Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Mar 1921, p. 10

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#5^ r--* :i ji.'>V' ;^r . AilO AND (AWE PAINTER AM YOUR MAN. Do you want your motor „ car or carriagelrepainted but don't know w her el take itjto get a perfect job at a reasonable price? ? ; guarantee to use the bestjand highest priced vai5^v shesl made, IValentine's Varnishes, -said to five If* dsomc, durable job. PETER R. FRIEND? s*- OENTRAL GARAGE JOHNSBURG, ILL ' • • f - t\ *" ' ' a;' u > i r NEW PLAID GINGHAMS These popular fabrics may be chosen in eitherllarge or small checks or staple plaids. Red Seal Ginghams come in a close /y ^ even weave, the colors are fast, yd. JOHN STOFFEL WEST McHENRY 0 -ONLY' FOUR WEEKS TO EASTER You will want your New Easter Dress, so do not delay calling and making your selection. Our stock is very complete in wool fabrics, silks and voiles; new spring shades and designs. A 1 • Suits. line of Silk Waists, Camesoles and Envelope Shoes and Oxfordsirt new low prices, • Our sample line of Men's Made-to-Measure Clothing is the finest wtfhave ever shown. Prices are extrvmely low. Come in and look them over. Every thing in Staple Groceries for the tablet j^rotect your health by using only the best qualities. Good* Delivered 117-R M. J. WALSH . ?: rY. ; 3- • . f : b' > 4':'. #.• ft wpp---- START RIGHT ON 1<SS&7T?*T?- ' J ' J- : ^ : .'. •• and you will save a lojt of trouble, worry and money. Much depends on the proper selection of your lumber--strong durable dimension and joists, good smooth siding that will take and hold paint, sound shingles and smooth flooring, end matched and hollow backed, guaranteed to lay close. There are a lot of things we can help you with that will make your home a haven contentment. Left talk it over. McHENRY LUMBER CO f OUAUTY AND SERVICE FIRST v, ' .r fr%.. v . i •' ' i-j: »• WE WISH TO EXTEND OUR SERVICE When you get. ready to install new furniture into your home we want you to feel at liberty to call at our store for advice as to what sort of furniture would best fill your requirements and also an estimate as to the cost of such. This is only a part of the service we extend the public. It always pleases us to have you call for any and all information which we are able to extend along the lines of home furnishings and the chances are 10 to 1 that our prices too will meet with your approval, f jl.AQPB JUSTEN .-K4 McHENRY. ILE. % #Pfi in«B w ElwflL AS PICKED UP BY PLAINDEALER REPORTERS DURING WEES What People Are Doing In Thia VU- - life and the Immediate Vieiatty-- Other Short Paragraph* Shoes and hosiery at Erickson's. For real bargains trade at Erickson's. Measure the. value of yoar doUar at Erickson's. - . / Dollar sale March 5, 7 and 8 at Erickson's store. ^ Ladies' oxfords for Easter now dh sale at Erickson's. Read The Plaindealer and keep posted on local happenings. Attend Erickson's dollar sale Saturday, Monday and Tuesday. Charles Chaplin in "The Kid,' Star theatre, Grayslake, March 6 and 7. Spring is here! Now is the time to get your spring hat. Blake Sisters. For two weeks only, 6 ten-inch double records for $3.50. Will fit anjjr make of machine. N. A. Huemann, West McHenry. For two weeks only, six ten-inch double records for $3.50. Will fit any make of machine. N. A. Huemann, West McHenry. Perch are still biting in the vicinity of the Fox river dam, where local anglers have made some very nice catches during the past several weeks. Now that the automobile traffic is once more on the increase, wouldn't it lie a good plan for all of us to pay a trifle more heed tothe traffic posts about town ? The body of George Schreiner, who died of pneumonia while in service in France, is expected to arrive in McHenry shortly. All of the papers have been signed and forwarded to the proper authorities. From present appearances the manager of. the Wilbur Lumber company, together with his clerical assistants, will have one of the most ideal offices to be found in McHenry when the present alterations now in progress are completed. Henry Antholtz, who has been employed on the C. & N. W. section here for several years past, was recently appointed foreman of that body and~ he has already succeeded Fred Voeltz. Mr. Voeltz is now watchman, at the Waukegan street crossing. Very good progress is being made in the work of razing the old Schneider block on the West Side, which was recently purchased by Messrs. R. B. Walsh and M. A. Thelen. The building is being wrecked in" order to make room for a new garage building, which is to go up on the site this summer. The responsibilities of C. G. Burkhartsmeier of Chicago have been considerably enhanced since the arrival of a bright, bouncing baby boy at St. Joseph's hospital in that city last Friday. The mother was formerly Miss Laura Barbian of this village. Their friends extend congratulations. Our readers enjoyed a good joke at our expense last week, when in an item we referred to M. A. Thelen as conducting a barber shop when it should have read a harness establishment We are only human and therefore are subject to mistakes. The error, while unintentional, even caused us a smile. McHenry friends of Miss Ruth Bacon of this village, who is now teaching school at Merinette, Wis., recognized her picture in last Friday morning's Chicago Tribune as an entrant in the beauty contest which is now being conducted by that paper. Miss Bacon is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Bacon of this village. The store building on Water street, owned by Mrs. Peter Rothermel, is undergoing quite extensive improve ments. The stairway on the north side of the building has been removed, while the entire building is to be repainted. We understand that the place has been rented and will be used for restaurant purposes this summer, i Chas. Bechtel, a former resident, -was in town the first of the week, shaking hands with friends and look- . injg after his interests here. Mr. Bechtel last year purchased a lot in the Edgewater Beach addition to Mc- . Henry, where he hopes to erect a summer home this year. His lot ad- ; joins that on which J. C. Holly Is now i having a cottage erected. A telephone message received here'on Tuesday morning of this week bore the sad news of the death of Mrs. M. B. Wilkins,. who passed away at Syracuse, N. Y. Burial will be in Oakland cemetery, Chicago. The family, a few years ago, made their home at Orchard Beach, on the west shore of Fox river, a short distance north of this village, where they owned a cottage. A card from Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Burkhartsmeier of Chicago informs us that they are now occupying their cozy, new bungalow at 4939 N. Ridgeway Ave., which was completed for them only a short time ago. McHENBY'S miwmmm ^ < w • ' {v. ' Vv. • Vv--};'.•* • FRI. A SAT., MAR^^Ijpi v : Frank Mayo ' •£*- and Ora Carew IN - Ite Peddler ' of AND - AN EDUCATIONAL COMRD* DON'T BLAME THE STORK SATURDAY MATINEE 2:3$ --_ SUNDAY, MARCH ©•>,. ; Myers • INAND -- A CENTURY COMEDY' .MATINEE AT 2:30 HARVARD MAN MURDERED. Ifonday by Deputy Sheriff Charles Wandrack, she was locked up in Maribella's shack when he went out to kill Forbish. She heard* the shot and a minute later, she alleges, Maribella returned and ordered her to get out «f Harvard. "I was walking down the railroad tracks with Forbish when we first saw Maribella," M^r. Marz told State's Attorney Lumley. "I had made a date to meet him at the depot in Harvard at seven o'clock Friday night. He Was not there and later in the evening I met Forbish. The shooting occurred about ten o'clock." After being freed from Maribella's shack, a railroad freight car, Mrs. Marz attempted to telegraph her husband in Chicago. She could not, however, pay for the message and the clerk refused to take it. She then returned to the depot and asked per- 'ihission to spend the night there. The night clerk then made arrangements for her to stay at the Noble hotel. She left for Chicago on the 6:30 o'clock train Saturday morning. A postmortem examination revealed that five of eleven Vackshots which struck Forbish went thru his body. Death was instantaneous. w... The shooting of Forbish occurred in the southeast section of Harvard, known as the {'Italian village." Maribella is said to have toid fellow countrymen, employed at the roundhouse, that he killed the contractor. He then made his eaeape on 'i 12 o'clock train. « ADDITIONAL PERSONAL John R. Knox and Frank Masquelet drove to^Rockford Tuesday. A. M. Schiller is spending a few days in the metropolitan city. \ John Montgomery was a Chicago passenger last Friday morning. / Mrs. Mary McGee of Woodstock was the guest of relatives here Sunday. . Eugene McGee of Chicago was the guest of relatives here over the week end. Miss Aileen O'fieilly passed a few days this week with relatives in Chicago. Chas. G. Fr*tt of Aurora passed the first of the week with relatives here. ' , Miss Mabel Peterson spent Satur day and Sunday with home folks at Maywood. Chas. Kiing of Chicago spent thf week end at his/ cottage at McCollum's lake. f Mrs. Fred Schoewer passed a few days last week as the guest of her parents in Chicago. The Plaindealer for news. THAT'S the kind of stuff that your bread and pastries are made from if you buy our flour. We watch every detail connected with the milling of our product. Nothing gets by us that is not representative of, the best in flour productions, lie sure of ytnir baking by . using our flour. < y-f Try our flour -you'll Uk«i|| McHENRY Flour Mills West McHenrv. III.. Body Femd Near Pickle Factory Last . • Saturday , : Rivalry for a woman's lent il, believed to have been responsible for the murder of Walter Forbish, Harvard contractor, whose body, riddled with buckshot, was found in an alley adjoining the Harvard pickle factory late Saturday. McHenry county authorities, investivating the shooting, ordered the arest of two Italian- families said to have been witnesses- of the murder. Forbish is believe^ to have been killed while he was in the company of a Chicago woman, who reached Harvard at 9:40 o'clock Friday night. His assailant attacked him from behind, firing a charge of buckshot into his back. The name of a fourth party believed to have been implicated in the killing was given to State's Attorney Lumley and he was being hunted for in Chicago the last of the Week. Location of the man, the county prosecutor said, would clear up the mystery. Pending outcome of the search in Chicago, announcement was made that the Harvard man suspected as the murderer will be kept under constant watcfy. > "I have just ordered the arrest of two Italian families who make their home in a railroad car on a Chicago & Northwestern siding near the pickle factory," said Lumley. "I have information that they heard the shot fired and saw the murderer escape. They will be held pending the result of the inquest held by Coroner Windmueller." Forbish's body was discovered by Robert Milligan of Harvard as he was walking to his work at the roundhouse. It was lying face downward in an unused alley between the pickle factory and Carl Barlow's coal office. The murdered man w.is last seen alive by Elmer Saunders at 9:45 o'clock Friday night. At that time Forbish was at the Chicago & Northwestern depot at Harvard. ^ Harvard officials, who were being assisted in the investigation by Deputy Sheriff Charles Wandrack, refused to divulge either the name of the woman or the man under suspicion. The woman, it is said, resides in Chicago, but has been a frequent visitor at the McHenry county city. It is known that both Forbish and the alleged suspect were rivals for her hand. A resident of Harvard all his life, Forbish, who was thirty years old, was well known thruout northern McHenry county. He worked as a carpenter and cement contractor. Forbish lived alone at Harvard. A sister, Miss Irma Forbish, is employed as a stenographer in the office of the Hunt, Helm & Ferris plant in that city, while a brother, Arthur Forbish, is a cleVk in the Harvard postoffice. The murdered, man's mother is making her home ih a Wisconsin fcejim 300 miles north of Harvard. V -Later Development* Alleging they have conclusive evidence that Walter Forbish, Harvard jJjr" contractor, was killed by Tony Mari- Burkhartsmeier, with Paul G. Bar- jbeHa' M^Henry c°unty authorities anbian, a McHenry young man, conducts nounced th? have 8ecured the Edgewater Beach garage in that,*1"6® hl« whereabouts It was city and the young men are enjoying 8tated that; the Italian will 'probably a very nice business. f ^ arrested Wlthm ^ Mxt The date for the holding of thej'our hourscounty Woodman convention, which is Mrs. Lillian Marz, also -known as to be held in this village, has been set; Bertha Sterling, "the woman in the for April 6. The place for the hold- | case," is alleged to have confessed to ing of the convention has not as yet State's Attorney V. S. Lumley that been decided on, but action on this; Maribella killed Forbish. She is bematter will "be taken at the next reg- I ing held in the McHenry county jail at ular meeting of the local camp. It is j Woodstock on a temporary charge of expected that the convention will be \ accessory to the fact. attended by at least two hundred mem- J At the coroner's investigation held bers of the order. McHenry county at Harvard witnesses testified they has nineteen camps with a total mem- J heard Maribella say that he was go bership of 1756. Seventy-one dele-' ing to kill Forbish. gates from the various camps have! According to the story told by Mrs. been elected to attend tha convention. Mara, wfco^'tra* located 1m Chicago r A refuge from trouble? A retreat where peacc harmony reign? Or, a worry, an anxiety, and continual source of care and expense? The family that is harassed by financial troubles, that continually lives beyond its means, can never know the real joy of a home--the peace and contentment that arKthe outconie of an intelligent ..Jftqde of living. . * Nothing so firmly establishes that spirit as a insistent form of saving. A savings account in ttjis bank can be started with a dollar. Fret* Income Tax Service at Hi>um MARCH 5th, 7th and 8th these days we are going to present an exceptional opportunity to give you a real good old fashioned dollar's worth for a dollar. The following ljst is only a suggestion of what a dollar will buy on these three days: GROCERIES 4 lbs. of our regular 30c blend of Coffee for ! , -- --- $1.11 2 lbs. Japan Tea, fancy quality 6 lbs. Kerber's Lard .a. $1.M lbs. fancy hand picked Ngvy j Beans ... ^T^__.$1.H 5 lbs. fancy Rolled Oats_... $1.#0 15 bars American Family Soap.._,$l.M JJ> bars Maple City Laundry Soap $1.6$ >1$ bars Fels Naptha Laundry Soap $1.(§ 16 bars Kirk's Flake White Laundry Soap ......... Sl'H 12 bars Kirk's Cocoa Hardwater Castile Soap-- $1.W OVERSHOES WHt* feach pair of boys' or men's 4 buckle cloth or all rubber artics sold at our regular 1921 prices we will sell one pair of first quality 4 buckle all rubber army overshoes lor pair Men's Work Socks i. #pair Wool Mixed Socks..... , 2 pair Heavy Wool Socks All men's and boys' winter spriaff Caps, each. MM MM MM SI.# and Large Willow Clothes Basket $1.0® Five 25c Men's Handkerchiefs. 3 dozen Children's Handkerchiefs__'$1.00 1 dozen Ladies' Handkerchiefs.^$1,041 2 Men's Neck Ties I$1.00 Large Cotton Batt, Comfort site.-.$1.00 5 yds. 36 in. wide Percale,' light or dark patterns.^.... $1.M 5 yds. of the best standard grades of Dress Gingham. _ __$1 M 5 yds. cotton Challie, 1 yd. wide---$1.M 6 yds. of Apron Check Gingham...$1.60 4 yds. Linen Crash Toweling. .$1.0# 2 yds. Mercerized Table Damash_.$1.0i 2 wool mixed Baby OVERALLS ^ Men's Hickory Stripe OveraH|k,_. $l.W Men's and boys' blue stripe Overalls and Jackets, per garment $1M MM 6 Cup Aluminum Percolater, a value Large galvanized Wash Tubs, special value ... MM 10 qt. Blue and white enameled Dish Pans MM 2qt. Aluminum Double Rice Boilers $1.M Galvanized Wash Boilers, % real d o l l a r s p e c i a l , e a c h . -- J i A. ERICKSON GENERAL MERCHANDISE Wr McHENRY, Hi. : yS~

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