Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 11 Aug 1921, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

« Have you ever tried Aiapld'ssmokt'd meats? If not, come in today and give them a trial as we are certain of their quality. Our line of canned goods, bakery and v e g e t a b l e s is always complete and our minute-service goes with each and every order. Buy your table needs here and go home satisfied. i.-nl.)'iiii 'ir in.; ,|i nil mIiii .--WATER STREET--• " MARKET & GROCERY P. J. Heimer, Prop. Ifs the inner man whom we serve and so welfare we acquainted with the every day needs of life that we have just what you want in the line of Staple and Fancy Groceries, Veger tables, Canned Goods and Bakery. Our prompt delivery system iiever at your service. M. M. Niesen McHenry Phone M PHILIP# JAEGER GENERAL COMMISSION MfiRCHANt . ^ SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE SALE OF : ^ Dressed Beef, Flutton, Hoes, Veal, Poultry, ^ Hides, Etc., Butter and Eygi > •, Tkta to the oldaat honsw on the street Tag* and pe1i» on application. \trS-; • ' ^ • COLO STORAOB PREB v Stall i * 3. FultM «t CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. Wholmli Market --"RED DRAGON" TEASare strictly May pickings prepared from tea grown in the choicest gardens in Japan. They are scientifically blended and fired so as to produce a tea superior to any other in strength, flavor and general excellence. These teas are especially packed io moisture proof packages which preserves the delicate flavor and prevents deterivation. Will make more cups of delidPlM tlra than cheaper grades, therefore more economical to use. V Vi pound package....Me 1 pound packagK.v..75e JOHN STOFFEL SOL^ONLY BY WEST McHENRY DRESSES AND CAMISOLES During the latter g*rt of this week we will * fyie assortment of tricotine and serge dresses lor ladies and misses. Prices, $12.50 and up. ' -A We also haye a nice assortment of children^ Just received a nice lot of two-tone camisoles Which are sure to please you.. JOS. DITTRICH . WEST McHENRY When There's Roasting to tie Done _ you'll get the best results with least effort! an<n^ attention from a Modern Cabinet Gas Range./ The rotfsting oven of the new gas ranges \ is at just the right height for the cook. It ^ ^ enables you to watch the roast without stoopt ing or bending. Fowls or meat come out of the oven done td an irresistible golden brown* crisp and inviting to both eye and palate. / TOR-- i- ^ '• *<!> J, ZrK?*?: Saturday and Sunday Also Chocolit^ and Strawberry ice cream. Any flavor i^c cream made to special order. We catePte-sQdals, picnics and parties and guarantee first class service. 1 i -•tv. vfC ICE CREAM FACTORY C. UNTI, PROP. , i , \ v RINGWOOD Lyle Brans wick spent last w«ik with friends in Chicago. , Popular shades of satin miHtaire dress silks at Erickson's store. , r Mrs. S. H. Beatty of Woodstock visited relatives here Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens spent the week end with friends in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Will Beck of Dundee spent Thursday with friends in town. Wayne Foss visited his aunt, Mrs. Adelaide Coates, in Solon last Friday. Miss Dorcas Foss spent part of last week as the guest of friends at Harvard. % Phonograph records for all makes of machines at the Everett music store, McHenry. A number of Ringwood people attended the funeral of Mr. McGraw at Richmond Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs, Arthur Peet and Mrs. E. E. Hopper spent Sunday with Mrs. Colby Moss at Libertyville. Mildred and Harold Jepson spent last week with their grandparents, Mr. arid Mrs. Clark Huson, in Elgin. Mis. J. D. Smith and son, Harold, returned to Champaign Monday after spending several days with relatives around here. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hoy are entertaining the tatter's mother, Mrs. Woods, and Uttle daughter ftatn Evanston, HI. Fred Walker, who underwent an operation at Woodstock hospital last week, is improving rapidly and\will soon be home. Mr. and Mrs. Ed son Hodge"and Mrs. George Frye attended the funeral of Miss Dorothy Hodge at Lake Geneva last week Wednesday. The Ladies' Aid society will serve supper at M. W. A. hall on Thursday, Aug. 18, from 5:00 p. m. lintil all are served. Everybody is invited. ADDITIONAL PERSONAL Miss Mary Burke spent several day.' Mrs* W^ McCannon,' acc"o^panie4last week °f her aUnt by Miss Mildred Wolkos of Milwaukee, spent a couple of days last week in the Hewes home near Hartland. Mr. and Mrs. Gus Pearson and daughter, Grace, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Olson and daughter, Florence, and Mr. and Mrs. Larson and family started Saturday for New Lisbon, Wis., to visit the Engstrom family, who formerly resided here. Mrs. Emma Brown started for Crookston, Minn., last week Wednesday, where she expects to spend several months with her sister, Mrs. Jane Ellington. Miss Martha Dailey accompanied her as far at St. Paul, then she went to Buffalo, N. D., td visit her sister, Mrs. Biggers. , TERRA COTTA -•\ Coffee and teas that satisfy at Erickson's store. George Phalin of Harvard was the guest of home folks Sunday. Owen Billows of Crystal Lake was a business caller here Tuesday. Russell Allen of Cary is spending; several days at the home of M. Knox. Miss Eleanor McMillan is visiting relatives and friends at Spring Grove. New cotton challies and cretonnes-- fine comforter material--at Erickson's. George Conway of Detroit, Mich., is visiting relatives and friends in this vicinity. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Schaefer of McHenry spent Saturday evening at Geo. B. Frisby's. Mr. and Mrs. Michael Knox spent Tuesday in Chicago and attended the Pageant of Progress. Miss Florence Knox was the guest of her aunt, Mrs. Ed. Malone, in Elgin several days last week. Mrs. Stella Peck was called to El gin last week by the death of her mother, Mrs. Betsy Davis. Mrs. Ralph Wingate has returned from a Chicago hospital, where die recently underwent an operation. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Portman of Chicago were recent guests of the former's aunt, Mrs. Geo. B. Frisby. J. P. Green of Woodstock and Misses Flornce and Frances Knox called at the Courtney home near Wauconda Sunday. Miss Alice Sutton of Spokane, Wash., and Mrs. Ed. ICnox and daughter, Marguerite, visited Mrs. M. Knox and daughters Friday. Raymond B. Brantingham, who came here in May in hopes of benefitting his health^ died at his home here last Tuesday evening. He had been ill for a year. He is survived by his wife, a daughter, Ruth, his mother and three brothers, Harry, Frank and Maurice. The remains were taken to the undertaking rooms at Crystal Lake Wednesday and the burial took place at Rockford on Friday. SPRING GROVE Market your eggs at EricksMft. Joseph Rauen was a Chicago passenger one day last week. •Math. Dixon motored to ^fflSot, Wis., one evening last week. Sheet music, all the latest and most popular numbers, at the Everett music store, McHenry. Mrs. Gertrude L. Miller of McHenry called on relatives and friends hare one day recently. John Kattner attended to matters of a business nature in Ringwood l*«t Saturday afternoon. Miss Eleanor McMillan of Terra Cotta is spending a few days with relatives and friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Math. Glossen of McHenry were recent guests of their daughter, Mrs. Joseph Rauen. Leo Rauen and Miss Lillian RaAn motored to Ringwood Monday evening and were guests of relatives, there. Miss Madaline Rauen of Kenosha is spending the week as the guest of relatives and friends in this village. Miss Flossy Lange returned to Chicago this (Thursday) morning I nfh>r aiwwHiwy fw/i wooka no a giiagf i Kir p owyialifit. in the home of her mother her*. Mr. and Mrs. Math. Lay and Mr. and Mrs. Nick Weber attended the funeral of Peter Hiatal at McHenry last Sunday afternoon. Traffic thru our village is more extensive than ever this summer as tourists from far and near pass thru here enroute to the lotus beds. Mrs. Fred Kamholz and sons and Mrs. Henry Block of West McHenry passed thru our village on Monday enronte to the lotus beds at Grass Lake. OSTEND Extra' quality work shoes at Erickson's. Mrs. Joe Harrer is entertaining a lady friend from Chicago. Little Elma Sherman is the guest of her grandparents this week. Mr. Jepson is the name of the new mail carriejr * from Woodstock on route 5. ^ 1 I^eon Lincoln of Harvard was a Sunday afternoon callcr on his cousin, Roy Hobart. Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Harris and family visited friends at Waukegan and Kenosha Sunday. The Ostend threshing machine was silent last week until Wednesday afternoon on account of the rain. William Thomas and wife spent Sunday r.t Woodstock at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Wm. Belcher. It is hoped the threshing may be finished, up in this neighborhood this week. There are four jobs besides the one they are at work on today (Tuesday). Some of the farmers are beginning to talk silo filling. Many fields of corn look as tho they could do lots of ^growing yet before they fill very fast in the silo. Mrs. Ed. Malone, at Elgin Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Baron of Hebron were Sunday .guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Baron. Master J. Eugene Sayler is the guest of his friend, Lowell Walkup, Jr., at Ridgefield this week. Mr. and Mrs. John Montgomery and daughter, Beverly, were Lake Geneva, Wis., visitors last Thursday. Mrs. Alsena Smith has returned from a several days' visit in the home of Mrs. Geo. Smith at Elgin. Mrs. Mary Carey of Elgin was a guest in the home of her daughter Mrs. R. I. Overton, over the week end. Wm. Smith passed Tuesday in the metropolitan city and was in attendance at the Pageant of Progress exposition. Mrs. Mollie Givens and sons, Donald and John, attended the funeral of Jarftes Givens at Wauconda last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. A. Frisky and children of Elgin speht several days the past week in the home of Mrs Ellen Frisby. Misses Alice Knox and Nellie Doherty have returned from Notre Dame, Ind., where they have been attending summer school. Miss Margaret McCSbe of the West Side hospital, Chicago, spent the week end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McCabe. Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Wfstfall of Chicago were guests of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stoffel, over the week end. Mrs. George Meyers and grandchildren, Arnold and Joyce Chesnut, and Marcellus Meyers were Richmond visitors last Thursday. Misses Nella Bray and Haaek Hale of Waynesville, 111., passed the week end as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. 0. Johnson. Mrs. Ross Wheeler and Miss Blanche Meyers of Chicago were week end guests in the home of their" parents Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Meyers. Mrs. Emma Froehlich and little daughter and Miss Helen Froehlich of Winnebago, Minn., are guests in the home of Dr. and Mrs. A. I. Froehlich. N. C. Klein and daughters, Mildred and Eleanor, and Dr. N. J. Klein of Chicago were week end guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Schoewer. Walter K. Conway, a student at Notre, Dame, Ind., is spending a couple of weeks as a guest in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Conway. „ Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Fraser attended the funeral of Wm. Hamlinton in Chicago one day last week. Mr. Hamlinton was killed in France during the late war. Mr. and Mrs. Will Bishop and daughter, Margaret, Mrs. Anna K Bishop, Mrs. Elizabeth Schmitt and Mrs. David Johnson were guests of relatives at Spring Grove Saturday. Misses Inez and Ruth Bacon have returned home from Marinette, Wis. where the former had been spending some time with relatives, while thi latter has been teaching school there during the past two seasons. Mr. and Mrs. Will Bishop and daughter, Margaret, Mrs. Anna K Bishop, Mrs. Elizabeth Schmitt and Mrs. David Johnson were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Smith at Woodstock Sunday afternoon. George Schumacher of Chicago spent Sunday in McHenry. Mr. Schumacher informed us that he is now having a home built at Crystal Lake where he expects to reside in the future. He will make daily trips to and fi*bm Chicago. Mrs. Geo. C. Steilen and sons, Charles and Jack, attended the Pageant of Progress exposition in Chicago on Tuesday, Baby Jack being an entrant in the Chicago Herald-Examiner baby contest, and was selected as one of the high score babies of Illinois. The parents were notified to bring the yotingster into Chicago to be examined Optical Good* and Jewelry E. C. Jacobs of Chicago, who has been making his headquarters at J us tan's hotel during the past several months, has rented the Mrs. P. P. Rothermel building on Riverside Drive, where he expects soon to open an optical and jewelry store. The interior of the building is now undergoing some extensive alterations and improvements and will be ready for occupancy within the course of the next two weeks. , • Notice to Boat Owacra V / * The Fox River & Lakes Improvement association wishes to advise its members, who own boats with fixed engines and who have not as yet paid their special federal tax on eazAe, to do so at once, because the local deputy collector has started to check up all boats of the district which are subject to tax. Tax blanks "can be secured or tax can be paid by addressing the deputy collector, .ear© of McHenry House, McHenry, 111. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT rim i ill ill"ii"'V" T "Mmi FOR SALE--Three choice Holstein cows with calves by side. Inquire of B. J. Adams, West McHenry. 8-tf FOR SALE--A house and four lots on West Side. A bargain for somebody. Inquire at The Plaindealer office. 4S FOR SALE--1920 model Ford sedan. Has been used but little and is in firstclass running condition. John Okie, McHenry, 111. 9-2t* FOR SALE--A seVen room bungalow. All modern conveniences. Green street, McHenry. H. J. Schaffer, McHenry, 111. Phone 83-W. 6-tf STRAYED OR STOLEN--Dark brown mare, weight about 900; hitched to buggy. •Disappeared Saturday even# ing, Aug. 6, between 8 or 10 o'clock from Railroad street, Crystal Lake. Finder please send information to Crystal Lake Herald or phone No. 4. WANTED--Two acres or lots on river front. Give price, location and terms in first letter. C. Sorensen, 4305 N. Spaulding Ave., Chicago, 111. 8-2t* FOR SALE--Timbers, lumber, brick and other building material. M. A. Thelen, West McHenry, 111, * 5-tf FOR SALE--Three new grafonolas. Will be sold at factory prices. M. A. Thelen, West McHenry, 111. 5-tf FOR SALE--Six cylinder, 7 passenger Buick touring car in good running order; also a 5 passenger Chevrolet sedan, nearly new. Schaefer Bros., McHenry, 111. Phone 49. 5-tf LOST--Between Libertyville and McHenry, a wire wheel and spare tire for Nash car. Size of tire 33x14. Liberal reward offered if returned to McHenry House, McHenry, 111. 9-11 inm inirri pearls. Reward. Finder fetndly turn to Mrs. Jos. Krett, McHenry. r FOR SALE--"Hie old Smith homestead farm of 160 acres located about two miles east of McHenry: the Smith estate farm of 82 acres at Lake Defiance and the house and lot east of the Fox river bridge in McHenry. 8. H. Freund, McHenry, 111. Phone 64SM- 2^> 41-tf LOST---Between my home and St. Patrick's church on Thursday of last week, a black jet bar pin with gold spray of lilies of the valley set in •33 WaM say, "It ser^es Mm fight," w tear of a man being held up and robbed of five or hundred dollars. , I ^ ' tv Nevertheless, the dormant dollars lying around 'I'ilir homes are as unprotected as were the goldlined pockets of the victim of the hold-up. ^ ; : . If you have savings at home ask yourself this question. "Is it better to leave money at home or to put it ill the bank where it is always available-- always safe and always working?" v -a \ 1 - *•* % - -V: Fox River Valley State Bank JOS. C. HOLLY, Caafc. McHenry, illinoit FREMONT HOY, Pwfc - vt.- <; * ' •i# -v? Thfc lflterstate €oi»flieree Commission has semi-dfficially announced that freight rates cannot be lowered before February 1st, 1922. 1 t»- Coal consumers all over the country have placing orders expecting a Traduction in freight rates and in consequence thereof there wilKbe a rush for fuel that will be difficult to handle. Don't make the mistake of putting off buying your winter supply of fuel until the mines get swamped, with appeals for coal and the railroads are congested with traffic. • • r v • , ' ^ a good supgljf of the following in stock: 0 3x2 Nut 6x3 Egg Indiana Block . Pea - Nut Range * £gg , ; Pocahontas Phone No. 5 and we will be pleased to take care of - • • , . . i ' < ' • •-ut-xT' your requirements. ¥.J§1 W3-j FOR SALE--Beautiful wooded lots with good bathing beach on Fox river. Prices very reasonable, at Clement Lodge sub-division, oge-half mile south of McHenry bridge on river road. For prices and terms call or write R. F. Clement, dement Lodge, McHenry, 111. 7-*t BABY CHICKS--Cut prices. $&b 00 up. Postpaid anywhere. Assort* ed, white or brown Leghorns, Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Reds, W. Wyandottes, Buff Orps. Big hatchery, 600,- 000 chix. Get our prices first. Catalog free. Farrow-Hirsh Co., Peoria, m, a :-a 'J v* ]i • -{A . i %" * ^ •»'* PHONE| WEST McHENRY, ILW JPHONE t \ m. _ i m £

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy