mmim- -m. • • *(• JUNE 2, 1927 JOHNSBTJRG IMIl •pppp i- Ifr. tod Mrs. Joseph H. Adama and Alex and Genevieve Adams and Miss Marie Merfces spent last week Thursday at Holy Hill, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Thelen and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Adams, Monday evening. The Wide Awake Club met in the home of Miss Agnes Hettermann on Friday. The evening was spent by playing bunco, high honors going to Miss Kate Frett first, Agnes Hettermann second and Amelia Weber consolation. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lauritz of Chicago Visitejd (Mr. and Mrs, Frank Kempfer Tuesday. Misses Kathryn and Mary Althoff of Elgin visited with Mr. and Mrs. William Althoff a few days this week. , Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Deitz and daughter, Kathryn, and Mrs. Christina Brefeld of Chicago visited-in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. W.* Hettermann Sunday. Misses Tresa, Ella and Rosemary Huemann of Chicago visited their parents over the holidays. 4 Henry Hettermann, Edward Tonyyan and Anthony Freund boarded the train in Spring Grove to Janesville on Tuesday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith and family visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Smith Sunday. Joe Hettermann, Frank Kempfer, Adam Bildner, Charles Mertes and Bernard Althoff motored to Janesville Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Kennebeck and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Schumacher Sunday. Rose Pitzen and George Ohenauf of Libertyville visited with Mt. and Mirs. John Pitzen Monday. Mr and Mrs. Louis Adams and children visited with Mr. and Mrs. Nick Pitzen Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Steve King visited Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Smith Monday. t Mr. and Mrs. Roy Horick of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Regner and daughter, Betty, and son, James, of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Steve King and Alex Freund of Chicago visited with Mr. and Mirs. S. H. Smith Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Jerrick and family visited Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schaefer Friday evening. Misses Catherine and Frances Pitzen of Chicago visited with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schaefer over the holidays. Mrs. Catherine Tonyan and Mrs. Mary Freund visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Freund Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Tonyan and family visited Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Hettermann Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Math Lay and son and Mr. and Mrs John Lya, Miss Mary Schmitt, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schmitt, Mr. and Mrs. Math Schmitt and son and Mr. and ¥r.s John PERMANENT WAVING done by EXPERIENCED OPERATORS ONLY at Claire Beauty Shoppe Main Street One Block West of Community High School ALL BEAUTY WORK DONE For Appointments Call 208-R Phone Crystal Lake 127-J and Reverse Charges We will call for your work and deliver it in a dust-proof bag on hangers. Crystal Lake Tailors Lodtz & Lodts J I F F Y tor CORNS Will Take Off Cnm We know you will be surprised and justly so, too. We were surprised when we tried than. They positively will take that Corn off. Also Jiffy for Bunions and Callouses. Each 25c. ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED Thomas P. Bolger Tl»e More We Buy,--The More You Save Tfcat s th« secret of our lower prices on good furniture. There are nvw SZ I/eath stores. Our purchases mount into the million*. Our purchases are fifty times (greater than tbe average store. Our savngm art- passed on to you. A UATH STOU B NEAR TOO KLGLN 7q Grwt Ave. ROCKKORD (01 W Stata AURORA...... 81 Island At*. DUBL'QUK S76 M» <r. St. FREE! ORT t W. Mais WATKKLOO M L»far«tt( ':E.LOIT 425 E Gr*n<J 'OLIET m Jrttmon JAXPSVILLK MZ MHwaokw EAU CTjMEE 4M 8. ilamtow O&UKOSH 11 Main St. PEORIA J» S. Adantt i>KCATTR . 4>2 N. Wau* »*ADISON ...,117 State 8L 3REEN BAT 408 W Walnut FOND DU LAC. 50-r.t N Mam St. MORRIS 112 W. Wwhtrrton BC HOOPKSTON . . 21ft E Main St. Al'f'T n ciN 103-1 OS ColieB^ A VP A. LEATH St COMPANY Tires and Tubes Let me supply your needs with Mohawks or Goodyears. Balloons and high pressure, all sizes. Lowest prices in history. My prices can't be beat anywhere. Prices gladly quoted on request. TIRE AND TUBE VULCANIZING--BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING Globe and Willard Car Batteries "A" and "B" Radio BattetW • •$ • TIRE SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY, SUNDAY AND MONDAY 30x3! Mohawk Cortis $10.00 TUBES FREE . • • • • • •+ Everything Guaranteed J. Freund , Phone 120-R West McHenry Sfchmitt visited with Mr% Schmitt Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. John M. Pitzen visited with relatives in McHenry Wednesday. Mrs, Catherine Tonyan visited" Mr. William Tonyan one day last week. Mrs. Del ma Freund visited in the home of Miss Miller Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Schaefer wet* j McHenry callers Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Miller and family visited with M2r. and Mrs. H. Stilling one day last week. Miss Emily Smith visited with Mr. and Mrs. George Michels Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe King and children and Mr. and Mrs. Steve May and daughter visited with Mr. and Mrs. Steve King one day last week. Miss Marie Kempfer was a guest in the home of Miss Isabella Freund Sunday. .Misses Rose and Kathryn Pitzen and Joe Pitzen visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Pitzen and Mr. and Mrs. Ben J. Schaefer Monday, Mr. and Mrs. John Schmitt were visiting with Mrs. Mary Schmitt on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Thelen visited with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thelen on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thelen visited relatives in McHenry Thursday. Mrs. Frank Kempfer visited with relatives in Chicago a few days last week. •' , ;-•--/ Elizabeth Kempfer was a McHenry caller Tuesday. Mrs. Fred H. Schmitt, Mr. and Mrs. John K. Schmitt of Okarche, Okla., and Misses Mary K. and Agnes Schmitt motored, to Hartford, .Mount Calvary and Appleton, Wis., to visit relatives over the week-end. They spent Sunday at Holy Hill, Wis. June is the month for weddings and graduations and we have just the correct gifts for, both. Erickson Dept. Store. ILLINOIS State News OSTEND L. S. Lincoln of Harvard was a caller on relatives here Sunday afternoon. Our new neighbor, Mr. Dalziel is in very poor health. The report is that his blood is very poor, turning to water. fBudd Sherman is spending a part of his school vacation at his grandpa's. It seems it would be well for people that own dogs to know where they a: . A few weeks ago two strays came to Henry Hobarts in the night, chased the turkeys off the roost and killed the gobbler and one fine hen. The dogs were seen but in the night was hard to describe them. Just recently a runabout visited the John Boyle place and killed his gobbler. E L. Sherman, wife and two children were Sunday dinner guests in the home of Mrs. Sherman's parents. A teacher has been hired for the coming school year but the writer has not been able to learn the name. Farmers are getting very anxious about corn planting. Most of them have the seed in the bag yet. Many sav it is better off than in such wet soil: Judging from the many calls the farmers in this section have for potatoes the spud must not be very plentiful. We are still selling a large quantity of our splendid brands of coffee. Try some and see what a difference there is in the flavor of coffee. Erickson Dept. Store. • r THE LINKS REFEREE S / ntorprote#ion* of tko Rodo* ( | of Golf \ { By 1NNIS BROWN $ \ (Managing Editor, The American ! J Golfer) j What it to be done where a player drives a ball into ground under repair and is unable to find it f Can he drop another out of the ground under repair as near as he can tell to where the other ball dropped, without a penalty? Can a ball be dropped in this way with a penalty of a stroke f The player Is not allowed to drop a ball as suggested either with or without penalty, If the first ball la not found. To avail himself of the privilege of lifting and dropping without penalty the ball must be found. Otherwise the case must be treated as a lost ball. That Is, the player must go back and play again from as near as he can determine to the spot where the previous stroke was played, that Is, the one that resulted in losing the ball, counting the previous stroke and adding one penalty stroke ^ When winter rules are in effect it a player entitled to tee up his ball in the fairway, or must it just be placed f The answer depends on the wording of the so-called winter rule. Such a rule Is ordinarily adopted for the purpose of saving the turf of the course from being cut up by trying to play the ball out of close, cuppy lies. That being the case, it Is usual to state In the wording of the rule that the ball may be placed, thus Insuring the player a fair lie. to tb« B«11 Syndic*!*, Imi) Cood-Natttred Mom Everybody can tell a good-natured man by looklag Into his face. So It Is that the good-natured ones of the country are those who are most Imposed upon, but as they bear It cheerfully, thereby clinching their claim to good nature, nobody, not even the good-natured ones, need Exchange. complain.-- Bear It but Don't Grin" Paragraphers are long suffering. Occasionally they see their stuff credited to somebody else, but never •booting themselves. Hardmet Known Metala " Nickel, cobalt and manganese an Ike hardest metals found in the natural state. Alloys of steel, containing these soetals, are harder than the unalk> T*^ metal • • n i l h i mim nmm Walter Long, forty-four, of ltushville, died from injuries suffered when kicked In the stomach by a bronco colt. Mrs. Mary Bell Logan, sixty-five, for 40 years telegraph operator Wr the Chicago & Eastern Illinois railway, is dead at Danville. Irene McDaniel, nineteen, committed suicide at Murphysboro by drinking poison. No reason for her act waa ascribed. Dr. A. T. Nadig, fifty-seven, and Laura L. Price, thirty-four, his housekeeper, are dead at Freeport following a gasoline explosion at Doctor Nadlg's home. The Catholic Order of Foresters will hold its fourth triennial state convention at Kankakee on June 13, 14 and 15. Preparations are under way to entertain 500 delegates. Three were instantly killed, at Robbins when a Rock Island passengter train demolished the light truck in which they were riding. The dead: Mr. and Mrs. .Louis Miller and Henry Smith, thirty. Mr. and Mrs. George Bosler claim the record for farm tenantry, having conducted the Gantz farm, three miles south of Deland, for 35 years. They took charge of the farm after their ftarrlage. Floyd Stout, twenty-four, of Palestine, was fatally injured and John Huken, forty-eight, also of Palestine, was seriously injured when their roadster skidded and turned over onto another car west of Terre Haute, Ind. Miss Ruth Ewan of Cuba, who has been professor of home economics at Lombard college for the last five years, has resigned anil Mrs. Amy LInderoth Newberg of Galesburg has been secured to take her place. A billjon dollar congressional appropriation for Mississippi flood prevention has been suggested by two congressmen in accepting Mayor Thompson's invitation to attend the flood control conference in Chicago this month. Chicago and Cook county women have taken the first step in their policy of aiding the United States Department of Agriculture in reforestation work by planting 100 "walnut trees In Ryan's woods. Western avenue and Eighty-seventh street. Ceremonies of graduation week at the Illinois Women's college at Jacksonville began with the laying of the corner stone of the new science building by former State Senator James E. MacMurray of Chicago, chairman of the board of trustees, and largest contributor. Soldier dead of Illinois who lie "be-„ neath the crosses row on row," in French cemeteries, will rest under earth from their native state when the American Legion goes to France late this summer. A small quantity of earth from graves of "buddies" buried In Illinois will be taken to France and strewn over the graves there. No statutes exist in Illinois by Which the governor may permit convlcts to attend funerals outside of the prison In which they are confined. Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom Informed the governor, and any such release, even without cost to the state, and when the convict is accompanied by a guard, is illegal and unauthorised, Calstrom declared. The Shelton brothers, Carl, Earl and Bernie, southern Illinois gangsters, who recently were granted a new trial for the robbery of a mall messenger at Oollinsville on January 27, 1925, were released when a group of about twenty residents of Williamson and Franklin counties schsinled bonds aggregating $170,000 for the appearance of tbe three qhould they ever be retried. Illinois has just acquired Its first state forest It comes as a gift from Colonel and Mrs. C. C. Judy and their daughter Mary, of Menard county. The deed for the property has been formally accepted by Governor Small and William Stratton, director of the state department of conservation. The property embraces a tract of approximately eighty acres and is near the village of Tallula. Senior sports managers for next year at the University , of Illinois were announced as follows: D. R. Grimes, Evanston, football manager; C. A. Collins, Highland, 111., baseball; P. H. Bush, Newcastle, Iowa, track; S. D. Jones, Dewey, III., basket ball; M. D. Horse, Oifford, 111., Intramural; E. L. Hanson, Watseka. 111., Interscholastlc; H. C.-Bear, Evanston, circus; R. C. Murphy, Aurora. 111., relay carnival; N. R. Miller. River Forest, senior cheer leader; J. B. McLaughlin, Aurora, and L. I. Mulhall, 6401" South Lincoln avenue, Chicago, assistant cheer leaders. Illinois State fair, said to be the "greatest fair on earth," will greet visitors on opening of the exposition August 20, garbed In $500,000 worth of Improvements. A new grandstand will accommodate 10,000 persons. It will contain police headquarters, telephone booths and offices for fair officials and for the governor. Luke S. Gardner, seventy-seven, former county supervisor and four years custodian of Christian county fair, was found dead in his barnyard near Pana. Heart attack was the cause of death, said tbe coroner's verdict. ©LOOT/ & ELMO SCOTT WATSON "Long Ben/' Hero of a Play •^TKXT to Captain Kldd, perhaps no other pirate leader ever caught the popular fancy so much as Capt John Avery, alias Henry Every, alias Oaptain Brldgenfan, variously known as "Long Ben," and the "Arch-Pirate." A large part of this was due, no doubt, to the fact that he was the hero of Charles Johnson's play called "The Successful Pyrate," which was acted M the Theater Royal in Drury Lane. ^Avery was born about 1605, the son of a Plymouth Innkeeper, and from the beginning he had a turbulent career. As a youth he shipped as a cabin boy and soon proved himself an accompUsbed young desperado. He first came into prominence as first officer •n an armed privateer, The Duke, whose commander, Captain Gibson, the Spaniards had engaged to fight French pirates In the West Indies. Avery led a mutiny on board the ship whUe It lay at anchor In Cadiz harbor, put the eeptain ashore and was himself elected captain. Then he renamed the vessel the CSiarles the Second and set out. At the Isle of May he seized the Portuguese governor and held him for ransom until a supply of provisions were sent aboard; then he sailed away to the coast of Guinea to engage in, the slave trade, capturing two or three English vessels en route. Near the island of Princess he captured two Danish ships, and then set oat fQr Madagascar,, frptrj wglcb base he operated In the Red sea. At Aden Avery's ship was joined by two English pirate ships and three from America, all bent,upon the same quest. An incident which took place a short time before this was typical of Avery's capacity for deviltry in general. He had sailed into the harbor of a town named Meat with the intention of selling some of his stolen merchandise to the natives. But they were suspicious of Avery's villainous looking < "traders" and refused to do any business with them. In order to punish them the pirates burnt their town. Although the pirate ships kept a vigilant watch for the Mocha fleet It managed to elude the freebooters In the night. But Avery was hot in pursuit the next morning and, singling out the biggest vessel, captured It after a two-hour battle. It turned out to be the Gunsway, owned by the Great Mogul himself, and one of his daughters was aboard. From this ship the pirates took a vast loot--100,000 pieces of eight and the same number of chequlns. The Great Mogul was furious at this outrage and indifferent as to whether Innocent or guilty should pay iter it, threatened to lay waste to all the East India company's settlements in revenge. Whether or not he le good on his threat Is not recorded, but he never made Avery suffer for it. <* llll. Waatern Hawapapar OMm.) v- V SEED CORN m IMPROVED LEAMING FODDER CORN ~ sV16 !?nd that S1"0** «*tra tall and is especially good for silage. Buy now. STORE Phone 114-E McHenry, m. i : V. jP» - f; •MMIOM I H M t I l»»«r Cast Side Garage * GAS and OH. ACCESSORIES J Also Moving and Lorig v Distance Hauling HERMAN SCHAEFER Phone 49 ,• •»»»»»»»»»>»»<•»< ! tli, ' T T r f 11 I t I m ntui. PEAKL HAS TWO COPPER. WIRES IN THE Right Now is the time to Screeawiih PEARL WIRE CLOTH DONT WAIT Shut out mosquitos and flies. They are carriers of diseases. Keep them out with PEARL Wire Cloth. Due to its metallic coating, PEARL is a guarantee of beauty and long life--the most handsome and economical screen wire cloth. We carry the genuine--two copper wires in the selvage. Win. H. Althoff Hardware West McHenry m Natsticed Milo Lonjor The nautical mile, or^linot," is 800 feet longer than the statute mile, points out an answered question In ' lUberty. The statute mile is 5,280 feat 'bid the nautical mile is 6.080 feat / puburbmidtfo Wish '1 suburban man says he's l)(aM lots of people speak harshly of klABapers. but he wishes his would nap a little late on Sunday morning. Life's Building We try to grasp too much of life at once. Since we think of It as a whole instead of living one day at a time, life Is a mosaic and each tiny piece must be cut and set with skill--first one piece, then another.--O. & Marden. • , MORE POWER - MURE FASTER ACCELERATION XiU ;-V See this new engine--the finest -^pver used in Graham Brothers • Trades and Commercial CaasJ Compare it with any engine over built into any truck! tfL ij„ i • i :• :v3.s^r ltt-TON I JAMES MORROW & SON 77 .