s You furnish your room because you want * it to be comfortable and attractive. You should furnish your body for the same J. Reason--comfort and attractiveness. Your * •f-jnom is only your living place, but your! tv, it: i,. body is YOU and you can't get Away from Our new winter line of clc thing. and* gents' furnishings is extra attractive to the riman that wants to put on a "good front.|" There are suits for men of all tastes and> jof any means. Be good to your body and i ^ lt will be good to you. Give it the best covering you can find and , come to us if | y o u want to f i n d the t e # * ;5 . . / • f \ k i k WEST McHENRY, ILL. M Among your New Year's resolut ions include cac ihat will give friend wife that piece of Furniture she has been wishing for. Our line com-"3 prises everything that goes with the Furniture business and the fact that our goods have found their way into a great many homes thruout this locality during the past year is a guarantee that our quality, prices and service are right. COMERS AND GOBRS OF A wmm IN OUR BUSY VILLAGE McHENRY, ILLINOIS. mi A desire-for service has animated us in the assembling of our perfectly matchless line of General Merchandise--Dry Goods, Shoes, Groceries, Notions, Etc. It is a good sized job to keep up a stock in condition to meet the wants of all the people, but that is just what we are doing. We are prepared at all times to give you the best of the market-- clean, fresh, satisfying groceries of every description. Try us next time and well make good. Also see our line of samples from the famous International Tailoring company. The snappiest fine on the market today and prices righl|^^ s Telephone 63-R ClsinAm AmUwAcUtfi '; vOINS OWTvKlw - - WESTMcHENRY St i. WAtSH AUCTION! H. Freeman, Auctioneer SK& >"mr- Having rented my farm, I will.sell || iat public auction on my farm, 2% ^1^ ; miles southwest of Ringwood and 3 miles east of Greenwood creamery, on j~J>! "* MONDAY, MARCH 17, 1M9 '. Commencing at 1 o'clock p. m. * r 7 HEAD OF HORSES 7 Gtasisting of 6 Young, Shire |f| Horses and Mares, "Prince Nero** • stoek. These hare not been stabled | ail w later and are described as fol- | ••• km:' Spar, hrcwn mares, coming 4 and ? 5 years old; pair sorrek, coming 4 years old; pair bays, star in forehead, mare and gelding, coming 3 and 4 years old; bay mare, 15 years old. Horaee are good booed and ^ill mate up welL ALSO A QUANTITY OF HAY, GRA1N» FARM MACHINERY, ETC. 4 , TERMS OF SALE: All sums of and under, cash; over that '%? amount a credit of 8 months will be £-' allowed on good bankable notes at 7 II per cent interest. No property to be Removed until settled for with clerk GEORGE H. HARRISON. ' C. C. Harrison, Clerk.' TERRA COT?A G. W. Ames? was an out-of-town ^,.*teltor|on Monday. Miss Clara Frists spent Sunday with friends in McHenry. in Chicago last Thursday. Mr. ?nd Mrs. Ralph Win gate spent Sunday at C. A Mason's Misses Clara and Agnes Frisby were Elgin visitors Saturday. Mrs. Mary Grant was a business caller in Crystal Lake Monday even ing. Miss Edna Colby spent Saturday evening with relatives and friends here. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Malone of Crystal Lake visited at M- Knox's Sunday afternoon. Several from here, attended the Parent-Teacher association meeting in McHenry Saturday evening. Miss Alice Bergman of Chicago was a guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. B Leisner and daughter, Alice, over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. 8. B. Leisner and daughter, Miss AHce, entertained several neighbors and friends at their pleasant hojne here on Wednesday and Saturday evenings of last week Miss Leisner was recently presented with a beautiful piano by a friend Miss Alice Bergman, and the guests were invited to enjoy it Euchre and five hundred were played and delic ious refreshments served. The Of both evenings iwtrt 5ft: J. H. most delightful time. "Bacon's" pure, high-grjul^hom^ made butter delivered in McHenry every Friday. Call phone 612-M-2. The very latest vulcanizing outfits are used at Stilling's vulcanizing shop at the McHenry House garage. Now .a.jmwu^s viffl^pjtiett 4* hi^w^gg,, As Seen by Plaindealer Reporters and Handed Into Our Office by Oar Friends'. ' „ \ * Miss Clara Stoffel .was a Chieago visitor Wednesday. W. F. Vogt was a Chicago vitrttor the first of the week. <\ Unti was a business visitor in the windy city Tuesday. H. Degen and son, John, were Chicago visitor last Thursday. F. A. Beller transacted business in the windy city last Friday. J. C. Bickler was among thOBe to board the Chicago train Tuesday Mesdames F. E. Martin and Ida King were Elgin visitors Monday. _ J. W. Fay of Chicago spent Sunday with his wife and family here Frank Zuelsdorf of Kenosha, Wis., passed Sunday with bis family here. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Wattles and son, Glenn, passed last Saturday in Chicago. Supervisor S. H. Freund attended to business matters at the county scat .Tuesday. M. J. Walsh attended to matters of a business nature in the metropolitan city Tuesday. Miss Kathryn Weber is spending the week as the guest of friends in the Watch city. % Mrs. M. Schneider of Chicago spent last week as a guest in the'home of Mrs. A. Wolff. Miss Elizabeth Thelen passed a few days last week as the guest of relatives in Elgin. Miss Marguerite Knox passed Saturday and Sunday as the guest of friends in Chicago. Everett Hunter attended to matters of a business nature in the metrepolitan city Tuesday. Misses Rose and Josephine Worts were among the Chicago passengers last Saturday morning. " Walter J. Warner of Woodstock spent the first of the week with his wife and daughter here. Jos. J. Frett of Chicago was a guest in the home of his son, Peter W. Frett, last Saturday. Guy and Lester Bacon and Geo. Stoffel of Woodstock spent the week end at their homes here. Mrs. Frank Zuelsdorf is spending a few days with her sister, Mrs Frank Hironimus, at Volo. Mrs. Peter J. Freund of Woodlock spent' the week end as the guest of McHenry relatives. Chas. G. Buss of Chicago spent Sunday as a guest in the home of his mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Buss, Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Landwer and son, Keith, spent the week end as the guests of relatives at Barrington. Miss Anna Reiter of Chicago passed last week as a • guest in the home of -Mr. and Mrs. John Stilling. Richard B. Walsh of Chicago was entertained in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Walsh, Sunday. J. W. Bonslett, who is again acting as traveling salesman, spent the week end with his wife and family here. Dr. C. H. Fegers and Miss Eleanor McGee passed last Saturday as the guests of relatives at the county seat. Miss Maude Krumpen passed a recent day as a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Cole at Rich mond. Mrs. C. W. Gibbs and little niece, Catherine Walsh, spent the latter part of last week as the guests of relatives at Elgin. Mrs. P. N. Musser of Elgin spent Thursday of last week as a guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Whiting; John Bolger, who is now employed at the Oliver typewriter factory at Woodstock, spent Sunday as the guest of home folks. Mrs. John Reihansperger of West Chicago spent last Thursday as a guest in the home of her son, Chas, J. Reihansperger, and family. Misses Rose and Gertrude Oertel and Christina May were over from the couijty seat for a week end visit in their respective homes here. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Whiting and' daughter, Loraine, of Lake Gen eva, Wis., were week end guests of relatives in and near McHenry Miss Esther StofFel of Chicago passed the latter part of last week as a guest in the home of her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stoffel. Mrs. G. C. Boley and son, Kenneth spent the latter part of last week as guests in the home of her sister, Mrs Ray F. Winke, at the county seat. Mrs. John Oehmke and daughters, Elsie and Lydia, of Crystal Lake passed a recent day as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Franzen. Mrs. Dewitt Dixon and son of Silverlake, Wis., passed the week end as guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Tesch. Mrs. Frank Zuelsdorf and Mrs. John Engeln and daughter, Virginia, passed last Friday as the guests of Mr. and Mrs. John ' Karls at the county seat. Corp. Earl Whiting left Monday morning for Atlanta, Ga., after enjoying a short furlough in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Whiting. Earl does not know just how soon he will be relieved from service, but he hopes it may be soon Blue Jacket Fred Nickels, has been spending a short furlough as the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nickels, on John street. The young man, for some time past, has been stationed out on the western fcoast. • ^ dAtUROAY, MAR. IB A TRIANGLE FEATURE ROY STOW ART ^ A Western Drama i ; 0* ; (4 "UNTAMED" -•v3f v;:4 ORDER NOW U} Let us do your Hatching, in our mammoth 3600-^gjg. incubator E. G. Peterson Phone 625-M-l JOHNSBURG, ILL. mar. lift • A FOX FEATUKt ' e Favorite Lee Kidi • • --in--- liiag Their Rt" ECONOMY in'business methods is more essential tod&y than ever before in modern American history^" It is demanded as a win-the-war I measure. Without it, private Enterprise cannot hopfe*to aurvive ift the face of rising costs* ' V..v v Y;-W '} I . • \ •;*-> ^ But effective business economy is impossible without proper account- s Many merchant have been surprised to find that good accounting isf' V * ^ dimple accounting--more simple, in fact, than systems they have used, and^: and which did not give the complete figure information that is necessary, it/.; V V : ' Proper accounting methods for the retail store will show: .Amount of 7 ^ in the bank, amount of cash on hand (undeposited), amotint owed to ' ^ you by customers, amount owed by you to creditors, total receipts to date, -f ^. ; '| total disbursements to date, total cash sale$ to date, total charge sales date, total purchases by departments to date, total expenses classified w date, approximate stock on hand. . . . ' v -* And such accounting means real economy, because it furnishes ther ^ 0 Necessary information on which to base the manageiv&nt of a business. It, - V>.r|v discloses leaks, protects against dishonesty and relieves the manager and ' ^ Owner of the worry and uncertainty caused by guessing. business men of this village to talk with us regarding ^:v8Keir accounting problems. Any advice that we actual knowledge of «he best bn^taesB practices. , ^ / ^ ^ v -.r' A> " l*- sm •! •*.[• ;c- ";'->V WE mm THE H. KIND Lectures at St. Patrick's The course of lectures announced for St. Patrick's church, during the Lenten season was opened by the lecture on "The Unity of the True Church" on Tuesday evening of this week. A summary of the lecture follows: Unity is an essential mark of the chufch, belongs to its very nature, because Christ willed it so, when in the prayer for His disciples He said: "Holy Father keep them in Thy Name that they may be one asje also are. And not for thenMiJJ^o I pray, but for them also who thru their word shall believe in Me; that they may be one as Thou Father in Me and I in Thee, that they may be one in Us that the world may believe that Thou hast sent Me.Y Where this unity was found, there was to be found- evidence of Christ's divine mission. Where it was not found there was lacking the first essential of the true church. All men were obliged to belong to the true church under pain of eternal loss. *He that believeth and is baptised shall be saved; he that believeth not shall be condemned. (MaHc 16, v. 15, 16); In a matter of such importance as eternal damnation or eternal salvation Christ could not and did not leave man without a definite and certain means of knowing the truth. So He sent His apostles to teach the whole worldj "Teaching them to observe ail things that I have commanded you, and behold I am with you all days even to the consummation of the world." The apostles were His ambassadors and their successors were His ambassadors to the whole world unto the end of time. That teaching body is in the world today and it has the mark of unity that Christ intended it to have. As everyone knows there is only one organization whose members believe every where and always the same truths, only one organization that claims to teach all nations with the same, authority as Christ, only one organization whose history stretches back to the time of Christ, only one organization that thruout its twenty centuried life has worshipped God in the same uniform way, and that or ganization is the Catholic church. The world war emphasized that there could be no efficiency without a united command and protestant denominations recognizing this are striving more energetically than ever to unite th^ir forces as witness the Inter-Church World Conference holding sessions in Chicago. But unity to be real unity necessitates agree ment on religious teachings, neces sitates an authority to decide what is to be believed, and this is not possible where every denomination bases its teachings on every individual pri vate interpretation of the scriptures. So real unity outside of the Catholic church neither exists, and all admit this, nor can it exist, as is evident from what has been said. Neither cart any results come from the mission of the three Episcopalian bishops, Anderson, Weller and Boyd Vincent, who are on their way to Rome to consult the pope about the reunion of the Christian world, unless we suppose that they are prepared to admit the authority of Christ's church and give to her their sub mission. There can be no bargain ing in matters of faith and though union is greatly desired it is only possible by submission to the author ity of the church, that Christ estab lished. The subject of the next lqptyre on } Tuesday evening, Mar. Ii» " will hr A. J. MULLEN . V Attorney at Law At West McHenry State' Bank Every Friday Hom Office, :: Woodstock, DL FOR SALE--A modern soda fountain, the one now in use at C. Unti's ice cream fmrloar. C. Unti, McHenry, 111. . . 39 FOR SALE--A quantity of Marquis spring wheat for seed, clear from foul seed. Jacob M. Diedrich, McHenry, 111. Phone 631-W-l. 39-6t* mm This is. the fatuous Elgin brand which is giving such excellent satisfaction wherever it is sold. We receive shipments two and three times a week thus assuring our customers fresh goods at all times. If you have never given our bakery a trial we invite you to do so. JOS. J. MILLER McHENRY. ILL. EXCEPTIONAL VALUE IN LASSIHED- DEPARTMENT LOST--Somewhere between Rosedale and Borden's milk factory, a horse blanket.. Finder please leave at this office. 89-lt* FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN--A good house and six lots near Catholic church in McHenry, 111. ; Address F B. Bennett, Woodstock, 111. 39-lt WANTED--A few* customers for "Bacon's" home-made butter. Deliveries in McHenry every Friday. Prices right. Call phone 612-M-2. FOR SALE--Your choice of two trucks; one a Ford and the other a Republic. (T Both in good running order. Frank Freund, McHenry, 111. FOR SALrf--The C. H. Parks house and property on the corner of John and Center streets in West McHenry. C. W. Stenger, West McHenry. 39-tf pad SALE OR RENT The Xdtsr farm of 120 acres situated east of the village of McHenry. Apply to OE write C. W. Stenger, West McHenry, 111. 39-tf 9-4-inch wide Pepperell Bleached Sheeting, per yd Sic 36-inch Bever fine brown Sheeting LL heavy, yd --l8c 36-inch Logwood B Sheeting heavy, yd . _ _._18c 36 inch Nainsook Lonsdale, heavy, per yd.wr..._.,Mc »l6-inch Fruit of Loom Cambric, per £ PRINTS, PERCALE AND GINGHAM 27-inch American Prints, light and dark, per yd, lSe 36-inch light ground Percale, stripe and checks, yd_.i$c Good patterns Apron and Dress Gingham, per yd._-21c ^ Wonderful Bargains in - 6^ochet Bed Spreads, Sheets and""Cases v Large3 & 3^2-11* Crochet Spreads, plain, scalloped $2JS 81-in. x 90-inch Seamless Sheet**.. - j?; - - -V---- ll.lt 36x45-inch Cases, match - - f «. I* - -2tc JANESVILLE OVERALLS / /Men's heavy stifel blue stripe. Youths' heavy stifel blue stripe Boys' heavy stif^Muftjsfrjge^^^^ is- A WEBER & LAY, • SPRING GROVE, ILL. --91.25 M-Jl- Me BATTERY The Automobile pleasure will soon be here and you'll want your storage batteries as well as casings and inner tubes to be in good serviceable condition. Better examine your batteries, casings and tubes and assure yourself that they are not in need of repair. Remember that these are subject to .damage and wear even if your car has not been out of the garage all winter. We employ nothing but the very latest methods in our work and guarantee satisfaction at all times. invite your inspection. MILLER & HAWLEY MCHENRY, ILLINOIS FARM WANTED--We have a cash customer for ~ small farm on lake. Send full particulars. Chas. Bauman & Co., 8065 Lincoln Ave., Chicago, 111. 37-4t FOR SALE---One Goulds high pressure power white wash machine and Waytag engine, hose and all complete. In good condition. James Meehan, West McHenry, Hi. 39 FOR SALE--100 fat, pure bred White Wyandotte pullets and cockerels. $'2.00 each. Get your bid in early, as they will go quickly. Townside farm, Volo, 111. Address C. E. Cox, Round Lake, 111. Phone McHenry 628-J-l. 39-21 <!iSoiSactttr of CjbiSf PHILIP" JAEGER GENERAL COflMISSlON MERCHANT - VKUb 4TTIMTIOK QlVftN TO TIU Sill OP . • •-/"v", • OmiMl Bm(, riutton, Hofi, V«fl, Poultr* HMm, Etc., Butter and B||i Thl# lathe oldest |pflpa on the 'Street . Tags appliofcttoo. ^ v GOLD STORAGE FRBE sun i * ». HaiM at. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. WkelaaaU Mark at. rUHDOK AND BEATING Kxperienced Workmen IDONAVIN * H&IHANSPKRGER Telephone Nol 1M-K SIMON STOFFEL Insurance agent for all daaaea of property in tke beat cwnpenlee -' mm jnwHp^v y |i i mini t , . ' •; V' V'.. " - • -£ *