McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Jun 1949, p. 1

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: V? - y.L .. "' . \ ; y • . ? • • . ~ i j v . . . - ' • • • • • • ' < • * * •<- - • , . - - - • ' ' •> x %- ~ • 4 ' .« *' + """ • *' .mt iii.mii i l l l W i » < M » ia> »•_ , .1,. **<1 " «. *' , »V *"' ^ '• ••;*' '"•• ' . . '• j'.W'XVi ' '*' w /V >.'0 •' . •> •' . ' • " * Volume 75 McHENRY, ILLINOIS, THURSDAY, JUNE 9, 1949 * Hfc« 130 GRADUATES OF CITY SCHOOLS ARE AWARDED DIPLOMAS THIS WEEK /*• COUXNCKHEITT AT HIGH SCHOOL 19 IMPRESSIVE Fifty-three members of the senior class were present last (Wednesday) evening to file, in caps and gowns, into the high school auditorium for commencement services. It was probably the last time that a class will ever walk down the aisles of this room for such graduation exercise, the auditorium having outgrown the needs of the ever-growing graduating classes. Future exercises will in all probability be held in the new* gymnasium, soon to be completed. Never before in the history o/ M. C H. S. commencements hasi" sadness spread so entirely over j the entire senior class, with one j member having lost his life only | a few days previous and another; seriously injured. The resulting 1 atmosphere only intensified the! customary nostalgic note which j characterizes most graduation ser-j yio<e8. j Following was the program fol. j lowed for this twenty-ninth annual j commencement: 1 Program j Selection, "Opera Gems" -- Arr. 1 by Mackie Beyer. j Serenade, "Melody of Love" -- Engehnann. ' j Overture, "Patriotic" -- Arr. by j Bowman. \ I HIGH SCHOOL ORCHESTRA j Paul R. Yanda, Director. j Processional, Priest's March, from] "Athalia" -- Mendelssohn. Special Awards -- American Legion and Business Men's Association. Address -- Dr. Harold C. Hand, University of Illinois. Honor Awards -- Miss Helen Stevens. Presentation of Diplomas -- Supt. C. H. Duker IDC EIGHTH . OBADBBS ABB AWARD WINNBBS TWb PRESENTED TOP HONORS ON SUNDAY, JUNE 5 Thirtyreight eighth grade StU- First honors at St. MaryVSt. dents at the McHenry Community j Patrick's school as winners of the Consolidated school received their Business Men's awards COMPLETE PUNS FOR RED CROSS SWIM PROGRAM Registration To Be - Held At Blake Show Room On ^pne 17-18 FRED KLEINHANS DIED FOLLOWING LONG ILLNESS Fred Kleinhans, 77 years old, a resident of McHenry for the past ten years, died at his home on Rt. 120. east of the city, about 5 o'clock Saturday morning, June 4. He had been in poor health for the past three years and had been confined to his bed for several months. The deceased was born in Chicago, where he was . employed as an accountant for a jewelry firm 'until moving to McHenry. FOUR ACCIDENTS CAUSE QEATHS OF TWO, SERIOUS INJURIES TO THREE OTHERS FRANK MUZZY, '49 GRADUATE, An unkind fate cast sadness over CHICAGO MAN DIED SATURDAY IN AUTO CRASH JOHN LAY HURT IN COLLISION LAST MONDAY A party which celebrated the family and friends of Frank first birthday of a young the John Lay. 65. of Washington Mc-; streets until recently a resident The Red Cross Swimming pro-1until failing" hoaUtTforced his^re- BILLED FRIDAY gCamofthe McHenry county chap-Urement. he worked with his son ui i iih ter j ^meri^an Cross has jin the latter's business, Kleinhans : i completed its plans for the free Building Service wonsouaaiea SCnOOI receivea meir I ouBilietsu mens uwurus (wrist BWlmmln«r nrnirrnm n» MrHonrv % . j " Z":: "• " j"--* "J"'* *® diplomas at simple graduation ex- watches) ^and also the Kiwanis for ,* £nd *irls and their Survivors include the widow, ISr ni»?' t£V*r. ? £ull?m # Lf^e b°y ended in the of Spring Grove, suffered injuries * ' J * IOr and ^ aD(1 tQelr 'Otthilla, one son. George, and a ffilre„^V,r 1..c'aSl »1 death of, hl« a"d. seri- in an automobile collision at grandson, Steven Kleinhans I,.8 school last Friday when the ous injuries to his father. Mitchell the intersection of Rt. 12 and The first classes will be held on . The body rested at the Peter M.! Thoniason, 27, of S25 N. Sheridan a gravel road, one-quarter mile June 20. with registration on June Justen funeral home, where ser-i!njur suffered eariler in the day Road, Chicago, was killed instant- west of Spring Grore. about awards was made during"the grad- !17 and 18 at B,ake s show .roQm, | vices wore held at 10 30 o'clock' a lno£orcycle accident. Death ly in an auto accident which oc- 7:15 o'clock Monday morning. He 301 E. Pearl street v ' -- _ gir)s ercises held in the public grade j certificates were Sally Nye, daugh- mothers and fathers as well, school Wednesday morning of ter of Mr. and Mrs Herman Nye, this week. They were p^rt of the and John J. Bolger, son of Mrs. 130 graduates of the three schools | John Bolger. Presentation of these in the city. ^ Following are the graduates: luation exercises .which took place ILENE BASSETT. at the 8:30 o'clock high mass RALPH BENNETT " LOIS BITTERMAN. BRITA BJORKSTRQM. CHARLES BROOKS. WILLIAM BUFFUM. VALERIE CAPPELIlf. RICHARD COLLINS. RONALD CONW4Y. WAYNE DIXON. DONALD DOWE KAREN ENGDAHI. DORIS Fl'HLER. PATSY GORANSON. CHARLES GNUSE. CHARLES GREEN. HUGH IIOUCK. RALPH HENSCHEL. RAYMOND HENSCHBL. LEONARD JENSEN. CHARLES JOHNSON HARRY KETCHUM.' t JOHN KLAPPREICH. MARTHA KREPEL. ROBERT KRICKL. H. EDGAR LACY. JOEL MARTIN. MARYLINN McCURDY. ROBERT NYSTROM. CAROL OLSEN. PATSY OWEN WILLIAM RAYCRAFfV JtlCHARD REHBERO. . HARVEY SAND. GEORGE SUTKO. AftLENE THIELE. "WILLIAM TONY AN. RICHARD ZIOLKOWSKI. , Tuesday morning. Rev. Noll of the!«ame t at P ^ood6toc't curred about 4:45 o'clock last Sat- was taken to the Woodstock hosss at i I"*16 Red Cross is offeriiyg ele- Round Lake Lutheran church of-1 ^Ust 8'x ^our8 a'ter the urday morning Just a few feet this pital, where he was suffering from v mentary swimming tiasses*aftd a j ficiatiirg. Burial was in St. Mary's' 1,lac"'ne . t'16 blacktop road side of the railroad tracks at Mc- cuts and bruises and shock. lolar- juni°r saving course for the : cemetery McHenry. eas' °' "onde,i Lake, near Cristy's Culloni Lake His campanion, Wal- Mr. Lay was "crossing Rt. 12 en- St. Mary's churCh last Sunday ' The Legion awards for scholar ... ship, leadership, courage and!"1.01"6 experienced swimmers, i sportsmanship were presented to'^ere a'®° be an adult swiin-j CITY BAND WILL Dolores Smith and Joseph Stoffel. i,c'ass„.1" the fellings if; pnr>Cp»m x>tt>orn The boy and girl were selected for * ere sufficient registration to; * 1 JTIKST | the Legion award by the vote of ,warra"t il- Those adults who wish (JONCERT' FRIDAY •i the faculty, while the Kiwanisi^P register should either do so at j presentations were determined by ! Blake s show room on the dates a vote of the class members mentioned or send word to the The first concert of the season vote oi ine ciass memoei s i hv tiui fitv h-mH ,..nt i,. . As winner of the Kiwanis essav registrar so that the classes may; * , • hand will bt presented jAntSe swt, inDnoerro tohiy tnDeo hKeriwtya nw^sa s^ s»psrae>- oe f»oorrmmetdu -^aatj itnhee im.ioossti (coonnv\eenniieennti | 00 l'r,da>' ev, ening. June . 10. at S ' „ .time. Anv atiditkmiil information i ^ 'n *"e < 't> park, under The Star Spangled Banner March, "Loyal Forever" -- Lincon. Waltz. "Gold and Sll\»r" - Lehair. contest, , sented with a canary and cage. jtime. Any addititm^l information . .. f p . n Honorable monlkra has been "W be obtained by phoning Royj"1'?' awarded to the following pupil. A. Kent who,i, in charge. .™L for perfect'attendence during the1 WUHllned Instructor entire scholastic vear: j The swimming program will be Eighth grade * Joseph StofTel. under the c apable and experienced Seventh grade: Thomas A»lams, direction of Richard Lappin, a 0v_rtlir ri»p««a», Arthur Barbian Donald Blake graduate instructor of the National • *„ 1 lenss* Siafdine FreuSd. VfTian, Nima-' Aquatic School. Mr. Lappin I. "s'«« "«««! Men" - gern. Geraldine Thompson. Har- | old Schmitt and David Smith. j Sixth grade: Raymond Hirsch. j Fifth grade: Kathleen Anglese. j olores Blake, Monica Phalin,! Betty Jane Schaefer, Phyllis Schmitt and Dianne Tonyan. Fourth grade: Gene Freund, J e a n n e t t e F r e u n d , J o s e p h i n e Freund, „ Nicholas Freund, Ruth Phannenstill, Dorothy Stoffel and Arlene Wijas_ Second grade: Richard Herdrich and Carole Ann Piler. First grade: Patricia Cxydlow- We Offer You tCongratulations ski, Dianne Freund and Charlotte ! Winners of the school's Ameri- {Freund. j can Legion awards, selected by the BoniTMii"--! Recessional -- Graduates of 1949. faculty members, were Richard! 1JI1 nltnSTllHy SXOB* Both the musical portion of the Collins, SOB of Mr. and Mrs. How-1 RROTTOTTT FROM HTTTN A program and the a d d r e s s by Dr. a r d C o l l i n s , and P a t s y Owen J m m Hand, who has long been a popu- daughter of Harold Owen. The oiralMu uKQV£ MAN ) lar commencement speaker in business men's awards went to many parts of the country, were Ralph Bennett, son of the senior! Arnold N. May. son of Frank J. | well received by the graduates and | Ralph Bennetts, and Patsy Goran- i May. -Burton tqwnship aupervisor, j the many parents and friends who, gon> daughter of George E Gor- \ and his wife. Margaret, left Shang-1 crowded into the auditorium to anson. The Kiwanis citizenship! hai, China, on the S. S. President j see the seniors awarded their dip-j winners were Ronald Conway, son j Wilson April 28, returning to the, lomas. J of Mr .and Mrs. Earl Conway, %nd j United States via Japan and Ha-j One 6f the most interesting pafits Ilene Bassett, daughter of Mr. jwaii. They arrived in Spring Grove | veteian of the last war and was a niversary last Sunday. June 5. Mrs. day afternocin Baiiey's arr. by Yoder. March. "Barnum and Favorite" King. Waltr. "Ting A Ling" Britt and Little. Overture. "Horizon" -- Buys. Fox Trot, "Nobody's Sweetheart Now" -- arr. by Buchtel. ^ March, "Lights Out" -- McCoy.* Selection. "H. M S. Pinafore" -- arr. by Yoder. " Novelty. -"The Teh Little Indians" -- Long: March. "Trombones on Parade" «-- Taylor. Finale, "God Bless America" Berlin. Corners. ter Markovic. of McCullom Lake, route north to Spring Grove and A small ad stating the desired was critically injured and was was blinded by the sun so that saje of a Harley Davidson motor- taken to the Woodstock hospital, he did not see a car approaching where his condition Js reported to from the east. The Lay auto waa be somewhat improved. • damaged beyond repair and the Mr. and Mrs. Thomason arrived flont end of the 0,her car *as a,so at McCullom I^ake early Friday £reatly damaged. ^ evening for the birthday celebra- _ * ,w ^ tion for the1 son of the Markovics, - Thj'£<? Chicago bo>s who. having made Ihe trip by train. ,heir s«m»«e-s their family About S o'clock the two men said ',omes at Orchard Beach, were ar- ^ they were going fishing. When rested Sunday morning when -the j they did not return, their families 4 ar one of them was driving | assumed thev had camped out. failed to negotiate the turn from J * r>i , w . Broad street onto Richmond Road* 1 nott iceda the uh ead?!l•i g5h*tsc Couf" oam ca^r in a^pd broke off a Public Service J !e on the left slde of the | the cul^e? abo"^1 4 ^,,a ^ and The accident occurred about 12:30 | immediately called Police Officer ,n j Hastiiigs. who in turn summoned, p^ver of the car was Marshall 1 a doctor, the coroner and state Zelney. 15. who had taken his 1 e' - father's 1?47 Packard without con- j Thoniason W'as found to be dead, sent and had driven two friends J having been hurled from the car Ronald Orgast, 16, and HerbSsrt If as it turned over. Markovic *as Fohlmeister. 16. to McHenry. || crushed behind the steering wheel The boys were taken before the « and was taken to the hospital The court (ft Justice Albert Kranse, \ car was completely demolished: who fined them twentv-flve dollars j A n i n q u e s t w a s h e l d i n t o t h e ' a n d c o s t s f o r e a c h a n d s e t f « ^ i x ^ Thoniason death on Saturday month's probation period. "J~" morning at the Peter M. Justen 'N*one of the boys was seriously funeral home but was continued injured, receiving only minor cots pending the outcome of the injured aud bruises. cycle in a recent issue of the Plain- man. ! fc^save^th^* l-mith'1 fr ered.'n The two men were found to have JOHANNA THOMPSON !°eh"£ ",e >ou,h ,rom ,he ' b-" '» «•> *»'« : GIVEN IMPORTANT v a Hinsaale sticker and no license ^ . n * nnATtTmuatTm ' Critically injured in the same plates whicih disappeared from in i 0«*>S. APPOINXMEWT 1 acc ident was Patrick Krohn, alBO front of the Lake Shore club some! J a ,®c}100.1 a"d desig- time during the night. Upon in- Mrs Johanna A. Thompson Photo by a. Worwlc*. McHaury FRANK MUZZY RICHARD LAPPIN ,P«K and Mrs. Lisle Bassett. ' nated tc> lead the Baccalaureate vestigation the car was found to Wonder Lake wa« appointed • niaich Sunday evening. He suf- belong to Walter Vanne of Wal- member of the "charters" com- |fered a broken arm, cuts and ter's Painting and Decorating bus- mittee of the general grand chapjbruises aud a brain concussion. iness, Lily Lake. He had only re- ter of the Order cf the Eastern • On their first day away from cently purchased the auto and the Star hv Mrs. Eva'Holland Hainil- ; studies, the two boys were riding transfer of license plates had not ton of Chicago, most worthy grand ----.--- 011 the Muzzy motorcycle, enjoying been made. matron. On her ninety-first birthday an. the beautiful weather of last Fri- Thomason. a native of Louisville, I* was ^trs Thompson's They weye en^ k>. was manager of the Rienzi Pleasure to serve with R. Donald of the commencement was presentation of awards. For sev- _ -- eral years the two seniors, one TEACHERS HONORED boy and one girl, selected by the baq >rtirpvrv vins faculty as outstanding in scholar- Jruifc lWfiXilX-riYB ship, courage, leadership and other t YEARS SERVICE like qualities have received the j coveted Legion medal, an honor \ Miss Florence Knox of Terra last week. Mr. May, an engineer ' member of the outstanding de- Gertrude Justen received the con- route from Wonder Lake and were Grill at 114 S. Clark street, Chir Stewart of*New Brunswick. Canada, graduate of the University of Illi-, niolition team in that conflict. He gratulations of her family and rounding a corner near the Ci isty caKO He leaves his widow, »»ost worthy grand patron, renois, had been in China for three [ received training with the United many friends. In good health and farm when the acc ident occurred. Heiene. and 16-month-old daugh.' rently in the instirution of two years working on land reclama/;states navy in Florida and Hawaii out for daily rides in the car. she It is believed that Frank lost con- ter. Gail. new Eastern Star chapters on the tion, irrigation and construction i W|bch gives him an unexcelled observed the day quietly. trol. the machine leaving the road, '-f^e body rested at the Justen Island of Oahu. Te-ritory of ,Haprojects. He first went to China j background in instruction work. He Mrs. Justen was the first lady breaking through _ a barbed wiie funeral home until Sunday, w-hen waii- Mid-Paeiffc chapter at Pearl in April of 1946 for United Nations comes to McHenry with the high- to be entered in our anniversary fence and landing in a nearby field jt was taken to Chicago for funeral Harbor and Kailua-Lanikai chapter Relief and Rehabilitipn Adminiwhich is regarded highly by all j cotta was presented with stration. returned to the United --jcelve • at Honors Day, held Tl „ , 1 a'tern<io,i, June 2, at the public january 194s. to work with the This year's winners were Ferol j grade school in Crystal Lake. The ni,s„0 those who ar, e,,s,hl. to revive j ^ ^ It. - I nftprnrton. June 2. at the nuhlic t 7.. est possible recommendation's and book when it was started three No one witnessed the accident arrangements we are very grateful to have the > ears ago. She appears no older but a few moments after it oc_ services of such an excellent in- today and still undertakes her curred Leo Kerber. hi»;!i. school structor. favorite hobbies, chief among them agnculUre instructor, and meni- Th'e American Red Cross/ in heing sewing and making rugs. hers of his class who were 011 a sponsoring this program, is mak- Needlework has long occupied field trip, passed. They saw the her spare hours and Mrs Justen motorcycle near the mac! Patdazed, looking for Martin, daughter of Mr• ! f.ift ^as from .^e ^"a{'d of educa- State8 government. Mr. May was jng a very noticable mark in it*? ll, r .Mrs net Sn^f i?ennT/pe?rl'Vice ^rJhlJh now exceed lfter transferred to the Economic The "mill -mpleted 1.000 hours of Rod Cross rick standing street B0U1 have been Snusually jientv-five ve^rs^^^t the same Ume Co-°Pe t rati«n Administration as a j amount of time necessary to devote "ork during the last war. Kven lus companion street. Botn nave neen unusuauy , twent>-nve years at ine same ume, reconstruction specialist. continu. U,, RWimmine in<»triictinns m tv f active in most school activities . sixty-five members of the eighth ,ni, his 8ame field of work to Bwimming instructions ma> ro»l(1Q for rnnvil»,rwit ihrnnrnnt their four vears Ferol criuie elasa were nronioted to hieh ' f, sain® neia oi *orK |well repay the pupil in the future make lap rohes ror con\alLscent througout tneir tour years, reroi, grade class were promoted to nign, IIe wa8 consulting engineer to;it |B honed that eood turnouts servicemen and woolen socks for has b^n a member of lthe' band,,school. ! China Relief Mission and Econo- wjh be evident at every clas* tho8e who continued to be stamixed thorus and girls chorus for; Miss Julia Fetter, a former resi- ,nic Co-operation Administration,1 evident at every class four years, a member of the or" j dent of the McHenry community and initiated and supervised numchestra for one year,- president of iand a teacher for twenty-five years erous engineering projects. Most the .F H. A. in her sophomore year, j at the prairie Grove school, east prominent of these projects inpresident of the G A. A., the stu-;0j crystal Lake, was given a very ^luded the repair of the Kiangsu dent council and of the band this compjete surprise at the annual ajttd Shanghai Sea Dyke, a series past year. Paul has been one of j BChooj picnic held last week. In of dykes Nearly?200 miles In length the school's finest athletes, being . the midgt of activities, she was along the soutn bank of the Yanga member of the football and bas- j presented with two twenty-five dol- tie River near Shaghai. Repairs ketball teams for the past three jar government savings bonds and! effected kept salt water from in- } years and of the baseball team for 1112.BO in cash in honor of her undating 1,500,000 acres of land four. He is also a member of the j twenty-fifth anniversary of teach- and protected the livlihood of some mixed chorus and boys' chorus. |jng at the BChool Runners-up for the award were1 Hold Annual Bull Valley Flower Show On June 11 on the-windward side of the island. Hawaii chapter No. 1 at Hflo, Hawaii, will celebrate its fiftieth anniversary in Juno and claimed Mis. Thompson as the first past grand matron/to visit the island. A tea was given at the home^ of Mrs. evident at every period. -- tioned in cooler climates. The City Council is co-operating Mrs. Justen hafl many memories fully by furnishing sand and clean- earlier years, chief among them up work at the beach to put. it in heing her marriage to the late NT first clasa condition •' Justen in 1S79, the establishment ' of the N. J. Justen furniture store ALL READY FOR BIG CIRCUS IN McHENRY JOMORROW ISTS?/.. tiTu. JduasUt?n.CInd0,MaMrrk ^j RITES HKUD^ 'Hopkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wal. AT ROSEHILL JUNE 4 Tomorrow, Friday, June 10. the versarles circus comes to town, under the 10,000*000 people. ! The deepening of Elliot Passage' -- .. in Canton by a dredging operation sponsorship of St. Mary's parish. MINNIE GREEN fs now allows ships of 11V4 foot draft {A matinee performance will be ___ . __ Ito enter Canton, whereas previous-;given at 3 o'clock and an evening WBW HEAD COUNTY ter H. Hopkins. Dorothy was this pQ£ UTRg D. N. HARRIS ly only small shallow draft vessels, presentation at 8 P m. Children's t fP/lTniV ATTXTT TARV year's only winneT* of the Business; were able to approach Canton. j tickets sell for fifty cents and Men's award, a wrist watch pre- oprvlcM #or Mrs Dwieht N Har-1 The Yangtze River Dyke Culvert, adult tickets for ninety cents. ' sented to the students who have, ^ daughter of the Charles Go- Pr°)ect put fifty-one culverts in {• No circus would be complete Th® McHenry county council of On ^a'urdav. .Tutfe II, at _ •lock, the Bull Valley Garden Janetta Herkes, worthy matron ot By the time they oiub Flower Show (Mrs John S the chapter, in .houor' of Mrs. peacetime 6he continued to reached his side he had collapsed Clifford, president) will be open Thompson to the public at the Cold Springs ^ reunion of the 1946 grand offischool house. This rural school 0er8 pt Illinois will be held-at the is one of the oldest and is the home of Mrs. Lt.'iel Atterbery, smallest schoolhouse in Illino:s. S!ail<l _warder. at Alton. 111., on It is situated in a beautiful park June 25. Mrs. Thompson and Curof McHenry County rear Wood- "8 Bloomington will be stock. The rolling hills and tlie 8uest8 honor. views are something you will not The Thompsons will also attend want to miss seeing. Your di- triennial session of the general rection signs will be at all cor- *rand chapter, to be held in Toronners and will say "Follow the to. Canada on Aug. 10, 11 and 12, Green Thumb." The Past presiding officers of the An interesting and educational Chicago area, the J. A. T. club, will afternoon and evening is assured, have an outing at tbe Tuscarora." The show is open until 9 p. m.-The the Thompson hom? at Woader theme of the show is "Country ^<ake. on July 10 Mrs. Cledfth Living." with exhibits of scare. K°ons is the president. Outstandcrows. outdoor works, tea for two 'n® work is being done by the on the terrace, a fine horticul- chapters in this area for the sanitural exhibit-all in the country torlurf at Macon. III., maintained school yard The table and flower ^y the Order for its ill and inarrangements, of which there will 9urah'e members, beventy-e^ght in 1883, the destruction of the store and most of the Justen block in the raging fire of April, 1926, artd her golden wedding day in 1929. May this charming resident observe in good health, future annimalntained a straignt A average ' *\ ... f M ri the main dyke to allow large in-1 without dogs and ponies and so tne American L<egion Auxiliary throughout their fonr years of high lngs, early residents o undated areas of land behind the (the Ayres it Kathryn Davies Wild elected Minnie Green of McHenry j « noBdhili remeterv Chi- dyke to drain into the river. ' This Animal Circus offers the Mont- as president for the ensuing year The ... cago. Mm Harris, ™ resident of ranged from Nanking tojgornery Military Ponies. Five at school. BiCftlairMte commencement only three days after _ baccalaureate talk was presented May a meeting held last Friday followed ji3^ 'pores{ avenue, Evanston, died Hankow. a distance of nearly'spotted beauties execute a series evening at Huntley. Mrs. Gail a solemn winter home at' Dav- L000 miles. Probably no other in !of precision drills seldom seen in Benton of Marengo is the retiring calaureate talk was presented ^ n h Fia and last week China benefitted so many people j these times. They caper on their president. to the senior class by Rev. Fr. j wna_Beacn. *». .ana uuw over such a large area. (hind legs, roll barrels, waltz, and ' , elected Friday night were eral hours. fholo oy A. %v • -1 PATRICK KROHN .^e many and varied, will be inside members, the greater number ho»- fhe school building. Pita! Patients. are being taken care ,of at the present time. | Mrs. Thompson is serving as .'secretary of the Macon sanitorinm I board of directors. and remained unconscious for sev- ZION CONGREGATION JOINS IN BUILDING CAMPAIGN OF SYNOD William Regnier, assistant pastor'the body was brought north. The Liang Kam Dam, an earth- 1 mount pedestals at the command I'-mily Cowlin of Crystal Lake, first Both boys were rushed by am- « v _ . . . «-* • • A 1 to IT a! aAir /\# IS* v I I ^ A k _ Zion Ev. Lutheran church of McHenry. a member of the Missouri Gus freund Attending Two Weeks' Sales Coarse of St. Patrick's parish, after which! The deceased was the wife of ern danTwith a concrete core was of their trainer. Pringle's Edu- #ice-president; Alta Kelsey of Fox bulance to the Woodstock hos- Synod, has joined her sister con- Gus Freund. of the McHeftry the mixed chorus of the school. Dwight N. Harris, who resigned buUt In Kwangtung Province to cated Dogs execute back somer- Kiver Grove, , second vice-presi- pital. where doc tors expressed gregations in a great campaign Equipment Co . is attending a twowith Rosemary Doherty as accom-^n 1928 as he?d of the department provide water for Irrigation pur-'saults. Jump rope, plav London <^nt; Patricia ^jPeterson of Har- little hope for' Muzzy's recovery, appropriately headed, "Building for weeks' sales and management panist, presented several numbers, of political science at Northwest. pogeg Thls dam waB constructed bridge, balance on the slack wire. vard. treasurer; Gradell Proper of Krohn regained Consciousness on Tomorrow." The previous effo-t, course conducted »>v the Interem University. Prof. Harris is a under the auf,piCe8 of the Kwang push their puppies in a babv earri- Wonder Lake, chaplain; Mary Saturday and since that time has was twenty-five years ago. In this national Harvester Company for member of the Harris banking tung International Red Cross who age. ride skooters, to mention onlv Shales of Woodstock, historian and shown improvement. period membership increased 70 its dealer organisation. Class family. Mrs. Harris was a trustee suppiie«l a portion of the funds,a few of their tricks Delightful Gail Benton of Marengo, sergeant- Friends recalled following the per cent and the number of con. wss'ons will be held at the Hnrof the National College of Educa-)for p,.^^ t]S the performance of a rare two at-arms. acc ident tthit young Muzzy had gregations in Synod 40 per cent; vester Central T-ain'ng School tion in Evanston. t I Mr May 8pent a 0f 'and one-half foot high Sicilian Installation of the new officers decided only recently that he The result is an urgent need to from Monday. June 6, through FHBefore her marriage to Prof. , his time on the Chien Tang Sea- mule named Tbni. He plays on a wiU be held in McHenry next would sell the machine as he had enlarge the colleges and semi- dav. June 17. Harris in 1939, she was an execu- | wall Project, some 140 miles from musical bell, leaps hurdles and September. experienced trouble controlling its naries and increase the enrollment., As a rumSer of n c^ass rt 3f?y tive in the Peoria public school Shanghai. Here a strange phe- icomically harasses his trainer, t i .* speed. 1 V ith the assuming of the pastor-; Harvester f f>m a\l see- '• 1 in addition, thi Aryes and Ka%J^ RETIRNED ^ I Both boys were popular with al duties at St_ Paul's church in ;oes of t^e 1 States. Mr MILK DAT i More than 15.000 people are expected in Harvard today, Thursday, June 9, for the eighth annual Milk Day celebration honoring the dairymen of this community. The caravan of floats in the __ parade down the "Milky -Way" on j system. Her widower is her only nomemon known as the Hangchow Ayer street, all the free milk you wapt to drink from Borden's, Bow- » man's and Dean's, the all-day cattle show and judging contest and the crowning of the Milk Queen during the Dinner Bell broadcast are just a few of the thrilling .-n highlights that will mark Harvard's biggest day of the row. i n i i i i i i i i i i i n ' n i » m < BIRTH8 f I I I I I H I M I KM 4'11 1-4 > Mr. and Mrs"!*William Hamil are the parents of a boy, born at t£e Woodstock hospital on June 2. Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Huska, Jr., of McCullom Lake announce the birth of a son at the Woodstock hospital on June 1. immediate survivor. THOMAS DO WELL, 85, DIES WEDNESDAY 1 last their classmates and were very Midlothian by Pev. Walter C. Jo- y>e\md will V.a.e '««OvA Quer- active in school activities. Frank hannes, Zion Church is fortunate j Min:tie-t du^T: "v- t*ci (a» "iT^ lifelong Lake, southeast of McHenry, passed away at the Libertyville hospital at 7 o'clock, Wednesday evening, June 8X Funeral ufricu will be held at the Jacob/ Justen Sons funeral home in McHenry at 1 o'clock Saturday. Burial will be at Wauconda. SOLDIER RETURNED Bore had inflicted tremendous' ryn Davies Wild Animal Circus Military r|tes were held damage to waterfront structures presents Captain Eugene Christy Saturday at z p. m. at the and land bordering the narrow {and his performing jungle bred hammer funeral home in Crystal played football-rfor two years, was to have the Rev. Martin J. Neeb, mouth of Hangchow Bay and the j African lions, the Frazer Troupe, La*e 'or Sgt. Paul E. Colby, whose a member of the pep club and of serve during the vacancy. Rev. I Chien Tang River. The kinetic lovely Betty Tllton, queen of the b°dy was brought back from Bel- the boys' chorus and was promin- Neeb, serving in the post of execn-' EVENING IN HOSPITAL I force of the rumbling wall of; air, cowboys and cowgirls, Aus- K»««n. Sgt. Colby was killed in ent in both the junior and senior tive secretary of the board for! 1 water, much like a tidal wave en-!tralian bull whin crackers, hllari- action on Feb. 3, 1945, in a bomb- class plays. The death of one Higher Education, has expressed! TWk--H M .ur. nt ari. I tering the bay at each full mora, 'ous clowns, Acrobats, equilibrists ln« over Germany. It was to have and serious injuries of the other the seriousness and dire need of . arl>w&ld haB a Particularly destructive ef-'and many other amusing acts. Ar-1 been his last mission before re- cast a shadow over all commence- the expansion program. a lifelong resraem near unswaiq fect on the Seawal) aligned to' rlrlng here at early dawn on its turning home. Sgt. Colby was a ment exercises for the entire stuprotect adjoining farmlands from! caravan of twenty trucks and trail- re'*ttye of the Claxton family Of. dent body. i RECEIVES DEfiHEE the ravages of the tide-like waves lers, the tented city will be erected | McHenry. „ j Frank Newton Muxxy, III, was Miss Barbara Carey, daughter of . ... . which often r«Ach a height ofjon St. Mary's parish grounds. j ;-- iborn in Chicago on July 14, 1931. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Carey of I patient in the V'ooictcck hoap'^kl . I twenty feet. The wall, 200 miles in ! The community is invited to the RECOVER FROM INJURIES jjind moved with his family to Ring- Broad street. McHenry. received Mrs Jos H Ha'mam. whn ?< - i length, made of ashler cut stone, j grounds to watch the erection of _ Beulah Mehn, 33, and wood in 1935. He is survived by her degree from Barat college, \ turned to br !>««•»» forum <Vi '-ni^Tn .-»nd Vaiige of vVvj* -v piWnent to " A?-T0N1r TH^ SICK ; Mrs Renn Sm ih ha»" hejn a is twenty feet in height, twenty feet wide at the base and six feet at the top. and was built nearly the tents and feeding of the ani- daughter, Mary 12, of Algonquin,' his parents, Frank and Mary Stan- Lake Forest, at graduation exer- la«*t *e©k f-oin The-i^e /• mals on the morning of circus day. ar® recovering from injuries suf- ford Muzzy; two sisters, Suzanne clses held last Friday afternoon n'tai. Waii*^7*i reported to Se 5 . .. f fered last week in an accident;and Jean, at home and his grand- Samuel Cardinal Stritch conferred slightly Improved. I; {a thousands years ago. Over the CRIPPLED CHILDREN'S CLINIC which occurred on Rt. 120, between parents, Mrs. Edna Stanford of the degrees on forty-two graduates Voher* J Pr*«on Vaa bssn m- • ' i past centuries, laborious methods! A clinic for physically handi- Lily Lake and McHenry. The car' Minneapolis, Minn., and Mr. and In a beautiful* ceremony which took lined to the Woodstock V" CHORAL CLUB MEETS iand crude handtools were used to j capped children in the Elgin area ln J^hich they were riding, driven Mrs. F. N Muzzy?of Marengo. place in the'college chapel. Miss the past week after suffering * -- -• , Tl1® McHenry Choral club held repair the damaged sections. To ' will be h?ld from 9 a. m. to 2 p. m., hy William Mehn. 16. overturned Last rites were held at 1:30 Carey majored in social science, vere burns on his hands when I A daughter was_ born on^ June jits first meeting of the^ summer | vjew the wall one must marvel at daylight saving time, Wednesday, when the lad swerved to avoid o'clock Monday afternoon from the Her plana for the future am tedal- tar fall on them while at work. 2 to Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Freund season on Monday evening at the ] the great engineering enterprises* June 15, at the Sherman hospital in hitting a dog on the highway. Mrs. Peter M. JuSten funeral home. Rev. nit*, of Schullsburg, Wis., Mr. and Mrs. j home of Mrs. Annabel Aicher, with i which were undertaken at a time Elgin, Dr Herbert R. Kobes, di. Mehn suffered a broken arm and Charles Stephens officiating. Cfcri j. Freund of McHenry are the ! a large group In attendence. The; When only crude hand implementa rector of services for crippled chil- her daughter from shock and Robert Anderson of Chicago sang proud grandparents. club will meet In two weeks with Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Savner are | Leone Tonyan. the parents of a daughter, born at " ~ ~~ * the WooMtock hospital on June I. Subscribe for The PUindealer. -- Michael Thill of Aurora NOTICE In the Anna DfedHch were available* Today a job of dren has announced. The clinic bruises. Both were treated at the several numbers during the ser- The annual election of officers last of the week. He i t*»«« na*ti*-e wnld t*v onr modern he conducted by the Univer- Woodstock hospital. . vice Burial was in the family lot of the local Red Cross will he panled home hp hi* "-------- "ity of Illinois Division of Services B , at Marengo. The graduating class held at the City Hall oh Tuee- children, Jaaiee and Continued- on last page. -for Crippled Children. . • Read the Want Aas. (attended last rites in « body. day evening. June 14. 4-fp had s»snt th* T . 1 - • • ... tejiS- •;

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