t^l it. . . f V- tJl. t C ? ^ " • <#l-- -------- ipx M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1926 TAe Best Things Whatever Is best Is safest; lies oat Of the reach of human power; can neither be given nor taken awaj.-- Bolingbroke. • " '; Po'i Pile Tlie pies tliiit Mother used to make Se^iu even inure wonderful when we j consider the dough that father used to make. v-' Dividend Notice THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS of Public Service Company of Northern Illinois, have declared the regular quarterly dividend of $1.50 per share on the Company's 6r'o preferred stock, $1.75 per share on the 1% preferred stock,and $2.00per share on the common stock, payable May 1, 1926, to stockholders of record, at the close of business, April 15, 1926. QEORQE R. JON^S, Treasurer , This is the 58th consecutive quarterly payment by the Company to its common and preferred stockholder* and the 97.th consecutive dividend including the dividendpayments of the Company's principal predecessor. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OP NORTHERN ILLINOIS "Serving 6,000 square miles--234 cities and r • v towns--with Qas and EleSricity The Common and Preferred Stocks cf Public Service Company of hlurihem Illinois are list> d on Tfue Chicago Stock Exchange WEEKLY_PERSONALS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK J&9UR BUSY CITY c SERVICE SERVICE SERVICE • ••" ^ ' /•' , * " • * ' 1 Hollister's Motor Express Motor express service from the Chicago warehouse to McHenry on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays. All freight delivered to the Chicago warehouse before 10 a. m. on the above mentioned days will be delivered to \ its destination before the close of business on the same day. Adress your freight plainly. - Via Hollister s Motor Express 434 SO. DESPLAINES St., CHICAGO Warehouse telephones, Monroe 0107-0108 WoodstockTelephone, Woodstock 497 SERVICE GUARANTEED <• * AS SEEN BT PLAINDEALER REPORTERS AND HANDED IN BT OUR FRIENDS Mrs. Frank Ensign waa a racent Chicago visitor. Mr. and Mrs. George Stoffel spent Sunday in Kenosha, Wis. *• Mrs. Edwin Knox and Miss Leone Conway spent Friday in Chicago. Mrs. John Fay was a Woodstock visitor on Tuesday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Frett of Aurora visited McHenry relatives on Sunday. Edmund Goth of Woodstock was a visitor in McHenry on Monday afternoon. - Mr.^and Mrs. Frank OTlaherty of Elgin spent Sunday with Miss Nancy Frisby. • Mrs. E. F. Kelter is spending the week with relatives iiltjie Metropolitan city: . Whatever you need, try first to get it at Erickson's Dept. Store, West McHenry. Dry goods, groceries, shoes, etc. \ M. J. Freund and daughter, Mathilda, were Woodstock visitors on Monday. | Miss Genevieve Knox of DeKalb spent the week-end with home folks in this city. Mrs.'Anton Schneider and son, Anthony, spent Monday in the Metropolitan city. f Mrs. F. H. Wattles returned from lim heater, Minn., on Monday night of last week. V M ss Marion McOmber, of Chicago, was a week-end guest in the home of M iss Clara Miller. Robert Taylor was a business visitor in the Metropolitan city on Saturday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Powers and son Raymond Jr. spent Sunday with relatives in-Woodstock Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Wheeler and M isses Inez and Dorris Bacon spent Sunday in Libertyville. Dorothy and Walter LaSalle of Des Plaines spent Sunday with Miss Floribel and Lisle Bassett. Mrs. Smallfeltlt of Silver Lake was a Sunday guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Tesch. Miss Lena Stoffel is spending the week in the home of her sister, Mrs. C. E. Westphal, in Chicago. _^G. F. Grignon and family, of Chicago, spent Sunday as guests in th'.' home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ritter. Mrs. James Powers and daughter, Helen, and Mrs. P. J. Cleary were Elgin visitors last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schaefer of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Schaefer. Miss Maude Granger of Chicago spent the week-end in the hom£ of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson. Mrs. Simon Stoffel and daughter, REMEMBER that asbestos is taken out of the earth precisely as rock is. Remember that it has lain in the earth for unknown ages, r e s i s t i n g a l l t h e force* of rot or decay. It is probably the most enduring material that has ever been mad* into a roof. P Write, call, «r • Ultphomt. Roofs of Rock! -for every building old or new AROOF of asbestos is a roof, of rock because ^ asbestos actually is rock. Thus, a roof of asbestos has all the enduring qualities which have enabled structures of rock to withstand the storms and stresses of centuries. Fire protection, too. For asbestos, in addition to being immune to the ordinary forces of rot or decay is absolutely fireproof. Roofs of Johns- Manville Asbestos entitle owners to base insurance rates, because Underwriters' tests have proved them entitled to the best classifications. Your pocketbook, too, is safeguarded. A roof of Johns-Manville Asbestos never needs painting. It needs no surfacing to protect it, for the asbestos of which it is formed is all the protection necessary* Write, call, or telephone us for particulars regarding a Johns-Manville roof for any sort of building. IVf^LJENRY LUMBER PA i-» J. JL Quality and Service First^^-^ • Clara, visited Miss Mary Bonslett in the Aurora hospital on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Krepil of Round Lake spent Sunday as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Ritter. Mr. and Mrs. August Sherf of Chicago -were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ensign. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Maynard of Crystal Lake spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ensign. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Carey of Chicago passed the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stoffel. Mr. and Mrs. William Lester of Chicago were week-end guests in the M. A. Sutton home in this vicinity. Mrs. Harry Alexander, of Hebron, spent a few days last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson. K Mr. and Mrs. Math Steffes, daughter, Loretto, and son, Herman, were Sunday visitors in the Metropolitan city. E. F. Kelter, who has been spending the last few weeks in Chicago, on business, has returned to his home here. & Mr. and Mrs. Matt Rauen tmd family of Evanston were Sunday guests jn the home of Mr. and Mrs. Anton Schneider. Whatever you need, try first to get jt at Erickson's Dept. Store? West McHenry. Dry goods, groceries, ^hoes, etc. Mr. and Mrs. John Hickey of Chicago, spent the first of the week in looking after their summer cottage in this city. Mrs. Katherine Althoff of Kenosha* Wis., is spending a few days as a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Miller. Mrs. Charles Mertes and little daughter of Chicago are spending a few days in the home of her mother, Mrs. A. Wolff. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weingart and children were Sunday quests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Christensen, at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. A1 Freeze, Miss Charlotte Stahl, and Miss Martha Althoff passed Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Guyser of Johnsburg spent Wednesday evening of last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weingart. Miss Lftla Bacon, who has been spending the last three weeks with relatives in Kenosha, Wis., has returned to her home in this city. Mr. and Mrs. John Reihansperger, of West Chicago, spent Tuesday and Wednesday as guesfs in the home of Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Hi i .ansporgor. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brooks am1 son, James, and Mrs. Al Wagenor, ol Chicago, were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Kelter. Mrs. Herbert Simon and family, Mrs. Albert Kunz and family and Mrs. David Johnson were Sunday guests in the home of Mrs. William Bishop. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Martin of Round I^ake attended the card party given by the Royal Neighbors at Stoffel's hall on Thursday evening of last \spek. Mrs. E. M. Wheeler, who haa been quite ill at the home of her son, Dr. J. E. Wheeler, for several months, is much improved and will return to her home next week. Mrs. William Tesch, who has been spending the past week with relatives in Salem and Silver Lake, Wis., returned to her home in this city on Saturday of last week. Leonard Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Will Smith, who was recently taken to the Woodstock hospital, was able to return home on Tuesday evening of this week, aiu) i* improving rapidly. TERRA OOTTA Miss Eleanor McMillan of Elgin spent Saturday and Sunday at her home here. Whatever you need, try first to get it at Erickson's Dept. Store, West McHenry. Dry goods, groceries, shoes, etc. Mr. arkl Mrs. M. Knox and daughter spent^Sunday at the home of J. J. Doherty. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sund and her daughter Darlene of Carpentersville spent the we§k end at the home of Henry McMillan. Miss Jennie Hogan of Elgin spent Sunday at the home of B. J. Shine. Miss Eva McMillan of Chicago visited at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Boger and family visited at the home of D. A. Powers Sunday. Thomas Bernston of Elgin spent Sunday at the home of B. J. Shine. Originated Turkey Trot Going back to the early Eighteenth century to show that every Innovation In dancing lias met with violent opposition, a writer In Liberty Magazine says that It was In 1912 that Mabel Hlte, an actress, and Mike Dunlin, a ball player turned vaudevlllan, who was Mabel's husband, brought to Broadway the first turkey trot New York had ever seen. Right there (toefntly ordered terpslchore expired. SLOCUM'S LAKE Mrs. Ollie Grantham and daughter, Fern, spent Sunday afternoon and Monday in Chicago. Mrs. H. L. Brooks accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Louis Rohman of Barrington to Waukegan last Saturday. Sunday afternoon callers at the W. E. Brooks home were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Underwood and son, Edwin, of Mundelein, Dave Williams of Lake Forrest and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kropp and two sons of Lake Zurich. Emmet Geary and son, Forrest, of Fremont township spent Saturday at the Henry Geary home. Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brooks were callers at Crystal Lake last Monday afternoon. RINGWOOD Mr. Howard Bell who has been quite seriously ill for a few days, died at his home on Monday. He was 28 years old, being born in Marqh, 1898. He has been an invalid all of his life and has won a host of friends through his sunny disposition. He is the youngest of six children of Edward and Florence Bell. His mother and two brothers preceded him in death by a number of years. He leaves two sisters, Mary and Bertha, each of Spring Grove, and his father, Edward Bell, and one brother, Lewis Bell, a number of nieces and nephews and other relatives. He will be very much missed by friends both old and young. . Dutyps Catl Every mission constitutes a pledge of duty: Every man Is bound to consecrate his every faculty to Its fulfillment. He will derive his rule of action from the profound conviction of that duty.--Mazeinl. BILL BOOSTER SAYS: OA KG HOME SOME FLOWERS Qfc A BOX OF CAUON TO NOOft VJIFfi TOUHSrWT, MR. VMkU, AklD SACNJ HER TUAT "fOJ SY1UUNEUER. \F THE SHOCX DOGS UOT Kl U, HER, 6HCL VflU. SU&E APPRECIATE NOUR UTTtE GIFT 1* i Add Boneheadt in Butmmm They are telling In Cape Town the ttory of an actor who took a suit of evening clothes to a tailor "to be let out." As he needed the suit for the evening performance he called for it Just before closing time. "What about my clothea?" be aalrad. "Most successful; most successful 1" seamed the tailor. "I ve managed to let them out for a month at a shilling a week." Have Flowers In Your Home Sunday • i It doesn't cost much to brighten tip the home with flowers. We will deliver one dozen carnations to your home or a mixed bouquet to your home in McHenry on Saturday fQr___ -V 6©c We are ready to supply you with vegetable and bedding plant# for the garden. LET tJS HAVE YOUR ORDER Rosedale Greenhouses Phone 653-;W-1 McHenry,- 111. Truly Delicious McHenry Too Cream, whether you buy it in bulk or in delightfully blended flavors in Bricks, is a truly delicious confection. The guaranteed purity of all ingredients adds to your enjoyment of it. When yon say Ice Cream, don't forget to also say "McHenry." McHenry Ice Crean Company Green and Elm Streets McHENRY ;; SELL IT WITH A CLASSIFIED AD IN THE 4 PLAINDEALER /I / /. y\ X/ / cAt iheiouch of a button** Starts *' Runs Stops Automatically Root System for Trees The bureau of plant Induatry says J^at healthy trees must have a good root system. The roots of some trees grow deep, while others are likely to appear on the surface. Among the deep-rooted trees are the oak and tulip. Among the surface trees are the poplar, silver maple and walnut. Perambulating Orbs The Boston Transcript reprints thla from a novel: The gill's eyes shone With fierce anger, and then without • «»rd walked aimf. Here is the new automatic DekxvLight. It is backed by ten years of experience on the part of the pioneers and leaders in the farm electric field. It represents years of research and experiment and test. And now it is ready--the Delco- Light that starts, runs, stops,--at the touch of a button. Only $279 The new automatic Delay-Light is priced at only $275 f. o. b. Dayton, Ohio--and it is sold on the easy terms of the GMAC payment plan. This new automatic plant com* pletes the Delco'Light line. There are battery plants in several sizes -- a self'Cranking plant without storage batteries --and now the fully automatic plant at a surprisingly low price--a Delco-Light for every need and every purse. Write or phone for am complete installation o§tr» McHeary Finn Eke. Go. H. W. White, Mgr. UI Deaa St, Wvodatod^ ML 1 BAXSQMt QHIP