Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 26 Mar 1914, p. 5

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e ir~-< ^ >r ^-"i *"jT*. 1 'r ^ J ^ • 1 "A * <J t-^ ^ : >V * a pp\»f i^viSKi, . ^MlSiS'ir®[ia,*T PLAJNDEAUEB, 1THENBY, * I i ir i jff i: INSTANT RELIEF SORE &<?& SJ8H£iL5 %'•'*•'• yv-vSore feet, tender feet,, chilblains ami v , v swollen feet'cufed every time. & "• . . ' •>!>"••. • -• Burton's Sudicura • : will make your feet well, no matter what ails them. Sudicura is a soluble foot powder, and a little dueled in your stockings daily means relief from all foot troubles. Try it and be convinced <i •&$$ k'rS)!.- . For sale- by N . H . P E T E S C H DRUGGIST McHENRY & Bell % W U*tsSs System Bad news flies fast and is mag­ nified by distance. Reports of accidents cause apprehension ait home when some member of the family is traveling. ^ Much worry may be saved those left Be­ hind if the traveler will telephone hom$ frequently, particulady when there is an^ disturbance of public order where hHti happens to be. A telephone itinerary, prepared before starting on a journey, also will enaofe those at home to reach the traveler quickly should occasion demand. Use PiltftlKlft IliiMi Chicago Telepnone Company •J H. Con rath, District Manager, Telephone 9903 fr P H I L I P J A E G E R GENERAL COflMISSION MERCHANT SPBCIAL ATTENTION QIVSN TO THS SAIdt OF Pressed BmV. riutton. Hogs, Veal, Poultry, Hide*, Etc., Butter and Ejf» This is the oldest hocus on the street Tags and price list* furnished on application. CQLD STORAGE FREE UaiS.*d»,t CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. J. C. DEBRECHT QUALITY service right prices Phone 625-M-2 Johnsburgh, Ul. ' * { ' HOW DOES NICE GREEN LETTUCE SUIT YOU FOR, SUNDAYS ' I now that the warm days are setting in. v To be had every Saturday at the store OF J. C. DEBRECHT Masquelet's East Sidi You can depend upon the quality of our goods and the" service in our &ore. Wis endeavor to carry a com­ plete assortment ofvarioys sundries always found in s| f i r s t - c l a s s d r u g - v * f XX DOTTBEKIA ANTITON FUKNOgr YOUR FHYSICJAN, ALL W HOURS BAY OK NKBT v McHENRY, ILL. Still On the Job with a dandy line of fancy \ . and staple groceries. We also carry a full line of 1 kenten eatables which you should not overlook. Phone us yowr onfer and we'll assure yo# that it will have our prompt attention and will he delivered to your very door, I .. Math. La u res Wont S » Wes tTMcHenry i v . i,r £• it - NEIGHBORING NEWS AS CHRONICLED BY OUR ABLE CORPS OF CORRESPONDENTS .•M. jnHNfiRITROB. Father Royer was a caller at St. John's today and made n long stay. Quite a number of our residents went to McHenry last Saturday to cast their vote at the tawo aauens.--Ik's a safe bet that John Neisen got many votes froui here. The school trustees have begun in earnest to excavate the school base­ ment. Many a load went to the cem­ etery to fill up holes and will be a de­ cided benefit to the grave yard. Roads are getting dry and dusty. Now for a good dragging. Where are the road men? Call them up and don't give them any rest until they put on the finishing touches. Good roads mean a lot for Johnsburg. For reasons which have not been made public Father M. Grath did not make his advertised speech here last Sunday afternoon. Rev. Grath was in McHenry on that day and the public is interested in knowing why the lec ture was not given as advertised. Next week Friday on the feast of our Lady of Sorrows the ChristSscher Muetter Verein receives holy Easter communion at 8:30 o'clock, taking breakfast in the parish hall after­ wards. A Franciscan father is expect ed to help out Thursday and Friday This promises to be a big day for the women of Johnsburg. Nicholas Smith, who is now a student at Ivenrick Seminary, St. Louis, Mo. will be ordained a priest some time this spring. Tomorrow he will be or dained a deacon and on Saturday he wilt be made a sub-deacon. He will undoubtedly celebrate his first mass at <St. John's church here some time in June. His many friends in and. around Johnsburg will be pleased to receive 4hi* good news.. Father Bet ihold is the owner of a new di; sol\ ing siereopticon picture ma­ chine and is busy preparing to enter tain the parish with a grand, enter­ taining and educational lecture on Germany. The show will be much longer and finer thaii last Sunday-and the pictures are said to be the best ob­ tainable in Chicago for that purpose. He visited Germany very extensively in 1904 and 1905 and is in a position to handle the subject well. Our reverend pastor refuses to go into the local option campaign. He gav? the reasons for this and wants the women to vote as they please, but to be sure and get out. Thank heaven the start. has been made to regulate to some extent the hours of the saloons, at least in this territory. This may not cure every evil, but it's a start in the right direction and if the rules are observed it will make things look brighter in 1916, when the question will come up again. If more concerted action were attempted among inn keep­ ers there would not be such a big howl against them. Let's hope for the good. John A. Bugner, a former Johnsburg boy, but now a resident of Alvado, O., writes that it looks like a late spring out in his country. Last year, he states, spring was also a little late in arriving, but nevertheless the crops turned out fine. The wheat, he adds, will not be near as good as last year, as the absence of a mantle of snow dur­ ing the severe cold spell caused much of it to freeze. The thawing by day and freezing at night at this time is also damaging to the wheat crop Speaking of hog cholera he says that the farmers in his community lost quite a number of porkers thru this disease, he being one of the few lucky ones to escape the loss of a hog in this manner. The letter was dated March 23 and he finished same in this manner: "We had about an inch of snow t/his morn­ ing. Well, I see by the paper that the people out there are going to vote on the wet and dry question. I hope it will go wet all right. We voted on the proposition five or six years ago, the wets winning. They are very strict around here. There is only one saloon to every 500 population." TKRKA COTTA. Mrs. Chaa. L. Buck is on the sick list. Arthur Shales of Elfin visited rela­ tives here recently. Mrs. Allen Jackson was a Huntley visitor Wednesday last. Lester and Forest Wingate of Elgin were recent visitors here. Miss Agnes Conway is spending the week at Woodstock, attending insti­ tute. • Mrs. Nellie Biggy of Chicago is spending a couple of weeks at B. F. Martin's. Miss Ferol Abbot of Cary spent the week end as the guest of Miss Mildred Steinbach. Miss Emma Conway and friend of Elgin spent Sunday at the former's home here. Misses Dorothy and Eleanor Walsh are spending several days at the home of M. Knox. Mrs. M. J. Walsh «nd children and Miss Mary Burke of McHenry spent Monday at M. Knox's. Mrs. Frank McMillan and daughter, Eleanor, are spending the week with IStlVCS at Spriug UHIVH Misses Gertrude Kle^n, Eleanor Pha- Un, Florence Knqx and Anna Rydquist are attending teachers' Institute at Woodstock this week. Mesdatnes M. A. Conway, P. H. Con­ way and M. Knox attended the meet­ ing of the Social Workers' club at the home of Mrs. Ed. Knox Saturday after- qoon. Mr. and Mrs, B, F. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. M, A, Conway, Mr, and Mrs. M- Knox, Misses Eleanor and Edna Pha- lin, Florenoe Knox and Marion Con­ way, Messrs. Ray and Ed. jConway at­ tended the K. of C. banquet at McHen­ ry last Tuesday evening. "1 OSTEND. Dorr Shermkn is spending this week #ith Grandpa Ilobart. William Thomas was hulling clover .Tuesday, trying to catch up to 1914. No schoblthisweAktThe teachers are all attending institute at Wood­ stock. Miss Alice Richardson came home Saturday from a visit with Chicago friends. It looks as tho all the milk in this locality was going to Ringwood. We hear that six more dairies will be on Bowman's list April 1. Warren Francisco has two very sick horses--were taken sick last week Fri­ day night with colic. Dr. Wheeler is caring for them and they are getting along nicely. • The relatives and friends of Mrs. Merritt Thomas are very much excited over the news of her very serious con­ dition at the Woodstock hospital, where she underwent a surgical operation last week.. Mr. Landgren, who resides, on the James R. Sayler farm, now owned by E. J. Fellows, was thrown from a wag­ on Sunday, breaking- both bones in one of his legs. We hear a line broke, giving the horses freedom, with the above named result. The family have the sympathy of the neighborhood. Mrs. Jessie Harrison left March 12 for Crookston, Minn., but after her husband had reached there safely with their goods her condition was so seri­ ous that Mr. Harrison rented his farm and took Mrs. Harrison to Rochester, Minn., for treatment. Mr. Harrison's mother returned to Illinois with their two children, Helen and Richard. KIMOVUOIt H. M. Stephenson waa a Chicago vis­ itor Wednesday. Bert McCannon moved his family to his new farm Monday. M I?. Mary Smith was a McHenry visitor one day last week, v Miss TIelen Kruse of Richmond vis­ it Dorcas Foss Tuesday. Warron Foss and wife were shopping in the city last Wednesday. Mrs. Libbie Allen attended the fu neral of her cousin in Elgin Sunday. Lewis McOmber of McHenry spent Monday night with Paul Stephenson. Mary Bell has been spending a few days with her sister in Spring Grove Mrs. L. A. McCannon and Mrs. Chas. Thomson of Greenwood visited Libbie Simpson one day last week. The W. C. T. U. will meet Thurs­ day, April 2, with Mrs. Luella Steph­ enson. All invited to attend. Mrs. Nellie Tuttle of Coral came to Ringwood last Friday for a few days' visit with Ringwood relatives. Mrs. Alice McLean of Woodstock spent part of last week with her sister, Frankie Stephenson, and mother, Mrs. Carr. M re. C. E. Tuttle went to Dundee last Thursday, returning Friday even' ing accompanied by her daughter, rs. Edith Todd. -Bp)," V T'?:w i . ?' • -f ' . v~- 4 a'" *•#** fN . .t. . JUDGE BANK w * "3 i&m q0;f: by the loyalty of its customed. They v know better than anybody else how helpful is its attitude towards them, how conservative its methods, how secure the institution. There has always been a reciprocal cordiality between this bank and its customers. They remain cus- fl tomers for years and they bring in their Mends Bank of McHenry FREMONT HOY CLARENCE F. HOY rr75$! m RS •p>; m. •&S, II HOI.COM HVILLK. Henry Buchert was a Sunday caller at Chas. Buchert'8. Mrs. W. T. Beiser visited relatives in Elgin recently. James Doherty of Sandwioh la home on account of sickness. James and Paul Doherty were callers at Ed Knox's Saturday. Mrs. Jay Doherty spent Saturday afternoon at Ed. Knox's. Mrs. Olson and son ol Chicago spent Sunday at Bert La Sage's. Mr. and Mrs. David Powers were McHenry callers Saturday. Miss Lucilc Byrd is attending insti­ tute at Woodstock this week. Mrs. Will Gilbert was the guest of her daughter in Chicago last week. Clarence La Sage is spending his vacation with his mother in Chicago. Miss Edna Colby spent Wednesday and Thursday with her sister, Mrs. T. L. Flanders. Misses Anna and Irene Frifby and Walter Walsh were Sunday visitors at Will Doherty's. Misses Nellie Doherty and Margaret Powers are spending their vacations at their homes here. LET FREEDOM MM [Ry Mrs. O. A. Tabor, Ringwood, III.] Editor's note: On account of two typographical errors appearing in last week's publication of this contribution we are asked to republish same. The word county should have read country and the word, satan should have been sot. The women to vote to the polls will go, Even thru rain or drifting snow; With prayer on the lipa and hope in the heart, / That old king alcohol will have to de­ part, That this beautiful country called "The land of the free," May be freed from salQQQf from sea to sea. As it is now, temptation Is great, From town to town, from lake to lake. So dme out one and *11* reapoqd to the urgent call, By casting the right vpte That will help and save us all, Then free indeed we all shall he^ Even the poor old sot. No slave of the south va« So much of a slave as he. Then no more wasted lives, No mere hearts to break; For this we ask and pray For the dear boys' and •country's sake. My country, 'tis of theet Sweet land of liberty, Of thee I sing; t , Land where rny father* did, Land of the pilgrims' pride. From every mountain side, Let freedom ring. ' Ring, yes, ring, Ring freed from the curse of nun. Ford and Buick Cars Let me give you a demonstration and c^aitt th£ fnerfr» of these Cars. A man will be found at the Garage at all times ready to give demonstrations. Complete line of Automo­ bile Supplies and Repairs. "wmr •rM •US % -v "J *iu John R. Knox, Proprietor 1;mm t'W •• •• Star Garage m 'J 4£- /f The Promise of Spring It's in the air and many things are timely. For example--let us suggest it--the work of Wiring Your House for Eiedtric Service We're in the market to do it--cheaply and with- * out inconvenience to the occupants. PublicServiceCompany OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS STOMACH HEALTH OR NO COST TO YOU Very likely others huve advised you to use Rexall Dyspepsia Tablets, be­ cause scores of people in this commun­ ity believe them to be the best remedy ever made for Dyspepsia and Indiges­ tion. That is what we think, too, be­ cause we know what they have done for others and what they are made of. We have so much faith in them that we urge you to try them at our risk. If they don't help you, they won't cost you a oeot. If they don't do all that you want them to do--if they don't re­ store your stomach to health and make your digestion easy--just tell us and we will give back your money without a word or question. Containing Pepsin and Bismuth, two of the greatest digestive aids known to tnedieal science, they soothe the in­ flamed stomach lining, help in the secretion of gastric juice, check heart­ burn and distress, promote regular bowel action, and make it possible for you to eat whatever you like whenever you like, with the comforting assur­ ance that there will be no bad after­ effects. We believe them to be the best remedy made for dyspepsia and in­ digestion. Sold only at the more than 1,000 Rexall Stores, and in this town only at our store. Three sises, 25c, f>0c and 11.00.---E. V. McAllister, West McHenry. ^ If you want to purchase a pipe at a bargain, call at Barbian Bros. Easter bonnets at th$ Lotus milli­ nery, West McHenry. > ^Cago • "yp: Any improvements you tttake should fie permanent, *ihd permanency is assured by the judicious use of concrete. But concrete will be best when made with A "Chicago A$ Portland Cement ? if We have for free distribution booklets oq every subjerf pertaining to concrete construction. If you plan to build let us help you by sending a boob!^ the which you are mo& interested. A 4 ̂ < r Phone We& McHenry ̂ IF IT'S QUALITY AND SERVICE that you want, youll make no mistake by doing your meat and grocery buying at tikis plaee. We always aim to carry the be$ quality of goods in our line and with it ' \ give you the very best ser­ vice at our command. Let us convince you that we are 'tight. ; s .s ^ G. C. BOSMA /F Successor to Wedt McHenry Matthews :: Phone 5 rw:. for us to pleakefour cus­ tomers when it comes to the grocery question. The reason for this is that we have the quality goods and are ever ready to supply your demands in a satisfactory manner and on short notice*.^ It M > "rj?; '• '-Ifk-- e\ m ' • , V*- Subscribe for the Plaindealer and keep posted cm local, happenings ' 5i iJkj. w. ' •A'. .

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