Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Aug 1929, p. 7

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V J _ " ; 7 ^ * 7 ^ , THI MTflSBItY PLAWDEALER, THWK8DAT, ATJO. 1, 1929 • rw * , * •" ^ KINGWOOD h'. • • ' C : .. ; i, fed /l Mr. ud Mrs. Max Beth and' son of Chicago spent Tuesday evening and Wednesday in the Wm. Beth home. Mrs. Viola Low spent Monday with relatives near Hebron. Mrs. Edgar Thomas and children and Mrs. Wm. McCannoa were Woodstock visitors Tuesday. Mrs. Ed Thompson and children and Mrs. Nick Young were McHenry visitors Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. Viola Low and Mrs. Sam Beatty were Woodstock visitors Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and son cf McHenry spent Wednesday evening in the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. Geofge Hubert of Woodstock spent Wednesday with their daughter, Mrs. Sam Beatty, and family. . . Mrs. Lewis Hawley is entertaining her niece from Chicago this week. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter of Antioch were visitors in the W. A. Dodge and Leon Dodge homes Thursday. Mrs. Clay Rager was a patient at the Wesley Memorial hospital at Waukegan two days last week, where she want for treafaaanfc. Mrs. Howard of Woodstock spent Thursday in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Leon Dodge. Mm Frank Fay is on the sick list. Mir. and Mrs. George Frey of Mo- Henry were callers in the George Noble home Thursday evening. - Miss Alice Wilcox and Wayne Foss spent Friday afternoon and evening with Miss Louise Winn near Richmond. Mrs. George Young and Miss Viola Low were Woodstock visitors Saturday afternoon. The Bunco club journeyed to the home of Mrs. Leon Dodge on Thursday afternoon, to remind her of her birthday. There were six tables in play. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Viola Low firs, Mrs. Ed. Thompson second, Mrs. W. A. Dodge third, and Mrs. Nick Freund the consolation. Miss Ethel Biggers received the punch prize. At the dose refreshments were served. Miss Carolyn Hubert of Elgin spent Wednesday in the home of her uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beatty. Miss Bethel Draper of McHenry spent a few days this week in the Edgar Thomas home. Mr. and Mrs. George Adams and family spent the weekend in Elgin. ICr. And Mrs. Francis Adams aad son of Elgin were callers in the Geo. Adams home Monday evening. Mrs. Ada Mann, Mrs. Homer Mann and son, Bob, of Woodstock and Mrs. Lelah Gaylord of Elkhorn spent Saturday in the Edgar Thomas home. Mrs. Frank Hitchess is entertaining her niece from LaGxange this •week. George Shepard and ehiMren «en McHenry caIters Saturday twmg. Mrs. Lewis Hawley aad children andlfrs. LeXnjr Neal aad children attended a picnic at Fox Lake Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepard of Richmond spent Sunday in the Geo. Shepard home. Donald Adams Is spending several days in Elgin. Mr*. Edgar Thomas and children and Miss Bethel Draper were McHenry visitors Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and son of McHenry spent Sunday in the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. Leon VanAtten and Mrs. Grace Hackney of Flint, Michigan, are enjoying a visit in the Ged. Shepard home. Miss Marjorie Noble has been spending the past week with relatives at Aurora. Mrs. Katherine Adams and daughter, Clarabel, spent Tuesday and Wednesday in Ringwood. On July 30 the 4-H girls of Ringwood held a meeting at the home of Mary Celine Adams. Mina Lawrence acted as president and opened the meeting. Roll call was responded by the name of a lake. Games, club yells and songs furnished amusement for the girls. Each member is to plan and serve three breakfasts and three suppers and wash dishes eight times. Th® next meeting is to be in the form of a picnic to be held Aug. 291. Woman Refuse* Salary; Causes Political Stir Annapolis, Md.--Mrs. Ethel Lorents had a Job with the city delegation in the general assembly, but she had no work to do. So she turned down her salary and It has no place to go. Speaker E. Brooke Lee announced1 that the $5 a day that Mrs. Lorentz was supposed to get for her wort as a cletk or secretary to the city delegation was pslil to her by check, but the checks were returned nncashed and there was nothing for him to do about It. The money will remain where It Is-- wherever that is--on til the end of the session and then, according to Speaker Lee, It will be turned over to the Maryland general treasury. There It will go right in with the other money with no special ceremonies, Just as If it didn't enjoy the distinction of being the first salary to be turned down By anyone on the legislature's pay rolL Mrs. Lorentz accepted employment, she said, not for the monej but for the legislative experience.*1 ^ «**hed; Wm«s Warsaw.--Alleging bis wife beat-hint with an Iroa poker and a meat fork, (Elmer Johnson, Warsaw, has filed suit for a divorce tnm Katberiae Johnson, Rensselaer, Tnd. Muvdoatl ^ The human *>rain is wonderful. The Instant It is Informed of a grade crosstag ahead, tt sends a message, down .to the feet to dfcep ce the iccdcnttt^ Detroit News. Nearly aad Yonder .... Iqt T. T. MAXEY St. Marks in-the-Bouwerie ST. MARKS in-the-Bouwerie is, undeniably, one of the outstanding land-marks of early New York city. It also Is one of the few old-time churches remaining in that city which still occupies the site originally selected and dedicated for worship, while the site Is said to be the oldest now so occupied. The church Is unique. So is its history. Petros Stuyvesant, the last of the seven Dutch governors, was a picturesque character* in early New York history. He had a bouwerle--suburban home with a garden. Bowery village was laid out on his ground. In it he built a chapel. He died in 1672. His wife gave It to the Dutch church. Subsequently Trinity church became interested. Now it appears to be a Dutch church with an Episcopal servvice-- a decidedly unusual religious combination. The present structure quaintly reminds one of ancient days. The cornerstone was put down in 1795. Stuyvesant's tomb forms one of the foundation stones. Its venerable walls are overhung with ivy and aged trees spread their branches over the graves in the side yards. An old-fashioned scraper for removing mud from the boots of worshipers attracts attention as one enters. The interior is restful to an extreme, rich In colorful windows and memorial tablets. The co-operation of the clergy with enlightened physicians has brought about a neighboring soul-and-body clinic where ills of arany sorts are treated through a sympathetic blendtag of science and religion. (A WW, Wejtern Newepeper Black Saow Though sometimes discredited, tt tl an actual fact that black snow sometimes occurs. The color Is produced by the action of Innumerable fungi, known as the "Micrococcus nivalis." It has also been reported from time to time that snow either red, blue, or green in color, has fallen in certain localities. This Is caused by the action of such fungi. The black ijbs comparatively rare. / Self-Seelnr Cond»M<l tfba lawyer who uses his knowledge to stir up strife among the industrious and Impede path of commerce, that be himself may thrive, is un- ^rorthy of ear respect--Seward. E||i for Groc erica Much of the petty trade of rural Mexico is still done by barter. "Qln me an egg's worth of sslt and cas dies," a woman will tell a grocer. William M. Carroll, Solicitor SALE OF REAL ESTATE State Of Illinois, County Of McHenry. ss. In. the Circuit Court of McHenry County, to the May term, A. D., 1929. Frieda Roesch, Complainant, vs. John Jonas, Louisa Jonas, Stephen A. Bohl, Mary E. Bohl, Roy A. Kent, John G. Steinmetz and George Cessor, Defendants. In Chancery--Forcloeure, Gen. No. 28340. Public Notice is hereby given that in pursuance of a decree made and entered by said Court in the above entitled cause on the 8th day of July, A. D., 1929, I, Floyd E. Eckert, Special Master in Chancery of said Court, will on Friday, the 9th day of August, A. D., 1929, at the hour of ten o'clock in the forenoon of said day, at the front door of the Court House, in the City of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder for cash the following described real estate in said decree described, to-wit: Lots Number Twelve (12) tend Thirteen (13) of the Assessor's Plat of section Number Thirteen (18), in Township Number Forty- Five (45) North, of Range Number Eight (8) East of the Third Principal Meridian, according1 to the plat thereof recorded in the Recorder's Office of McHenry County, Illinois, in Book 48 of Deeds on page 300, said lot Twelve (12) being located in and being a part of the South West quarter of the North East quarter of section Thirteen (13), and said Lot Thirteen (13) being located in and being a part of the South East quarter of the North East quarter of said Section Thirteen (13), Township Fortyfive (45) North, Range Eight (8) East of the Third Principal Meridian, situated in the Village of Johnsburg, County of McHenry and State of Illinois. 7>erms of Sale--Cash. Dated this 15th day of July, A. D. 1929 FLOYD E. ECKERT, Special Master in Chancery of the Circuit Court of McHenry Co., , Ills, 7-8, AUDITOR'S NOTICE STATE OF ILLINOIS OFFICE OF AUDITOR OF PUBLIC ACCOUNTS The undersigned Auditor of Public Accounts hereby gives notice that he has appointed Theodore Hamer of Woodstock, McHenry County, Illinois, Receiver of the CITIZENS STATE BANK OF M7HENRY, McHenry County, Illinois, and that the said Theodore Hamer has given bond and is the qualified and 'acting Receiver of said bank. All persons having claims against said bank are hereby notified and requested to present the same to said Receiver forthwith and to make legal proof thereof. All persons indebted to said bank are requested to make immediate payment to said Receiver. Dated this 17th day of July, A. D. 1929. ^ OSCAR NELSON, Auditor of Public Accounts. 7-18 State of Illinois Wifely Immolatkm Suttee is the name of the former practice in India for a wife to place herself upon the funeral pyre of her husband, and be burned alive. This practice is now illegal, although some writers claim that It is still continued In secret. Similar customs prevailed among Comanches, and throughout the Congo region in Africa; also Ip Polynesia and Malaynesla wives were sacrificed. i Lifhtaiag Pretectifji'/'v . The bureau of standards says that a galvanized iron roof properly grounded will give good protection against lightning. El Is necessary to place air terminals on chimneys and see that all separate parts of the roof, as porch roofs and main roof, are bonded together so that they are In electrical "Hitact. lbM« Wbiag Material Tungsten, which Is used for the filaments In Incandescent lamps. Is nearly twice as heavy as lead. A thread of tungsten wire Is as strong as a copper wire 10 times its sice. v.**,tt. *' & • -"A -; y V"1» We Save You Costly Error In Tire-Buying We Demonstrate to your satisfaction the greater lis* Hon and superior wear built into Goodyear treads! ' We Demonstrate on a testing machine the superiority if Goodyear Supertwist over the best competitive cordt L_.We save you frdfoi the costly error of .buying other 'fires in the belief that you're getting m good tins as Goodyears. Aftd tt cfflrta bo mere f or Goodyearg properly mounted «||l your wheels with the benefit of our year 'round ' helpful »ervi©*--WHICH IS ALSO SUPERIORS r P WlWiP y ' : " EDDIE, THE AD MAN 00USIM69B.WIU. RUM wnwoor AOVEftnsiMfi.- THE SAME WAY AGAR RUM wrmooTGAs-ct POVMUMIU* Trade tfs Tour Troubles ' The last miles axe the costliest with old tires. ..Save yourself expense and delays due to punctures aad repairstrade in your well-used tires. 1 liberal Trade-In Allowances on Goodyear Double Eagles Goodyear Regular All-Weathers Goodyeas Heavy Baty All-W«a|fcani Walter J. Freund West McHenry, 111. . , |« J " PHONE 120 R ; ; J M ttIRE AND TUBE VULCANIZING J * BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIR1KII f J 4 ALL WORK GUARANTEED /I j • • m, m:M a It WUl Pay You To Visit I ^ /ytC Jo* If. Wooded Water Front Lots, threefourths mil# north of McHenry on west side of Fox River 15 \*r =3*q= 75**38 //S7G -AVE 4 frfv4T«. 33 & t5* '//&< 1 5^ Gss. ceee, /cfZ fas* /?/e/'/ * ATIA prjvftU AVE. % Mj»'9oW 3xnrr t BEAUTIFUL WQODEXI: Lots Left Slashed 6^ Everything Must Be Sold TERMS! Phone 8 KENT & CO. X- ^ McHenry, .y i-.'j. - "-shi SI

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