(FIJI ttwlf Miner*! apringa Hotel) BEAUTY 8POT Of THE LAKES ,411 rooms with hot and cold water and •lectric fans in each room. ::S<8padal Steak and Chicken Diqgtoni Phone 604-M-2 WILLIAM P. PETERSON MGR. McHKNRY TOWNSHIP MUTUAL •S V FDM INSURANCE cheapest and safest earth. Rates and other may he had upon /ZjfcM on information a Michael Freund, Agent, <a-: Rent a Motor Boat Visit the famous LOTUS BEDS in Grass Lake W da^lh \v£efc, leaving McHenry, Illinois, at 9:00 a. m. and 1:30 p. m. / ' ;; Large and small boats--at any time. '.-M $5 miles ol beautiful scenery up the Fox River Valley.through Fistakee, Nippersink & Fox Lakes. ,K<>pd Jrij& " ii Ti liijVi «• ' n nfrifyi in t >1.1 ir'i|y\i ifiii '• 1 \ ^ 1 n iif^ifii'jiV'i .ftiifrii nil •- ^ • Jtcnfc afid fishing parties our specialty BEAUTIFUL NEW MOTOR BOAT GLADOLA SEATING CAPACITY-MI THE HUNTER BOAT LINE LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE NO. 7 Doc^--- East End River Bridge, - McHenry, 111. From Credit to Cash On and After August 15th We Will SeltfJ i FOR CASH ONLYi - ,n"\ " THE REASONS Your own welfare is always the thing that deserves vour most carefull consideration- Upon you men and women, asheadsol your families, lies the responsibility of conducting yjour business iuSpuch a manner that will (five to thoee dependant upon you the greatest possible amount of comfort. In making the change in our business methods which we are now announcing to you, we have had this thought clearly before us. In any business there are three important and essential factors--the producer, the seller and the consumer. The most important factor in any business is the consumer--the man who uses the goods. He therefore deserves our most careful attention. A merchant's interests are very closely associated with his customer's interests and of the general interest of the community in which he lives and earns his bread and butter. It will also be readily seen that a merchant can prosper only in proportion to the good service that he renders. After a very careful consideration of the subject and a thorough investigation of the many communities where it has been tried, together with an observation of conditions extending over many years on the part of some of us, and a discussion lasting through several months we have reached the conclusion that: TB E REASONS A HE VERY PLAIN 1. Credit bit* rained many more people than It Hm helped. You can. no doubt, see this result right in your own neighborhood. Men bare established a reputation for being good pay, have been able to buy goods on credit at any. store and. as a result, have overreached themselves. This result varies in degree. Some have had to soil calves and pigs and colts before they were ready for the market thereby talcing a loss by not being able to cash in on the valuable growth which these animals would have made. Even the good wives aiy affected by this. 2. It is then very plain that a Cash System will l>eneiit the entire community by putting it upon a more conservative and a much safer basis. If every family pays as it goes there will always be money In the "family exchequer" to meet the emergencies which continually arise in our lives. Last season furnishes an excellent ex. ample of this. Many of our good farmers were compelled, on account of dry weather and short crops, to sacrifice valuable stock and stint themselves in order to obtain feeg for their stock and the things absolutely necessary for their families and also to pay the store bill. How much better it would have %been If every man instead of bills which must be paid had had in reserve a fund to have met such an emergency. A cash system also eliminates the idea of competition in spending money. Would it not be far better if each of us, instead of trying to see how much better we can look than our neighbors or how much bigger show we can make than "soand so." would face about and see bow much better we can conduct our business and do our work. '»• 3. A cash system then will give every man an honest chance. It will compel every man to stand four square to the world exactly as he is and give btm a feeling of confidence which only the cash man can have. There is absolutely DO question about bis being uble to become more prosperous and carry a bigger bank account under such a system. Be will know every night exactly what be is worth and like the "*11- laffe blacksmith" of your school day fame "Look the whole world In tbe face, for be owes no man ^anything." It will entirely eliminate from the minds of ns all the thought that "pay does not come until tomorrow and tomorrow is a long way off." We had thought of discussing the question with you from the merchant point of view as well as from the customers but after a thorough discussion among ourselves we have been unable to discover a single instance where the merchants interest is different from that of the customer. We are all living together in the same community. We all help support our Churches, our Schools and our Good Koads. What benefits one, must In some degree, at least, benefit us all. It is good for us all that we all prosper. While many people have the Idea that every merchant has a fat bank account tbe reverse is true/ Under the old credit system the many unnecessary burdens we have been forced to carry have prevented us from making t he reasonable living profits to which we are justly entitled. By changing this system many important improvements can be made. 1. It will save merchant a large phrt of hfa expense In doing business. There will no longer be any forgotten charges to account for when we come to tbe end of the year and figure up our loss and gain. There can hardly be an error In a cash transaction. We will no longer have to go over a long llstof accounts and wonder if this man or that man is STILL GOOD. Ft will eliminate loss of goods wrongly charged and accounts denied. f. It will enable tbe meicbaattobb a better buyer. Cafh on delivery always talks louder in the markets of tbe world than sixty days time with a requestlon for an extension when the limit is reached. It is a well known fact that almost all wholesale houses bave several prices but the cash man gets the best one. There is nothing that makes such a tempting noise as good old Uncle :Sam's currency, the supreme standard by which tbe values of all the world are now gauged. Cash Business is Better for the General Good of the Community than Credit Business We are sure that our stand is just and right. We appeal to you as entelligent ambitous business men and women to take the sane honest view of the question and give it your most careful consideration. Then join with us as we bave always united with you in a spirit of earnest co-operation and let us all pull together to develope the "PAY AS YOU GO" system and make McHenry and community the most prosperous community in all this prosperous state. Our children will then develope into better men and women, our homes will be brighter, our land will be worth more, a GREAT SPIRIT OF CONTENTMENT WILL PREVAIL AND WE WILL ALL BE MORE HAPPY. •#sp> •k JOHN J. VYCITAL McHenry, Illinois to the lUll^ne of Lot 3 af O* ty Cleitfr Plat of the Nortit Rtftf 9* 85, Township 45 North, of Bangs 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian for a place of beginning; thence South 56 degrees Bast 275 feet. A strip of land of a Uniform width •f twenty (20) feet, being ten (10) feet wide on each side of a line described as follows: Part of the Southeast quarter of Section 26, in Township 45 North, of &ange 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, commencing in the center line of Riverside £)rive, extended at a point 420 feet Southerly from the center linp of Elm Street; thence South 36 degrees East fo the North line of Lot 28 of the fCounty Clerk's Plat of part of the South half of Section 26, Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, for a place of beginning; thence South 36 degrees East to the Southerly line of said lot State of Illinois, ) County of McHenry,)i In the County Court of McHenry County. To the March Term, A. D. 1922. , Village of McHenry, Coanty of) McHenry and State of Illinois) vs. ) Fred Beller, J. E. HauswirUt,) ' ' Adelia Bonslett, Gertrude K.) Freund, Mary J. Jackley, John) W. Bonslett, Everett Hunter,) Jr., Gerald Carey, Agnes Doh-) erty, Florence Carey, Evelyn) Carey, Genevieve Carey, Wal-) ter Carey, Mary Carey and all) « other persons having or claim-) ing interest in any of the) " premises designated and de-) :nscribed, "All Whom it May) ' Concern," C: - " ) Defendants^ In the matter the frfctftloBi of tile Village of McHenry, County of McHenry and State of IlHnois, to ascertain the compensation for private 28. property to be taken or damaged for 1 A strip of land of a uniform width the local improvement in the Village of twenty (20) feet, being ten feet of McHenry, County of McHenry anfrlwide on each side of a line described State of Illinois, consisting of the as follows: Part of the Northeast construction of a connected system ofj quarter of Section 35, Township 45 vitrified tile pipe sewers, for sanitary North, of Range 8, East of the Third purposes, including all necessary man- . Principal Meridian, beginning at a holes, "Y" branch house junctions, j point in the center line of Waukegsn vitrified stoppers, excavation and Road 790 feet Easterly from the cenbackfilling, all connected and com- ter line of Elgin Road; thence North plefcely installed in place, including aj73 degrees East 94 feet to the East sewerage disposal system, the con-j line of Lot 6 of the County Clerk's demnation of lands, the securing of J Plat of the North Half of Section 35, " i n T o w n s h i p 4 5 N o r t h , o f R a n g e 8 , you may appear and defend if yoa see fit so to do. Dated Woodstock, Illinois, July 24, 1922. Q. E. Still, Clerk of the County Court of McHenry County, Illinois. 7-4t easements requisite therefore, the establishment of a sewer district and providing for the making of said improvement by special assessment and the issuing of special assessment bonds to meet the cost thereof and to ascerain what property will be benefitted by said improvement and the amount of said benefit. It appearing in the above entitled cause, from the files therein and the affidavit of ownership, filed therein, on the 24th day of July, A. D. 1922, that the defendant, Mary J. Jackley, impleaded with others, above named and made parties defendant in said cause, is a non-resident of the State of Illinois; notice is hereby given to said defendant and the defenants designated as "All Whom It . May Concern," and to all other persons and parties named in the report and assessment roll of the commissioners, filed in the above entitled cause in said court, against whose property benefits have been assessed therein, to pay the costs of the mprovement hereinafter described; that on the 22nd day of May, A. D. 1922, said Village of McHenry, County East of the Third Principal Meridian A strip of land of a uniform width of twenty (20) feet, being ten (10) feet wide on each side of a line described as follows: Part of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, commencing at a point in the center line of Waukegan Road 790 feet Easterly from the center line of Elgin Road; thence North 73 degrees East to the West line of lot 5 of the County Clerk's Plat of the North Half of Section 35, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, for a place of beginning; thence North 73 degrees East 506 feet to the East line of said lot 5. A strip of land of a uniform width of twenty (20) feet, being ten (10) feet wide on each side of a line described as follows: Part of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, commenc< ing at a point in the center line of Riverside Drive extended, 420 feet Southerly from the center line ef Elm Am berg & Amberg, Cfcas. T. Allen & Wm. M. Carroll, Solicitors State of Illinois, ) . v McHenry County, )ss. In the Circuit Court of McHenry County. State of Illinois, September Term, A. D. 1922. John F. Amberg, Complainant, vs. Fred E. Markus, Amanda Birk, C. Henry Markka, Lena V. Meyer and Arthur F. Meyer, her husband, Lillian V. Arnold and Carl A. Arnold, her husband, Frederick Voss, Louis Voss and Lavine Evans Voss, his wife, Laura Voss and Oscar A. Reum, as trustees under and by virtue of the last will and testament of Frederick Voss, deceased, and unknown owners, Defendants. In Chancery--Bill for Partition. - Notice is hereby given that the above is the title of the Court and the names, of the parties to a suit which is now pending in said Court and that, process for said defendants ha& been issued to the Sheriff of> said County returnable to the said Court at its Court Room in the City of Woodstock, County, of McHenry and State of Illinois, on Monday, the 25th day of September, A. D. 1922. * In testimony whereof I have hereunto set may hand and affixed the seal of said Court, at my office in Woodstock this 25th day of July, A. D. 1922. 8-4t Chas. F. Hayes, Clerk. of McHenry and State of Illinois, j street, thence south 36 degrees Eaftt filed its petition in Said County Court of McHenry County, Illinois, praying that steps be taken to ascertain the just compensation to be made for private property to be taken or damaged for the improvement of the construction of a connected system of vitrified tile pipe sewers, for sanitary purposes, including all necessary manholes, "Y" branch house junctions, vitrified stoppers, excavation and backfilling, all connected and completely installed in place, including a sewerage disposal system, the condemnation of lands, the securing of easements requisite therefore, the establishment of a sewer district, and providing for the making of said improvement by special assessment and the issuing of special assessment bonds to meet the cost thereof in said Village, ordered and provided for by an ordinance of said Village entitled "An Ordinance for the making of a local improvement in and for the Village of McHenry, County of McHenry and State of Illinois, consisting of the construction of a connected system of sewers for sanitary purposes, a sewage purification plant, the condemnation of lands and the securing of easements requisite therefore, the establishing of a sewer district and the providing for the making of said local improvement by special assessment and the issuing of improvement bonds to meet the cost thereof," and to ascertain what property will be benefitted by such improvement and the amount of such benefit, and to levy a special assessment upon all of the property benefitted by such Improvement, to pay the costs of said improvement, in accordance with the terms and provisions in said ordinance and in manner provided by law; that the summons in said cause is made returnable on the 4th day of September, A. D. 1922, to said court, to be held in the Court House in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, and that the pieces and parcels of property to be taken for said improvement are described as foUowg, to-wit: Part of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, described as follows: Commencing at a point in the center line of Riverside Drive extended 420 feet Southerly from the center line of Elm 280 feet to the North line of lot 5 of the County Clerk's Plat of the North Half of Secton 35, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, for a place of beginning; thence South 36 degrees East 95 feet to the East line of said lot 5. A -strip of land of a uniform width of twenty (20) feet, being ten (10) feet wide on each side of a line described as follows: Beginning at the intersection of the North line of lot 29 of the County Clerk's Plat of part of the South Half of Section 26, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, with the center line of Riverside Drive; thence Southerly along the center line of Riverside Drive extended 57 feet; thence South 36 degrees East to the Southerly line of said lot 29. A strip of land of a uniform width of twenty (20) feet, the center line of which is described as follows: Part of the Southeast quarter of Section 26, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, commencing at a point in the center line of Riverside Drive extended at a point 380 feet Southerly from the center line of Elm street; thence Westerly parallel with the center line of Elm street to the center line of Court street extended; thence continuing Westerly to a point 420 feet Southerly from the center line of Elm street at a point 172 feet Easterly from the Easterly line of Green street; thence Westerly parallel with the center line of Elm street to the Easterly line of Green street, excepting therefrom the Southerly 17.88 feet of lot 31 of the County Clerk's Plat of part of the South Half of Section 26, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian. The Southerly 17.88 feet of lot 81 of the County Clerk's Plat of a part ef the South Half of Section 26, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal Meridian, all in the Village of McHenry, McHenry County, Illinois. And that the pieces or parcels of property to be damaged by the making of said improvement as described as follows: Lot 8 of the Assessor's Plat of the E. M. Owen Estate in the Northeast quarter of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, in Township 45 North, of Range 8, East of the Third Principal was a Sunday guest in the home of her mother, Mrs. Christina Brefeld. Mr. and Mrs. Lew Powells, of Chicago, were week-end guests tn the home of Mr. and Mrs, John W. Fay. Misses Stella and Lydia Ulrich, of Senville, Mich., were week-end guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Knox. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Schneider spent Wednesday evening with Mrs. Emma Starritt and family, at Terra Cotta. Supervisor Stephen H. Freund transacted business matters at the county poor farm, at Hartiand, last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Dowling, of Chicago, were Sunday guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Gans. - Mrs. Jacob Justen and daughter, Helen, spent several days last Week as the guests of relathresin the metropolitan city. , hisses Genevieve and Dorothy Knox, Eleanor Conway and Ruth on Fox river, a short .ft Meridian, in the Village of McHenry, street; thence South 36 degrees East' County of McHenry and State of Uli 375 feet; thence South 55 degrees^0*8* East 275 feet for a place of beginning; j That the total cost of said improvethence North 75 feet and thence East ment as shown by the estimate and to the Fox river; and also beginning j report herein is the sum of $62,855.00; at said place of beginning and thence t that a special assessment has been made to raise the cost of said improvement and that the report thereof was filed in the office of the Clerk of South 75 feet; thence East to the Fox river; thence Northwesterly along the Fox river to an intersection with the foregoing described running to the Fox river. A strip of land of a uniform width of twenty (20) feet, being ten (10) feet on each side of a line described follows: Part of the Northeast quarter of Section 35, in Township 45 said County Court of said McHenry County, Illinois, in the Court House in the said City of Woodstock, County and State aforesaid, on the 24th day of July, A. D. 1922, and that the proceedings therein are now pending. You are further notified that sum- • • y _ a L y North, of Range 8, East of the Third moM in said cause ic made returnable Principal Meridian, commencing at a i to the March Term, A. D. 1922, of the point in the center line of Riverside l said County Court to be held in said Drive extended, 420 feet Southerly j Court House in the City of Wood from the crater line of Elm street; j stock, Illinois, on the 4th day of Sep- Sonth Hfi Aatnwi Kmvt S7R A. P. 1922. when and where * \ ~VJ ^"*V 'U ^ !* 1 v Kent spent the past week in the Kent Smith. south of town. Mr. and Mrs. Qua. Hrfwiff uj children, of Elgin, were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Jencks. Misses Lenora and Roaina Freund, of Chicago, spent Sunday as guests in the home of their parents, Mr. and .Mrs. Jos. W. Freund. Miss Irene May and a gentleman friend, of Woodstock, Were guests in the home of the former's parents, Ife. and Mrs. Martin N. May, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stuffel, of Woodstock, were Sunday gtMsts in the home of the latter's pareats, Mr. and Mrs. Martin N. May. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Mansfield aad. Mrs. W. A. Martin, of Woodstock, were visitors in the home of Mr. Mrs. E. E. Bassett, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. T. L. Kimball, of Chicago, spent a few days last and this week as guests in the home of latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. ADDITIONAL PERSONAL Mr. and Mrs. Walter Fay were Chicago visitors the first of the week. Miss EtheUGrilfoy, of Chicago, is a guest in the home of Mrs. Mollie Givens. O. G. TreadWay, of Chicago, passed the week-end as the guest of McHenry friends. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Schreiner and sons motored to Elgin, one day last week. N Eugene Fagan, of Chicago, was a week-end guest in the home of Mrs. B. Frisby. } Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Schreiner and sor.s motored to Lake Geneva, Wis., Sunday. Mrs. Elizabeth Hunter, of Elgin, passed last Saturday as the guest of McHenry friends. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Frisby ,of Chicago, spent Sunday as the guests of McHenry relatives. > Patrick Moriarity, of Chicago, was a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Pint, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Frisby and children, of Chicago, spent Sunday as the guests of McHenry relatives. Miss Genevieve Walsh and friend, of Fox Lake, called on relatives in John Spencer, of Chicago, passed Tuesday as a guest in the home of his son, Wm. Spencer, and family. town last Saturday evening. Donald Givens and sisters, Leone and Kathleen, visited Wauconda friends last Sunday afternoon. Miss Amy Lamphere, of Elgin* is spending the week as the guest of her cousin, Miss Varina Wentworth. Mr. and Mrs. Eli Brink, of Lake Geneva, we^e guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Wentworth last Thursday. Misses Ruth and Marion Scribner, of Chicago, spent the past wedc as the guests of McHenry relatives. Miss Maude Granger, of Chicago, passed the week-end as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Robt. Thompson. Miss Genevieve Brefeld, of Chicago, I# close the estate of E. J. Countryman I will sell at 1 PUBLIC AUCTION m ACRE FARM & 10 VILLAGE LOTS Tuesday, August 29, 1922 t 1:3# p. m. onthe premises Situated adjacent to the village of Volo, Illinois, 5 miles east of Me- Heury and 5 miles west of Round Lake, Illinois, on the Belvidere cement road and the Rand cement road. This farm is well improved and in a high state of eultivatidn. IMP--. tion is invited. A beautiful place to live and rif good investment. CHARLES R. LEAKE, Trustee DIXON, ILLINOIS ii v Get. ready "' * for Fall--now TAST Fall thousands of home-ownera JLj who had counted on an ARCOLA hot-water heating-system to heat their homes, were disappointed. They waited until the last minute and there weren't enough ARCOLAS to supply the demand. We predict the same thing this Fall. But today, we have plenty of ARCOLAS on hand and more time to do the work. Our advice is to take^ no chances. Don't wait and get caught in the rush. Save money on ARCOLA now (These figures, though rough, will show how reasonably ARCOLA can be completely -- despite tbe fact it pays for ittclf m the fud it saves.) 3-Rooms Arcola with 2 radiators $ 198 4-Rooms Arcola with 3 radiators $ 241 5-Rooms Arcola with 4 radiators $ SSI 6-Rooms Arcola with 5 radiators $3SS Phone or call and we'll gladly give you the exact coat of putting ARCOLA in your home--hut, for your own good, do it now befm the Fall rush. - j y ' V ; J. DONAVIN • Wast McHeary, I,- WOODSTOCK, ILLINOIS 15 -16-17 -18 -19 Largest Stock Exhibit EverShown 3 HORSE RACES BIG BALL GAME Automobile Races oil Saturday 8 Bigr Free Acts ' ' > Mammoth Display of Automobiles, Machinery, Farm and Garden Products • 2*. ^ •A**"-" • VEvery Day a Good Day T%%r- a Come and see Your Neighbors