Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 3 Nov 1904, p. 8

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* i*' IP- <-4, « ' ' *".y i •ji-'v y,-••.-• P " . BLACK DOGSKIN COATS ,$15.00 BIvACK MARTEN C0AT|is|,||||;j||Pl8.0() BULGARIAN liAMEt COATS i .Lj, U1&20 BROWN RUSSIAN CALF COA'TS.... i.«520 UNDERWiSAR^ HATS, CAPS, GLOVES. ^IXT- tenSoBoots, shoes, groceries! >' " * . - , »« * , "* ' , -1 ' 'WT JOSi W. FREUND Some of you have doubtless heard oi Chase & Sanborn's aild some are using it. No need of telling the users of an article about its good qualities, they ought to know It and th®Y DO- You, who have failed to try it, are respectfully invited to do so at once. We offer you special good things in all departments. New and fresh stuff, remember. No old stickers. . ; 'J- 1 Best granulated Sugar, per 100 pounds $5.45 ^, t 3 packages, 1 lb. each, Seeded Raisins......;|25c s t 3 packages or pounds finest Currants.......1 . .25c " 3jpounds extra large Prunes....................25c . 6 bars Maple City Soap 35c 22 pounds extra fine "whole Rice......., «•... $1.00 We have special bargains in fine Salmon and Canned Goods, We offer you extra inducements in Shoe§, Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, Gloves and Mittens to close out. Look over the Sweaters, Men's Shirts, Ladies', Skirts, Underwear. Ab­ solutely the best for the least. ,£p|iL]^»sloek--ler"sale and building for sale or rent. W. C. EVAN SO I I I Distributed throughout our stock there- are at all times pieces of Furniture marked at less than the usual prices. These are articles bought at special discounts, on which we are willing to make special concessions. One can* therefore, often find here just the arti* wanted a£ja very low figure. I UNDERTAKING n« EMBALMING! IV'..: < Jarcob J usten; I rfi tti tti iti ifi rtl ttl itt tfnti rti rfri rti rti flTi rti rti m rti rti iti r*fri • W9V V V • lV V V V 1 V ®X *x V *4.' vl'fj.® i|i 1^1tyl i HAPPENINGS IN M'HENRY AND I ADJACENT COUNTIES. A Mlaeeltakaeoue AMortacait of Newi Item* In ComdeniuMl Forai Iuc Cmtm* lenre ofBukV IVopl«. A party of Dundee hunters aremooee banting in Minnesota. Threw valnahle prizes offend this jwt in McOmber's corn contest. A nev7 Citizens' State basic h&s bees organized at Genoa J auction. A condensing factory is one of the possibilities for Spring Grove, The St. Charles Home and School for Boys will be opened in December. The open season for shooting quail is from Noyember 10 to December 30. The County Sunday School conven­ tion will be held at Nunda next year. Bargains in stoves and furnishings. Also repairs Osmun Broe. 16 Enter the corn contest at McOmber's. It costs yon nothing and yon may gain much. The first number of "The Witness," Walworth's Blew paper, was published last Week.,' :vV At a recent fair given under the ana- pices of St. Joseph's church at Harvard $1,200 was cleared. The Woodmen are to have no assess­ ment for November, making .four that have been skipped this year. John Nickols of Lake Geneva has White Wyandotte chickens on exhibi­ tion at the world's fair, St. Lonis. Harvard merchants have signed an agreement not to deliver goods after 5 p. m. from Upvember 1 to April 1. Jtidge O H. Gillmore recently spoke at a Republican rally a.t Huntley and whs heartily applauded by his audience. The Hebron basketball teams, both boys' and girls', recently defeated the teams representing the Walworth high school. , H. C. Dunbar has sold his stock and farming implements at Blomfield, Wis., and has moved to a farm near Chicago, where he will conduct a duck farm. 'Tain't no use to sit down and whine, When no fish get tangled on yonr line; Bait your hook with a bnmble-bee And keep on taking Rocky Mountain tea. G. W. Besley. Antioch News: We hope that at the next meeting of the village board our village fathers will do something in re* gard to lighting our Btreets. The lights we now have are a disgrace to any civil* ized community. ' I was troubled with constipation and stomach troubles, lost flesh, my com­ plexion was ruined; Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea brought back my health and complexion. "--Mary Allen, St. Lou­ is. 35 cents. G. W. Besley. Nunda Herald: Gus Y°f?e'. a Wood- stuck man, while running a buzz saw Monday morning, accidentally got his arm near the saw, which cut one bone and severed a main artery, but the phy­ sicians think they will be able to save his arm. { Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera aud Diarrhoea Remedy. This is the moat successful medicine in the world for bowel complaints, and is the only reme­ dy that will cure chronic diarrhoea. Eyery bottle warranted. For sale by all druggists. The automobile is scorching into fic­ tion these days as well as into the un­ wary foot-passenger. In Lippincott's Magazine for November Helen Sherman Griffith (nieee of General Sherman gives an irresistibly funny turn to a dual tour of two couples, in a short story called "Mixed Pairs " » The state central committee has reo- ognized Judge O. H. Gillmore's ability ae an orator and a convincing reasoner and has assigned him to a speaking tour through the counties of Iroquois, Douglas and Jo Daviess. This will not be the first time that the judge has pulled off his coat and helped roll np a big majority for the cause ot Republic­ anism. Woodstock Sentinel: The names of the women who voted at the last gen­ eral election have been registered, but those who did not or have doubts that they have been registered, should go to the regular polling place where they are entitled to yote next Tuesday, Nov. 1, and see that their names are on the list. If they arp not registered they cannot vote unless they swear in their vote. Elgin Courier: Ten minutes after they had received a telegram telling them of a robbery at Fox Lake and that the thief was coming to Chicago, De- tTOtive* and |*uggy of the <>i>- uttl ueiail on duty Wednesday mgat arretted Guy Bandy, .» negro, at the Union depot. The man was taken to the station -and when searched, it is re­ ported, the money was found in bis clothing, The victim «m N. J. Has­ tings of F6x Lake. Harvard Herald: The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Will Douglas of Chemung had a close call from death last Tues­ day. In playing about the house the youngster secured a campaign button, on which there was a sharp pin at­ tached. and the child put the-button in its mouth, with the result that it soon had the button in its throat and when discovered by the mother the child was nearly *choked. Medical aid was called, but before a physician could reach there, the mother succeeded in palling the* button out of the child's throat. Woodstock Sentinel: Miss Freda So- dawater, a fifteen-year-old girl, was brought before Judge Gillmore in the connty court Saturday, Oct. 32, aud by a jury of six was found to be a depend­ ent child. Judge Gillmore gave her in­ to the hands of the Illinois Industrial School for Girls, located at Evanstoc, 111. Mies Freda's parents are dead and her brother-in-law, Eld. Ward, Marengo, her guardian, found that he was un­ able to care for her so brought her into the county court. The institution to which she is sent as a county charge is in no sense a reform school, but one where she will receive the parental care she so much needs. People think it is easy to "run" a newspaper. An exchange says that one week's experience would change the opinion of most people on this subject. Did you ever count the words in a col­ umn of ordinary newspaper print? There are about two thousand words in a column. Suppose you sit down and write a thousand words on some sub­ ject and then another thousand on an­ other until you have written, eight or ten thousand. Try it and see if is easy. Keep that gait up for a month, a year, and see if it is easy. Then chase a local item all over town, and after you have gotten the facts all right) condense them into a few lines--an hour's work that can be read in a few seconds. Do this for a dozen items that seem insignificant after they are print­ ed, but which you know are important. Do this day after day. Ob, * yes, it is easy to "run" a newspaper. Dayton, Ohio, Mrs. Mary Simpson-- "Everything disagreed with me and baby until I used Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. Now baby sleep* and grows like a weed." 85 cents. Tea or tablet form. G. W. Bebley. 11 ' •'11,111 1,11,1 I" Cwicasscd Tuesday. Dick Walsh speut Tuesday in Chicago. Peter H. Weber waa a Chicago visitor passenger Miss relatives ia Elgin. T. L. Grot wjto a Wednesday morning. Mrs. F. A. Boh lander spoilt Wednes­ day in the windy city. Mrs. W. F. Gallaher spent a few days in Woodstock last week. Mr. huu Mrs. Rollin Waite spent Sun­ day with Elgin relatives. M. J. Walsh was a business transact­ or in Chicago Wednesday. Isaac Went worth of Gilberts spebt Sunday with relatives here. Miss Etta Rosenberg spent several days the past week in Elgin. 3. W. Freund and family entertained relatives from Johnsburgh on Sunday. Mrs. Geo. Meyers and sons, Marcellns and Paul, were Wauconda visitors Tues­ day. Mrs. W. McClintock of Chicago is visiting her sister, Mrs. D. G. Wells, this week." „ Casper tierbes wettf to Chicago Wednesday, where he has secured em­ ployment. Jonas Sftodberg of Plainville, Kan., was a guest of old McHenry friends a few days this week. * 1 *. Mrs. Geo. Meyers and daughter, Etta, were Chicago and DesPlaines visitors Saturday and Sunday. * Miss Nellie Wilson of Chicago is visit­ ing her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Sherburne, and family. Miss Mary Block left*for Dundee last week where she has accepted a lucrative positioh in a millinery store. Mr. and Mrs. John Walsh and two daughters and Miss Kate Walsh were Woodstock visitors Tuesday. 'Miss Delia Heimer went to Chicago Wednesday morning, where she will join a party of friends for a visit to the St. Louis fair. Rev. J. M. Cormack has returned from Sycamore, where he has been vis­ iting his son, Kimball, who is in the custody of his grandparents. ~ *" \ H. H. Miller and family of Rockford have been visiting Rev. and Mrs. J. M. Cormack"and family recently. They were accompanied upon their return by Mrs. Cormaok, tbeir daughter. Mrs. A. W. McOmber and daughter, lone, left for their home in Sioux Falls, S. D., Thursday, after spending a month with friends and relatives here. Miss Celia Frisby accompanied them as far as Chicago. The youngsters of McHenry behaved themselves quite decently on Hallow­ e'en night, very few pranks being com- mitted on that evening. Shoes we have; the style as well "quality at lowest pric&k # Try our specliil . kadie^, lifld Mea> @ IN DRESS GOODS AND WAISTINtiS « t *;jshades and grades. New line of ready-; ; made Skirts and Waists. Iti j(i.jris)!$ff^^ tfaejo^e^t r. 1. BOWER, WEST M(«Y, ILL. : •. • S I " . --BUY--'. I SWHITE PEARL FLOURS Because. IT 15 THE BEST! Try a sack and if you don't find it so, return it lyour money will be cheerfully refunded. and'*' -1 Also Groceries that are right at prices that are right JOHN STOFFEL West McHenry. H. PETESCH druggist; Patent Medicines. Toilet Articles.; A A A A A A A A A .•». A A A A A »•• Vh A A A AAt /iV i .t, A A A, .*K .•. A A A A A .̂ . A A .1*, A A A AAi AjAlAlA YVWWWtFV v WWW ^ ^ WtWWW W V w V V w q . ' V w A J I 1 * 1 , ^ W ^ -- H O M E N ' S 4?%f 'Sf •HOCI (Afts* CKiU-Om. if I onlr Ka« m ef <iWm HNar 1MM till morning. .. medium and heavy weights, ^SIO.OO and up. Our line of Sweaters, Underwear, Gloves, Mittens 3nd Caps is complete in all the popular grades. Ladies Dress Skirts in black, brown, gray, navy and Novelties, all hand tailored and new styles. Ladies \fine silk Shirt Waists in black, navy and brown, nicely trimmed fromu^.. 3.7 5 to 5-QO each ress Goods* Suitings, Fjannels, Flannelettes, etc., all grades and colors, Press silks, 36-inches wide, Upf . . . . f 5 C t o $ 1 . 5 0 ry our 50c tear Non<*..belter, p^al of Minnesota Mystic FlouV, only v w.. -<•. . . . .$K6o per^ack. BINKS IS RIGHT! There's nothing better as an outdoor comforter than a good, well built "Inter-fgii national" Overcoat. Get your orders in before the:*,^. snow falls. All the latest styles and samples galore West McHenry, hone choose SPECIAL WHILE THE! LAST Extra heavy Tennis Flannel, in.- plain and fancy colors, at per 9c Extra heavy 10-4 bed blank­ ets, weight 2% poundvS, color d r a b , p e r p a i r . . . . . . . . . ; Remember this Blanket will out-weigh any Blanket sold at 7Sc. Extra large and heavy 11-4 Bed Blankets, color drab and white, fancy border, wt. per pr Hand Decorated Dinner Set Free! r ^ ^ ̂ , ... . .. , Begin your cash purchases at once and ask for a Home Mutual Saving Stamp with each and every ten cents you spend in our store. Remember we are leaders in our line. We sell our goodslower than the lowest and give this beautiful hand decorated semi-vitrious porcelain ware ABSOLUTELY FREE to our cash customers. We have contracted with the largest factory in the world to supply us with ~ an unlimited amount of this ware and here is a chance for you to obtain a handsome dinner set (one piece at a time) at absolutely nO cost to you. We have control of this design and can match the de­ corations for years to come. Ask for stamps with each purchase. Get a set of hand decorated Dishes free. Come in and see the beautiful decoration and get full particulaiaft-^Bear i« mind t&eli^ stamps cost you nothing. * • ! ' -- - Full-sized 12-4 B^d Blankets, wt. t / A 4 % lbs, drab only, -never sold less \| f|U w e h a v e t h e m o n s a l e n o w a t ^ * 'mS* . ' • . CASH DEPARTMENT STORE, McHENRY, ILLINOIS. 'PHONE, 314 Sixty-inch black coney scarf, a fur that will wear and al­ w a y s l o o k w e l l a t . . . * * . • • • • Fancy 27-inch Flannelette, at p e r y a r d . . . . . A Men*s all-wool Socks, alllQ/ |C/ IA/ colors, at per pair..«. i.•••>» Ladies black fleeced jkosejJJj ^5( Men's extra heavy fleeced Un­ d e r w e a r a t . , . • ̂ , . . . . . . Best Cambric Remnants, per yd..3K^p Chicago Huck Toweling, bleached ^ n d u n b l e a c h e d , a t p e r y a r d . . . . . . . Fancy all pure Linen Table Cloth, with set design, at per yard, only..1 "-S. ... ' - •

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