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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Apr 1930, p. 3

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TO! . >.5 » » • H T v * > : > ' • ? . ,* - a ; 51 T"" V ' . % _ /.v';>-".•., - , • " • ' * • , "- " ' ',• < '>.. - - * C. .V"'~ - " ' ' v* > ' v ' ~ * ,- if -*; *' t?*> V ** A i fiviiL I?,IJ3O V' V v , - ; •.'. ••..'•'•> ' "" ' ' $**1 ^ir* ^.,v ^>^€/ t? ' f ^ If*1 >fOHH8BUU ... . w-:*.'iy Ifrs. Jacob Steffes at McHenry Thursf " Mr. ind Mrs. George Midtefa aiid k *on, Donald, motored to Crystal Lake f> Friday night. | Hka IHMMM(«r o£ G»ysday. ' j Mr. and Mrs. Henry StdFel and I daughter, Marie, df Volo visited at 1 the home of Mm 8rlM»«ftrr Sunday. I John Pitxan «U a visitor at the 1-borne of his Mrs. George iiWEOmr, of Volo ana day last week. 1| F*ed Smith, Ijfeth Smith, Clemens ^FTrenad and Charles Sehaefer motored y to Waukefan, one day last week, il whara Hht visited Leo Smith at St. iinjiiii I KMpnai. ^ Mrs. Stephen Schmitt and daugh- ^ tar, Aft lias, gatamcd hate after a S long visit at Sterling, 111. Mrs. John Pitzen, Mrs. John HiUqr, :4 Mrs. Joe p. Hettemjan, Mrs. Joseph j Freund ,.*pd Beripad HiQer altered to Chicago one dagr last week, xshave « < they visited with Mr. and Mrs. Frank S| Zhmpfer. | Miss Olive Hetteruuuu* visited at the home of her parents, Stendrty. .'* Mr. and Mrs. AnfchaSy Q«rtel< "Mrs. • ^Elisabeth Oerte! a©d daiythter, Marie, ; and grandchildren, Betty vnd Richard Nixon, of Woodstock were visitors !n the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Michels Friday night. \ , Miss Evelyn Meyers was -••-•HEHenry visitor Thprsday. Mr. and Mrs. George Lay visited at the home of Mr. and Mr*. Henry Nell Friday night. Mrs. Joe B. Hettermann was a Woodstock culler Friday. Raymond Miller of Volo was a caller here on Friday. Mrs. Nick Sehaefer is quite 111 at her home and has been confined to bar bed for some time. Mr. and Mrs. John S. Freund of McHenry and son, Vernon, visited with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs Casper Adams on Sunday. Leo F. Smith returned from Wwikegan- hospital Friday, after being there for two weeks. Don't forget the dance Easter Mon day being held at St. John's hall. A good time will be had. The baseball players began practice on the diamond, and this is a sure sign of the opening of tha baseball sea son. faster will be tha first game if the weather permits. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Adams and two sons visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Anthony Freund Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Billy May and Leo Michels motored to Elgin Friday The McHenry 4th and 6th grade boys played a game of baseball with the Johnsburg boys, Saturday afternoon, the latter winning by a score of 41-0. Miss Mildred Sehaefer of Grayslake Visited at the borne of bar parents, one day last weak. Mrs. William J. Mayan, Mrs. Joa King and daughter, Mabel, and Mrs. Jacob Stellas and daughter of McHenry motored to Elgin Friday. Mrs. Frank Pitsaaand Mra. John P* Sehaefer visited with Mrs. Nick Schaefet Friday afternoon, jfr. and Mrs. Joe King and daughvisited at the home of Mr. and Laura Meyers and Jack Danham viaitad at tha home of WQIiam Meyers Friday afternoon. Mrs. Joa Hettermann and daughter motored to Elgin Saturday. Misa Evelyn Meyers visited at the home of Helen Sehaefer Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. William Lowe of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives and friends here. Helen Sehaefer was a visitor at the home of Miss Alvina Schmitt Sunday. Alfred Oeffling and John Bertrang of Aurora were visitors at the home of Edward Schmitt Sunday. Miss IsabeUe Schmitt of McHenry spent Friday Evening with bar parents. Mrs. Jacob Schmitt and Mr. and M». Bernard Schinitt motored to Be loit Sunday, Where they vtttad with relatives. Hak Jteory Dagan of McHenry was a Sudsy visitor in the home of Mr. and Ifrs. John Diigan. Laura itotffe <f Chicago was a caBer here Smiday. Mh . Joe P. Michels and son, Fr*nk, wera McHenry callers Saturday even ing. Henry Althoff, Mary and Catherine Althcff of Elgin visited at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mm Wit liam Althoff, Sunday. ^ Mr. and Mrs. John Rauen and Mr. and Mrs. Math Rauen of Spring Grove were visitors with John H. Freund Sunday afternoon. Mil and Mrs. Albert Huff and daoghtar spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joa P. Michels. Visitors in the home of William Meyers on Sunday were Mrs. John King of McHenry and Miss Julia King and John Bowman of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. George King visited with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller Sunday. Hats for matrons, misses and children at Mrs. Thelen-Fich's, Riverside D£^$ ^t Pearl St., McHenry, 46 * '• ir: " Potato's History - TlSte White potato, known ftt "ftlsh," is a native of America, like corn and tobacco. The Incas of Peru bad It under cultivation for centures before the Spanish Invasion. For 150 years after its discovery by Europeans, only wellto- do people ate potatoes. It was raised in their gardens and the lower classes tyoew of it by hearsay alone. Commercial production was begun about 1570. Fi »«m of Hoatinf Liqaid Whan a liquid is heated, convection currents are set up, the warmer liquid near the bottom becoming less dense and rising to the aurface, while the colder liquid falls to the bottom. Thla continues during the whole process of heating. The forces present in a gyroscopp may be flailed "gyroaoopic" forces. Qmly Tocknica! Differ--sa The difference in the names Tree* ury and Liberty bonds is made only to -distinguish bonds that have different dates of maturity. Both are gold bonds. ABOR C L E A N CLOTHES fe? FUN) MINftN CANALS H ARIZONA WESEBT Camera Reveals Woik #f Ancient Engineers. Washington.--An elaborate system «f canals built by Indian engineers here about 1200 A. D., and now entirely lost to view, has been successfully mapped by the penetrating eye of the airplane camera. The mosaic map of what might be called invisible ruins was made from a United Statea army plane and by an army photographer. Neil M. Judd, archeologtst of the United States National maseum, supervised the aerial survey over the Gila and Salt river valleys. In Arizona. Preliminary reports from tha army officers reassure Mr. Judd that the photographers achieved their purpose, though the work of developing and arranging; the negatives is not complete. Tha pictures were taken from an altitude of about two milea. Brings Plana Back. Tha magic abfllty of airplane photography to hring back Into existence the plans of vanished bniMlngs surprised the people of England when MaJ. O. G. S. Crawford showed that his air pictures could record the plans of Roman towns and fortresses long since plowed over. Now, Mr. Jadd has shewn that the same magic works for America's prehistory. Only forty years ago the lines of 400 miles of the prehistoric CRnais and laterals could be seen in central Arizona. Now, not more than forty miles of this remarkable engineering work can be observed from the ground. The land which the Pueblo Indians Irrigated so that they could raise their corn, beans and squashes Is now green with alfalfa, citrus and data groves, fields of lettuce and cotton. The Coolidge dam stores water for much of this farming. The plan to study the Indians' system of irrigating this region was proposed by Senator Carl Hayden of Arizona. Mr. Judd stated. Last summer Senator Hayden noticed that where Indian reservation land was being prepared for Irrigation the workmen were pulling up cactus, mesquite and other growth at the rate of twenty acres a day and Ailing In tha ancient canals. He felt that some record of the old American engineering should be quickly made. Can Set Course of Canals. Ia many cases an airplane observer 2,000 feet up can see with his own eyes the course of the old canals, Mr. Judd found. Describing these observations and his study on the ground, Mr. Judd stated that the engineering of the Indians was sound. Tto*ir ideas were so sound, indeed, that many of the modern canals of the region, dug with steam shovels, have followed the same contours and approximately the same gradient. Tha Indians had to dig their canals with nothing better than stone tools and sticks. The loosened material was carried off in baskets. They had as metal, no beasts of burdan. Both the Pueblos and modern engineers have followed the course of constructing canals and later abandoning them in favor of naw ones, Mr. Judd explained. From the air it was possible to find points where on^ of the early Indian canals was cut across by a later one. White settlers who first went lnta the Southwest made good use of tha Indian engineering plan. One Mors »oo gr»a§ which aattlad near tha towa aOhaa la tha 19Wi tap a canal In %apa of the riHMnp sat hg Indiana many centuries baftwa, and a part of that taaal is in aaa today, Jlr. Ja«i •hid. TEltKA GOTTA Mrs. Bertha Esh has miovad 1|m / Mra. Belle Dufield of RidgeAeld was postoffice equipment to her home, dur- calling on friends here Sunday, ing the past week. She has taken MiSs Florence Knox was a Chicare of the mail since the death of cago visitor Saturday. the postmaster, H. Peacock. Raymond J. Riley of Chicago spent Mr, and Mrs. Joe G. Wagner ware Sunday at his home here. Sunday gueata of the latter's brother, Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Anderson and Fred Shotliff, at Hebron. daughter, Rath, were Waukegan vis- Mr. and Mrs. Norbert Klauae, Mra. itors Saturday. William Britz, Mrs. John Wagner Glenn McMillan of Chicago visited and Peter Weber attended » funeral relatives here Sunday. of a relative in the city Monday. Mr. and Mrs. George Wegener and Mr. and Mrs. George Wkgner and daughters of Lily Lake visited at tha son of Chicago were here over Mon- ktfme of P. A. Huffman Sunday, day with their parents. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sand and Mr. and Mrs. Frank McMillan of daughter of Carpentersville spent Crystal Lake and Joseph James and Sunday at the home of Henry Mcfriends of Rockford were Sunday Millan. Mrs. Sund and daughter reguests of Mr. and Mrs. E. Peacock. stained for a week. Joseph Rauen, Mr. and Mrs. Math Mrs. H. G, Hille and Mra. J. Mills Rauen, Mr. and Mrs. Mike Rauen, Mr. <rf Ferndale, Mich., were visiting and Mrs John Rauen attended the friends here Saturday and Sunday, funeral of a nephew, Stanley Rauen, Mark and Glenn McMillan visited at at Kenosha Mr-nday. Home of their sister, Mrs. J. S. Joh* H. Freund spent a day tha Lynott, near Elgin, Saturday evening, past week with his daughter, Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Georga Dunkley and Math Rauen son, BHly, of Elgin visited at the Mrs. Maggie Feltes spent a few lwme of Henry McMillan Sunday, days the past week in Johnsbusg. Mystery's Cfcara* Plain truth will |aitoan<!a half a acore men at most In a nation, or an age, while mystaiy wtQ lead millions by the nose.--Henry St John, Viscount Mr. and Mrs. Anton May had their dinner guests Sustday, Mr. and Mrs. Chtrles May and children and Mr. and Mrs. Anton Meyers and daughter, Gladys. t vwc ,JT T--,rT, . _ Joe G. Wagner ia quite sick at this #0|U^bf0k# (1678-1751). UttSr. writing. ... Math Lay and Joaeph Brown ssotored to Burlington, Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Oxtoby attended a birthday party at the home of their uncle, Robert Hunter, at Richmond, the occasion being bis 84 birthday. Mrs. Maggie Bauer and daughter, Carol, of Waukegan were callers here one day the past week. SIDE CAIAG1 •-•s* ' fs • * «« TellW Ctaend Automobile Repairing Bet. Phone, Pity Poor Ma* A Judge has Jaat affirmed that a Is not old at fifty-nlna. No one would dare area to aak eaafcr * lass Hon about a woman. Help to Fight Disease In a bulletin on the United States' role In fighting disease all around the world the National Geographic society points out that cattle, horses, snakes, rabbits and guinea pigs are the living machines of the biological industry. In this country they manufacture $20,- 000,000 worth of products annually. Lanmm Respite Nobody cares to be sick, of course, hut the period of convalescence Is Una for "catching up" with your reading,-- Lnulsvllle Times. Argentine Wheat Sefsaa The wheat harvest in the Argentine republic commences in November and Is in full swing about Christmas time. It continues well on into January In the most southerly portion, where the season starts later. Central Garage JOHNSBURG VteB J. IWTH, Freprftet** Chevrolet Sties. General Automotive Repair Work Give us a call when in trouble ZXPKRT WELDING AND CYLINDER RBBOSING Day Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 • i f j ' • - 1 ELECTRICITY • '•:! 'V,T' . p Great Help m Your Chores iiiiHn^ the dearie wsj is mudi ****** then m0kiii£- by hsnd. Also makes ir possible for you to deep si|: f hour longer in the morning because electricity cm milk from two to four cows st a time... If yoig separate the cream from your milk, let a small electric : • motor turn die separator. It will keep the separatof v ; tunning st an even speed essicr and better than yo% ..v can do it turning the crsnk. Then, too, you will. get mote cream. • liT: ASK ABOUT PLAN FOR BRINGING ELECTRIC SERVICE TO YOUR FARM s card will bring you cos# plete informarioo sbo«|K our newplan for enen«|» lug modern electric service to fcrmii InqiiiH today! I •. . PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHBRN ILLINOIS ^ . X & J. LARK IN. Dint. M*r. 4 401 Williams St, Crystal Lab <>7^ 1 Clarence Douglas, Local Eap. TeL 19S, McHenry, O, Find Skeleton of Toft Buried About 1000 B. C. Af loa, CataUna Island, Oallf.--Tba skalatoD of an right-year aid child, surrounded by beads, shell necklace*, rings, carved stones, and other primitive treasures, believed to have beep burled about 1000 B. C., has been dug up on C&talina island by Prof. Ralph Glldden, archeologiat Professor Glldden has a party oa the Island seeking to discover the on* time temple to the sun god Ohlngiclch. Another skeleton found by the Gliddea party Is supposed to have been that of a Channel chieftain. Twenty-twa dog skeletons were buried about tha chiefs remains, and the scientists have a theory that the dog was se> cred to tha Channel Indiana. AST WORKI Yes, indeed, tine Haiig ?5 makes fast work of laundering. And $1 takes just about all of the work out of it, too. Youll never go back to hand-rubbing and soaking again, once this Haag does your laundering. It cleans clothes ? ||jaan^-eveii heary pieces, work clothing and blankets. And you can trust it with your finest, sheerest | filings as well. The safety agitator protects them from - il chance of injury. Hie new wringer, with its • balloon-type rolls of soft rubber, "smoothes" water' . - from the clothes, and is most careful of the buttons.: You'll surely want to see this washer. Then, we feel sure, youll be eager to try it. Tbm caa je»ii\y be Arranged, without any obligation* Young People to Build and Manage Own Churdl Milwaukee, Wis.--Members of tha Milwaukee Episcopal Toung People's association have begun steps to build a church, to be managed entirely by young people. The church will be built In White, fish Bay, Milwaukee suburb, this sura* jner and is expected to be completed next fall. Money will be raised through sale of 5.000 $1 certificates, to interested Milwaukeeana. No age limit of church membership will be set. Fergus With, association president, said, but the management of tba church will be entirely fe thf hands of young members. Find. Job mmd Di m Bvansvllle, Ind.--After spending several weeks seeking employment, Edward A. Goenlnger. forty-eight year# old, fell dead within less than an hour after assuming his new duties in a factory here. He was a victim of heart disease. mm - . Green Street, McHenry KAAC A platonic friendship is a form at friendship from which the element of romance is wholly absent It is for Plato, who depicted such a . A ' • v 0" . - ^ • ' * 'i ' The average person spends 18 days} * a year eating instead of 61 two dec- ®*°' coDShideg Marje Dahnke, anii " - •; . '""i' \ %>>• .fj: mK>-*: 'V-tji . IT'S GOOD BUSINESS TO BUILD NOW : y-1: V • . • '4 : :1 > 1 jc O f t w d J / , - -i r 4 > Hj i i o ? n a t i o r i Q - Hope J • fo f . c r r . ""w AinO " d v e vOUl i e n . o d e l t n g work : ) n f now Ot7:- r, ' i; h - c , r - S 1 f ~ c t i t , u ^ J i I jr "I d e a l e r WEE S T E R N UNI T E GAS and ELECTRIC COMPANY D V!;

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