*K?i& &PW I#I! ;*t*- . Ji."..a..-.,j>?+Ji.si«,.Jj-sS'..,,.lt, ..v»1. /C«li^^-,jnfl. '(^?c y ^ SIXTY TEARS AGO I Albert Snow, two doom wt of Bubfam Am., cigarfactory. FORTY YBAR8 AGO • Jo* Wheeler has launched a handsome new gasoline launch onto the Fox, which he expects will furnish bin some good times this summer. Jos. Freund and Fred KargM were in Chicago the Ant of the acting as dolgntes from this convention of We learn that > f horses on Monday i$M0 severely injured. Stegemann by one o: afternoon, place at. the state con Knights of Colombo*. The Rev. Win. Nickle, resident of Ringwood, but j\ Chicago will occupy the palpits at in jwnsjthe M. E. churches here and at Ringof * Mwood next Sunday. Miss Mary .Wentworth and" Miss Kate Howe started on Tuesday morning for Hartley, Iowa, to visit Misa Hattie Story. The Central Meat Market, Althoff Bros., proprietors, have a new and tasty sign. M. S. Worts has received his new auto. It is a three-passenger Ford roadster and a fine looking machine. TWENTY -FIVE YEARS AGO A pretty wwdinr was solemnised at St. Mary's Catholic church here at nine o'clock on Wednesday morn £ , Dr. A. S. Childs. has purchased a ™* of this week, ^th Miss Mary ' V! lot of Henry Simes, west crfthi«Meyer8 Freund as the remarket and opposite tha Parker i ®®v- Charles S. Nix iv House, and is building himself a ;• f j tasty office. FIFTY YEARS AGO* , Frett Bros, ft Witt have purchased •i the ice house and contents of W. A. Cristy which will furnish them ke for the new wholesale and retail • market when completed. \ , H. A. Keith ft Co., the contractors, . " are here this week with their men, looking up and fixing the leeks in f , the water mains, leveling Up the streets and completing tMir tract in some other particulars. At a meeting of the Board et Education, held on Saturday, Prof. • F. E. Angevine and the entire co: • of teachers were re-engaged for coming school year. John Brents 1 the efficient janitor, was also reengaged this coming year. _ Anton Barfcian is today moving into the house lately vacated by Capt. con- X 1 officiated. Infants to six year dresses made ready to embroider, ranging in price from 75c to $1.46, at the Agatha •"Sfc . and Mrs. Frank Thurlwell and family have vacated the flat over the C. J. Reihansperger hardware on the west side, have taken up their abode in the house just west of the railroad tracks. Miss Harriet Bobb has accepted a position as stenographer in the office of the Hunter Boat company, starting upon her new duties the first of the week. Out of a national population of •boot three million at the time of the American Revolution, it la estimated that 100,000 Toriea Subscribe for The Plafndeatar OT I C E - 'V. ' r"~* X ¥% "* - >' , As we do not dose 4ft Thursday afternoons .. i* -• . .cand, in ordsr to simplify the waiting hours of oar employees, we have decided to close our plants. Starting Saturday, June 9th, at 13 o'clocfc McflDST (MONTY FARMERS C04N>. ASSN. McHENRY MILLS, Inc. ' *«V Olf ROUT* 190, BAST OF McHENBY invites yon to try their deftdons FRIED SHRIMP ^ w Also order* to take ent V.ttLlI. . - x^.:. : . mmim Kathleen Norris Says Teasing Husband Lacks Maturity; RINGWOOD I* eejd-ianta* BcU Vtaterw rss -r.i i i (By Mrs. Georre Sbevard) Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley entertained the 500 club at their home Thursday evening. Prises were awarded to Mrs. Kenneth Cristy and E. E. Whiting, high, and Mr. and ; Mrs, Cruiclcshank, Tow. The home circle will hold a plastic j demonstration at the home of Mrs. ! George Shepard Wednesday evening, June 9. I Thp Home Circle will meet with | Mrs. Mitchell Kane Thursday, June 10. Mrs. Rose Jepson and Mrs. Ray Elgin, Morris Hubert of Indiana and! Another daughter. M Mfcs. Barcow of Rippon, Wis., were' Chaplin, of Plymouth, callers in the Mrs. Emily Beatty unable to attend. Mr. home Sunday, evening. j Betts have four grandchildren. Ewl Kane, 0f Mundelien! The couple was presented wfch and Miss Sarah Kane of Hollywood,^ complete set of silver by their 8Pent Thursday with Mr.; children. iand Mrs. Mitchell Kane. • Mr. and Mrs. Lowell of Orlando. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Low and! Fla, have been visiting her family spent Monday with his i E. E. Whiting. mother Mrs. Viola Low. " ---- -- Mr. and Mrs. Howard Shepard and son and Mrs. George Shepard spent Thursday" in the Alan Aigner home at Hebron. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jepson and family of Dundee were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell Kane Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Weldon Andreas and Algonsiater, The codfish produces an iverut of two million eggs at one time. Merchant will help serve. Each one! family. visited relatives at is requested to bring her wedding' quin and Marengo Monday. picture. ... j,,^*rs- Stone, Howard Sark and' The pupils of the school and their Mr. and Mrs. Russell Soddy and parents and friends held a picnic at daughter of Kenosha spent Sunday the school house Sunday. [with Mr. and Mr? John Blackman. .The Happy H girls metj Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bruckner and with Carol Harrison Thursday eve-, daughter of Chicago spent Sunday' Clover 4-( arrison Thurs ning. The Sunshine 4-H girls and their leaders met at the home of Mrs. Paul Walkington Monday evening sna sper__ „ and made plans for the coming year.1 Mrs. John Blackman. evening in the Fred Wiedrich, Jr.,' home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Miller of Kenosha spent Thursday with Mr. and SUPERIOR SEX? „Lois Decme and her husband are participant* m the antedehivkn controvert# which has waged for centuries--who is superior* man or woman? Nettled by her spouse's tetmte and jSbe$, Lois launches herseif into hysterical fits, becomes hetphestii/ exasperated and cries tn annoyance at her hustxnuTs brutal criticism of her sex. She faUs to perceive the utter senselessness of such debate. It is comparable to answering the €ndle$s query : Which came fint, the chicken or the egg. Miss Norris emphasizes that both women and men have admirable charltcteristics. Women are the moulders of men. They buSd character instead of buildings; meg are supreme realists who reml in earthiness rather them ideological, intangible concepts. INSECT U PELLtNT A woman wul leave the feveriah A M P beby half-pa inte<Wen her eaael, feavc m- -j** YELLOW CLASS LAMPS da* an Utfiec fsval 92«...U» the typewriter eft which she is depicting a harassed Mother, to go and sit with the real child, to klep the real nursery cool Ind comfortable, to bring beck henUft w A «mu» wk» gives Air eUUfn (ki hmekgrmmi mmi wmmory hom«, right ideals, developed characters, dees atere /er " By KATHLEEN NORRIS T OIS DEANE is a younf wife ^ who writes me that her husband is a tease and that he makes her mad, and wants to make her mad, and that when'she cries in sheer helpless ' exasperation, he triumphantly tells her that women are all like that They all love to ary over nothing, they are flutteiy, hysterical cfeatures who can more for a new hat than for who is going to be president, and that their, brains are just like the soapsuds they talk so much about. He reminds her that no woman has ever composed any sort of an opera or a great play, no woman has ever painted a great picture or written a great poem; that to compare Chaminade or Rosa Bonheur, Jane Austin or George Eliot to Leonardo, Shakespeare, Milton, Tolstoi and a thousand other males is just to make herself ridiculous. Great cities, are all man-made says the gallant Bob, bridges, roads, machines. JV Asi se far, Beb Is speaking die setaal tntfc. Bat there is aaetfcer to a» pietere; there are fearieharaetertstles Jest as valeas theef aascrihe gifts that have IBei ear galerles, ear libraries asi ear opera heaaee. Only a rather vain and somewhat simple man would taunt his wife in this faahkm, especially as die in her turn appears to be simple enough to be upset by- it. Teasing is a childish habit usually outgrown in childhood; that Bob has not outgrown it is an indication that he Is not fully developed. Superficial AeUevjaseats After all, these achievements that he praises in his own sex ere largely superficial. Pictures, music, booka, bridges, machines, delightfully embellishing as they are to cultured living, still are not ea important as iS the woman's share; the making and moulding of the man himself. And it is men who praise men, who decide that this one and that eoe is a geniue, who build up the flattering theories that- make the decorative side of life so important, who have placed their market values upon letters, art, dancing, opera, roads, buildings, schools. Men also have made wars. No woman was ever on a waf council, and where women have ruled wen have been comperathrely few. Women and men know equally the futility and stupidity and waste of wpr; but only women can possibly appreciate it. Women knew the value of human life; they know the value of home. Human life and home--wha? elae is there, to start with? Great painters of the past centuries used to use as their models fpr idealistic canvases their own weeping mistresses, their own illegitimate and unwelcome babies. Great writera have been notorious for their domeftif cruelties--they might wrte exquisitely of a woman's love, of clinging, little, childish arms, and at the same moment outrage ardl cast off that love, roughly unwind those baby embraces. Women arent Mke that. Te a Htean the painted pietare ef "The Cotter's Satarday Eve" is satisfying. The weataa, mere realistic •ere self-sacrificing, likes the real thing; the reand table, the weU-aerabbed little the gteat agood where sickness We«cn Aie'Soperior Women, to my thinking, are infinitely the superiors of men--when they want to be. A woman who gives her children Wr beiHgi ound and memory of e gooSl home, ri^ht ideate; developed characters, docs more for them than all Dad's hardearned money for their'colleges and motor cars and social life ever will do. A woman who rejoices in her privileges 6f home hours, of study, charities, mastery of home-making and kitchen-craft, is the richer of the two who riaintaiii the home, husband and wi.'e. Not all men are wiser than their wives, Lois. But as a class men have general characteristics that tad to make them mare stable. While women are Irfttfaif at the monotony of home duties, men are accepting the equal dullness of office routine pretty cheerfully. Men are nearer to earth; good meals, a fairly pleasant office atmosphere, small successes, some amusement, untroubled sleep -- these content them, in the main. Women en the eAar hand art apt te fret at a far less .binding deaieetle groove; they are mere given te dreams, --attainable amMtieas, Jfealoasies and moods. This is partly because, generations ago, custom decreed that each wife should live in her home alone, and not experience the healthy effects of daily contacts with other minds and other lives, such as make men's business hours stimulating. Perhaps it is woman's fault that she has accepted this and other restrictions, that she has not taken a stand against wars, preventable and acknowledged crimes, excesses, controllable diseases. Perhaps some day she will. Meanwhile, why don't you become one of the real" women, rejoicing in your enormous advantages and powers? And--just a hint-- you can at the same time laugh Bob out of his superiorities if you will. Quote him at everyone, grasp at his wisdom, sit at his feet, tell your friend? before him that he is so wonderful that you wonder he ever would look at you. Mid you'll have shim cured in no time at an. ' SALT LAKE CITY,--Mrs. Carolyn Audrey English, an aspiring arriter, •aught some real-life experience, but wound up with a |I0 fine imp*>sed after die was found guilty of shop- PHONE 40 40-m« ffaf 25C 9S DRUG STORE l MoHKHEY, 1 - -- k' ----A, -- ---"Jf™ * i Pan! Severn's Lantern Paul Revere's famous lantern wag lighted by a candle, not keroasna. Car mm--|« Privately owned ^American passenger cars travel about 500 billion passenger-miles per year, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica. Motor buses cany about 4 billion pa--sngtrs more than S billion miles 4 year, and trucks provide nwnnaBy more thai; SO billion ton-miles of transportation English told the Judge she |1S "whatnot" and a 9730 from a department store to leern the "reaction" of a shoplifter for a book which she is writing. Police Judge Frank E. Moss was net impressed by her plea. ley many a sUp 'twixt the and the front gate when is ice on the steps and walk. A tody of hospitalised home made by National Safety showed 4 per cent were caused by ice on walk or steps. Remove snow promptly before It packs down. Use salt and elbow grease to get rid of ice. Need Rubber Stamps? Order at •• -• -+• Mrs.Fred Wiedrich, Jr., and Peggy Ann Lenard spent from Thursday until Saturday in the Phelps Saunders home at Sycamore. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and son and Jfr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper, and and family of Chicago, spent Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. John Blackman were! Kenosha visitors Friday. I Mr. and Mrs. Karl Betts were' pleasantly surprised on Tuesday evening when their children and families and a few friends called, to help the couple celebrate their | twenty-fifth wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Betts were married in Minneapolis on June 1, 1923. | Those who attended the obeervancei 1^ of; party were .Mr. and Mrs. Lee Ritt Miss Charlotte Hogan was chosen as the outstanding eighth grade girl from the Ringwood school and will attend a banquet at Woodstock Tuesday evening with others from the county. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley daughter, Marion, spent Tuesday evening with relatives at Crystal Lake. Mrs. Kenneth Jackson and children of Grayslake spent Friday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Whiting. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Shepard and son, Howard, Jr., of Memphis, Tenn., spent the past week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon and family of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Jepson and fami' 'Dundee and Mr. and Mrs. Paul man and family of Evanston spent | remedies at Wattles Drue Store. Mis . Ro"- ^ ' T~ - - • ^ Margarine Predaettsa • • w , Margarine, now receiving parting , lar attention because of high food ^ prices and a world shortage of fata f and oils, originated during another period of shortages. During Franco-Prussian war, Napoleon III *v& offered a large cash prize for a substitute for butter, and Mege* . Mouries, a chemist, won the prize 5 in 1880. Four years later his original . % process was patented in the United „• States. By IMS, there were 17 fac- '* ^ tories making margarine ja Wa 'I j country. % j ' Bristol a Printing Center *V .< ~ \ $ In the printing world Bristol, Eng-, ! land, long has held an established | position. Iron-ware, zinc and : shots are other things which I to be made in Bristol for the ! time and there are thrilling irtories | told about them. Engineering, how* • ever, is the premier industry, Of the city's total population of 429,000, I more than 40,000 are associated with | this industry. Among the projects 1 which occupy local manufacturers are immense orders from all parte of the world. Concrete blockmak* | ing machinery for New "Zealand, ! electric and plastic goods for India, radios for Finland and plastics for I Singapore are some of the-. rna»a^. important export items. t" ; VKt * "• -'.VTV; - f ? ' Sunday with their mother, Mrs Jepson. Mr. and Mrs. Jphf Woodward and | children of IFlonla are visiting her ! parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Hawley^ Jack Murray . of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Woll day with Mr. and Mrs. Wolf Shadle. . Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Ainger and ; son, Elbert and Mr. and Mrs. Alaa 'Ainger and family of Hebron, Mr. jand Mrs. Wm. Heine of Chicago* jMr. and Mrs. Howard Shepard and son of Memphis, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Colby and sons, Lester and LaVem and Mr. and Mrs. Walter Frits of Crystal Lake spent Sundav with Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. A potluck dinner ana supper were served. Miss Marion Peet of Elgin spei the weekend with her mother, Mi Lena Peet. f,., Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Emily Beatty spent Sunday afternoon wits Mr. and Mrs. Irving Herbert at Twin Lakes. Mrs. Lena Peet returned hom{[ Saturday from the Woodstock hosf pital, where she underwent an opera* tion. > Mrs. Gordon Fossum and children of Richmond are visiting her parent^ Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy, while Mr. Fossum is in Hines hospital under observation. Mr. and Mrs. Alva Hubert ntf rs. and Mr. and Mrs. William Ritt, of Complete line of Lee's poa^y Algonquin, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Betts, remedi * -- " " ~ Carl, Jean, Jane and Kenneth Betts. > Henry. S-tf Rom where Isit...Ay Joe Marsh Thiit Mighty Important Maybe yee read, where a great encyclopedia has sorted all basic ideatjato a few select groeps. Under the letter T they have: Temperance - Truth - Tyranny. Seeads like a fanny combination. And te philosophise a little, notice that Trath is la the center--between Tyranny and Temperance. Now and then you hear folks criticise temperate people who enjoy a moderate glass of beer... who talk about "two beers" getting some one into trouble, and claim: "There ought to be a law!" Then Truth steps in between, sad points eat that twe beers never got anybody into trouble end that somebody's trying te distort the facts. No, there shouldn't be a law --than akmmli be Truth. From where I sit, those ideas are arranged just right. Temperance on one side, Tyranny en the other--and Truth in the aridils-- seeing that Tyranny never ea» croaches upon Temperance. Copyright, 1948, Vmkei States Brtmtn Ft • .• »»v * - i m. ITALLER With Your Car or SOME om ININ6I 10 THMK OF • Wei ehenge yaw eUs ami • WeH tun • Wall scrub • Wall align We'if do everyfUsg ffceCs YES, here's the only gun I^I tbe world with the job of giving life instead of taking it. It shoots fresh life blood" into any car or truck--restores, refreshes, brings bade youth and endurance to any vehicle. There are a thousand nooks, and crannies of your car or truck whet* this good gun penetrates. Let there be no dry, orphan spots in that vehicle of yours to trip you up, cause *you trouble and expense as time goes on. With summer coming up,--NOW*$ THE TIME to switch your oils and greases and shoot the works with this good gun of life for car or track. « And Whih You're Hf-- ' Hire's what obo ws'is nsdy to ..\Vi MNTT OtIVE WITH YOUR, A. S. BLAKE MOTOR 301 C. PEARL STREET PHONE 156 • ••DE • PLVmUUT Dodge Truck s ... •