Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Mar 1922, p. 6

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

'r i > T W * *4 * :W- :% • " v ; A * * .& ? " * * «? '1 » ^ ^ * >s ? ** / 4 ^ s" » •>'*" I. * i$" * * * """* K •* r < "jf ^ o' ^ ' '^4 *" * ' %«Jt * I V ^ Henry rdatives Miller passed in Kenosha. Monday with G. E. Schoel Was a Chicago visitor lasj, Friday. r ' I" < m ; *,-v lESTER Republican Candidate for Sheriff of McHenry County Lester Edinger, candidate for Sheriff is now devoting all of his time to his campaign. Mr. Edinger is 28 years old, married, has two young children and resides with his family at Woodstock, Illinois: , • Since the close of the waiy Edinger has been employed at the Oliver Typew riter Factbrv. He inlisted in the National Guard in 1913 and became a Lieuteipnt in December, 1914, and a First Lieutenant in November, 1917. He serv ed with the National Guard on the Mexican Border in 1916 and was called out with Company G, on July 25, 1917, for service in the World War. He sailed for France in May, 1918, and served in the front line trenches until the close of the war, being stationed on the Somme and Argonne fronts. During much of the time that Company G. was in France Lieut. Edinger was in command of the company. Mr. Edinger is the only, ex-service man who is a candidate at this time for the office that he seeks. He is clean, honorable, intelligent and efficient McHenry County has honored one of her former service men in the person of Charles F. Hayes, our Circuit Clerk, who has demonstrated by his conduct of that office that the boys who fought in France are as capable of filling civil positions at home as are those who stayed at home during the war. The training had by Lieut Edinger during his war service, part of which time he was in command of a Company of 250 men while under the enemy fire at the front, was a valuable experience for him and his friends believe has fitted him for public service in his home community. Among his most ardent supporters for the office of Sheriff of McHenry Couiity are the men who served with and under him overseas. They speak in highest praise of his loyalty and devotion to duty, his capabilities, intelligent moral and physical firmness and fearlessness in the most difficult emergency and his pleasing and lovable personality. These are some of the masons'why his fellow ex-service comrades urge his candidacy to the favorable consideration of the men and women voters of McHenry county. Personally, Lieut. Edinger is no politician, knows but little about .politics and his aim in seeking office ist to serve well the people should th&y see fit to honor him with this preferment VOTE FOR For I hereby announce myself a candidate for the office o# assessor for the town of McHenry and will appreciate the support of the voters at' the coning election. E. M. Geier. DR. N. J. NYE * PhjrsiHan and Surgeon X-Ray Treatment and Radiograph .... Office Hours: » , / 'ViV&oo to 9:00 a. m. : 00 to 3:00 p. m. % ' :00 to 9:00 p. m. 'Phone 62-R :: :: McHenry, III ^KTTFR FROM CHIN^ R*r. ft. 1. Harrison Describes the City ;jjgf Chinkiang 4 Edinger For Sheriff at the Republican Primaries Tuesday, April 11, 1922 New Rubber Belting • ,~*4PRICF. PER FOOT--r • Inch 2 Ply 1 r ".#5 1 1-2 M I -2 2 ' 3 4 « 3 Ply M M .1• 4 Ply .M .3$ JS .35 .5# Also pulleys. Iiutif?»rs. shafting, leather lilting and a larRe supply of Ik«si\ I'sed bcltWfK at ft sacrificed price. Money returned i (goods are otherwise than represented. Write for prices on any width up to Hrt inches. CLINTON SUPPLY CO. 117 S. Clinton St. Phone Chicago, HI. Main 5964 VAfcRfc YOU'LL FIND THE f000 IS weAffTYTHAJS ViM HE'S CM.V.ED PAVCTV W rE enjoy the hearty good will of our patrons because they know we sell them the most nutriu ous, wholesome food that is offered to the people of this or any other ootnmonitv. We make it certain that you will be satisfied, as we cater to your individual wants. <?* '* " ' Watch for Mr. Happy Party •FRETTS 1MARKET % GROCERY IIN ST. WEST MttlENBY.IU r PHONE 3 ~ the Security When you purchase household com* modities or wearing apparel, there is satisfaction in securing products you know. ou make your investments you e teeling of confidence •Ir'V When! you maice V, want tne same fe and dependability. The Preferred Shares of the Western United Corporation afford just such assurance to residents of the Fox River valley. ^ Such an investment is hacked by the tangible assets and properties of a company whose reliability you know to be sound. The management is in charge of local men you know to be community and industrial leaders. The same feeling of assurance you seek in all purchases is open to you through an investment in the Preferred Shares of Western United Corporation. u can purchase them by easy partial payments, if you prefer# . x Ask your local gets bffice. v *• i'y4 INVESTMENT DEPARTMfiitT my - ill"* WESTERN UNITED CORPORATION 'S.. . - .•;-r f.i HP ^hinkian^ llcHenry_J^aindaa|e^i%;;.-%fto McHenry, III. • . • 1 c, Dear Mr. Schreiner--*fhe Plaindealer serves many purposes and goes to many homes, but I want to tell you that there is one place that it is looked for regularly and always read a n d t h a t i t i s o n r h o m e . We w i s h , t o . . . . be remembered to all our McHenry!0* m'"sslonary 8ervice m •hi laid out there like a checker with the dykes dividing the several plate of land and making irrigation of the rice crops possible. In the background we see a long range of mountains with their multitude of forms and color to testify to the beauty of their maker, with their fortitude and strength to challenge stand and start doing business in the middle of the street. To add to this clutter you may find a row of beggars sitting along there with their moan and wail, or sometimes one throws himself into the middle of the street get more attention. You have more sympathy for dives after you've seen a lot of oriental beggars. You may ask me how many out of every hundred people we pass has enough education to read the newspaper and I will tell you not more than ten. Or you may ask me "After fifty years Chinkiang what percentage of these people that we pass on the street are Christians?" I will reply, "Three out of a thousand." When you have gone thru this street you will begin to see that there is still something to be desired in this venerable civilization of four thousand years in age. We will not have time to visit the missions today, so will hope that I may have the pleasure of showing you thru our work some other day. Till then, I remain as ever, Cordially yours, S. J. Harrison. Garden, field and flower seeds at Erickson's. friends. Perhaps you would like to go with ' me for a little walk to see something i of the city in which we live and work. It is a beautiful, bright, crisp morn- i ing and, altho it is ttie last of Jan- ' uary, we have had only one small; snow storm, the ground is now bare, j It is true that the grass is brown I and dead, but there are some trees in our front yard still green and beauti- j ful. Moat of the trees, however, are bare. : < We wilt take a look first at our front porch. Looking to the right we see two hills, the nearer one being the location of the W. F. S. S. hospital and school, the further one at a distance of perhaps two and a half miles being the location of a Chinese fortress overlooking the river. Between these two hills lays the city of Chinkiang with a population of from 200,000 to 300,000 people, but invisable from this point. Straight ahead of us we see just the end of the Chinese city, the railroad station, a stretch of level plain and beyond that the Yangtze river, at this point over a mile wide and 180 feet deep, one of the greatest waterways in the world, j ROOMS FOR RENT Inquire of or To our left we see in the foreground : wr*te Mrs. Mary Simon, „ McHenry, the fields of the Chinese farmers, all! HI. Phone 105-R. 39-3t board, Read The Plaindealor and keep posted on local happenings. CLASSIFIED DEPARTMENT FOR SALE--Silo and mower. Ben Henry, 111. filler, 12x80 silo Adams, West Mc- 34-tf FOR SALE--Oberstadt residence in West McHenry. See J. C. Holly, McHenry, 111. 32-tf FOR SALE--Horse, ness. Very cheap. West McHenry, 111. buggy and har- A. S. Parks, Phone 83-J. 30 FOR SALE--Late 1918 Ford roadster at $100.00 cash and should be worth considerable more. Call 608-R-2. 39* FOR SALE--A lew choice Poland China gilts bred for April farrow, decadent and insufficient civilization j James Hunter, West McHenry, 111. 30 to new courage and achievement, with their solitude inviting those who ane thronged with cares to go apart and think. Had you been with me ttfst week I would have taken you into these mountains with us on our j FOR SALE--«-A quantity of rye, also four days' hunt, when four of us cap- jSome Murdock Yellow Dent seed corn. bear and .Lewis McDonald, West McHenry, 111. j FOR j posts, I early. ! 111. SALE--A quantity of fence 5% and 6 feet long. Order Mrs. J. H. Justen, McHenry, 36-tf Phone 638-M-2. 39-2t* tured three deer, a wild some small game. We leave the front porch, pass, out [FOR SALE--One black mare, 9 yrs. i old, wt. 1700; one black gelding, 10 !yrs. old, wt. 1450. Inquire of Chas. j Ensign, McHenry, 111. 39-2t* WANTED TO RENT--Cottage furnished or unfurnished right in town. Best of references. Ed. Bohr, 2631 Lincoln Ave., Chicago. 38-3t* thru the front gate and down the road. You ask me "What are all of these mounds that cover the hills on both sides of the road right up to the walls of your compound?" I reply, "Why I these are the graves of dead Chinese." i Within a few blocks of our house you will see perhaps ten thousand of these graves. If the day is auspicious you FOR SALE--Store building and may meet as many as half a dozen' ground. Property has a 92-ft. frontfunerals with > their prefessional1 age and is 132 feet deep. Anton mourners, their heathen idols, their j Schneider, McHenry, 111. 38-tf paper money to burn to appease the gods, their brass band and all that goes with a heathen funeral. We walk down the road that passes FOR SALE--Spring seed wheat, Montana grown Marquis, free from foul seeds and other grains. McHenry Flour Mills, West McHenry, 111. 36-4t FOR RENT--Eighty acre farm at Lake Defiance. J. B. Kelter, 171 W. Lake St., Chicago, 111. Tel. Franklin 3865. 37-tf FOR SALE--By the ton, a quantity of wood in stove lengths. Inquire at Fox River Valley State Bank, McHenry, M. 88 thru this graveyard as far as three or four city blocks, turn to the right and then to the left and find ourselves on a point of a high hill overlooking the city. Did you ever see an ant hill with ten thousand ants busily plying back and forth in the daily routine of their work? Well that is Chinkiang. Houses packed in tightly together, streets not as wide as the average ally in an American city bending at every hundred yards or less in order to fool the devils who travel in straight lines, there you see the city of Chinkiang. Yonder you see the city wall climbing up a hill and running off to the right, surrounding what is known as the Old city, but the real city has outgrown its wall and today as much or more business is done outside as within the city wall. Around to your left you can see the place that Marco Polo tied up his old ship and came to land a hundred years or more before Columbus discovered America. Yonder is the Golden Island temple, one of the oldest FOR SALE--Ford coupe, 1920 model, Buddhist temples in the world anil one good condition, equipped with shock of the most renowned. You stop to , absorbers, spot light and many extras, think for a moment of the venerable IA fcarbain. inquire at Overton'8 civilization upon which you are look- Garage> Weat McHenry, HI. 38 ing and you remember that Napoleon' FOR SALE--House, barn and eight lots. Will sell as a whole or will sell lots separate. John G. Schrauth, McHenry, 111. 35-tf FOR SALE OR RENT--The Michael Justen estate house on Elm street, McHenry. Apply to or write N. J. Justen, administrator, West McHenry, m. 16»tf BABY CHICKS--Lowest prices. Eleven kinds, full blooded stock, postpaid. Free catalog tells how to raise chicks. Universal Baby Chick Co., Peoria, 111. . 37-tf Painting, ^Decorating Paper Hanging and Calcimining aOxNtLiYv FrmIRScTr CLAa SoSo WORK r'M^'S ^ * 4|Mred Peais' Sample Book of the Latest Desigaa "V-""" ^ H» 'KASCH «pabnfotfmai eihi ; • w • a • • • i. • ^ • ITI _ I . " ^ m i"- i£. How long should a gas mantle last? The answer is from 800 to 1*000 burning liours. Turning the gas on and off too fre- s S|uently; the slight explosion that some- • limes results when it is lighted, are both r ^ ^ liighlv destructive to a mantle. Or a v Mantle, which burning steadily, might y fast for severed thousand hours, may be ; ^ destroyed in a few minutes by rough handling. y<* Westernlfiflfed'Gais^vfift <11* and Electric Company said to his men when they were down WANTED--Would like to hire an all in Egypt ready for an engagement in around man for farm work. Also the presence of the pyramids, "Re- have for sale one or two horses. Apmember men, four thousand years are ply to John Regner, McHenry, ni. i looking down upon you." Every move Phone 616-W-l. 38-2t* jyoucSfake in China is within sight of a four thousand year old civilization. | But, alas, that civilization is sadly jlacking in many respects from our ! point of view. . BABY CHICKS--Full blooded stock. Leading breeds. Low prices. Postpaid. Alive delivery. Big catalog free. Capacity, 1922 million and half • i f c h i c k s . F a r r o w - H i r s h C o . , P e o r i a , Suppose we go down from this hill 85»tf into one of those narrow allies that. -- r they call a street and look around for FOR SALE--Sevan passenger Lexa moment. If you are just from ington Minute-Man Six touring car in j America you will be struck with the fine condition. Will be sold cheap. Can be seen at the McHenry garage, N. F. Steilen, McHenry, HI. Phone 111-R. 35-tf FOR SALE--Second absence of almost everything you 'are accustomed to see in an American | city. No street cars in the middle of | the street, no room for them. No autos whizzing by to give you the jodor of ite gas, no, but China has ?_rrt^as 1 B_co1^] ; smells of its. own. No beautiful glass i front show windows in the stores. i What then ? Wheelbarrow, mules, i horses, ladened with sand, brick or hand cars in Buick six touring, Dodge touring, Republic truck and Ford roadster. Central Garage & Repair Shop, Johnaburg, 111. Phqn 640-J-2. reeds for fuel pushing and crowding (X)RN FODDER AND HAY--I have j to get thru the narrow ally. Men about 200 shocks* of good corn fodder, pulling rickshas, men carrying sedan ^ tons 0f alfalfa hay and a quanjchairs, men carrying buckets of water tity Qf shredded corn fodder for sale, on tfie two ends of a poll across their g j Fellows, Crystal Springs farm, shoulders, all these adding to the ^est McHenry, 111. 37-tf ! crowd and push. Not only is this ---- call traffic ham- FOR SALE--One span gray mares, 2800 pounds. Price 'mess that you will I pered by narrow streets," but these weight about narrow streets are made more narrow $175.00. Also one span of gray by the little business man who has a geldings, coming ° ' ' right to squat anywhere oa the thoro- H. Harrison, RmgwoW.) * fare with his meat stand, his hat Phone Richmond farm phone 38-lt* Bell Work House Wiring Electric Fans and Motor Repairing We install and repair all kinds of Electrieftl Equipment. mm* PRICES RIGHT WORK GUARANTEED GIVE YOU AN ESTIMATE ON YOUR WORK J1EIMER & BLAKE Phone, McHenry 90-W 20th Firemen's Ball To be given by the Volunteer Fire GOmpafiir of Grayslake, at the Grayslake Opera House Friday, Mar. 17 Remember this is the regular Firemen's Dance. This means thatno one will be permitted to go away without having a good tint*, just come here, there will be a prize winning costume here for you, your wraps will be taken care of free of charge, your auto or horses will also be taken care of free of charge. More than a dozen prise* groups have been arranged and all but a few are cash prizes. Above all remember that there will be a supper served at midnight. SIX PIECE ORCHESTRA DANCE TICKETS, 56c A PERSON Jtnotted Cords Make Noisy Lines •The cloth-covered cord which connects your telephone instrument with the bell box and the cord running to the telephone receiver are each made up of a number of fine wires covered with light insulation. If these cords were not made in this way they would not be flexible. They are necessarily delicate and easily put out of order by misuse. Subscribers are requested to avoid twisting aiftt knotting the telephone cords as this wears through the insulation, breaks the fine wires and causes short circuits. The first effect is usually a scratching noiae in the receiver and later the telephone is put out of service entirely^. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY hi • :

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy