* ' ~ ^ ^ * • * ' * < ' ':.. 81 ,:^.:r^':'.'r*v;* •• THE MT9ENRY PLAINDEALER FlMished «vcry Thursday at McHenry, 111., by Charles F. Benieh. 'W: a* aeoenchclass nate «t«the the act etf May8,1879. at KcHemry. EL, *&• On* l«r - ~»2.00 .J1.00 \ A. H. M06HKR, Editor aid Muapr • Daty «f Big ;Bmiaw ft seems to me that economic society own the fnttWol and efficient worker three things and these areJ the highest possible «raKe. security of employment, nnd (prevision for the days of retirement. A \worleer who Is Bot obtaining these three things can- BOt function at full efficiency.--Owen D. Young in Collier's weekly. ILL THEATRE WTdodttock's Beautiful Play katfaees Sun.-W*d.-8at Sstt | Evmiaci 7-9 Special 50c FAMILY MATINEE Sunday PLEAD GUILTY IN COUNTY COURT w;: THURSDAY-FRIDAY Lawrence Tibbett Grace Moore HewMow" Yon've Heard Beautifa! Voices on tbe Screen Before--bot HP*** two such ^-marvelous "TOicMI {*' one picture! . also , ., Comedy and ^ llovietone News -- SATTTTOAY ,«FT NIGHT George O'Brien in "Fair Warning" : The ace of western stars in a thrill-packed, fight-filled oatdoor drama. Comedy and Movietone ' News SUNDAY-MONDAY 1 Ina Claire Fredric March ' in "Tie Royal Family ° of Broadway With ; ^ Mary Brian and Henrietta Grosma^^ 'The Big Splash' comedy Movieton News Joha Katol and August SchulU, two alleged McHenry bootleggers, who were arrested by Sheriff Lester Edinger last week, pleaded guilty Monday in the county court and were fined $100 and costs each. The pair were named in an information filed by State's Attorney V. S. Lumley and were charged with violation of the prohibition law. A quantity of "moonshine" was confiscated by the sheriff when he raided the home of the pair which is located on the outskirts of McHenry. It is said the two men hail from Chicago and have not lived in McHenry very long. One installment of the fine was paid and the pair promised to return {the middle of April to pay the remainder of the fine. Many reports have been received that the pair were sefl&pg "rotton stuff." The liquor confiscated in the raid is said to be of th* poorest brand. Want Ads 2,1931 ,r, Erad FOR SALS ii jiff1 FOR SALE--A coupe, in good Phone 59-M. Rtft ru#i E. T Ford ning condition. Smith. *44 iFQR SALS--Clover .Miller, Johnsburg. (655-M-2. Tel. John A. McHenry •48-2 RING WOOD POTATOES .FOR ..SALE--No. 1 Irish Cobblers; good eating and also good ifor seed. $1.30 per bu. We deliver. "We also have Genuine Early Ohios. These potatoes .are not cold storage, but lcept at my home therefore will xoa&e excellent seed potatoes. Dave Segal, West JHtiHenry. Ttelr 92-J. -. 41-tf FOB SALE--,Eight-room modern home, furnace, gas and electricity, known as the Joe Hettormano home in Johnsburg. Seasonable. Inquire at Plaindealer office. *41-4 Will Have Much to Do With Control of Black Stem . Kust of Wheat, ^ f FOR SALE--9 Guernsey and Hol&tein heifers, ranging in age from 1 to 2 years. Priced reasonable. George Witte, Phone «08-W-2. 40 tf FOR SALE--7-room boose and garage, located in Spring Grere. Very reasonable. Inquire of Prank L, Adams, Ringwood, 111. 27tt BEFORE YOU BUT SHOES see our bargain counter. B. Popp. Expert shoemaker and repair shop. Main Street Phone 162. 38-tf Mr. and Mn, Davis Walkington and son of McHenry spent Sunday in the Ben Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Carlson, F Davis and Irene Anderson of Woodstock were dinner guests ip the Alec Anderson home Sunday. Mrs. John Dreymiller and Mrs, J. F. Claxton of McHenry were cellars in the George Shepard home Monday evening. Mrs. Fred Munshaw of Eau Claire, Wis., spent Monday and Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs. William McCannon. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Adfcms of Waukegan have moved into the Mrs. Mary Green house. Mr. Adams will run Dr. Hepburn's garage. Mr. and Mrs. Win. McCannon and Mrs. Munshaw visited with friends at Richmond Tuesday. Mrs. J. C. Ladd entertained her Bridge club Tuesday afternoon. Luncheon was served. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McCannon and Mrs. Munshaw were Woodstock visitors Monday. Mrs. S. H. Beatty and Mrs. Viola Low were Woodstock visitors Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son, Billy, of Chicago spent Tuesday night and Wednesday in the Wm. Beth home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dugan and daughter, Evelyn Mae and Mrs. Belle Boyd of Western Springs and Mrs. Clyde Dugan of LaGrange Park spent Tuesday in the S. H. Beatty home, Misses Ruby Davis and Bernice Smith entertained the Bridge club at the home of Mrs. Clarence Pearson Tuesday evening. Prizes were won by Mrs. Pearson and Mrs. Lewis Schroeder. At the close of the games a luncheon was served. True Story Magazine--May issue--- out today at Bolgers. 44 FOR SALE--Rag rugs. Prank Gustafson. W. McHenry, corner of Center and John streets. 35-tf FOR SALE--Well secured 7% First Mortgages on McHenry Residence Property. Inquire at Plaindealer office. 19-tf FOR RENT FOR RENT--Four furnished rooms. All conveniences. Mrs. B. Joos. Tel. 135*M. 44-tf HOU SE~FOR RENT--On Main street West McHenry- Inquire at West McHenry State Bank. ~ 42-tf FLAT FOR RENT--Reasonable. H C. Kamholz, West McHenry. 36-tf WANTED WANTED--Sirtfele driving harness, complete. Must be in good condition. Address E. O. S., 25 East Washington St., Chicago. *44 WANTED--Housework by the or day. Call 149-R. hour *44 SALESMAN WANTED--To run Heberling business in McHenry county. Many make $60 to $75 weekly -- year round work--no lay off. Write today for free booklet. G. C. Heberling Company, Dept. 345, Bloomington, III. 43-2 WANTED--Man to deliver, house to house; must furnish own truck. Good proposition to right man. McHenry Bakery. Jim Marshall. 40-tf FARM LOANS--First mortgage loass on farms, low interest. Now taking applications for 1931 loans. R. M. Fritz, 2nd Fl., Harvard State Bank Bldg., Harvard, 111. Phene 147 29-tf TUESDAY WEDNESDAY 4 &UEST NITE Tuesday Two will be admitted for 50c "loo't Bet on Women" It, with IK Edmund Lowe ' jfcanette MacDonald Saiacy laughs, sparkling dialog, t snappy situational Also Comedy and Movietone News Radios at bargain price*, West McHenry, 111. See Nye, ,44 MISCELLANEOUS . Old Heidelberg The University of Heidelberg wis founded by the elector, Rupert I, the bull of foundation being Issued by pope VI in 1385. ' ' ' * Room (or a Send* There Is so much room at the top that some other fellow arrives and kicks jpoq iMIaml Herat<|#' N«n*t of Wiidoa Insults are like bad coins; we cannot help their being offered to us, but we need not take them. SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED •T.^'/'Pa* R»gs Made to Order All Work Guaranteed ; B. popp Phene 162 St. McHenry (Prepared tr ths trnltsJ Rtftins of Acrtcultur*.)--WNU Service. Fifteen years of barberry eradication in the wheat belt h^ve accomplished much toward reducing the toll of black stem rust. The United States Department of Agriculture estimates that this disease destroyed 50,- 109,000 bushels of wheat annually during the first five years of this period, Jess than 26,000,000 bushels annually during the second five years, and only about 11,500,000 bushels annually from 1925 to 1929. Eradication Results. In Farmer's Bulletin 3544-F, "The Common Barberry and Black Stem Rust," the Department of Agrlcultnre points out some striking results of the barberry eradication campaign.- Since 1918 the department and co-operating states in the northern wheat belt have destroyed mere than 18,000,- 000 barberry bushes. In the northern* suites the common barberry is the only source of early grain rust Infection. Comparing 1916 and 1925, two years of similar weather conditions, the following results are obtained. In Minnesota 61 per cent of the entire crop was destroyed by rust in 1916 and only 12 per cent in 1925. In North f>akota 70 per cent of the crop was destroyed in 1916 and only 5 per cent In 1925. In South Dakota 64 per cent of the crop was destroyed In 1916 and 7% per cent In 1925. There Is every reason to suppose that if so many barberries had not been eradicated the epidemic of 102& would have been almost as destructive as that of 1916, except In certain areas of the Dakotas and neighboring ,,ftates where durum, wheats are groWn and the hot, dry weather checked the development of the rust. Destroyed Miiah Wheat. A single 60-year-old barberry bush In Decatur county, Indiana, was credited with destroying at least $50,000 jyorth of wheat Itt the vicinity of the town of Aleft in 1922. After that bush ywas destroyed wheat In the vicinity was practically free from rust. Such facts make it evident, says the department, that much has been accomplished by destroying 18,000,000 btishes. The authors of Farmer's Bulletin 1544-F, Dr. E. C. Stalqnan and Donald G. Fletcher, polnf'out that even though millions of bushes have been destroyed already and the great losses of earlier years have been reduced, mauy bushes continue to escape destruction. The bulletin, which may be obtained free by writing to the United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, offers suggestions for locating and destining this .bt|tfc.' • Derivation of "Golf" The word golf is probably from the Dutch word "kolf," meaning club. TARS ADRIFT MONTH pN WINTRY OCEAN Seven Found Near Death , From Hunger and Cold. The Real Test Whilst you are prosperetn, you can number many friends, bat when the storm comes, yon are left alone.--Ovid. • New York.--Seven sailors out of Kewfoundland arrived hi port with tale of a thirty-day battle with \nidwinter Atlantic that seldom has been surpassed by any epic of the sea. The men were plucked out of Davy Jones' locker starving and half mad with thirst 500 miles southwest of the Azores by the German freighter Wido, taken to Panama, and transferred to the New Tork boijnd liner Carlnthla, writes Tom Petty in the Chicago Tribune. For a month they had drifted/In a wrecked, leaking schooner through the ice filled northera waters with waves thirty feet high breaking over the floundering boat and making a sieve of it No Are could be kept going In the galley and every stitch the men wore was soaking wet with freezing water. Two cases of Scotch whisky provided the only warmth aboard. _ Mast Lost in Storm. Capt. Cyril Harwood and si* seamen put out from St. Johns In the John W. Miller, a chip of a schooner loaded to the guards with salt cod. They were going to "roll down to Rio,M but two days oat of St. Johns the schooner ran into a full gale and lost her sailing clothes. Just as darkness closed In on the second day of the storm the mainmast came crashing down, injuring three men. That night the schooner almost went to the bottom, for with every IaSh of the gale the big stick was sent crashing Into the side of the vessel. Great leaks were sprung. From then on It was pump, pump, pump to keep afloat The seven half frozen seamen, injured and all, kept the shrieking pumps grinding day apd night. The crippled John W. Miller bucked and pitched its way through the great waves In a crazy, aimless manner with the men living on ship's biscuit, canned meat, whisky and water. Their first break of luck came, the men said, when the ship after a couple of yearlong weeks felt the pull of a southern bound current. From then on It was. just a case of drifting, -almost always in a gale. Food Is Exhausted. The rudder had gone with the first blow, said Captain Hnrwood, and there was only the battered stub of a mast left and for sail there was not enough canvas left to make a shirt First the canned food gave out and for the last four days the crew existed on starvation rations of hard biscuit and half a cup of water a day per man. The warming whisky, for which they thanked their, lucky stars, had been drained to the last drop the week before. Tl.ey had long since almost given Bp hope of being rescued, when one morning a thousand miles east of Nassau the lookout sighted a wisp of smoke on tjie horizon. A few hours later the freighter Wido drew alongside the waterlogged schooner and sebt a bout for them. Their last act was to open the schooner's seacocks and start her on its trip to Davy Jones' locker for water soaked derellcts are dangerous if left afloat. l BSfatrt of Armutico The signers of the armistice which ended the World wir were Marshal Foch and Vice Admiral R. E. Wemysa on the Allied side and Mathias Eraberger, Gen. H. K. A. von WInterfeld, Count Alfred von Oberndorff and Naval Captain von Salow for the Germans. Others mentioned as having been present include the French general Maxlme Weygand and Voa Helldorf, German courier and interpreter. Higher Edacatioa Why should the energetic and ambitious boy or girl stay at home, out of a Job, and not take the highroad to fortune? He or she may now take a home correspondence course in a university on janitor service or beekeeping.-- Columbia State. ~r, Coral Roof - Probably the largest coral reef'ln the world is the Great Barrier reef of Australia, lying off the coast of Queensland.' It is 1,000 miles long. Important Safely Device The first vestibuled car, a Pnllmairinvention, was built in 1887. It 1* considered the greatest single safety device in railroad travel. It provide* safe car-to-car travel, includes antttelescoping construction to prevent" cars climbing one another ^n collisiwr and holds the train in a rigid oidtr tiding more safely and smoothly. m- • 0. Kisses Are Like MOM} " ^Everybody wants plenty. The SioM you get, the more you want They are payable on demand and good tor face value. Some are counterfeit. Some come in small denomination^ others in large. Some people are stingy with them, others extravagant. They can't always buy happiness. Kisses are like money, only sweeter.-- - V" "• 1 ' v 1 *lfs a great virtue to be able i keep one's own secrets," says a pi losopher. And a greater to be able i keep other people's. I SPECIMEN BALLOT FIRST WARD City Of McHenry, in County of McHenry and State of Illinois Election; Tuesday, April 21,1931 METER A. NEISS, % Gleik PARTY (By Petition) (By Petition) FOB MAYO® ~] JOHN K. KNOX " ~ FOE Orf V CfCEB ^ A. MjtlSS FOR CITY TBEASuftfe ~~] (HERALD J. 0AKEY FOft MAYOB^t A.E.NYE CITY »-• • •; si «* tr •"K; V '•> jPOR CITY TREASURE^ i. H FOR PETER J. DOHERTY sSkI-V fOB ALDEBMAN ntANK O. SCHRE SPECIMEN BALLOT SECOND WARD City of McHenry, in County of McHenry and State of Illinois " ' ' Election: Tuesday, April 21, 1931 - > PETER A. NEISS, City Ckx*. A Plaindealers at Prattles. V|0E KVIDERA, CART, life. Livestock Dealer Dairy Cows a Specialty Satisfaction Guaranteed Phone Cary 87-J lM* UPHOLSTERING--AH kinds of furniture reupholstexed and repaired. Good work guaranteed. Work called for and delivered. Chas. Rasmussen, S. Center St., West McHenry, I1L TeL 107-M. 12-tf The Safer Plaa Ad in literary paper: ."Send yov Mrs. to us for candid criticm and advice." TUNE--and keep year piano tuned. Tuning makes your piano a musical instrument Phone 274-J or write J. EL Deihl, Woodstock. I1L 27-tf SPECIMEN BALLOT • ; i FIRST WARD ^ w 'v :: V*** :i -' City of McHeiiry, in County of McHenry aend Stetd of Illinois Election: Tuesday, April 21, 1931 PETEK *. NEISS, City Clerk. j i, i y riir ( .mVjni im i ; '• "Shall the City^if McHenry operate on Daylight Saving Time during those months that the City of Chicago operates on Daylight Saving Time.**!!: TAXPAYERS PARTY ^(By Peti INDEPENI I ism FOE MAYOR (By Petition) --- '«:-s for mayohk- Permanent Waving Keen Steam Oil For reconditioning dry ofe oily hair. Will not discolor gray or blond hair. Regular $10.00 value, now only $8.00 Special Waves at $7.50 and $6.00 Junior Permanent Wave * $1.00 free Shampoo and Finger-wave with each Permanent. The texture of each head of hair is examined before goring Wave. .. Clean Soft Water Usei. Dead Animals Dead and Crippled K Cows, Horses, Hogs, and old Plugs Prompt Service $1.00 to $10 a held ^ Telephone Harrington 256 Reverse Charges ' Pamocs Carillon ~' 5" The following are the words associated with Big Ben, London's great clock, "In all the press of multitudinous days. Nor falls the breath of prayer, the sound of praise, Serene above the city day and night The chimes ring out with every quarter's flight; O Lord our God, Be thou our guide, That by thy help, No foot, may slide."--Washington Star. Special ^ ^ * for Limited Time Onljr fes^Wave or Marcel with Shampoo, only. .00 Sturdy Brood of Dog The Bsfclmo dog is hardier thaa aay other domestic animal, surviving blissards, cold and hunger with remark' ablee^grance. " % i'lllHsiiii l*®*' ' A Westlnghouse scientist says om loise can be used to silence another. The little bell oa the cash register, for Instance, stops the sound of moaning;-- Los Angeles Times. Orchid Beauty Shoppef Phone Richmond 981 i RINGWOOD, ILL Datios of Chorch Coerts Ecclesiastical courts meet to determine matters of church polity and alee the action of the church In conformity with ita declaration of principles In regard to social or spiritual matters such as the stand of the church upon marriage. With control, prohibition, child welfare, educatioa. confederation aad many ether charch principles. YE*-1 Q JOHN a. KNO? FOB CITY CLSaqf5 3 PETSE A. NEISS : PO9 CITY TBEASUBEB Q oskalo j: dark* FOB ALDERMAJI a. a hye FOB CITY CLE3RK F(» CTTY TREASURB® •I' - jpen ALDERMAN Qhebman j-keeutzee • johh s*ornqs| SPECIMEN BALLOT < SECOND WARD fp in Oounty of McH6nry sod State of Ullnoia Election: Tuesday, April 21, 1931 > ^ PETER A. NEISS, City Clerk. ••1 lii-or : -mm. i. "Shall the Oity of McHenry operate on Daylight Saving Time during those months that the City of Chicago operates on Daylight Saving TimeJi*' yv' SPECIMEN THIRD WARD , City of McHenry, in County of McHenry and State of IHinetog E*ection: Tuesday, April 21,1931 ^ PETER A. NEISS, CKty Ok**, h* V0T TAXPAYERS (By PetitKMft, -2**^ '"'4^ v INDEPENDENT PARTY 5 Petition^" ,f V'. '» * ^ 4-v SPECIMEN BALLOT ; THIRD WARD City of McHenry, in County of McHenry and State 4f Illinois Election: Tuesday, April 21, i«31 ^ PETER A. NEISS, City Clerk. ; t|POR MAYOR fl JOHN R. KNOX FOB CITY CLEKR [j PETER A. NEISS: FOB UAYOK mm • 1 1 "! "J ^1 , "tiri.' ' • " '"y- i . . "Shall the dity ol McHenry operate on Daylight Saving Time daring those months that the City of Chicafo operates on Daylight Saving Time.1' . J&JS-.k i TES •ffe- i:C"i J-**- ,-A>; •.. .4k-.vJiL-.v-,' iX)B CITY TREASURE# (3 OEKSIO J. CARET JOB ALDERMAlt f~] JACOB SCHAKTER ^ $To Fill VscSncjjL.* n ALBERT BARBIAW FOB CITY CLERK * FOB CITY TREASURER FOR ALDERMAN (To Fill Vacancy) ..if y. •- . £ * -r ..T4i .. '