Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Apr 1936, p. 4

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ffn f-F ?•.•;' ;^rj ? fH»F<mr v»* ; ^ x n ^ T < ; * * ^ THE McBENRT PLAUfDEALER Thursday, April, 16,1930 <•• m t'.: M'HENRY PLAiNDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, Dl., by Charles F. Renich 4 Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, III., under Hie kct of May 8, 1879. STUDENTS HOME FOR FASTER VACATION RE ELECT BOARD 'f t? Year ... Months $2.00 $1.00 Schools and colleges resumed their ( usual routine this week after a short. Easter vacation, daring which col- MEMBERS, SCHOOL ELECTIONS APRIL 11 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager Lillian Sayler* thecal Editor WEST PLANS CHEAP INNS FOR TOURISTS :£hain Wduld , Link Up With Those: Npw in Eaat. - ,. - %. « -Skn Fiaiuisco, Cali'f.--A cflmpHlgfl, 1 *'* for simple. in»»S'iHinSivr€(. inns', where. • >oim»: pcn|tle can stop unile. traveling • In Jlie west^ Juis )>«n'h launched by ' rf t Jlf^s .liisephino D." Kflivrftjl. v ji»r (He • S;ih'C Kraiieti^.. retfnjattosn/.'de-- ?" *• ^ "|»ar tmt'nt. ' * " \ V * The chain (jf inns In thw.f'tst ;wonl<i .y -j" '• lir|k wp , w ith% tjiose already in -v.-V. •" .^vnoo in -Hie. flHst, wliei-e."'&5i- have-.1>ee.n „• • • fan«truel<m1.- • tW\We».'^ iy'nufeh) from PiVro[M> - > "|, ^ » Thr; youth hoiejs. Miss- -Riiraiitft ex? : * / . p l a i n s a l r e a d y " h a v e I t e e n e s t a b l i s h e d . , in IS ili'UVrrtit- 1 Jin"). «• •« •••'is. }•• There, it is .possible •for'jroting- people to travel . wHejy -by bicycle, fw»t and can<>e for six weeks at a total r<»si ; ' 'of ?•_•«>. These, inns had their in<iepti<»n in (iennuny, !mH have now spronri to nearly all !'i;rt»po:in countries. t' . The idea wei.v.ifttrniiuced Intu the \ United Slni<'.-v,h,v Monroe and Isabel • Smith and Ins proved a .success, in 'the ^ v east. Miss Uandall hopes to complete . thiL. system 11< r*>vijjln»«t the western states. ' \ >' The >;eneiai rd:Yli. will always he he same--sej»ai;i:t> d^mitorles- for boys and «irls, wiiu. eotninunilykitchens and recreation halls. ," Tti > -hivsieis nrovi.de beds. mattresses. 1 " 4 Idiiiiki'ts and cooking Utensils. Th>* i •• • chnrjie Is "J.'i i-ents for a night's lods: ing, with rents to HI cents added ;<»c<-asiotijilly lor fuel. r V Miss Katidal^ hopes as Mie tirst step • v . .. in her jVniy:t :<jyi lo have the national park commission conslnict a "liiop"' of . such hostels over a suitable area that will enahle yoijuj; travelers to make _ the entire tour hy loot in 15 days. . With, this as a denionstration, she • ; ?X|H»< ts to he aide to link up not only ^ • a eofnplrte western but national svs ; tem of such inns. School election in McHenry was a lege stu7ent7 visited "in many l^cal £uiet afa^ this year ™m: homes. This will be the last vacation I*0* °* '?e gra^e and, hl?h sch°o1 for the majority of them for the boards who sou^ht "-election meetschool year. ingr n0 °PP°slt,on at the polls Sat- .Gr, uy DrLu .k er o.f ,t,h e „U n.i versity o.f I„I -; urday afternoon. A ^ of 55 voteg were cast at _ - _ T_e l,e pwho ne- 1if9t-77 1 er ihf oVlidJ aCysh ThePrae,,f fna rSri,v,einntg thW^„e5dnaests-- the Community High school election, with c j president Jay nifrht w.th h1S parents, Supt and of thd board receivi 53 ballots and 'Mrs C. H. Duker, who motored to E E Bassett> secretary( 55. Champaign earlier •^theday to at- , In ^ grade school election a total 1 tend a concert given bjJ the U. of II- of g7 ballots were cast, with George lmois Glee Club, of which Guy is a Stilling for president receivinjf th*e Imem . t full number, George Johnson, 52, H. Frank Harrison, also a student at E. Buch, 50 and Glen Wattels, 3. J the University, \<rho "will graduate I The organization meeting <>- of he this year from a course in agrfcul- board will be held within ten days ! ture, came home with them and spent when the question of the hiring of •jEaster with jhis parents, Mr. and teachers will again become an im- Cat Apes Dog's Lead, . Succumbs to Mumpis Jefferson, Ohio.--A big black Tom cat shared Freckles, the highly exploited "mump dog" who, strangely enough, is a Jeffersonian, too. The swollen-jawed feline came down with a «ase of mumps after being exposed, to the disease when six Children in the Edward Patterson family suffered the first case of its kind in medical annals, meows weekly, and suffers tritefise pain. Patterson reported. A few weeks afco, Freckles, a fox terrier owned by Mrs. Av W. Teatsworth, contracted a case of niumps from his youthful master. His was reportedly the flrtt kiiirtvn case of canine mumps and created wide attention. \ :• It •- • ' MAN Flltos COBRA IN CAR.BESIDE HIM F0S SALE FOR SALE!--Seed Wheat at $1.50 per bu. McHenry Flour Mills. 44-4 FOR SALE--Used Norge refrigerators. Carey Electric Shop. Phone 251. McHenry. 43-tf FOR SALE--Carload of chicken wheat, $1.68 per 100. Bring your own bags. McHenry Flour Mills. 44-4 TOWNSEND MEETING IN CITY HALL The Country Organizer, A. D. Moore, will present the facts of the Townsend Plan of National Recovery 4t 8 p. m. in the City Hall on Thursday, April 23. Come with your questions. We are American citizens. This is a National movement. We all need to knew the real facts and truths of this movement. Come and learn how it will affect our tax bur* dens. Every taxpayers should attend this~ mee -ing. Every young man or woman who want* a job should come,. Every man now on relief, or .working oil the WPA should come. ~ Come and find if you have to sign your property away under the Townsend Plan. Dont' take hearsay, come and know for yourself. Come and hear why they are Investigating the Townsend Plan, v , V Cape Towner Leaps From Aijto a» It* Hit* Post. •S. ~*T Young- Teachers Found to Lead in Efficiency lif<>Mui.nu:ton. liul --The young . in Structdr, fresh, a iiti vigorous in his pur snits, ^h'olds an advantage over the tnore experienced professors in institutions of higher learning, aycordfng to I'ean Feniandns I'ayne, of the Univer Kity of Indiana. . . •'. The opinion is contained Ifl a tie\v book. "An Open Letter to College Teach erg." which; I»eari Payne co authored with Evelyn Spieth Wilkinson, of. City college. New York.' He cites experiments to show that any differences in efliciency between the young and old Instructor are in ;favoi of (he former. In one critical analysis, the instrnc tors scored 54.74; assistant professors, 54.2G; associate professors, ,r»l.l5, and professors, r>0.13. The same study also compared teachers who had taught from one to 11 years with those who had ta*ght more than 11 years. The efficiency score for the first group was 55.08. and for the second 48.82. "From whatever angle the approach was made, the difference In favor of * the young instructor persisted." said Dean I'ayne. "As you would expect, • ihere was a wide range of variation In •^ach groutf The poorest and also the 'hest teachers among those studied • *ere young instructors with two years' eaperieuce." ; Cape Towi^ S. A.--Driving In a closed car through the Mujitry at midnight with a hlsslSrf ^eobra stealing toward him. That was the-predicament of Willie Swart, a Cape Town man who had been visiting friends on a farm at Kllpheuvel. about miles away, and was driving hack here at night.. Soon after leaving the farm, he heard a hissing »outid behind his head. Thinking it was the wind, he drove on. After taking a corner sharply there was a rustling near tils gear shift. In the light of the dashboard, he saw a cobra'. With its hooded head swaying from side to side; it was closing on him, very slowly. For a few moments he sat watching it. Then he acted--qnickly. Opening the door of the moving car, he leaped out. He was unhurt. The car careened into -a ditch and drove itself into a telegraph pole. Mr. Swart walked to the farm. Next morning the cobra was killed. It was still a prisoner in the car, the door of which had shut again In the crash. The snake Is believed to have entered the car when the vehicle wa^ parked in one of the farm sheds". Mrs. C. L. Harrison, at Ringwood. Miss Mildred Thompson of bcKalh portant issue. • During recent years -the- ' local spent Easter vacation wfth her par- school elections • have been rather ents. , : , v [quiet affairs, the contest last year, ' Mr. and Mrs. Jack' Purvey of Chi- however, being an exception to this cago spent Easter weekend with rule. Wi.fo contests waged by canhome folks. Jack is a student at the didates on both h/gh and grade U. of I. Medical college in. Chicago; •. i school boards last year a record- Eugene Saylei", who is attending breaking vote was cast, totaling 1,- dental college in Clycago, arrived HO at the high school polls and 560 home Thursday night for the Easter at the grade school. weekend, returning Sunday night to1 Members of the high school l>oard Chicago. ,are now C. J. Raihansperger, E. E. Miss Bernice Unti, a student at Bassett, J. W. Freund, Ben Justen Mundelein college, Chicago, spent and Dr. A. I. Froehlich. last week at her home here, return-1 Members of the grdde school ing to her college duties Monday, board are George Stilling, George Miss Unti is taking a commercial Johnson, H. E. Buch, Frank Meyer, E. H. Nickels, Leeter Sherman, Mat S-effes. Next year the terms of Sherman and Steffes expire. Among the Sick RED CROSS OFFICERS Following are the officers of McMrs. Ejmil Boiler, daughter o"f Mr. Henry County chapter of the Amerian< J Mrs Wm. G. Ricks, of the Owen,ca" Red Cro88 T {°X the year 1936: Chairman--J. O. Gay, Woodstock. Vice-Chairman -- Sam Howard, Woodstock. Secretary -- Ruth Cunningham. Woodstock. V. Geisselbijeicht, Stenger and Allen subdivision, underwent an operation at the Garfield Park hospital, Saturday, April 4. 1 Her condition is reported very favorj able. ° j Mrs. Joe Williams is recovering 'from an attack of pneumonia. 1 Jack Geary of Wauconda is using \ crutches as the resuV. of three brok-, ^ „ I en bones in his foot, sustained on Lrfe Saving O. E. Metcalf, Crys- ; Thursday when one of the heavy 481 0 ^ . parts of a car he was repairing, fell „r °m,e , vice ' R- Cairns, ion it. . j Woodstock. i?nHugh'; Martin is quite ill with ' Junior' Red Cross--Mabel Hobbs, ' pneumonia at the home qf his neph- S? * ** wr 1? V u_ i^w, Vincent Martin. - r Pubhaty-lt^^ W. F . Johnson, Mrs. Joe Williams is confined to .Woodstock. _ ^ „ , , her bed with pneumonia, at her home Nursing Activ.t.es-Mabel llobbs. on Center street. ! C°Unty Ro11 Call-Thos. P. Bolger, ! Mrs. J. F. Claxton, who will be McHenry. 180 years old in July, is recovering1 ! from an attack of the flu. She was out for the first time Sunday and 1 Treasurer-- Woodstock. "> First Aid--rM. L. Schoenholtz, Mc- WHY BUY IMPORTED Grass Seed when you can buy home-grown seed cheaper? I have timothy seed, $2.00 per bu.; red clover, $12.50 per bu. Wm. Stiaines, McHenry, Phone Richmond 842. , 45-3 FOR SALE--Baby Chicks, from B. W. D. free, trap nested; single qomb white leghorns. Dams--200 to 327 eggs pullet year. Sires--289 to 332 dams record. $10.00 per hundred. A. C, Parfrey, Spring Grove, or call McHenry Flour Mills. 45-4 FOR SALE--Clover seed, Seed potatoes, seedj oats and seed wheat. M. P. Meyer, 1% miles north of Johnsburg, on River Road. *47 MISCELLANEOUS I WILL PAY $4.(Ky to $14.00 for old and disabled horses. They must be able to walk. Call or write FRANK M. JAYNE. Phone Woodstock 209. 19-tf WE PAY $2.00 FOR DEAD HORSES AND COWS weighing 1,000 lbs, or more. Phone Dundee 10--Reverse Charges. MID-WEST REMOVAL CO. WE HAVE CASH BUYERS--For farms in McHenry County. T. J. Stah 1 Co., Waukegan, 111. Twenty Years of Service. *43-4 SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED-- Before you buy a new sewing machine, let me see your old one. I guarantee it will work just as good as a new one, no matter how old or what model. POPP, Shoe Store, West McHenry, Phone 162. 43-tf. Bedridden Three Years, Jteindeer Meat Favored as Substitute for Beef Seward, Alaska.--Displacement of beef as a staple food in the northland by Alaska reindeer was seen as a possibility, after a meat shipment from the Arctic was delivered to Seward markets by government reiiuUvi ser* ice. j The meat wifs of better quality than most venison because the animals were fit and in good condition, and were .'scientifically butchered. It retailed in Steward at seven cents a pound. Tiie reindeer were originally imported to Alaska from Siberia for the Kskiuios. i Critic's Bath Comment J Brings Him Libel Suit 'Budapest.--After seeing a score of lightly clad chorus girls in the musical comedy. "Vienna Spring." Ander Varo. dramatic critic of a daily paper, re marked somewhat sardonically In bis review that obviously the chorus girls were not aware of the fact Budapest is famous for its numerous baths. The 20 girls understood that this broad hiht; meant that the critic did not Judge them to be too clean and *ued the critic for slander and libel. Deaths | You will be interested in th6 new convertible collision coverage when ' placing your automobile insurance. EARL R. WALSH, Phone 43. 46-tf LEGION PLANS CARNIVAL McHenry Post of the American Lecame "to MdHenry to"w)te~at""the pri- f10!1, mef M™d*y evening when marv on Tuesday ; . - . further plans for the carnival to be I Mrs. Charles Dunham is recover- over the fourth were disingf from an attack of th« flu. ^ | Mrs. E. J. Buss spiained her left I?TT P1 EYIR PPVCIAMG wrist recently when her arm ' t®? f , ™ ^ . Kansas Woman Still Smiles i«uBht in an automobile door. "c'Ie"ry couniy Brenner H,iel,., K,„.-To her he,!- ( .«-• fred Gilly, who b«a„e ill side have come newspaper stories and .with a heart attack Satuiday, was ., . - porai thP nlHoaf r,mo bulletins of "mercy killing," and Uken to St. Francis hospital, , ' ' " " a plea from another woman invalid for , ton, Sunday foi; treatment. • death--but there is no despair in the .heart of Pauline Ray. Unable to walk since September, 1932, when she was injured in an automobile accident, • Miss Ray has just celebrated her twenty-third birthday. The world has heard of the courage she had displayed during her three years as a bedridden, smiling invalid, and she received mote than 1,000 greeting cards from all over the United States and Europe. In fhe accident Mis Ray's neck was fractured in two places and dislocated in a third. Surgeons fear that an operation may cost her Jlfe. But Pauline smiles and sajrf: "I'm having a lot of 6in Just going on from day fb day. I*. I've read about Miss Ann Bet-lter of Buffalo, whose case has bees called hopeless and who has asked doctors to end her suffering. T,. "I sympathise vrttfjiet but 1 be^ lieve she should yry jfAd fo on Hvl,nit. There Is always hbi*p. There may be a bright day for her." FREE--1 Cardboard mash feeder free with every 100 lbs. of starting mash. McHenry Flour Mills. 44-4 WILL PAY CASH--For a farm from 40 to 160 acres, MoHenry County. Address McHenry Plaindealer. : *43-4 CELEBRATES SEVENTY SIXTH ANNIVERSARY Mrs, Emma P. Starritt PERSONALS Overrun ian Congo Coach Reed spent the Easter va- Never entirely recovering from in- cation at Logansport, Ind. juries sustained in a fall two months *Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ensign and ago, Mrs. Emma P. Starritt, 85 years sons, Roland and Howard, were Sunold, died Tuesday morning a(| 3:15 at day visitors jn the home of relatives her farm home near Terra Cotta. near Crystal Lake. She was born March 17, 1851, at Mr. and Mrs. George Jones and Boumenville, Area county, New York, Fred Selway of Woodstock were and lived in this community for 52 Sunday guests in the Albert Purvey years. Her husband, John D. Star- home. ritt, died April 18, 1906. | John Schreine* of Elgin spent Surviving are three sons, John, Sunday in the Albert Krause home. Henry and Clyde of Crystal Lake and Leroy Conway visited his brother, four grandchildren. ; Father Walter Conway, at Sacred Funeral services were held this Heart sanitarium, Milwaukee, Sun- Thursday afternoon in Gilberts day. Chapel with burial in 'Union ceme-'. Mrs. Minnie Block, son, Louis, and tery, Crystal Lake. , daughter, Mrs. A. J. Kamholz, attended a concert at Forest Park Sunday. • * Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kortendick of Pecatonica spent Sunday with their daughter and husband, Mr. and Mrs. John Bolger. M. A. Conway spent Easter in El- Stomach "Dredge" Is New Surgical Device Philadelphia.--Surgeons may gn "fishing" »n human stomachs through a new device perfected by Dr. «Iabrlel Tucker, professor ' bronchoscopy of the University of Pennsylvania medical school. So If you swallow your false teeth, an open safety pip or some thing equally dangerous. Doctoi Tucker's new "tackle" is rea^f to, be lowered into vjrour, stomach ari'l start tlredgint operations. ' Declared milch simpler than equipment formerly used, the new invention couiaius .a small pair of pliers at the end of the Iro'llow rubber tube. l~*ir is pumped in to inflate the organ and an x ray de vice makes {he afea visible. ; ; Click* Doctor' '-I'lickery'-pliti^ grab,' tiie swallowed article ati<l snake it out via the -tnhe. > of occurrenceu.jAj Rogue elepbatfi8, which are bachelors turned o«te">ofj£he regular herds, take pleasure in destroying crops, not for food but in a mania for wanton destructivenefesj^Theif,arrival on plantations is much l#are"d by natives. Fierce Elepl . Townjin Brussels.--Telegrams the Bel gian Congo report IncresBng danger from wild beas£% whic^uSi*H)ecomlng bold owing toV^ct^mr Of th,e popula tion because "of1 th* r^hrn of many Next Monday night our meeting gin. colonists to Europe. > wilt take place - in a very different Sergeant Phil Guinto of McHenry, The latest message stages that herds j setting. We are going to hike up popular state highway officer who of rogue elephlfidi cma*. up from the , the railroad tracks, north of town has been in charge of the DesPlaines Ruciz valley and rushed through the jand have our meeting there. This district during the election campaign, streets of Uvira, head of the Klva rail- will be enjoyed by the whole troop, was in McHenry Tuesday to vote, way line to Tanganyljj^--an Snheard ! Special committees of two Scouts During the past month he has been occurrence..,• ] each will provide us with entertain- on special detail a*; Governor HOr- 1 ment and games. I'm sure no one ner's office and was a personal escort : will want to miss this fun. to the governor since Friday. All the Scouts in groups which are Leo Smith of Chicago Heights I exhibiting merit badges at Wood- spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. ! stock should be sure to attend the and Mrs. J. R. Smith. [meetings which their leaders call J. F. Claxton was a Chicago vis- # ! this week. These meetings will be .itor Monday. 798-Lb. Couple Claim ! especially important because the ex- Mrs. Charles Dunham has return- World Weiffht Record hibit will take place this coming ed from Chicago and with Mrs. Phil Saturday. Guinto will conduct Niesen's restau- Mr. Schoenholtz, our Scoutmaster, rant again this season. Mrs. Guinto informed us that he has made ar: has been in the. restaurant this winrangements for a boat hike for some ter, also. time in the near future. This is us- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Roberts of ually a yearly event in our troop and Oak Park were called here Saturday provides enjoyment for some of our by the illness of her mother, Mrs. older Scouts. Keep this boat hike Fred Gilly. in mind and try and get boats, to Mrs. N. J. Justen went to Chicago use that day. to spend feaster with her children. SCOUT RICHARD WILLIAMS-; , Her daughter, Verena, of Pittsburgh -- , /was also in Chicago for the day. MRS. BETTY NIELSEN 0"Mrs. Peter M. Justen was a Chi- Jacob Justen, senior member of the firm of Jacob Justen and Sons, undertakers, who with Undertaker Stafford of Woodstock ranks as the oldest undertaker in McHenry county,, observed his seventy-sixth birthdaj Wednesday, April 15. Mr. Justen started in business more than fifty years ago in 1883 and eleven years ago his sons, George and Albert, went into partnership with him. On Feb. 5, 1884, he married Mary Buch wlio died Feb. 23, 1935. He has five children, seven grandchildren and one great grandchild. Mr. JuSten and his sister, Mrs. Eva Stritz, are the only < surviving members of the family. CHRISTIAN MOTHERS TO GIVE SUPPER SUNDAY The Christian Mothers of St. Mary's churph will sponsor a supper and evening of games and fun, in the church hall Sunday evening, April 19, to which the general public is invited. & The following menu will be served at 5 o'clock and will continue until everyone is served: meat loaf, potato salad, deviled eggs, baked beans, pickled beets, hot rolls, cake, jello. coffee. Adults 35 cents'per plate, Children 20 cents. The Christian Mothers, who are active in efforts to promote the welfare of the church, are well known for their culinary ability and always serve meals deliciously tempting. They are making plans to take care of a large crowd Sunday evening and hope that they will not be disappointed. The ladies extend an invitation to the public to attend the supper and remain for the evening. Your patronage is appreciated. Windhoek, Soiith West Africa.-- The distinction or being the world's weightiest marrbBBconffle is jclalmed by a man and his wife here. Their combined weight is 798 pounds. To this the husbam] contributes 448 pounds and the wife is a comparative lightweight at 350 pounds.- She still has time to catch up, however. Uer husband is forty years old, but she is only twenty-four. They have had to have special furniture made, as the ordinary kind "gave" under their weight. SUES FOR DIVORCE cago business visitor Tuesday. Mi*. Betty Nielslm, Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. William Aebischer of Popping Truckload * charges cruelty in a bill for separ- Chicago visited in,the Louis Stoffel Seattle.--There was -enough'popcorn ate maintenance filed in circuit court home Monday. to feed a thousand hungry kids near Monday against Harry Nielsen of the Sunday callers in the home of Mi", here the other day. Things started MctHenry bakery. She was forced to and Mrs. Peter Diedrich were, Mr. popping wlien"a truck, loaded with sey- ! leave him the bill states after two and Mrs. A1 Guthrie of Waukepan, en tans of popcorn caught fire after ' months of married life. She asks Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peterson, Lake striking a bridge rail. j custody of Edwin Frank Corey, 11 Villa, Mr., and Mrs. Mat Brown >nd T ! I year old son by a former marriage, children, Volo, and Mr. and Mrs. Leo ian* 'and money for his support, also ali-> Regner and children of Lake county. .Normandy, France. -- l'odefctrfans iriony and attorney fees. Mr. and Mrs. Charles McArthur here must carry lights at night. The , The bill further states that in the and daughter, Ruth, of Elgin spent °r^red,'lh.at Hny" PlaintiflF's opinir.n Mr. Nielsen makes Easter with Mrs. McArthur's moth*? one walking along unlighted highways in excess of $100 per month: er, Mrs. A. Wolfe. must carry, a lanterti, SO «S not to be The couple was married Jan. 31 Mrs. C. J. Rasmussen was S week and lived together until Mardh 18. end visitor in Elgin. " run down. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ellia entertained her parents of ft. Atkinson, Wis., Easter. WOMEN! Pursang Often Aids in Clearing Complexion Jfelp* BmiU Rod Blood Corp--dm tmd.To*** Up Emttrm Syttom How do you know your akin can't bs white and beautiful? Why take it for granted that you must look (allow and under-nourished ? Perhaps you're simply run-down -- as ao many people an at this time of year -- and need more iron in their blood. We recommend Pursang to yon. Pur sang is the product of the McKesson laboratories, famous in the manufacture of drugs and medicine* for more than a century. It is a scientific preparation containing organio compounds of iron and copper. These important elements make Pursang an effective hematinic--a builder of hemoglobin -- the substance which make* • red blood corpuscles red. In addition, Pursang contains ingredients that stimulate appetite, make you enjoy eating more, and make your food worth mora to you. It lack of iron in your blood is dragging you down -- making you f6el and look below par -- get a bottle of Pursang today. THOMAS P. BOLGER "The McHenry Druggist" Phone 40 GreenrStreet Glasses Fitted Dr. Paul A. Schwabe OPTOMETRIST ^._E. NYE BUILDING ^ v - Thursday Afternoon. West McHenry. ' Eyes Examined flours 1:30 -- 5:00 -- Phone 123-J Good Food and Good Liquor -- We are operating not only a tavern but a really first class restaurant as well Complete dinners from "soup -ttfjmts" as well as short orders and sandwiches. ^ Fish Dinners All Day Friday 10c and 25c My Place Tavern JUSTEN & FREUND, Proprietors MM Green Street McHenry, HI. DANCING 9t the RIVERSIDE HOTEL SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 18 CURLY'S COLORED HOT SHOTS ORCHESTRA.; Chicken Plate Dinn«t L, ......1,.....,. 50c SENIOR CLASS PLAY . ; McHenry Community High School '8:15 p. m. Tickets reserved at drug stores Thursday, April 23. All tickets r 25 cents . CINEMA CURLS AND CONTOURS Individualized by Nine Expert Beauty Artists HAIR-VITA PERMANENT , Revitalizing Non-Ammonia Process JO Eft Croquignole or Spiral, $4.00 Value, for (Combination 50c extra) complete with Personality Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave. PERSONALITY OIL PERMANENT, Special Solution for Hard to Wave Hlair Non-Ammonia, $5.If Q Cft Value, For Complete with Combination Winding, Personality Haircut, Shampoo and Set. HAIRTONE PERMANENT--A fragrant and reconditoning solution for all types and texture of hair, Non-Ammonia, Croquignole, Spiral or Combination, also with the famous Bonat Winding, ti AA $7.50 Value, For Complete with Personality Haircut, Shampoo and Finger Wave. FREE Facial With Any Beauty Service Amounting To $1.00 And Up. (From 8 a. m. To 12 Noon) Also $160 in Permanent Waves Given Away -- OnJ Each Month. SCHOOL GIRL'S PERMANENTS, END CURL PERMANENTS, $1.60 $1.50 and $2.00 up. Complete with haircut and finger wave. Bring a Friend Permanent Wave Specials. 2 Persons for $3, $4, $5, $6, $7, $8, $9, $10. Singly for $2 Up. STOMPANATO'S Ultra-Modern Beauty Saloa Tw« Etatraaeea Ten Private Booths 226 Main 8t 229 Benton St. Telehone 641 Woodstock, IB. Open From 8 a. n. to 9 p. m. CST To the Voters: Because it is impossible for me to tharik each of you personally for your support, and vote in the Primary, Tuesday, I am taking this means of expressing my appreciation to you for your efforts in my helialf. Enthusiasm shown for my candidacy for.the Republican nomination as County Judge came as a great satisfaction to me. I sincerely appreciate the vote given me and" will always make every effort, to merit the confidence,and trust you have shown in me. HENRY L. COWLIN

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy