"M- * * ^ * «t4 * s,^^ t* ' piiftji'"' IN IIWIAI RESIDENTS fm.ltNMM! Mn In McHeary This 'fm Checking Purpose# If^'^Biro retinae men, stent here from the ONIifco office, are this week makln| r ;Stfir headquarters at the Mc- Henfy House, their mission at this tim« being for the purpose of checking ®P residents thruoat this locality who failed to file an income tax report. We are informed that notices have gone out to a number of rural residents and in response die office of the two men has been kept quite busy during the past few days. More notices are to follow later on, at which time it is expected that additional CUM will be brought up for final disposition. According to the printed directions on the income tax blanks there is a heavy fine attached to the failure to file income tax reports and just what disposition has or will be made of the men called here this week we are unable to say at this time. The word was passed thruout the village some weeks before the income tax came due that Uncle Sam had his all laid for making a clean this year and as a result of awiwji. i. i ."ii,! 1 - • this report, we are told, a number of our people who had never filed before filled out and forwarded the blanks to the Chicago office. Annual Town Meeting and Election Notice is hereby given to the legal voters; resident? of the town of M/c- Henry, county of McHenry, Illinois, that the annual town meeting and election of officers of said town will take place Tuesday, the teth day of April, proximo, being the first Tuesday in said month. The election will be held in the places designated, as follows: District No. 1, Woodman hall, Ringwood, 111.; district No. 2, village hall, McHenry, 111.; district No. 3, Colby building, McHenry, 111. The officers to be elected are: One town clerk, one assessor and one commission of highways. The town meeting will open in the village hall, McHenry, 111., at the hour of two o'clock p. m. and after choosing a moderator will proceed to hear and consider reports of officers, to appropriate money to defray the necessary expenses of the town find to deliberate and decide on such measures as may, in pursuance of law, come before the meeting. Polls will be open at 7:00 a. m. and close at 5:00 o'clock p. m. Given under my hand this-24th day March, A. ,« Oh as. B, Hansnsen, Town ; V" ;' ,- Anlipr Meeting ' Notice .is -liertby given ihat the board of ..auditors of the town of McHenry, county of McHenry, Illinois, will meet at the town clerk's office in West McHenry, Illinois, on Tuesday, the 30th of March, A. D. 1920, at two -o'clock p. n*., to audit any and all bills against the town. Bills may be left with the supervisor or the undersigned. Dated this 16th day of March, A. D. 1920. xaas. B„ Harmsen, *Tjwn Clerk. for Highway Commissioned I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of highway commissioner and will appreciate the support of the voters of the towm of McHenry at the annual election to be held on Tuesday, April 6. 41-tf ' v Wm. B. Tonyatt. i t To the Public t Uriah to announce that I will not be ^Candidate for the office of school trustee, district No. 15. Thanking you for past support, which I can assort, you has been appreciated,.! an, Respectfully yours, S. H. Freund. l&tchen hardware at Erickson's. ever 40-3t* ¥• I* scribe thi long and hjajriwfri»'a» HowrdPs las this year. He has already been notified by a number of resorters who own and rent cottages at this beautiful resort that they will be out. for the season on May 1. Most of the cottages at this point have already been rented for the season, while inquiries are being received almost daily. "I could easily rent twentyfive four room cottages if I had them" was the manner in which Mr. Howell put it up to us. The resorters there have organized a sort of a community club and this year will engage the services of a man, whose duty it will be to clean up the entire place and keep the lawns mown and green during the summer season. This is indeed a fine spirit and one that should be and is being followed by most of the many cottage owners and renters who annually come to McHenry to pass the summer months. Thos. Graham of Ingleside is to be a candidate for re-nomination and reelection as minority representative from this district, which includes Lake, Boone and McHenry counties. Plaindealer ads briny result*. HERE IT IS! ffrst df all ytfcilliit all that's coming to you for your money. jSlo one expects more and you shouldn?t be satisfied with any less. --H ^ 7 The next thing is to make sure that the clothes you are getting are good enough to buy. They ought to be all wool, built for lasting service and correctly styled. Clothes that give you all that probably will cost you more than clothes that don't Buy only af first. I® the long run they'll save you money. & ' a $55.00 Isn't a Big Price--But The Suits Are Big Values You only have to see them to get the point. They com* bine snappy style, shapely fit, comfort and endurance in the thoroughbred way that good clothes should. " A large display of Spring Suits of first claf^^: , tailoring, in a wide selection of patterns and colorings, wonderfully well made of dressy * .looking fabrics. - * j jv $48.00 to $52.50 SPRING HATS Hats for men; hats for young fellows; brown hats, green hats ^-everything that men and young men want in headwear is here for you. The styles are new--but the quality J| the same as you have alwaj# found in a Rothschild hat. ' Si Spring isn't spring without a pair of new shoes or oxfords. Even P the bright sunny days of spring can seem a bit dull if you are not outfitted 1 with ne,w footwear. Dark brown and russett shades are 'very popular. $9.00 to $16.50 You Ought to have a Few Shirts for Spring You ought to see them. They are worth seeing, worth buying too. But we don't ask you to buy. Look them over; ckcuk yourself. ^ CHOICE TIES* . The silk weaves have been selected with the utmost cjare. The patterns are new. Everyone is properly cut, designed and sewn to tie easily and to wear You ought to get some. Maybe You Want Light Underwear Now Just as soon as the frost disappears some men turn to light underwear. You'll find most such men coming here for their underwear. Others buying ahead for summer. SiCnNWSY McHENRV, ILLINOIS tan, Moant VeriMjR, 17 On St. Patrick's day, March It, 1776, General Howe and his British army evacuated Boston, taking with him 1500 Tory inhabitant*. In compliment to the Irish under his command, Washington issued the following order: "Headquarters, 17th March, 1776. Countersign, St. Patrick: The regiments under marching orders to march tomorrow morning. Brigadier of the day, General Sullivan. By his Excellency's command." One of the arguments against Irish independence is that the Irish do not agree. If this were a valid argument then the independence of the United States from Great Britian should never have been declared, for the colonies were not, in agreement aboui separation. The following resolutions were adopted at the end of the first part of the program on St. Patrick's evening at the Empire theatre, March 17, 1920: Whereas, The pledged word of the United States in repeated declarations of the president on -the aims of the war, that the world must be made safe for democracy, that no people should be forced under a sovereignty under which it did not wish to litfe, that the rights of the weakest were as sacred as the rights of the strongest, that all peoples should have the right to self determination, and Whereas^ Ireland accepted and trusted these declarations and by a plebiscite of her people by a vote of three to one has declared herself a free and independent republic; and Whereas, The elected representative of the people of Ireland has for a year been in our midst seeking the recogni^ tion of the Irish republic by the great republic of the United States; and Whereas, Such recognition would be complete accord with American traditions and is demanded in fact by the plighted word of honor given to our boys and to the world when the president made known the war aims of the United States; and Whereas, The great debt we owe Ireland from , the days of the Revolution to the present day has- yet to be paid; therefore be it Resolved, That we, the citizens of McHenry, in mass meeting assembled on this St. Patrick's day, urge upon our representatives the speedy recog nition of the Irish republic and also favorable action on the Mason bill now before the house, providing for an appropriation for the upkeep of a minister and consulate to the Irish republic. Be it further Resolved, That a copy of these resolutions be telegraphed to the president at the White House, our representatives in senate and house, to Frank P. Walsh, chairman of the American commission on Irish independence, and a copy be given to the local press. Replies to above have been received from J. P. Tumulty, secretary to the president; Senator Lawrence Y. Sherman, Ira C. Copley and Frank P, Walsh. Mr!fl§! It is interesting, to compare the reception given to President De Valera with that of the Coote delegation now returned to Ireland. D? Valera has been and is being received by governors of states andj mayors of cities from New York to San Francisco. No official has been found to give hearing or reception to the little band of bigots whose small souls were incapable of harboring one single noble thought for freedom. De Valera's mission^has been a glor ious success, for before the rejection of the ignoble treaty the senate recognized the claims of Ireland to independence. The mission of the "Cooties" was an inglorious failure, for America has no use for humbugs. Capt. Julius Peyser, one of -the most prominent Jews of Washington, D. C.j and a well known lawyer, thus epitomized England's relations with Ireland in a recent address at the nation's capitol: "England, when she thinks of humanity, forgets Ireland; an<J when she thinks- of Ireland she forgets humanity.'! (Irish News Letter.) Irish bond drive amounts at the present time to $1300.00 in McHenry. QUARTER OF A CENTURY rat SAL1 wt» IlOfr pounds. McHenry, 111. mare, West . 38-4t FOR SALE--Fifty bushels of Marquis seed wheat. William Dettmer, West McHenry, 111. 40-2t FOR SALE--Lots in Edgewater subdivision to McHenry. J. C. Holly, Hoy bank, McHenry, IB. 40-tf FOR RENT--East Side market and flat. Inquire of Mrs. P. P. Rotberrael, McHenry, Jll. 38-21* WANTED--Pickle growers for the season of 1920. ' See John Ii May Pickle Co., West McHenry, 111. 36 FOR SALE--Good draft colt, three years old. Broke. Sam Rogers, West McHenry, 111. Phone 606-W-l. 38-tf FOR RENT--Two five room. flats. Electric light, gas and sink. Inquire at this office pr call phone 83- 40-2t* FOR RENT--The store .room how oc cupied as a soft drink parlor in West McHenry. Mrs. Peter B. Freund. West McHenry, 111. 40-tf FOR SALK--'The Math. Niesen house, corner Water and Washington streets. Inquire at West McHenry State bank, West McHenry, 111. v 40-2t FOR SALE---1918 Ford touring body in first, class condition. Address Eisenmenger Sanitary Market, Crystal Lake, 111. Phone No. 9. 40 FOR SALE--About 200 bushels of Oderbrucker barley, 1918 crop. Price, |2.00 per bushel while it lasts. N. M. Bowers, McHenry,. 111. Phone 627-Rl. - 4;-2t* SALESMEN WANTED-^To solicit orders for lubricating oils, greases and paints. Salary or commission. Address The To4d Oil $ Paint Co., Cleveland, O. 41-lt* Items Clipped From The Plaindealer «f Twenty-five Years Aft • iiim. Fred Hatch of Burton, who was so severely injured by being run over by a horse at Belvidere in December last, passed thru here on Tuesday with her husband on her was home George Meyers had a good work horse drowned in the clay hole near the river on Sunday. Also on the same day a valuable brood sow belonging to him died. Verily it was an unlucky day for him. Announcement lb »the voters of the town of lie McHenry: With many thanks for past favors I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office of assessor at the coming town election. Respectfully, John W. Kimball. Drop in. You are welcome to hear all the latest records on the Everett phonograph. We "carry a full line of needles and repair parts for all makes of talking machines. Expert repairing. Trade that ancient machine of thine for an Everett N*. 9. Everett Hunter, Jr. Subscribe for The Plaindealer and keep posted on local happenings. •V voters dee took place ifr4 the twin villages last Saturday. The question of voting upon the location of a new $90,000 townships-high school is what caused the unusual activity and excitement. .All told, 1,819 votes, were cast, the count showing that the East Dundee site had won out by only four votes. Witt. Reed,,.Sr., i#ho resides near Richmond, celebrated his ninety-llfth •birthday one day recently. Easter cards and booklets at Petesch's. DR. N. J. NYE^ -I uffhysieian and Surgeon X-Ray Diagnostic* 1%"*$ Office Hours: . z y>»!' ' "2 7:00 to 9:00 a. t# 1:00 to 3:00 p. m. 7:00 to 9:00 p. Tfwne*i&2-R :: Mcttenrytltl. y.sr FOR SALE--Beautiful McHenry lome. Large brick house, fine condiion, nice sightly location, large grounds, fruit and shade. Also exellent business building in McHenry, deal location for auto accessories, tire epairs, bakery, restaurant or most iny general line. Will accept liberty onds or exchange for Dakota or Neraska land. Address F. J. Schnorr, 18 Broadway, Council Bluffs, la. 36 We're Remy to serve you with a first class line of fancy and staple Groceries, Meats, Canned Goods, Bakery, etc. If you have not already called we invite you to come and see what an up-to-date completely sanitary trading center we have placed at your disposal. A perfect delivery system. Phone 43. FOR SALE--Entire furniture used in Riverside hotel, McHenry, 111., commencing Monday, March 29. Consistng of 50 beds, springs, mattresses, pillows, linen, bed spreads and. comforters, 38 oak dresser? and commodes, 50 roclcing chairs, 50 dining room chairs, rugs, all sizes up to 10x12; hall and stairway carpets, writing tables, clocks, 6-ft; extension tables, square dining room tables or card tables and all other furniture used in hotel. Sale to be held in Masquelet building, % block west of hotel. 41-lt A new federal bakery was opened at Harvard last Saturday. Hat Brite--the best of all hat dyes. 25c pe:- package at Petesch's. for Lent We have just put ill & complete line of' lenten eatables and want you to call and inspect what we have placed in stock for you. The stock com prises all kinds of fish and the numerous other lenten eatables which go to make up a able meal / ^ ^ •-v;6v/ir;•••n * Hi I.Ill• •! llligiii* M. M. Niesen McHenry Phone 86-W ----WATER STREET MARKET & GROCERY P. J. Heimer, Prop. m wne Wee porNvork shoes that will lit and wear well should not miss an inspection of our line. We have priced them at "sale" prices arid we can't keep that up yefry long for they cannot be replaced at our Ml ^ ft*' J* 'V, .H, JOHN STOFFEL I?::' r- "--Shi What would happen to me if I were your kid? Well, if you're not acquainted with Calumet Bakings you don't know what a good ex cuse I have. / Can't HOP Helping Myself-- they're so good I Good for me too, be cause Calumet Bakings are wholesome and easily digested Millions of mothers use CALUMET MKIN8 POWDER --because results and ic and. use Calumat contains only IDCA (npWimli •» ASM «WMI W>' press«# offtcimlhr km ihs U.S. Food Aathmiiti--. offMmuy lor <As • IN mmv It. HIGHEST Here is where you will find the lowest prices on