NEW YORK. -- Ap official British report on the atomic bomb reveals there are two kinds of atomic explosions, one the city destroying type, and the other only about as powerful as ordinary explosives. The low-power explosion has important implications for world safety in the promise that in producing atorrtic power for peace the engineers will deal with a force that is not much greater in destructive capacity than the accidents in steam and gasoline power plants. The two kinds of atomic explosions depend on fast neutrons for an atomic bomb and slow neutrons for atomic power. Fast neutrons are uncharged particles that travel at thousands of miles a second and with energies of millions of volts each. Slow neutrons drop to energies of only a few volts or even fractions of volts, and also to a few miles per second in speed. But these slow neutrons are about 10 times more effective than the fast kind in producing the splits of cores of uranium or plutonium atoms. Their very slowness prevents their use, in an atomic bomb. They would start the explosion without difficulty but before they could spread to detonate the entire atomic charge the expansion would separate portions of the atomic explosive. This separation would end the reaction. There would be an ordinary explosion. A peculiarity of th6 atomic explosives, uranium 235 and plutonium, is the fact that they, are safe until the instant when more than two pounds are brought together into a single closely packed mass. The slow neutron explosion would separ.ate this mass too soon. - -The fast neutrons, however, work in millionths of a second and spread so fast that they ignite all, or nearly all of the atomic explosive. <• • <• ig. .|. .g, (By Mark Hopkins) ( „ _ The cold snow storm failed to keep i grade, reported total resource* of basketball enthusiasts away from the $6,995,450,571. Billionaire Firms in U. S. Increased to 43 Hiw YORK. --- The number of private business enterprises with total resources of a billion dollars or more each increased by 11 during America's participation-in the Second World war, a United Press study disclosed recently. The survey revealed that 43 business organizations in the United States now boast membership in the biilion-aoliar club compared with 32 on December 31, 1941, a short time after the Japanese sneak attack on Pearl Harbor. At this time last year, billionaire enterprises numbered 41. Metropolitan Life Insurance company, the study showed, led the list of billion-dollar organizations for the second successive year. The company, one of the nine insurance companies to make the billion-dollar girl's All-Star finals last Friday. A comparatively large crowd, was there to watch the girls fight for the championship. To start the even- °^» sophomores and freshmen clashed. Margaret Bolger, sopho- Bell Telephne system, comprising American Telephone & Telegraph company and its telephone operating subsidiaries, again ran second with $6,548,361,704 in resources. -- -- flfBM.fff UTIW Mr, and Mrs. George 1. F MeHenry and Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern, Mrs. Robert Lent and Mrs. Lucille Nelson, son, Bobby, visited in Waukegan on Tuesday. A wM diet cotoradvagetab i _ dent water and regular toUeThaMto should result in satisfactory tion. ssmmrn (bar Mrs. Charles Freund) Mrs. Edwin May and infant daughter returned home from St. Therese hospital last week. Mike Hulr is a patient at St. Therese r hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Freund and family were supper guests in the Paul Gerasch home in MeHenry on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank O'Neil and ciaim a»ie in me estate oi j tu--. w - . . .. .. . family of Chicago were visitors in | pend-' , nri„' "^j^ding la> the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert i in£ in the County Court of Mc- °p atin* the GuM coast area. Lent this weekend. Henry County, Illinois, and that j 8 c°-operatives engaged in rice claims may be filed against the said | drymg and bulk storage in the four estate on or before said date with- j principal rice-producing states. It ia out issuance of summons. ! estimated, the report says, that the ARTHUft VERNON FREUND, i combine - dryer storage operations Administrator, i permit 60 per cent reductions to ftiee Ce ops Wia co-operatives are active Vernon J. Knox, Lawyer ; Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas i NOTICE OF .CLAIM DATE , California. In a report on prospects Estate of MABGXRRT M. FREUND, for agricultural co-operatives in (he Deceased. postwar period an inter-bureaa th^t'8 Mmuf»v till" *° | <*>™*ittee of the U, S. department $ fhS claim ^ate in tfe estate' 5 ^k^ure says there are 25 of > Margaret M. Freund, Deceased, pend- i ^se or*»nk«tion«, including 14 la- ^ The Edwin May family have moved to a farm south of MeHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern visited Mrs. George Bell and family in Solon on Sunday, Suncjay evening visitors (Pub. March 14-21-28) labor costs V'* r' • 7 , ; rv* ^ j,* * . • v ^ <• Don't Tit To Do All th# •> < 'y*5 f/ • i " !-.At alone. Hire These Helpers Keep your rugs cfaon with POWDER-ENE NO LiquidI NO Sudsl .. Sprlnkl* on. .. Bruih in. ..Vacuum off. 3-lb. earn $1 AppHar Brush 25c SQUEGEES DUST MOPS WAX 7i PARKER'S PERFECT POLISH JOHNSON'S CLEANER, $1.25 gal OLD ENGLISH PRODUCTS ' < NO-RUBBING WAX, 89c qt. RUG SHAMPOO, 69c pt, $1.19 qt UPHOLSTERY GLEANER, 49c RED POLISH, 25c bottle IjA .t j APPLICATORS BROOMS ' T KELLOG BRUSHES for all purposes Mfcla RUBBER KNEELING PAD ItlfM CI#ON CELLULOSE SPONGES CLIMAX WALLPAPER CI£ANER RAD REMOVES j__ALL DIRT RUBBER GIXXVES 50c to $2.5<r All Metal FOLDING STEP STOOL $3.69 4 THIS WEEK'S SPOT SPECIALMETAL DUST PAN 19c €» JOHN J. VYCITAL HDWE. S SSSB', Ikr" miamim DODGE 5 .V O O T H r S 7 C A R A f l Q fi. J A. S. Blake Motor Sales PHONE 186 301 E. PEARL ST. McHENRY National bank of the city of New York, the world's largest commercial bank, retained fourth position with $5,288,247,000. more, made the first basket which [ Prudential Insurance company held put the frosh two points behind. | third Place with $5,856,880,815. Chase The freshmen, although they fought hard, couldn't gain over their op- (onents, as was shown when at the naif the score was 12 to 2 in favor of the Sophomores. Even with" another half to catch up, the frosh couldn t get near the sophomore's core as the game ended with a Score of 26 to 9. Loretta Kunz made the first basket of the senior-junior game, which put the juniors in the lead. (Girl's basketball is most complicated. Also, Crime Wave of 'Slaved * In Bremen Is Suppressed FRANKFURT AM MAIN. -- The United States army said recently that order had been restored in the Bremen area following a crime it is played in such a way that very , wave in which gangs of former slave few outstanding plays can be made1 during the game, which explains the fact that little can be said in the way of describing the game itself.) The score at the half was 12 to 2 with the juniors leading. Towards the end of the game it looked as if the senior five might win, but try as they did to raise their score the game ended with a score of 16 to ^ can't be said, though, that the jhave a pep squad or cheerleaders, because at the half 132 Green St Phone 98-1 MeHenry ^ apa n n i i i i i i n n m i i h i u h h m i i i m h u i i i i i i m m.» V - E D AY DANCE and CARNIVAL at the BRIDGE BALLROOM McHENRY WEBNESDAY, MAY 8 An Old-fashioned Good Time laborers treated all Germans as "fair game." Troops of the 29th infantry division joined with military government forces in curbing attacks that had reached "serious" proportions, the official announcement said. "Because many erstwhile slave laborers have been reluctant to be repatriated and because they consider all Germans to be 'fair game,' the looting of farms and attacks upon civil policemen have been You aren't machinery, Mra Fannor, bocaiis0 PICKET LINES ' have taken the place of Mten or twelve . , v"" I uPon C1V" nave oeen gave one or two yells ^ ft,? £ I mountin8 during midsummer," the - " - l' ine announcement said. Lt. Col. R. R. MacDonald, Uhited funny thing about the cheering the fact that the cheerleaders were 1 -- --" -- "• ~-- ;; Dig, husky, senior boys. (I didn't' States Public safety section, said have a chance to get all their "our ^atest report from Bremen is names.) In spite of the limited orac-' tlie situation now is well in tiee they had, the yells were enthus-1 hand." received by senior; -- Just to mrt. .ure the junior,' U InCrewJ would have soifle backing, Lorrie Larson gave a yell for her junior class. (Lorrie was a cheerleader For Airplane Hostess KANSAS CITY, MO. -- Air hosti; for the 45-46 football and basketh^ll esses m®y look different lately, ac- | > seasons. cording to Transcontinental and Western Air, Inc., officials. hbyJ n,\Mr^rP. U DrSuCik, e8rp, ^!htainv,er <bLeleaMn ' tgaiuvginhgt several talks (for public speaking experience) in assembly. The are chosen by the students themselves and are prepaired by them. Among subjects discussed are "The ^Vorkmgs of the Human Heart," Snakes" and "Short Stories." Er- JE™UCpyg*»e "C,Uent ,*lk »" -DANCING- •.A' REFRESHMENTS- -NOISEMAKERS-- -ENTERTA1NMENTmmm Let's sm- what we have, in*the wiy of birthdays. John McGee, a freshmen, had fifteen candles on his cake last Tuesday, March 5. And, as I have been told, such a loud happy birthday was sung to him in the shower room during gym that it could be heard throughout the school. Marion^ Conway celebrated her 'sweet sixteenth" birthday last «. March 8. (I still think she only turned 15, but she keeps telling me she turned 16.) The trades class boys for the oast week have been painting the bleachers in the high school gym. The seats are being painted an orangish-brown. - . The reason is that they're taller than they used to be. The airline has upped the height requirements for hostess applicants by 1 inch -- from the former I feet, 5 inches to 5 feat, 0 inches. Short Shirt Tails Witt Continue in Style* W. P. B. WASHINGTON. -- War-born stubby shirt tails and collarless pa? Jamas may continue in style awhile. The industry, WPB reported recently, wants to retain the restrictions until it's sura plenty of cotton fabric will be available. Meanwhile, the agency announced that fabric manufacturers no longer need put aside part of their proj Auction for priority orders when no ' such orders are on the booka. Sponsored by VETERANS OF FOREIGN WARS AND AUXILIARY A round-robin table tennis tourn- . under Mr. Roche's supervision, is being held during the noon «. | lunch hour. Both singles and doubles are played.---- -- A fairly lane crowd attended the Band Concert last Sunday, March 10. The concert was very good and 1 U. 8. Invests* The first railroad bond issue was sold in 1831. In a century, the rail debt in private hands has reached 0.8 billions. In half a ^century American investors have built up their holdings in utility bonds to about 10 billions. They now have invested a total of 9.6 billions in the capital funds g| our 15 thousand banks. PRODUCTION LINES! ...so don't Mpne your Implement Dealer! r filled TOUR implement dealer had planned and expected to have Ins display floor filled with new implements and tractors weeks ago. And we had planned to make them--had told our dealers and our farmer customers they would have new equipment and plenty of service parts for the 1946 spring work. And we had hoped to sell these machines at no advance in price. Real Production Hod Started When the war aided, our organization bent every effort to increase production, with the reeult that in the last months of 1945 machinery was being built in very substantial quantitaea. Hera are a few figures: MODUCTION rat NOV. IMS DSC. IMS i Ytfedovs* ••••••*••••• ,7,271 7^11 GemMaes.... M4I 2,59ft CvMvelefS • • »,• •••••• *3,402 3,300 ,JNey Leaders •••*.«••• 200 002 • ^piews •••••••••«..•• «a,10S^ «^0«* *Nm cm* In Mr Canton an4 OiaWwwog» Warfct vMdi not hi Jonwy pfo4vcNoit woi 7|747 plsvi^ Both your dealer and we wera encouraged by this production picture at the turn of the' year. But the atrike changed all that. Aa you know, the CIO United Farm ^Equipment ft Metal Workers of America called a strike in tan of our plants, on January 21,1946. earnings in the ten plants, not including overtime, were $1.15H. If present wage proposals are adopted, this figure will become fl.33H per hour. When the strike began, negotiations wera broken off by the Union on this issue of 6ompulsory union membership. Hie Company has no desire to weaken the Union. It recognises certain reasonable needa of the Union. But the Company doea oppoae compulsory unionism. It feels strongly that an employe's membership riwuld be a --attar of Ms own choice. Material Costs Price Relief -- WlMt Is The Strike Aboult -- are a basic issuk At the time of fto atrike, Harvester employes wera among the workers in American industry, strike began, the average hourly and materials ana the great coats of _ our business---togethsr they conall but a few cents of every dollar Hie takaa in. Whfea are obviou^y to be high--and nobody knows juet how high material costs will go. In the face of rising casta of materiala, the Company doea not see how it can pay the saa recommended by a Governfact finding board until it haa definite and aatiafactory assurance from the Government that reasonable price relief will bo granted to the Company within a reaaonable period of time. Ilk matter is of audi importance that it will not be discussed bare,, but will be covered by future advertisements devoted to both prices and profits. Speaking for our dealers and ourselves, we am assure you that no customer is morethink much of the credit to its success goes to Paul R. Yenda the high school's instrumental director. than we are to resume production. We are doing and shall continue to do everything in our power to bring about a fair aottlement. as aoon aa poasible, HARVESTER