THE McHENRY MJUKDEALEE, THTOSDAT, SEPT. 23, 1927 N- - WEEKLY PERSONALS .1 OOMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR CITY Jks Seen By Pl&inde&ler Reporters and Handed In By Our Friends Mr. and Mrs. Frank Blake and sons Were visitors at Mundelein Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. Knox and daughter, Dorothy, were Elgin visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Colman of Chi- 2;o were Sunday guests in the Fred rls' home. Herbert Bennett of Racine, Wis., was a visitor in the home of Mrs. C. Howard Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Wirfs and Mrs. Kane of Chicago spent Sunday with 'Vtlatives in this vicinity. Mrs. C. S. Howard is recovering fpom injuries to her foot caused by a barn from boiling water. Edward Brefeld of Chicago was a "icaller at the home of his parents, Mr. tod Mrs. B. J. Brefeld, TTiursday. Mr. and Mrs. Mat Karls and son, Bobby, of Chicago were Sunday guests in the home of Mr; and Mrs,. Fred Karls. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith and baby bt Chicago spent the week-end in the fcome of Mrs. Smith's mother, Mrs. . Catherine Young. - Mr. and Mrs. Henry Foss and little •on and Mrs. Minnie Miller left Wednesday for a motor trip to New York City where they will visit relatives. They will be gone about three weeks. Mrs. William Pries of Waukegan was a visitor here Monday. Miss Genevieve Knox of Elgin spent the week-end at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Remke of Chicago were visitors here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Galitz of Chicago were McHenry visitors Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Koerner visited ^relatives at Batavia over the weekend. Herman Nye is spending a few days as the guest of relatives at Milwaukee, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. James Sorensen of Racine, Wis., were callers in the home of Mrs. C. S. Howard, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John Stringer of Elgin were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Stringer Sunday. Miss Theresa Karls of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karls. M)r. and Mrs. Kaufman of Chicago and friends of New York were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heimer. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Elsholz of Elgin visited in the home of their daughter, Mrs. Gordon Stringer, and family, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Butler of Chicago were week-end guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heimer. Mrs., Dwight Williams and baby left the last of the week for their home in Athens, Ohio, after spending the summer in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Cooley. Mr. and Mrs. L. Hagel and daughter of Evanston returned to their home after spending a two weeks' vacation with Mr. and Mrs. Will Bishop and other relatives here and at Camp Douglas. Y.r. f • J.L. • McHenry Cartage Service Company We specialize in hauling rubbish, ashes, cans, etc. r We will make weekly calls. - We will also do expressing of all kinds at reasonable rates FOR QUICK SERVICE CALL McHENRY 38 Frett Bros. & Freund MASON CONTRACTORS and CINCRETE BUILDING UNITS Telephone McHenry 600-M-l or 86-R East Side' Garage GAS and OIL ACCESSORIES Also Moving and Long « Distance Hauling HERMAN SCHAEFER Phone 49 >"yvT'>"fTTm^T¥f MILLER'S STORE Jos. J. Miller, Prop. GENERAL MERCHANDISE "A Good Place to Trade in All Kinds of Weather" Phone 114-R McHenry, 111. ?•••»••»•»•••»•!' fl •§,111II | MI 41* »»»»»»»»• Washday Comfort YOU can "take it easy" next washday-- every washday from now on--if you wash with the Haag Eighty--the hansW tome new all-metal electric washer which ^«ssts only $9&50. Here, at last, is a really efficient washer of the popular floating agitator type at aa amazing low price- The underneath drive snakes the Haag Eighty--beautiful--con- , venient--compact -- ideal kitchen equip* • ment for small homes and apartments. Come in and examine the Haag Eighty to* day. Look at its sturdy compact construe* tion, its generous copper tub, its beautiful design. See how good a low priced washer can be. •-pronounced HiW HAAG Jacob Justen & Sons Undertaking a Specialty Green Street McHenry, Illinois Miss Lena Stoffel was a Chicago visitor Thursday. Mrs. Lewis McDonald was a Woodstock visitor Friday. Miss Anna Frisby visited relatives at Woodstock Sunday. Miss Ma belle Wheeler was a Chicago visitor Monday. Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Schreiner were Chicago visitors Monday. Miss Irene Conway of Elgin spent Sunday at her home here. ^ Miss Letah Patzke spent several days this week in Chicago. Mrs. John McEvoy spent a few days last Week visiting in Chicago. Miss Gladys Rietesel of Chicago spent the week-end at her home here. Mrs. Joe Wegener and daughter, Marion, were Chicago visitors Saturday. John Erickson of Chicago visited in the L. A. Erickson home Monday evening. Mr. and Mts. Walter Brooks and son spent the week-end with relatives in Chicago. Mrs. George Herman sen is spending a few weeks with relatives in Chicago. Mrs. Charles Reihansperger and Mrs. Gerald Carey were Chicago visitors Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Weingart and family visited relatives at Crystal Lake Sunday. Mrs. Treadwell returned Sunday after a two Weeks' trip with friends to Minnesota. Mr. and Mrs. Lester Page enjojred a motor trip to Madison, Wis., over the week-end. Norman Lee returned the first of the week from his vacation spent at Champaign, 111. Misses Margaret and Agnes Mc- Cabe of Waukegan spent Sunday at their home here. Walter and Herbert Fenske of Chicago were week-end guests in the Charlfes Rietesel home. Mrs. Ray Thomas is spending a month as the guest of her parents at Raymondsville, Texas. Mr. and Mrs. Linus Newman visited Mr. and Mrs. Gus Ehrke at Solon Mills Monday afternoon. Dr. A. I. Froehlich and daughter, Adele, and Mrs. W. J. Welch were Chicago visitors Saturday. Mrs. Ben Rosing of Volo spent one day last week in the home of her son, Frank Rosing, and family. Mrs. George Kuhn returned home Saturday after spending the week with relatives in Chicago. » Harry Laurence, Dave O'Neil and Edward O'Callahan of Chicago spent the week-end at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Frazer and sons of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of 3Iis. Agnes Wentworth. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Mansfield of Woodstock were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bassett. Mrs. Clyde Thomas and little so.n, Everett, of Union were visitors in the Fred Kamholz home Tuesday. Miss Floribel Bassett is spending the week as the guest of Miss Ruth McKale at Three Rivers, Mich. Peter W. Engeln and John Engeln spent a few days the last of the week on a hunting trip in Wisconsin. - Mr. and Mrs. John Adams of Chicago were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurwell Tuesday. Miss Frances May of Woodstock spent Sunday in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin N. May. Dr. and Mrs. A. I. Froehlich and daughter, Adele, and Mrs. W. J. Welch visited at Mundelein Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Baron and Mr. and Mrs. John Miller were visitors at Lake Geneva, Wis.,' Sunday. Miss Elizabeth McCabe, who is attending business college in Chicago, spent the week-end at her home here. Mr. and Mas. Herman Schaeffer and children spent the week-end in Chicago, where they visited relatives and friends. Mr., and Mrs. Wesley Guffey of Western Springs were Sunday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Martin May. Frank Page and William Green left [ Monday morning on a motor trip to Los Angeles, Calif., where they will visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Kirk Harrison and son of Elgin visited in the home of the former's mother, Mrs. Mayme Harrison, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Purvey and Mr. and Mrs. Albert Krause left Sunday on a week's vacation and motor trip through Kentucky. 1 Mr. and Mrs. George Kuntzman and baby of Batavia spent the week-end in the home of Mrs. Kuntzman|s par- j ents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. B. F:i-by. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Martin and I Mrs. L. Francisco have left on a motor trip to Minnesota where they will enjoy a visit with relatives for a week or ten days. • Mrs. Paul Doherty and little son, Donald Paul, returned home from the Woodstock hospital last Friday and will remain in the J. J. Doherty home for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. George Bolger of Elgin and the former's sister, Mrs. J. S. Kanaugh and husband of Buffalo, New York, visited relatives and friends here Sunday. Mlrs. Peter W. Engeln and daughter were Elgin visitors Sunday, at which time they called on the formor' « father, Michacl Wagner, who isat the hospital there. William Harvey of Indianapolis, -fad., is spending the week as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gibbs and will take in the Dempsey-Tunney fight in Chicago Thursday. Louis Bonslett, who enlisted in the u. S. Navy a few weeks ago, spent 8unday at his home here. Louis is stationed at the Great Lakes Naval Training station now, but expects in the near future to be transferred Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Marshall and little daughter left Sunday for a week's vacation and visit with friends and relatives at Champaign, 111. Mrs. Marshall will remain for a longer visit while Mr. Marshall will return to Chicago the last of the week, where he will attend the bakers' convention _ Mrs. Alfred Richardson and little son, Robert Cooley Richardson, returned home from the Woodstock ifiospital Thursday and are spending fi few weeks in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Coloey, before "Grovf. ; * SHORT SMILES: Judgment 1 get most of my clever hunches when I'm asleep." She--"Tour most serious ailment is insomnia." \ Blissful Ignorance "What makes them such friends?" "What they don't about each other." good know Correct first Knut--What would a nation be without women? Second Ditto--A stagnation, I gtteaa Popularity '•'* "A good chef get* more than s college professor." "Why shouldn't he? • lot more people take his courses." Material "How can you take over a column of advice?" "Aw, I got a recipe for reducing and a good love talk." -'•fev' For Love HW->ByWia's going to • tUBWJ fcf love this time?" She--"Weil, she can afford to retire."--Life. ' a Hint ... He--You know absence make-* tltt heart grow fonder. She--Also presents, dear I Only One Explanation . Hank--My brother ain't been arrest' ed for ten years. Tony--What, is he up for life! Hideout Mirth Howell--"The loud laugh bespeaks the vacant mind." Jopes -- "Why, who's been laughing at you?" - The Likeness Sh£--You remind me of the s^a. He--Wild, romantic, relentless*-^ "No--you Just make me sick." Home Furnished Payne Inspiration for 3onfl> The old farmhouse at Easthauiptou, Long Island, which was the Inspira- Light Hearts Abound in Kerry Mountain• Next morning the tempest was still high, and, venturing upon the strand, I tt^re saw, as at Valentla, crowds of women busied; and speaking to one, she replied, "These stawrmy nights, ma'am, blow good luck to the poor; they wash up the say-weed, and that's why ye see so many now at work." The company Increased till I counted more than sixty; and busy, merry work they made of it: running with heavy loads upon their heads, dripping with wet, exultingly throwing them down, and boundtng away in glee. Truly, "A merry heart doeth good like a medicine." "And are you not cold?" "Oh, no, ma'am, the salt say keeps us warm." "And how many days must you work in this way, before you get a supply?" "Aw, sometimes not fawrty, but scores of days." "And all you have for your labor is the potato?" "That's all, ma'am, that's all; and it's many of us that can't get the sup of milk with 'em, no, nor the salt; but we can't help it, we must be content with what the good God sends us." She hitched her basket over her shoulder and, in company with one older than herself, skipped upon the sand made wet with rain, and, turning suddenly about, gave me a pretty specimen of Kerry dancing, as practiced by the peasantry. "The sand Is too wet, ma'am, to dance right well on," and again shouldering her basket,; with a "God bless ye on yer Journey," leaped away. I looked after tliem among the rocks, more with admiration for the moment than with pity; for what hearts, amid splendor and ease, lighter than these? This woman, who danced before me, was more than fifty, and I do not believe that the daughter of Herodias herself was more graceful In her movements, more beautiful In complexion!, or symmetry, than was this dark-haired matron of the mountains of Kerry.--From "The Bible in Ira< land" by Asenath Nicholson. --Rialto'af* Real Meaning The word "Rlalto" Is a corruption of the two words "Ribo Alto," wrhUSh literally mean "deep river." The cor- . . . ..TT „ .. rupted form was applied as the name tion of the famous song, "Home, Sweet | an lsland ,n the A(]rlatic 8ea< whlch Home," is to be sold, and its fate re mains uncertain. John Howard Payne, the author of the song, speut became the business center of the gryup of Islands occupied by the city of Venice. By the process of t lie assohis boyhood years In the staunch old c,atJon f Jdea8 ^ term ..Klalt0- „ structure, which is said to have been built 267 years ago by a Robert Dayton. When In later life, Payne became an actor and author, memories of his life on the farm Inspired the well-known words of the famous song, first sung in his long-forgotten opera, "The Maid of Milan." The weatherbeaten old house nestles under huge shade trees, and presents a pretty picture, but its chief value Is sentimental. The community in which it stands was founded by English settlers, who called their village Maidstone, after the English town from which they came. Drove Hard Bargain A man tells this story of "his college days: He was accosted on the street one day by a stranger who offered to sell at a bargain a ring which he said he bad found In the washroom of a hotel. The ring had a large stone set The stranger asked $5 for the ring, but after mnch bickering took 25 cents. The student put on his new mark of opulence and went down to the college with the expectation of making an impression, but on arriving, he found others had made similar bargains, paying from 10 cents to $4. used as the synonym for the business center of the city. - Early Navigators John Cabot and his son. Sebastian, Venetian navigators In the service of England, discovered the North American continent at & point in Labrador on .Tune 24, 1497. This event was second only to Columbus' discovery In Importance. Determined by Thought Back of each visible, being standi a host of invisibles; and by the nature of your thoughts and dosires and ambitions you determine the class of these Invlsibies who come at bidding to iencT countenance and strength to your undertakings. -- Ella Wheeler Wilcox. Wnms*n'» Valuable Idta The Idea of using cotton fiber for thread wns ronceived by Mrs. Sumuel Slater of Pawtucket, Rhode Island, In 1794, t ccordlng to Liberty. Previously the only thread useA was handtwisted linen, sold In hanks, Just aa knitting yarn Is sold today. Saspidouf Musband--I always think thare fc) some catch in It if my wife Hrea* ' with me. - * ^ China Upelde Daunt In China the needle of the compaal points south. Instead of north. Free your Big chance ; IN each residential section we are advertising1 the new Easy Washer by doing one week's j washing free in every home. It is your privilege-- don't miss it! Only in this way can we make you realize how wonderful, how different is the 1 new Easy. Not until you see it in your own home v will you appreciate it. And once seeing it, we > know you will never buy any other washer.. > •. x: Act Now Naturally, our representatives cannot teacfl ^ - every home at once; But your turn is coming*** ' so watch for the Easy demonstrator 1 You don't have to wait, however, to take advantage of this offer. Telephone us today and arrange an appointment before your neighbors. EASY WASHER QKj IS EASY® Also made gasoline m for homes out electricity. CARET ELECTRIC SHOP McHenry, llliiiote Wandering Alligator rinding an alligator in a rosebush In her garden, a Kansas City woman had what she described as the thrill of her life. The woman was clearing shrubbery from the rosebush when "something" snapped at her hand. She called neighbors. A crowd congregated. Some one obtained a rake and a "baby" alligator was taken from under the bush. The alligator was put in a box and turned over to the police department A Sound Sleeper *Dey bad to t'row water on Sam Johnson's face at his wife's funeral," volunteered a recent mourner. "Dasso? He done fainted?" asked a friend. "No, indeedy. He's Jes' an uncommonly soun' sleeper."--American Legion Monthly. ^ V/hen It Happened "Why, 1 didn't know your brother- Ui-iuw wanted to get married?" said an acquaintance. "He didn't," replied Farmer Fumble gate, "until the wldder Soonover wanted him to want to.v--Kansas City Star. Wait for Great Expectation Onyx--Dat nigger's wo'thless. Florlan--Nothln' else! Why, Ifn he'd give you an apple core, dat black boy wonld expect to be paid back de core ob a watermelon. the NEW FORD It won't be long before we'll have the new Ford. The minute you see it--ride in it-you'll be glad you waited for this beautiful new model. Reverse Process Battle--Did you say that your friend married a man to reform him? Helen--Nothing so old-fashioned. 1 «ald she married a reformer to make i man of him. Fast Air-Mail Schedule Airplanes will soon leave New York >r San Francisco at night and deposit mall at the opposite coast for early delivery on the second morning. First to Make Good The first successful typewriter In the world was patented on June tt, 1868, by three associates of Milwaukee, Wis. The inventors were O. Latham Sholes, printer and editor; Samuel W. Soule, a prlntervand Carlos Gliddeen, a capitalist. One of the inestimable privileges of being a private citizen is' that you ean spen4 you* vacation «Un you want to.--{Southern Lumberman. "Where Your Dollar Buys Most?' ' " 1 * KNOX MOTOR SALES Lincoln* --Fordson Authorized Sales and Service Phoius 30 and MrfteuT. lUiaois