Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Dec 1930, p. 2

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•ZrJlK* j-y -1 _ tragi „ S&#?2« ,s -J '- <L& .« $! *1] THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALgR, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 4,1030 +* \ F ^ f i , . . sili: _.,. ,Jfe3 a&Sl -•W M'HENRY PLAINDEALER jpuiOTMRE FOUR 'Published every Thursday at McHenry, HL, by Charles F. Renich. TIMES; DIES POOR Catered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHemy, lit, urnder the act of May 8, 1879. Subscription Rate* Om Tear Viz Months .|.||»||»||.|«(|| •»•»<». -•mo A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager ?,. -A • 'W ^ is • •rf. , -ji/fc-: : : f V O L O - fefe'S'- v. _-- , Dr. and Mrs. Kochens of Chicago spent Saturday here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hironimus. Herman Rossduetcher spent Tuesday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. John Cappeller of Chicago spent Sunday at the home of ; Dr. and Mrs. Rossduetcher. Mrs. Anna Lusk was a Wauconda caller Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eddy of Grayslake were Thursday guests At the Harry Passfield home. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hironimus spent the past week in Chicago. Joe Lenzen and mother were Grayslake callers Saturday. Captain William Rossduetcher of Joliet spent a few days here last week. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Passfield and family motored to Woodstock Saturday. Sunday visitors at the Harry Passfield home were Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Eddy, Mr. and Mrs- Roy Passfield and family, Mr. and Mrs. Milton Dowell and Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield. Mrs- Joe Wagner spent a few days in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rossduetcher are the parents of a daughter, born Sunday, Nov. 23, at the Elizabeth Condell Hospital at Libert yville. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen spent Saturday in Chicago. Miss Sarah McElmeel of Racine spent the week-end at the Joe Lenzen home. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Wray and children of Coney Island, N. Y-, are spending a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Worts. Fred Smith has moved to the Old Potter farm, mow owned by F- E. Wilson. Little Harry Passfield is numbered with the sick. Ben Westhuff was taken to the Lake County Poor Farm Tuesday by Supervisor Pete Stadfield. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lenzen entertained p group of friends at a duck dinner Sunday evening. Mr. and Mrs- George Scheid and daughter of Wauconda were Thursday callers at the Lloyd Fisher home. A large number of friends gathered at the home of Dowell Bros. Monday evening. Ten tables of euchre were played with honors going to Mrs. Joe Passfield, Mrs, Clark Nicholas, Gerald j - (Jrover and Clinton Ravin. A lunch was served at midnight. v Math Rossduetcher and Mrs, Cora Walmsley spent Saturday in Chicago. ; ;*f Herman Rossduetcher and Mrs, ' Anna Lusk were Thanksgiving guests of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oaks in Chi- ! . eago. - William Dowell has rented the old &&»'••• 'Wilson farm now owned by Lewis fpT Kitzentler of Prairie View. Iggg;! Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Benwell and > family of McHenry, George Benwell *<if Round Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Herman • ;%- , Dunker and family were Thanksgiv- , > Ing dinner guests at the G. A. Vasey home. A large number of friends gathered at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy, Passfield Saturday evening. Twelve jtables of euchre were played and ; prizes were awarded to Mrs. Milton v • ; iDowell, Mrs. Lloyd Fisher, and G. A. "Vasey. A lunch was served at the, close of the evening. JOHNSBURGt Quite a number of people attended the fair at St. John's hall on Thanksgiving day. Mrs. Russel Gibbs had the misfortune to fall Thursday evening and break her leg. Misses Evelyn and Laura Meyers and Helen Schaefer were MeHenry callers Thursday night. Miss Helen Smith of Woodstock spent the holiday with her parents. Miss Leona Schaefer of Chicago visited with relatives here Thursday. • Miss Alice Freund and friend oif Chicago spent Thursday with her parents. Miss Laura Smith of Chicago spent Thanksgiving with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff and son attended the wedding of their granddaughter at Volo last Wednesday. Miss Isabelle Schmitt of McHenry spent Thursday with her parents. Mr. and Mrs. Math N. Schmitt attended the wedding of their niece, Miss Rosella Schaefer, at Arlington Heights to Mr.. John Amann ofWaukegan, one day last week. Mrs. Elizabeth Oertel and daughters and son visited at the George Michels home Thursday afternoon. Miss Mildred Schaefer was a Woodstock caller Thursday night! Mrs. George Michels motored to Woodstock Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Smith and family of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs. P Oeffling and children visited with Mr and Mrs. Joe Michels Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Miller, Mr. and Mrs- Henry Stoffel and daughter of Volo, Mr. and Mrs. George Obenauf and sons of Volo visited with John Pitzen Sunday. German Knew Finance, Alto „ J He Knew Prisons. * --A millionaire four ttWW-lft •Ms life, Armand Schwob died penniless In a Berlin hospital recently at the age of seventy-three. At the height «f his enterprising and versatile career he was worth millions of dollars, had a racing stable «# 80 thoroughbreds, and was the declared favorite of the Russian czar. He also made the acquaintance of many prisons is the course of his adventurous life, including Sing Sing in New York. Smart in Business. A*, a small bey Schwob displayed remarkable business talents In" his uncle's watch business in I'aris. At the age of seventeen young Schwob founded a watch making plant in Mo* cow and in the course of two years he had made a million dollar. Although he- had received marked favors from the court, he turned his back on Russia and opened a watch factory in Paris. Profits were high and Schwob lived in regal spendor, RINOWOOD Playing With Science Nine per cent of airplane accidents are due to weather. Only 9 per cent are due to structural faults; 19 per cent are due to failure of power, and 60 per cent or more are due to the pilots' errSir or incompetence.--Conntry Home. Varying Periods of Torpor The word "hibernate" carries the idea of winter. South tropical creatures such as alligators, snakes and certain mammals and Insects undergo a period of torpor during the hot, dry season when food is scarce and vegetation Is taking a rest. This Is kaown as "estivation." Conscience Why does a woman who has lost St a bridge game break her neck rush- {Pjf borne to get supper for a husband who has beeb playing a losing poker game all afternoon?--Woman's Home Companion. ' To Looms Windows To open windows that have been stuck with paint, by wet weather, etc., brush the Inside of the frames with ordinary black lead. They slide without the least difficulty. ' A Tip, LadSes Unless she is well advised, a woman often will purchase a prominently displayed dress that is s leftover from last season.--Country 'Home. i. Plialin & Kennebeck (G. A. Stilling Oarage) Siorage*~Repairing"OiL*Qreasing phone 28 Corner Bm Street and Riverside Drive on Route 99 '0W-; St Put speed in your sales program ! Reach out-of-town customers with the speed of light! Your office telephones are ready to "carry:" salesmen throughout the state... the nation ... and, if need be, will "send" them to customers in foreign lands throughout most of the world. Modern selling demands modern methods. Long distance telephone service is the ideal means for rapid communication wifh out-oftown buyers. Supplement your present sales program with telephone selling. Long Distance telephone calls fit easily in any budget--they are the Quicky Clear and Inexpensive way to sell! Bell Lines Reach Everywhere ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY beul system One Policy « One System » Universal Service in Buenos Aires which he conducted himself. It failed. The crash involved a loss of 15,000,000 francs. He fled to Holland and was arrested on a charge of fraud. Acquitted, he turned to gambling. He conducted a flourishing gambling club In Paris which netted hfm a large fortune. A gold mine in Wales was &chwob's next business enterprise. Before the shareholders realized that they had Invested their money In a bubble Schwob had disappeared. A jeweler's shop which he conducted in Vienna was just on the verge of failing when Schwob Inherited 140,000. He went to Ainerica. Sentenced in United States. In New York Schwob forged checks to increase his rapidly dwindling revenues. He was convicted and lodged in Sing Sing. After 18 months in jail he disappeared. For years nothing was heard of him. He reappeared in Paris. As a war profiteer he again amassed a large fortune. As easily as it was earned it was spent. In 1922 he was forced to flee from Paris. Germany was his next field of activity. He reverted to check forging. In Berlin alone he netted $200,000. Before the police eouW get hold of him he had fled from the country. In 1926 he was arrested in Fiume, but made his escape. Nothing was heard of him till he was found sick in a small Berlin home and taken to the hospital. What the restless adventurer has done in the last years and what induced him to come to the German capital nobody knows. Mr. and Mrs. 3. F. Cl&xton and son, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Foss and son, and Mr- and Mrs. John Dreymiller of Mc-V Henry spent Thanksgiving day with Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and children were Thanksgiving guests in the home of Nick Young. . Will Beth and daughter, Cora, spent Thanksgiving day and Friday in Chicago- Guests in the S. H. Beatty home on Thanksgiving were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Jackson and family of Solon Mills, Mr. and Mrs. Will Beatty of New Mexico, Harry Helman and Mrs. Foxwell of Chicago and Mr. and^rs. Elmer Olsen and son. Mr. and Mrs. J. Neal and family and Mrs. Wice and family of Chicago spent Thanksgiving day in the Roy Neal home. lowe'en paYty, and candy bars were 'distributed. The drapes are now up, in both rooms and add greatly tQ the' 'appearance of the rooms. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens went to Elgin Sunday to visit the latter's brother, I. N. Butler and family. They are pleased to report that Mr. Butlei was able to 16ave the Sherman Hospital, Sunday morning, where he baa, been confined the past eight weeks following a very serious operation. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hawley entertained at a family dinner Sunday in; •hoor of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley. newlyweds. Those to attend were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chi cago, Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bacon of Crystal Lake, Mr. and. Mrs. A. E. Hawley and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hawley of Elgin and Mr. and Mrs. L E. Hawley and family. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Smith and sdn. Edward, of McHenry, Lucille Speaker of "Richmond, and Mr. and Mrs. Fuller Boutelle and family of Lake Geneva. Miss Viola Rager and Bo«r Qalnb - a|init Sun(1 wiU| M> >m| Mri of Chicago spent Thanksgiving with [ Qporye Young. I Mrs. day Rager and children. Dr. and Mrs. Wm. Hepburn spent Thanksgiving day with their daughter at Monroe, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal spent Thursday night in Chicago All went well till bis restless spirit k, "M r. a"nd >MZ rs. aC - J.. IJtelpCso n SanTd fam1- drove Schwob to open a branch office Elgin! relatives at Miss Ruth Harvey of Wheaton i^as a guest in the Frank Fay hofae on Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving Day guests in the Raymond Harrison home were Mr. and Mrs- Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake, Edward Harrison and Ruth Owen of Elgin, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peet and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harrison and son and Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Ray.Peters had dinner on Thanksgiving day with his parent! at Belvidere« Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hitchens of Chicagd arid Mr- and Mrs. Warren Thomas and sons of Woodstock spent Thanksgiving day with Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mann and son and Mrs. Ada Mann of Woodstock were supper guests in the Edgar Thomas home Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. David MahafFey of Grayslake spent Thanksgiving day with and Mrs. E. P. Flanders. W. P. Stevens of Solon Mills spent a few days the past week with Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Flanders. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and sons spent Friday in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs- C. A. Matsen and family of Chicago spent Sunday in the Gus Pearson home. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson, J. V. Buckland, Flora Taylor attended n Thanksgiving dinner at Greenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCanno returned Jiome Saturday evening from their wedding trip to Springfield, 111. Mr, and Mrs. George Dixon of Eagle Lake, Wis., called at the J. V. |Buckland home Saturday on their way j Jto Florida, where they will spend the THwinter. Mrs. Minnie Coates Is visiting relatives in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and family were Sunday dinner guests in the Joe McCannon home. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Dalton of Mundelein and Mr. and Mrs. Davis Walkington and son of McHenry were callers in the Ben Walkington hotne Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Fisher and family, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Douglass and •family of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. R. Porter and daughter of Hebron spent Sunday in the Harold Wiedrich home. Miss Florence Olsen spent Thanksgiving day in the Frank Wiedrich home. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young are visiting Chicago relatives this week. • Miss Dorothy Carr and D. Beck of •Chicago and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr spent Thanksgiving day with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich were Woodstock visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dodge returned home Saturday from a few days visit with their daughter and family at An-/ tioch. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and family spent Sunday evening with friends at Volo. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and family were Waukegan shoppers Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Alee Andeson and family spent Sunday in the home of Mrs- Rilla Foss. Miss Dorthea Howard of Kenosha -spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Merchant. Clay Rager came home from Chicago Monday to spend several days with his family here. Adrian Thomas *§ spending a few days with his parents. Miss Mercedes Smith, who spent a week visiting in the home of Mr. and Mrs- Lyle Hopper in Chicago, returned with them when they came to spend Thanksgiving in the S. W. Smith home. Mrs. S. W. Smith and Mrs. A. W. Smith were Elgin shoppers Wednesday. John Smith spent Wednesday evening at Harvard. Mr. and Mrs- George Young and family spent Thanksgiving" in the Fuller Boutelle home at Lake Geneva. They were accompanied home by Everett Boutelle who spent the weekend with them. S. W. Smith accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Llye Hopper to their home in Chicago Friday afternoon, remaining until Sunday. i The Ringwood Home circle will hold their annual Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Clayton Harrison Wed. Dec. 10. Ringwood School Notes Th%following pupils had perfect attendance for tliree months: Russell Lawrence, Hiley Jean Thomas, Lau rence Freund, Amy Harrison, Robert Adams, Walter Low, Pearl Smith Charles Thompson, Shirley Hawley, Sylvia Freund, Neil Harrison, Mae Rager, Floyd Freund, Rita Merchant and Howard Shepard- John Doherty celebrated his birthday on Nov. 10, The children were treated to cake. On Oct. 31st they held their annual Hal- Mr- and Mrs. $ay Peters spent the week-end with relatives at Belvidere and Hunter. The girls of the M. E. Sunday School will hold a bake sale at L. EHawley's market, Saturday. 9, Alaskan Dog Teams Are Giving Way to Planet Nome, Alaska.--Modcfkl transportation by aif ig threatening the future of the tnalamute, hero of many an Alaskan ttfte of danger and hardship on the snow-packed trails of America's frontier. Despite the present high cost of airplane travel, mail and other articles may be sent by air cheaper than by dog team, statistics have revealed. The cost of the average dog team, including the driver, amounts to $25 per day, or 65 cents per passenger mile, and the team has an average •peed of 30 to 40 miles per day. In comparison with the time and cost, airplane transportation has become popular in this land of poor communication facilities. The airplane has reduced dog team mall time between Nome and Nenana from 29 days to four hours. Gold dust and furg are transported from Nome to Fairbanks, 540 miles across a snowbound wilderness, in five hours, instead of the month required by a fast dog team. The malamute is slowly losing his place as provider of transportation Over long distances. Even law fenforcers, who used to whip their dog teams onto the trail of criminals, spending weeks or months In the pursuit, have taken to the air. With the development of airways and construction of landing fields, airplanes are expected to solve the communication problem In the territory. Cold 'Handshake Made Warm by Losing Nerve! Katfsas City.--Cold, and clammy lands may be made capable of warm handclasps, the Southwest clinical conference was told by Dr. L. G. Jtowntree of Rochester, Minn. The change, he said, is effected by cutting two little nerves that lie along the spine. Persons with arthritis or bone fever |*lso may be benefited by the operation, which increases the blood supply In the afflicted regions. (©, 1930, Western Newspaper Union.) Those persons and things, then, that inspire us to do our beet, that make us live at our best, when we are in their presence, that call forth from us our latent and unsuspected personality, that nourish and support that personality-->• those are our friends.--Randolph 8. Bourn*. VARIOUS GOOD THINGS . If yon like the Chinese dishes this will be one to prepare for the guests who also enjoy them: Crab artd Egg Omelet -- I f the fresh shrimps or crab is used, cook and cool. Shr&l one cupful of crab or shrimp. Out Error Helps Thief Newark, N. J.--Edgar Kille was getting the best of a burglar with Jwhom he was struggling in the dark |intil Mrs. Kille arrived on the scene jto help him. Swinging a potato masher with great inight, she brought it, by mistake, squarely down upon the head of her husband. The bucgMlt eecaped. •~3 Wreath From Pets Epsom, England.--A wreath Inscribed "To our beloved master, from all his pets," was Included among those at the funeral of Charles Jtlcard, tlft niaater, here. Workmen'* "Palace" The People's palace Is an institution at Mile End, London, established to furnish facilities for education and recreation to the people of east Lon- *';*%iv4rrte Order of Colors The French do not refer to the colors of their flag as "red, white and blue." They reverse our expression and say "blue, white and red." one cupful of lean pork into inch long narrow strips. Use scissors for the cutting. Soak one-fourth of a cupful of dried mushrooms, then cut into' strips. Slice one large mild onion and cut fine into strips. Fry the pork In two tablespoonfuls of peanut oil until tender and brown. Add onion, one cupful of bamboo shoots and mushrooms, a tablespoon ful of soy sauce. Just before dinner beat six eggs, add the finely cut crab or shrimp and the vegetable mixture. Fry in a small amount of peanut oil, in small bits like a pancake. Lobster Club 8andwlch.--Todst bread cut one-third of an inch thick, butter and keep hot Allow two slices for each person to be served. Saute the lobster in a little butter, use either fresh or canned. Season well with salt, pepper pnd a teaspoon ful of currant Jelly. Fry bacon until crisp. Place slices of bacon on toast and over this a layer of pieces of lobster;, cover with mayonnaise, then top with a piece of crisp lettuce or chilled watercress; make another layer of bacon and lobster and on top place a slice of toast. Garnish the sandwiches with sliced tomato, mayonnaise and lemon. Cut into triangles and serve. Pimiento Cup With Egg and Celery. --Drain the small red peppers from their liquor, place in gem pans jo fill. Fill with the following salad: Chop one cupful of celery very fine and mix 'witfe two hard cooked eggs chopped. Into this stir one-half cupful of mayonnaise and fill the cups. Decorate with mayonnaise and small shapes cut of green pepper. Serve .very cold on crisp lettuce with toasted biscuit and cheese. - Y*u Ka«w the Kl«4f' Give baby a sensible name, one hell like 20 years hence.--Country Horn* Cold motors will delay thotP sands of motorists this coming winter. In the morning, after business horns, 3H,d the theatres* thousands of owners will be seriously inconvenienced. You can feel perfect Security^ however, when you protect yourself by means of membership in the Chicago Motor Club. Free mechanical first aid is one of the services to which you are entitled. One hundred thousand - torists hive secured this protection. ^ -v. . . You may call if for any reason you cannot operate your car, for example; If you are out of gas, if your / ^ battery is dead, if yotir starter is stuck, or if your * car is disabled and must be towed. 86% of the trouble cases are remedied by mprhanify ft^ t^. spot; the remainder are tow jobs.- - ' .-•••• Other benefits of membership ..y are: insurance, bail bond, touring, home district and accident prevent tion services. ^ Sixty-four b^ch^Mdb\0l^ state; 30 in Cook County. Dues per year $10.00. Enrollment fee (first year only) ~ $5.00. Write for free booklet. Clip coupon belom. -i 4 V • v V- ^ iS# Ai CHICAGO Th. Chicago Motor Oub tviMinW* •a»to «rM• reaoottt *M» : CHARLES M. HAYES, MERRY CODHXlf BRANCH Harley E. Rardin, Mgr. m Dean St, WoodstM^ Phooe Woedstodc &| 6. A. 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That's why Winter'Test Parco Ethyl not only starts so quickly jbut delivers a sustained (power stream and many extra miles per gallon. And it is Certified Anti-Knock. r. ' • ' * * fht vijfiitifHy of Parco Gtfyt is regulated to conform with varying seasonal temperature*. Winter Test Parco Ethyl is especially refined for quick cold weather parting and vc££ • best winter diving results. \ MValvoline OUCofiipany, PbMM 3% : . ' 4 ^ . .

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