Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Oct 1903, p. 10

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

-1" '.If'-. W'r- Warranted;? ^ Suits V."*S^>V ^-I Html TWlntuHy WiapollltQk $•••'•-• ^'o^i OVere6ats ill prices ranging from $1.50 to $15.00 w, oWVil V% Catas Wampold * Mi, it tm Call and see the line. We can fit yon ont of our stock. Yon need uot look at a small sample, but yon can see the Garment. B00T5 AND SHOES "\ Try a pair of Selz Shoes and be conyinced that you get a better > Shoe for yonr mon^y than any other make. Selz guarantee }' ttieir Shoes. . v ' . Uatonw, OlsvM, MIttem, H«U, Cmp*, Oreoertea man Flear. West McHenry. JOS. W. FREUND. I f AIL 1903 1904 Willi ; - M */^v We are preparing for an enormous trade this fall in all lines of warm goods. Our prices are the low­ est consistent with good Goods. Call and examine our line of Bed Blankets, Underwear, Flannels, Flanneletts, Baratheas, Tennis and Outing Flannels. New Dress Goods and Waistings in the Silk, Wool and Mercerized Goods. Underskirts, Walking and Dress Skirts, Silk Shirt Waists. We have the fih- est line of Shoes ever shown in this vicinity. A new line of MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS ranging in price from $2.50 to $5.00. MEN'S SUITS and OVER- GOATS made to your measure, 1000 samples to Select from. Perfect fit. style and price guaran­ teed. Gloves and Mittens, Caps, Overalls, Shirts, Jackets, Etc. Floor Oil Cloth and Squares. Com­ plete line of fresh pure Groceries, Teas, Coffees and Spices, Flour, Corn Meal, Graham, Etc. Goods ^delivered promptly. Yours truly, West ricMenry. H. J. Walsh. /K A »*hi A A ti*« A «tt A A i A «^i A A A A A A TTI ITT ITT !•» TTi !M TTT "X* »T" 'x* "X f V "X* w "X* w "X* X \L* *X* 'X 'X* *X* 1y | Prices Right! | goods Right! # Customers Satisfied ' That's just the way business is conducted at this store. We defy competition even with Depart­ ment Stores or Mail Order Houses. Our Goods are right and Customers are satisfied or they would not come back the second time. We are J inhere to do business, are doing business and will 3Sf£<iontinue to do so. We attribute our ever increas- J ing trade to courteous treatment of our customers and giving 6ood furniture at Ronest Prices | | Jacob Juslen. | A s/Ta. tTi *T« A A »•» »*i*« »•« A A A »T» i A A A »i*« A if* A A .«f. -t-^ ,XI l4,114>1 t^l IJI iji ̂ ijl IJJJ lj.1 tj," 1^1 IJI 1^1 If I | M (II I PH IL IP JAEGER I I GENERAL COflMISSION MERCHANT i SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO THE SALE OP Dressed Beef, riutton, Hogs, Veal, Poultry, Hides, Etc., Butter and Eggs This is the oldest honse on the street. application. COLD STORAGE FREE TagB and price lists furnished on mm mm Stall i & 3 , Pulton St Wholesale Market. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. % ; \ Varicocele \ SD% Hydrocele Ho Cutting or Pain, Gumrant--d OHM OR Monmy Rmfundmd. 1 M M T U n d e r m y t r e a t m e n t t h i s i n » l d i o u » d i x e t u w wWliVVVUX rapidly disappears. Pain ceaaea almost In­ stantly. The stagnant blood id driven from the dilated veina and &11 soreness vanished and towelling subsides. Every Indication of Varicocele vanlbheB aiid in its stead comes the pleasure of perfect health. •>! 1 ?u.re to *Uy cured, Contagiou* lllood Poison, Kidney and m r Troul>leii, Nervous Uebiiity, and allied trouble*. My methods of treatment and cure are original with me and cannot b# obtained elsewhere. I make no *'x peri mentis. All c&ues I take I cure. h. j. TILI/0T80N, m.d. Certainty of Cure r̂̂ Tcurlf::̂ ̂ tjb« Master Sp«eUli«tof Chicaco who5*«r lnulu y* 1-3T VMiat I have done for others I can do for yott. V»wiViijooe«le. Established 1880. , ^,!p. ^„or_a' perinuueiit cur© will be reasonable aud (Cormjuutku.) no more than|rou will l>e willing to pay for benefits con- loine. W: *3SR?- fcrred. I CAN Clllili VOU at Correspondence Confidential ;̂;r,ny Uwu?Lm"l!ei'FHEE upo^lppuSu^ °f Ch*rge* My home treatment la euocesefuL My book* and H. J. TILLOTSON, M. D., 500 TilJotoon BuiUlag, &4 Dearborn Street, CHICAOO. Tka KoWMr Orak. In Central America there lives the { robber crab, of almost incredible sira j and somewhat resembling a huge spi- | <ler. The distance between its extend- j od claws sometimes as great as j t welve feet. It spends the greater part j of its life on land and climbs the cocoa- nut trees, on the fruit of which it lives almost entirely. It digs in the ground deep tunnels and lines them 'with co- eoanut fiber. When engaged the robber crab can break a man's limb with its powerful claws. Animals approaching it too closely often receive an ugly pinch which they do not soon forget, and it is on record that one of these crabs has captured and tried to drag off a goat. To open a cocoanut the robber crab removes the bark from the end con­ taining the three eyes,'-one only of which is easily penetrated, and, having found this, it revolves the nut agaiimt the point of one of its spindle legs un­ til the opening is large enough for It to Insert its great claw. With this it breaks the shell, grinds the contents iuto small pieces and carries them to Its month. > , Morality Versus KteltMtvfcIttt> As a man gi*ows older he perceives that the moral qualities are worth a good deal more in friendship than the intellectual qualities and that no bril­ liancy of mind, no charm of conversa­ tion, can make up for lack of loyalty, charity and generosity in social inter* course. Young men of brains are dis­ posed to value mainiy mental power in other people, and it is a human quality to forgive much in men and women of genius. r This is a false ap­ preciation of the respective values of mentality and the moral qualities. The time comes when a man learns that unselfishness and affection are better in wife or friend than intellectual pow­ er accompanied by intense self love. Fortunate the man who does not come to this knowledge too late.--San Fran­ cisco Bulletin. Tha Foam on Soda Wat»f. Foam Is a natural product, being caused by the escape of air or gas from a viscid liquid. In the case of soda water iT*ls the escape of the carbonic acid gas from the sweetened beverage that causfcs the attractive sparkling appearance, but the sweetened water alone would give rise to but a small quantity of foam, as the gas would too easily escape. In order to prevent this some mucilaginous substance is usually added to the sirup, which ren­ ders the mass more viscous, so prevent­ ing the gas from escaping and produc­ ing the attractive head of foam so familiar to alt The Npae. Use the nose to breathe through and not the mouth. In winter and spring particularly must this care be taken, if the mouth is kept open large drafts of cold air rush directly In upon the lungs, chilling the body almost in- gtantly. If the^mouth is kept shut the air can reach the lungs only by the circuit of the nose and head, and it be­ comes warmed before reaching the lungs. It is asserted that the reason the American nose is becoming more and more narrow Is owing to the repre- hensive habit of breathing through the mouth rather than following the inten­ tion of nature. Rnaalana aa Linsalata. Every educated Russian knows three languages besides his own and many of them four. Knowledge of the Eng­ lish, French and German languages is considered necessary to culture. A fam­ ily having small children employs two to four governesses, from whom the children learn foreign tongues before they are taught the more difficult Rus­ sian. This command of language makes possible the fact that Russians have a better knowledge of the world's affairs than any other people. Bead The Plaindealer "want" '* My hair was falling out and turning gray very fast. But your Hair Vigor stopped the falling and restored the natural color."--Mrs. E. Z. Benomme, Cohoes, N. Y. It's impossible for you not to look, old, with the color of seventy years in your hair I Perhaps you are seventy, .and you like your gray hair I If not, use Ayer's Hair Vigor. In less than a month your gray hair will have all the dark, rich color of youth. SI.M a bottle. All taigtUU. If your (lrtieeifii cannot supply you, send us ono dollar and we wirl v'.-qtress you a bottle. He sure and privo the nunie of your nearest exiirens olhce. Addreas, ' J. C. A Villi CO., Lowell, Mass. 8ENT TO ELGIN. WMl ftMWI Ball Player of Wfrneoada • Goea Insane, William, Che 18-year-old son of Ed. Golding of Wanconda, was found in­ sane in the Connty court of Lake county Monday and taken to Elgin says the Waukegan Gazette. Golding is a well known ball player and he played in the Wauconda team at the Libertyville fair. Whether or not he. received an injury or became overheated in the game is not known, but soon afterward he began to mani­ fest evidences of mental derangement. He grew gradually worse until it be­ came neeessary to watch him constant­ ly. He realized his condition and said he wanted to go to Elgin for trei^ment Auction Sale. The nndersigned will sell at pablic auction, on his farm, 8| miles east of McHenry, and 2 miles northwest of Volo, on Tuesday, Ofet. 27, commenc­ ing at 10 o'clock a. m. sharp, the follow­ ing described property: 22 steers, com­ ing 3 years old; 7 steers, coming 4 years old; cow, coming in soon; heifer, com­ ing in soon; 2-yeai^old heifer; 2-year-old boll; sorrel team horses, well matched, 9 years old; sorrel horse, 12 years old; bay horse, 8 years old; bay horse, com­ ing 4 years old; 2 roan mares, well matched, coming 2 and 3 years old; Prince Noir colt, coming 8 years old; 4-months-old colt; 4 old sows; 160 barred Plymouth Rock chickens; 7 full blood white Ply month Bock ehickens; 16 fnll blooded Bronze turkeys; lumber wagon; truck wagon; 2 top buggies, one nearly newjsetbob sleds; swell body cutter; Prairie seeder; pulverizer; check row corn planter; Champion mower; horse rake; Champion grain binder; 2 bay racks; Deering corn binder; corn culti­ vator; Bock Island hay loader; hog rack; set dnmp boards; 3 walking plows; Western steam feed cooker; drag; sulky plow; fanning mill; swill cart; grind stone; set blacksmith tools; Charles Daly shot gun; grain bags; 2 sets double har­ ness; single harness; Union butter churn; 2 cream cans; wash boiler; bed­ stead and springs; cook stove; small hand clipper;> Chicago wheel horse clip­ per. (Farm implements mostly all new.) 300 bushels good seed oats; 25 bnshels barley; 12 tons timothy hay; 2 tons up­ land hay; stack straw; 20 acres corn in shocks; 40 bu. fine potatoes; 15 bu. ap­ ples; wagon load fine pumpkins; cabbage and other things too numerous to men­ tion. Free lunch. TERMS OF SALE: All sums of $10 and under, cash; over that amount a credit of 12 months' time will be given on good bankable notes drawing 6 per cent, interest per annum. Two per cent, off for cash. No property to be removed until settled for. Jos. N. MILLER. F. K. Granger, auctioneer; Henry Stoffel, clerk. The undersigned will sell at public auction on the old Ellis farm on Woos- ter lake, near Big Hollow, two miles sonth of Ingleside station, on Thursday, Octobar 29, 1908, commencing at one o'clock p. m., sharp, the following prop­ erty: Hay in barn and stack, corn in shock, farming implements, horses and COWM, household furniture. TERMS OF SALE: Sums of $10 and under, cash; over that'amount a credit of 6 months' time will be given on good bankable notes, drawing 6 per cent, interest. J. CALLEBY. WALTER WHITE, auctioneerr "Watch the Kidneys." "When chey are affected, life is in danger," says Dr. Abernethy, the great English physician. Foley's Kidney Cure makes sound kidneys. Concern­ ing this remedy Mr. P. H. Duffy, of Ashley, 111., writes, "This is to certify that I have taken two bottles of Foley's Kidney Cure and it has helped me more than any other medicine. I tried many advertised remedies, but none of them gave me any relief. My druggist rec­ ommended Foley's Kidney Cure and it has cured me. Before commencing its use I was in sach shape I could hardly get up when once down." Sold by G. W. Besley, W. McHenry. Excursion Tickets to St Paul and Minne­ apolis and Return, will be sold by the North-Western daily until November 80, 1908, from McHenry, 111., at $15.84 for the round trip, limited to return until December 15. 1903. Apply to Agents Chicago & North-Western B'y. Oct. 31. When to Commence. Very often persons are afflicted with kidney disease and do not realize the fact until those organs are partially de­ stroyed, and that is why kidney dis­ eases are so generally considered fatal. When you have headaches, backaches, dizziness and capricious appetite, com­ mence at once the use of Foley's Kidney Cure and you will escape the dangers of kidney disease. Sold by G. W. Besley, W. McHenry. AUTOMATIC WEIGHING AND (PACKING. n Another vital precaution taken with : *5 ddley's Famous Coffees All Dudley Coffees in the various kinds are put op in one-pound packages, e,ther in cans, cartons or parchment-lined bags. Each of these packages is • I"?;6 'f i ^ sealed. Coffee put up in this way will retain its flavor and aroma indefinitely In order to still further insure the retention of the delightful flavor and aroma which we work so hard to obtain, we refrain from grinding and put up all Dudley's Coffees unground/~ Cost no more than ordinary coiieos. Just try them once and learn something to your advantage. M. J. WALSH. SOLD EXCLUSIVE THIS CITY BY IN m Opening "Backint" Safes. -Brery big concern dealing in strong box<78 employs a professional safe breaker against those frequent and of­ ten costly occasions when the safe sold to some consumer "gets out of whack," says a New York paper. The work of opening a bucking safe is usually a matter of minutes with the profes­ sional, but occasionally he is obliged to send for a half ton of tools before he Is enabled to procure the magic ses­ ame. Often a half hundred clerks are kept idle for hours and business mana­ gers spin around like tops while the safe breaker leisurely pothers about with the combination. When the safe or vault is finally opened it is usually discovered that some one connected with the firm is to blame for altering the combination and then keeping tlie matter to himself. The professional safe opener frequently has calls from out of town, and on these occasions he usually finds that some merchant who has just bought his first safe changed the combination and then forgot & s 'h Cold and the Universe. " Heat can exist only where there is an atmosphere, and then it must be con­ stantly supplied with fuel to overcome the law of constant repulsion and dif­ fusion. Cold is the absence of heat and exists everywhere. It overcomes disin­ tegration and preserves the universe. It enforces the universal law of the electric attraction and cohesion of at­ oms and worlds. Cold must predominate to preserve ' the universe. There is a billion times a billion more cold in the universe than heat. There always has been and there always will be. The heat of the sun compared with the cold that surrounds it is as a mustard seed to Jupiter. The earth's heat In comparison to the cold t̂ at surrounds it Is as an orange to the solar system. Then what folly to talk of the uni­ verse having begun in white heat and the earth having been a molten world and the sun's great burning spheres 1-- Booklover's Magazine. Do Good--It Pajra. A Chicago man has observed that "Good deeds are better than real estate deeds--some of the latter are worthless. Act kindly and gently, show sympathy and lend a helping hand. You cannot possibly lose by it" Most men appre­ ciate a kind word and encouragement more than substantial help. There are persons in this community who might truthfully say: "My good friend, cheer up. A few doses of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will rid you of your cold, and there is no danger whatever from pneumonia when you use that medicine. It always cures. I know it for it has helped me ont many a time." Sold by all druggists. Animal* •>< Mp: It seems strange that no animal, un­ less it be the squirrel, seems to build itself a shelter with the express object of keeping off the rain, which they all so much "dislike. Monkeys are miser­ able In wet and could easily build shel­ ters if they had the sense to do so. "As the creatures hop disconsolately along in the rain," writes Mr. Kipling in his "Beast and Man In India," "or crouch on branches, with dripping .backs set against the tree trunk as shelter from the driving storm, they have the air of being very sorry for themselves." But even the orang ou- tang, which builds a small platform in the trees on which to sleep at night, never seems to think of a roof, though the Dyaks say that when it is very wet it covers itself with the leavee of the pandanus, a large fern. ' Mr. C. J. EdmondB of Lincoln, 111., traveling solicitor for a hurge printing house, who is well and favorably known throughout Central Illinois, says under date of May 11th, 1908: "I have used Harts' Honey and Horehonnd for the cure of Coughs and Colds in my family for the past two pears and have always found the medicine to be all that it is recommended to be. We always keep a bottle of it in the house." Harts' Honey and Horehonnd is undoubtedly one of the best cough medicines com­ pounded. It contains no opium or oth­ er stupefying drugs, and is the safest in use for small children. Large bottles 25c, 50c and $1.00. Sold by G. W. Bee* ey, druggist, W. McHenry. Sex Characteristic*. Have you ever noticed in a fashion­ able crowd how much like men the women are and how much like women the men? It is not that the men are really effeminate or the women really masculine, as a keen observer once put It, but there is. nevertheless, a curious approximation in type. It may be to some extent a matter of dress. Women affect the mannish in their costume, men in summer seek more color. But It Is not dress akme. The woman's face seems stronger and the man's less sen­ sual than it would have been even a century ago. The figure, too, has chang­ ed. The man is less gross, the woman more athletic, and both an taller*-- London Tatler. - Confessions of a Priest. "Rev. Jno. S. Cox, of Wake, writes, "For 12 years I suffered with Yellow Jaundice and tried all sorts of medicines, bnt got no relief. Then I be­ gan the use of Electric Bitters and feel $h$t I am pow cured of a disease that held me ip its grasp fqj* twelve years'.' If yup WfrUt- a jrtjij&ble medicine for Liver and Kidney trouble, stomach dis­ order or general debility, get Eleictrio Bitters. It's guaranteed by Julia •. Story, McHenry, and G. W. Besley, W. McHenry. Only 50c. His Other Nana*. The candidate for the place Qi oosch- man had been weighed and was not wanting, according to his new mis­ tress' lights. Then the question of his name, which was Patrick, came up. The mistress objected to it in her heart, so she explained that it was her custom always to call her coachman by his family name. Had he any ob­ jections? "Not the slightest ma'am." "What is your last name, Patrick?* "Fitspatrick, ma'am." ; ; STOXtIA* r The Kind You H»w Always f m The Store is filled with all kinds of Winter Goods and the weather not ^firery wifitery consequently busi- C V ' w s s i s a l i t t l e q u i e t . ' S o t o - : ' *7^Btiniiilate' 'trade "" • 5 of 6 per cent. off everything in the Store, for cash, Ir6m How until November 1st, except SATURDAYS, the 24th and 31st when I-will allow ^ Anything in the S%ore. No*?/is your chance to stock up for winter. All sales must be $1.00 or more to get DISCOUNT i 4:1 •it =09: UhmniiniinmnHnuniniui"iiniiunniuiuui AVfcgetabie Preparationfor As­ similating the Food andRegula- ling ttie Stomachs andBovrels of 1 M A N 1 S /( H1ID K 1 N Promotes Digestion,Cheerful­ ness and Rest.Contains neither Saum,Morphine nor Mineral. OT HARC OTIC. Aw tfOUItSiMUELPtrQm Bmmptm Smi" Mtx.Smu** * lyjiff, tJfr-- • JW * Apeifeci Remedy forConstipa- Hon, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ness and LOS9 OF SLEEP. Por Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of YScSiirale Signature of • * NEW YORK. EXACT copy or WRAmlt In Use For Over Thirty Years CASTORIA THC CINTAUR COMMN\ NCW VORI OITV. f Buffer BusiQtss 61c a lay M Iff tj>« P*4*c* s*rvice that reocJtts why it's the gnattst service -- the best for^tou. CHICAGO TELEPHONE COMPANY k >

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy