Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Jun 1925, p. 6

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

Insure--in sore--insurance with W«. G. Schreiner. Office at residenct. Phone 93-R, McHenry, 111. Auctioneering. DINE M DANCE -AT LOUIS PAVILION FOX RIVER CROVE, EL" Every Saturday Night) Music by BANKERS* 8-riECE ORCHESTRA New Restaurant Now Open GENTS, $1.0# LADIES, 2SC Including' war tax 4M. FOWLER, D. C t . PALMER- GRADUATE -,, * * CHIROPRACTOR ^ Monday, Wednesday and Friday Hrs., 2:30 to 8:00 p. m. PhoRe 166 Brefeld Bldg. * W. McHENRY, ILL. WEEKLY PERSONALS * - - COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN&IR BUSY CITY COW BACKBONE OF INDUSTRIES DRS. M'CHESNEY & BROWN (1NCORPORATR) DENTISTS Dr. i, W. Brown. Dr. R. M. Walker Established over 45 years and' •till doing Business at old stand Pioneers in First-Class Dentistry at Moderate Prices Ask Your Neighbors and Friends About Us S. E. Cor. Clark & Randolph 145 N. Clark St.. Chicago PHONE CENTRAL 2047 Daily 8 to 5; Sundays 9 to 11 We carry a line of- AS FOLLOWS: \ GRAINS -- Corn, cracked com, wheat, barley, kaffir corn and buckwheat. Ready mixed scratch grains --course, medium ana fine. Laying mash, baby chick mash, grit, oyster shells, meat scraps, bran, middlings and Red Dog flour. We do not deliver and our prices are made accordingly. McHenry Flour Mills West McHenry, 111. WOND "y (classes A £ TO ORDER^O^NLY ' 1) r\ ( . 1\ 'pf'/TJiotrizi hriJ (Jpfician ^4 07 fsl. PAULINA ST. ; • - -CTE AND LI-NCOl N AVE. My spectacles and eye glasses are cnown all over America. Thirty years experience testing eyes and grinding glasses to order only. We make all repairs. Absolutely guaranteed. Dr. a KEL Optometrist and tician (Chicago Address McHenry, 111 8407 N. Paulina St. Phone 157 Phone Graceland 9540. SldS IT is estimated that within a single year over 50,000 footsteps pass across your floor. Each step mars its beauty--scats its surface--wears it down. Defeat this damage --put between these feet and the floor, a fighting film of Devoe Floor Paint--a tough, durable finish, made in 12 attractive colors. JUk m about the Diwt Home Imftrom \ am* Mm whonfa ymm com point rem f *. IfM--bmd* and omt--omd poj jet # JNNV MMWt&M} faiflttffaMflfe *~-y JOHN F. BRDA McHENRY, ILL. June, and the Telephone 4 ROMANTIC June, with its weddings and graduation^ l brings many urging! to the American heart to be off „ to some distant place. Why not eo, when the campus calls to the colors, when sons and daughters want your presence at commencements, when you feel the stir to be somewhere else, as audience or actor r With longdistance to serve, you can be wherever *ou want to be. There are 16,000,000 telephones in the nationwide communications service built for your use. One of them is always near to send back decisions and desires to home or office, or carry words of love or greeting to places that call your thoughts. The romance of life is iri the air, and the great romance of modern da] * universal telephone service 1 is yours to further it. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM Owe Policy - OneSyMtm • Universal Service AS SEEN BY PLAINDEALEft REPORTERS AND HANDED IN BY OUR FRIENDS Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wheeler were Chicago visitors last Sunday. Elmer Koerner passed Saturday and Sunday with friends at Naperville. Henry Freund of Waukegan passed the week end with his sisters in this city. John Gullachson of Chicago passed the week end in the Geo. Meyers home here. Carl Johnson of Evanston was the guest of McHenry friends over the week end. Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wheeler we're the guests of relatives at Belvidere Decoration day. Walter LaSalle of -DesPlaines passed the week end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bassett. Miss Kathleen O'Reilly of Chicago passed the week end as the guest of Miss Blanche Meyera. John H. Miller ahd" son, Henry, passed a couple of days the first of the week at Montello, Wis. Arthur Kennedy of Rockford passed the week end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurlwell. Miss Christine Maynard of Chicago spent the week end in the home of her sister, Mrs. F. M. Ensign. Miss Lucile Steinbach of Kenosha, Wis., passed the week end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Miller. Atty. and Mrs. R. M. Weinke and sons t>f Chicago passed the week end as guests of McHenry relatives. Mrs. Patrick Kelleher and daughter, Helen, of Elmhurst were guests of McHenry relatives over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. Edward J. Brefeld of Chicago were guests of McHenry relatives the latter part of last week. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Steffens of Chicago passed Saturday and Sunday in the home of Mrs. Caroline Schfessle. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spieker and daughter of Burlington, Wis., were Sunday guests of McHenry relatives Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Bending and daughter of Belvidere passed the latter part of last week with McHenry relatives. Mr. and Mrs. John Schuenemann were guests of Chicago relatives the latter part of last and first of this week. Mr. and. Mrs. Chas J. Heimer of Chicago passed last Friday in the home of the former's mother, Mrs. Josephine Heimer. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. HoffmBn of Chicago spent Saturday and Sunday with the letter's mother, Mrs. Helena Heimer. Mr. anchMrs. A. K. Burns and son Robert, of Oak Park passed the latter part of last week at the Burns cottage on Fox river. Misses Doris and Arlene Bacon passed last Saturday in the home of their sister, Mrs. H^vey Dam, at Kenosha, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Wheeler, Geo Meyers, Miss Blanche Meyers and John Gullachson were Waukegan visitors last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Garrity of Chicago spent the latter partof last week with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Schoewer. Mrs. Josephine Heimer passed the latter part of last and the first of this week in the home of her son, Chas. J. Heimer, in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Oder of Chicago were Saturday and Sunday guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fay. Mr. and Mrs. John Bushaw and son of Rockford were guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurlw ell, over the week end. .Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Kamholz and little son of Kenosha are spending the week in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Worts and Mrs Eva Lawrence of Blue Island passed the latter part of last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Wegener. Miss Lona Wadsworth of Kenosha and John Brefeld of Waukegan passed the week end in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Brefeld. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Schuenemann and children of Chicago were guests in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Schuenemann, last Friday. - Mr. and Mrs. P. Arvidson of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Watson of Hammond, Ind., passed the week end at the Granger cottage on Fox river near this city. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Chapell of Chicago, Mrs. B. C. Getzelmann and daughter, Eunice, of Elgin passed Saturday as guests in the home df Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Perce Molton and daughter of Joliet and Mr. and Mrs. Al. Monroe and daughter of Elgin were guests in the home of Mrs. Christine Schrciner last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Howard and son of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Heuser and children of Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Leo I^awson of Elgin were guesta in the home of Mathias Weber the latter part of last week. Mrs. Alsena Chapell, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Severins and daughter, Marion, and Miss Maude Granger of Chicago and Mrs. Harry Alexander of Hebron were week end guests in the hoing of Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Thompson. Mr. ad Mrs. Ben Neunert, Misses Frances Steinsdoerfer and Florence Zapse, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Worts of Chicago passed Saturday ad Sunday with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Steinsdoerfer, east of city. CONTRIBUTE MUCH TQ _WELOF HUMANITY" Milk, better and cheese are but a part of the contributions that the dairy cow makes to the welfare of humanity. But for her we would be without many of the conveniences and luxuiies that mark human life today. That was the tribute paid the dairy cow before the radio farm school of tfte Blue Valley Creamery institute by K. L. Hatch, assistant director of agricultural extension at Wisconsin university. "We are apt to think that the dairy cow has fulfilled her mother function When she has supplied the milk necessary for the normal growth arffi the healthy development of the child," Mr. Hatch said. "But she does more than this. The dairy cow is constantly with us, although the products for which she is responsible we often pass by without recognition. 'If we separate the butterfat in milk from the other constituents we have< left skim milk. The milk sugar is largely used in food for infants and in the preparation of medicine, while the albumin is used in the preparation of feeds for young animals. In drying the curds of skim milk we get casein, which in the form of cottage cheese is one of the most wholesome of foods. In this form it has many uses in the arts. Mixed with pigment or lime, it has myriad uses, in office, shop and factory. 'The business man on his way to work stops at the hotel cigar counter and rolls dice made of casein. He opens his morning's mail with a letter opener 'made of milk,' lights a cigarette held in place by a casein holder, and settles himself to work with his foot under a desk held together by casein glue. He sharpens his pencil with a caseinvh'andled knife and signs his letters with a fountain pen made of casein. At the close of the day he enjoys a quiet game of poker, using casein chips, while he draws smoke through the stem of his moersphaum pipe, made of casein. ^ "His wife or sweetheart starts the day with combing her hair with a casein comb and polishing her nails with a casein polisher, while boiling the morning coffee in a pot with a casein handle. She then dons her hat with'its ornamental casein buckle, fastens her cloak with its casein button, and turns off the electric lig^nt with its casein switch. Her afternocii is spent either at bridge with its casein sized cards, or shuffling the casein made pieces of Mah Jong. And when she takes her nap her eyes are soothed by the soft casein dolors on the bedroom wall. • "Hats off to the dairy cow.' GROW BETTER CHICKS ON A" DIET OF MILK AND MINERAL MASH ^ Chicks will grow almost twice as rapidly on a diet of milk and a mineral mash than on water and scratch grains, according to the Blue Valley Cream ery Institute. The institute, after reviewing data covering over a hundred feeding experiments, finds the milkmineral mash method the best feeding method for quick growth and full bodily development. The growth-promoting, idisease-re sisting qualities of milk were shown, says the institute summary, in one experiment at the N. J. Agricultural Exp. station when it was found that 66 milk-fed pullets at ten weeks of age weighed as much as 100 pullets of the same age without milk in their diet. It was further found at the Wisconsin college of agriculture that chicks generously supplied with skimmed milk were grown far better on a home-mixed dry mash, consisting of 80 parts yellow corn meal, 20 parts wheat middlii gs, 5 parts raw bond (about 50 per cent calcium phosphate), 5 parts pearl grits (calcium carbonate), and one part of common salt, than they were on the usual scratch, feed and water. The antriachitic factor was made up by allowing ^Wie chicks in the open sunshine. Of thousands of chicks fed in this manner, even when confined on board floors for weeks, no rickets or leg weakness was encountered and the mortality was especially low despite a late and wet spring. In feeding chicks milk it should always be in the same form, the institute q£ates. Never feed sweet milk one day and sour the next. If allowed to sour to the clabbered stage, the whey and solid material should be mixed before feeding, for much of the lactic acid and mineral content is in the whey. Twwncvw Fluff and Rag NRS. B. rorr Rugs made to order PHONE 1U . WEST McHENRY. ILL Insure--In Swe-Insnrince WITH W m. G. Schreiner Auctioneering OFFICE AT RESIDENCE Phoo##3-R McHENRY, ILL. Wonderful values for a dime in our ten cent section. Erickson's Dept. store. 'Quality Qrocers * Cor. Green and Elm Sts., McHenry, Ilk The National Tea Stores have taken the guesswork out of housekeeping by their plainly markedt prices and by the ELIMINATION of the CHARGE SYSTEM, the DELIVERY SYS| TEMand all the COSTLY methods of the "take your order by phone, delivery and charge it" grocer. The National Tea Co. has passed these savings on to the consumer in the way of lower prices for quality merchandise. FOR SATURDAY Macaroni Cross" 3Pkg8°25C CHiiP P. & G. White 1 fl 01/111 Naptha 1U Bars 38c Tuna Fish All White 1-2 s can 25c PUFFED RICE &"15c Grape Juice "s™* 47cp»- 25c SOUP Campbell's Tomato 3 CANS 25c Armour's Oats 3 25c PRESERVES National Brand STRAWBERRY 16 oz. 28c PTT A Q Home JL r> / % Telephone NO. 2 CAN 2'"<» 25c Tomatoes S S.212c NAVY BEANS SALMON CHOICE HAND tlCKED 17c Medium TALL CAN Red 17c CANDY Butter- Per scotch Lb. Rellogg's Corn Flakes««« CHEESE Mild American with fiatural creamy flavor LB. 28C

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy