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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Jun 1927, p. 4

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wm ipSPPPPfiPff «vv ••••'-*-+ • - jeypsj. ^ , :: ;4W..:T>'": "". t A 'fcij •••' A. V. ;-•• • •Mi *M*»i THE McHENRY PLAJjIDEALER, THURSDAY, JUNE 23,1927 W#sl 1 HE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, 111., by Charles F. Renich. Entered as second-class matter it tike postofflce at McHenry. 4er the act of May 8, 1879. IIL, n- One Year .. Six Months Subscription Rates .»..«...«««««*....••{•a•••••• • ••••••..••• *$1*00 A. H. MOSHER, Editor and Manager Now Is the time for all good golfers to come to the aid of their par tee| Life today Is one dodge after ail* other; automobiles, taxes and responsibilities • - . ' r Th$ San Francisco burglar who has. bad ten wives needs an adding machine or a guardian. S **""* ' Memory is a wonderful thing. Bigland things we have to run to tts protection all over the world. Why not add to the cow-hog-hen program, as long as you have ham and eggs, some pork and beans. "4r"" . . Maine's sardine canners will Spend a million dollars to popularise their product Success comes in cans. Aw between attempting to keep track ef Chinese generals, we'd rather try to count horses on a merry-go-round. The man who waited for something tt> tarn op achieved his desire too late--when his toes were turned up. The thief who stole a gnltar and ukulele will probably be looking for a bass -drum and a pair of cymbals next They talk about age overtaking one when in reality it is ant in front The faster you travel the quicker it gets yon. " * Prom now on a swimmer will have to be pretty well greased to get Into the heavy headlines with a Catallna swim. Good crops at home this summer and scant crops abroad would no doubt do muc' to simplify the 1928 situation. COLDS HELD CHIEF LOST-TIME CAUSE Ailment Blamed for Cent of Absencc 39 Per Crow Ghost, grandson of Sitting Brill, has joined the United States cavalry. Cfrow ought to be in the a viatic- serv^ 7» '* - •*" gfcr. -- Looking at the world through rosecolored glasses, as the radio tenor advises, would be rather confusing among traffic signals. A new federal law bars firearms i -from the mail and practically puts the j federal government out of business as a gun runner for the bandits. Radio makes it possible for eminent personages to talk over thousands of miles. What is actually said apparently does not yet much matter. If a cigarette Is "kind to the throat* of a world-famous tenor, as the pub llclty avers, a ctfcnpalgn cigar would probably be a cough drop for a bass. If, as Kerensky says, 90 per cent of the Russian people are hostile to the Soviet, the Soviet must have a mighty good lobby to enable It to hold its job Queen Mary has bought a neck for her teething grandchild to chew, not realizing that an old Inner tube makes an excellent teething ring. Washington, D. C.--The common cold goes to the head of the list as a cause; of lost Jjnje. In a su vey of $bseiices from work in a bTg Industrial firm over a period of ten years, just completed by statisticians at the United States public health service, It .was found that colds caused a time fdss equivalent to 1.4 days per year for every, man on the pay roll and 2.1 days per annum for every female employe. Colds were directly responsible for 39 per cent of all the absences among the men and for 31 per cent among the women. Diseases of the general type known as respiratory caused approximately half of all the absences, but were not so common among the women as the men. Women, It would appear from these records, are more liable to disablement from nervous disorders and diseases of the throat and tonsils, but their disabling Illnesses are shorter on the whole than the men's. This condition in favor of the so-called weaker sex is counterbalanced, however, by the fact that their absences were more numerous, totaling fourteen calendar days apiece during the whole ten years, while that of the men reached only 8.9. A high proportion of Illnesses occurred among the younger employes, notably among the women. The statisticians suggest that this circumstance may be In part accounted for by the dropping out of the less healthy. The group representing the ages thirty to thirty-five, they state, seems as a whole to have a greater resistance to colds, tonsilltis and stomach disorders than the younger ajSesT , ••••&&+. Civilization Fails to .. -- Dim Indian's Vision Muskogee, Okla. -- Undimmed by civilization, the keen eyesight of the Indians, essential in early days to detect the presence of enemies or of wild game for food, still Is retained for the peaceful pursuits of the present generation. Dr. Charles Southard, secretary of the Eyesight Conservation Council of America, after testing the eyes of school children in nineteen states, said that the 400 Indian students at Bacone college here possess, collectively, the best eyesight of any group he bad examined. "The Indians read distant charts with ease," he said, "while their white cousins are unable to make out the largest characters." Doctor Southard cautioned the Indians, however, that unless they stopped reading while lying In bed this marvelous faculty would be endangered. Classified Column V ^ ^ ^ * A A. A. A AAA A. AAA A * * ^ A AAA A ^ + g'g ||t FOR SALS . GOOD USED CARS AT BARGAIN PRICES 1926 Dodge Business Coupe. 1926 Dodge Special Business Sedan 1924 Dodge Business Sedan. 1923 Dodge Deluxe Sedan. 1923 Dodge Business Coupe. 1925 Willys Knight Sedan. 1925 Ford Coupe. 1925 Chevrolet Roadster. 1925 Chevrolet Touring.'. 1926 Oldsmobile Coach. And many more to choose ftOV. Easy Payment Plan We have a complete line of trucks in Mi ton and 1% ton in closed or open body types. JAMES MORROW & SON, Phone 186 West McHenry, III. FOR SALE--About ten acres of hay land. Alfalfa and timothy, mixed. Peter Diedrich. Pohne 656-R-2. 3* TYPEWRITERS Sales and Service. Repaired and Rentafc; Prbmpt attention to phone calls. Phone 549. L. KILTZ, Woodstock 49-tf COOPER'S SAPONIFIED CRESOL-- For disinfecting barns after TB testing. Sold by Dr. J. £. Wheeler, West McHenry. 88-tf FOR RENT FOR RENT--For tested cattle. Good pasture land in Richmond Twp., near McHenry Twp., line, Tel. Richmond, 685. WANTED GOOD USED CAR BUYS 1927 6-cylinder Standard Six Buick Demonstrator. \ 1924 6-cylinder 4-pa^s: Buick Coupe. 1922 6-cylinder 4-pass. Buick Coupe. 1926 Tudor Ford; new tires nod paint OVERTON ft CO^EN Phone 6 West McHenry FOR SALE--Ford truck in good condition. Will sell cheap for quick sale. Ed Mischke, Center street, West McHenry. 2-2* WANTED--A partner in a growing and well established business on a well paying basis. Who can furnish his service and at least $5,090 cash to put into the business? Must act at once. For particulars address The Plaindealer, McHenry, 111. 1-2 WANTED--First class cook for Sundays only. Call 667-W-2. Ask for Mrs. Peterson. 49-tf. FOR SALE--1926 Tudor Ford; good condition; reasonable. Inquire at West McHenry State Bank. 51-tf FOR SALE!--Modern home. 8 large rooms with sun parlor; extra lavatory, laundry, hardwood trim throughout; garage; lots 98x132, with all kinds of fruit, vegetable garden. Priced to sell. Terms. Phil Sheridan, 4122 Clarendon avenue, Chicago, Phone Lake View, 4669, or J. W. Bonslett, McHenry, 87-R, Saturday or Sunday. 3-2 WANTED--Farms of all sizes and descriptions for cash or exchange for income property. We specialize in quick deals. Kent ft Company,. McHenry. , 38-tf LOST" MISSING--Since Sunday, Tune 5, a white pig. Finder, please notify Joseph A. Schaefer, McHenry. Telephone, Richmond, 935. 2-2 MISCELLANEOUS PIANO TUNING--regulating and repairing. Chas. Diehl, Woodstock, HI. Phone 274-J. 1-4* FOR SALE--Barley, ground or rolled. $40 per ton. Wtt. Justen, Ringwood, .-- 3-3 FOR SALE CHEAP--A large reliable gas stove. Mrs. Nellie Bacon, McHenry. Phone 96-J. 3 RESULTS! - Kent ft Company Can sell that house! Can rent that flat! Can find a buyer for that land! 18rtf FOR SALE--Household furniture. Arthur A. Friestedt, east side Pistakee Bay. 8* WATCH, CLOCK AND JEWpSLRY REPAIRING-- Located at "Tempus Fugit" on Elm St., McHenry. Mort Ritt. 50-tf Loose leaf work is a specialty of the Plaindealer job department.- FOR ALL Sewing Machine and Victrola troubles, call 162. B. Popp, West McHenry. 50-tf SUPT. COE EAGER TO HELP SCHOOLS 8treet railway valuation puts the 6-cent piece in a position of subordinate influence. The buffalo and the Indian are being rapMly forced off the map. The Atchison Globe says that "when fen hear a von.an say, 'Alt men are alike,' that settles It; she is married." Or perhaps she has ' .st failed *~ain to marry. It will appease tbe my, let it he said that the reason gen tlemen prefer bloadeg, according to a Philadelphia woman, is that "blonder are more frivolous." If, as is asserted, crime costs the people of the United States at least S16.(**H*io.noO a year, we'll all have to admit that we get a whole lot of crime for our money. Want Grant Log Cabin Back at Point Pleasant Columbus, Ohio.--The little log cabin in which Gen. U. S. Grant was born at Point Pleasant, Ohio, would be returned to its original location, after more than 40 years of wandering about the cobntry, under a bill passed by the Ohio house of representatives. For many years the cabin has been one of the attractions at the Ohio fair, having been purchased by j the state after being moved about the brunette*- j country on private exhibition for several years. It was moved from Point Pleasant in 1885 to St. Louis, where it was displayed, and later taken to the world's fair In Chicago in 1893. The Ohio senate is expected to approve the house measure. Australia Is now offering an apftte that tastes like a cucumber. Tbe present demand hereabouts is for something along the line of an apple Oat tastes like an apple. 5 ^ : There's nothing much to M 4oae 1 •bout the Infant alligator a huiappms i friend sends you from Jacksonville, except to fatten it up for twelve or, ipnrteen years and send it back. An Oklahoma senator wants f* make It Illegal to traffic in biscuits less -than three inches in diameter. This is for the benefit of the younger generation mhlcb baf pever seen a horse weight Bears Are Well Versed in Game Laws in East Philadelphia.--The black bear of Pennsylvania is among the cleverest of animals in eluding hunters. In summer, when protected by game laws, Bruin rambles carelessly about the state, looking things over and picking up delicacies here and there in orchards, berry patches and dairies. Now and then he pauses to watch , farm hands at work. * When fall comes and Bruin is legally "in season" he is actually "out," seeking refuge In remote ravines, away from the sound of hunters' shots. It was only with the greater4 perseverance that Pennsylvania hunters bagged 514 bears last season. Gold-plated door knobs are to be Installed In New York's lewest family feotel. Unfortunately tenants will in •ert their keys in jnst ordinary frey- Holes. There isn't much you can do for a keyhole. 1 ^ Gold bas been found In Weepah, fiev., and the streets are said to be ^frorth $50 a pound. So are a lot ol •ther streets, not in Weepah, If the cost of putting them down and keeping, them there is considered. A columnist asks what bas become ' of the old-fashioned fellow whose signature used to appear prominently On all bis ads. It Is understood be went out of business Just after some one else traced It on a 900,000 check m The Inclination of some Judges to extend the sanctity which attaches to tin home to include the automobile in Immunity from unwarranted search lias some Justification in tbe fact that It is tbe nearest approach to a home -that many people own. Claims China Invents "Noiseless" Cannon Shanghai. -- Chinese, credited with invention of gunpowder, have now produced "noiseless cannon," say newspapers reporting tests of a gun designed by Yang Yl-cheng. The silencer Is not an attachment but part of the original mechanism and the principles are kept secret Although the •. gun Is effective at a distance of \ | 2.3 miles, it is claimed, the ex- • • plosion cannot be heard more ;; than 400 feet away. "Makee shoot -- bo makee bang," is h<9w the achievement • • was captioned by a foreign-Ian- ! guage newspaper, which stfld •' Chang Tso-lln, northern general- , issimo, had purchased the inven- ; J tlon for the Peking government, giving the inv&tor • bonus of :: $10,000. nilllllli»n»in»i**iii Committee Decides County Cannot Afford to Hire Helping Teachers At the last meeting of the Board of Supervisors, Mrs. Coe, County Superintendent of Schools, offered a report on the educational situation in McHenry county, stressing particularly the inequality of provision made for the grade children of the cities and those of the rural districts. The following facts taken from the report are of especial significance: There are 95 grade teachers in the city and town schools of the county and 131 rural teachers. Eighty per cent of the grade teachers of the cities and towns have professional training equivalent to graduation from a normal school. Less than ten per cent of the rural teachers have such preparation. Five inexperienced teachers were employed in the city schools last year. Each of these five was a normal graduate. Seventeen inexperienced teachers were employed in the rural schools, three of whom were normal graduates. A comparison of the amount of supervision provided' for city and rural schools shows that there are 2774 pupils enrolled in the city grade schools. Twenty-six supervisors and. special teachers ar^ provided for these. There are 2370 children enrolled in the rural schools of the county and for them there is only one supervisor, who ts me county superintendent. It is evident that the rural pupils, who are being taught by a group of teachers who have all the problems of the city teachers and some in addition and who, therefore, need more help, are actually receiving less than one-twenty-sixth as much as are the pupils of the city schools. This situation is not in the majority of cases, the fault of the rural districts. These districts pay enough for their schools, but, as a group, they must always have a large per cent of inexperienced teachers. In the light of these facts, a recommendation was made that the counT ty employ two helping teachers for the rural schools--one to be a primary expert and the other to be especially qualified for upper grade work--both of them to be professionally trained, experienced teachers who have also the qualifications necessary for the type of work they would be required to do. This recommendation had the support of the city superintendents of the county, who, at the request of the county superintendent, have visited the rural schools of the county this year. The cost of these helping teachers is estimated as follows: First helping teacher who will furnish her own car and act as attendance officer for the county $2400 Primary teacher whose transportation will be furnished by Mrs. Coe and first helping teacher 1800 Additional clerical cost 300 has been turned into the general county fund. Should this money be used for the benefit of the rural schools of the county? The Baord of Supervisors referred the matter to the educational committee with power to act. The chairman of this committee, Mr. L. A. Stockwell, called a meeting of the committee June 16th. At that meeting the committee decided that the county could not afford to make the necessary appropriation at this time. Mrs. Smith is Hostess The members of the Royal Bunco club were entertained at the home of M!rs. Roy Smith on Thursday afternoon of last weekr^Three tables of bunco were played and first prize was won by Mrs. Paul Meyers, second prize by Mrs. Henry Foss and consolation by Mrs. Henry Freund. imkm ' • ^ V'- '*' •", " * ./Jr ' \ f 1 LoMt Penobscot City Founded in Tradition A phantom city plays a part In the legendary hlstorj of tbe Feuobscot river. Fogs at that point' on the Maine coast are very thick and cold. The captain of a Penobscot whaler, outward bound for a Pacific cruise, is said to have stuck his jpek-knife into the fog off Desert rock and found It there still on his return three years later. When the fog does part, however, the golden walls of the phantom city of legend m* be seen am->ng the dark pine trees o* the wooded shore. Its streets are paved with ivory and pearl, gardens of glowing fruits and flowers surround its palaces, and bright banners lfy from Its tall towers. Drum-beats and bw-'Ie-calls are heard, and its lefty spires glitter against the clouds. Then, as suddenly as it has appeared, it vanishes In the enfolding fog. When farmers and shipbuilders •long the Penobscot wer* more credulous than they are today, more than one expedition set out to find the lost city, only to behold somber evergreens and a tangle of wild briers, or the heights of Mount Desert. The suggestion has been made that it was a mirage of Montreal or Quebec, or some other large city many miles away; but this does not account for drums and bugles or strange flags bearing an unknown device. Still less does it explain the Indian tradition that the rich and beautiful metropolis of a highly civilised white race once stood on the spot Nor does it explain the name, Norembega, by which It was known among the Inimm MMMMi Chineam PMi+nthropy Odd Quaint forme of philanthropy are evident in almost every part of China. Funds are maintained for transporting to his native province any man who dies away from home, another organisation provides coffins for poor children, and another society sets op "drinking fountains" of tea or water !br the thirsty coolies who are lowest III the scale of Chinese labor. Macerated Currency After money is macerated in tht United States treasury the pulp ismade into sheets by the bureau of en graving and printing and Is sold to the highest bidder. It used to be thai one would see a great many souvenirs made from this pulp. Nowadays this is not done to such an extent. a 4-"Z i. ' f-C- * - . C J*-'J t •' ' C. , Always freshly roasted, is more fragrant «ad delicious,^ i - p One retiscm f^ w rare flavor of our bulk Ooffee is that you get it fresh. We sell it fast. i ' ^ Thus it has the full aroma, the satisfying ftodness, which stale Coffee lacks. You will notice the difference. Phone 179 enry, fll Something New « Plate Lunch Have you tried one of our delightful plate lunches we serve each noon. A real meal for Try one today. KARLS* Simple Outfit E. R. writes--"A man could start a revolution In some of those South American countries with a uniform and a bunch of firecrackers."--Boston Transcript. Life Largely Watted Woe to the man who becomw without becoming wise; woe to him If this world shnts Its door without the future having opened its doors to him. --Tholuck Grand Opening of Sam's Place AT BURTON'S BRIDGE Saturday, June 25th: DANCING-AND REFRESHMENTS • SPECIAL FEATURES JULY 4TH 4 GOOD TIME FOR EVERYBODY Benefit Dance A benefit dance will be given at the William W. Freund farm on the River road near Emerald Park on Mlonday night, June 26. Everybody is invited. Admission 75c. ' Infant Child Dies The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Tony A. Freund of Spring Grove was buried Sunday afternoon, after a fleeting life of but two days. Slimmer Furnishingi I ? TT T T T TT <£• ---»PRING GROVm 4. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hergott celebrated their twentieth wedding anniversary on June 19th. About forty relatives were inv5fced to celebrate the occasion. Many beautiful ,gifts were received by the happy couple. The Plaindealer job department is ready to give you assistance in working out your ledger and loose leaf problems, It will prove a real pleasure to out- J, fit a bedroom in your home from the splendid showing «|> % of pieces to be found here. Many items can be pur- ^ % chased at a price considerably lower than you would ex- <|> I ^ % pect to pay for this class of furniture. i JUSTEN & SON Total $4600 Mrs. Coe called the attention of the supervisors to the fact that $386,- 248.37 was collected in McHenry county for school purposes last year. The commission to the county for collecting this sum was $7,724.96. The actual cost of collection did not exceed $2000.00. Thus there is left a balance of $5724.96 of the money paid by the tax payers of McHenry county last I year for school yturp#eeSh~ auw G O O D USED CARS At Bargain Prices in Studebakers Pontiacs Oldsmobiles j*- JAMES MORROW & SON DODGE BROTHERS DEALERS--McHENRY, ILLINOIS • ' v'V

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