tHZ M'HXNRT PUUBDEALKR, THURSDAY, HAT 82, 19S0 S\ t Jr.; lb*. Joe King1 retained fiwn the Witakefsn hospital Sunday. Mi* Getteirfato Adams was quite ill the Alter port of last week, bat is improved at the present writing. Mrs. Louis Oertel of Woodstock -visited with her daughter, Mrs. G. Michel?, Tuesday. Mrs. John Hfller, Mrs. Joe Freund, Mrs. John M. Pitxen, Mr*. William May and Mrs. Anna Bugner motored to Waukegan Tuesday of last week, where they visited with Mrs. Joe King at St. Theresa's hospital. Miss Emily Simon is spending 'a few days this week with friends in Chicago. , Jfiss Mildred Schaefer of Grayslake and Miss Alvina Schumacher visited with Mrs. George Michels Wednesday. Miss Alvina Schumacher visited with Miss Mildred Schaefer at Grayslake, Wednesday. , Mis& Oliva Hettermann of McHenry. visited with her parents, Wednesday. , Miss Florence Smith is spending a few days this week in Chicago. Miss Mildred Schaefer of Grayslake spent Wednesday with her parents. Mrs. Joe B. Hettermann and Mrs. Albert Smith motored to Waukegan Thursday where they visited with Mrs. Joe King. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Pepping and daughters, Marie and Lorraine, of Spring Grove and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Amann of Long Lake visited at the Joe Hettermann home Sunday. Miss Oliva Hettermann visited at the home of her parents, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Freund, Jr. and daughter visited with Mr. and George Lay Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Math Lay and Mr. and Mrs. John Lay visited with Hn. Stephen Schmitt Sunday. *» Joe B. Hettermann and children visited with Mr. .and Mrs. Albeit Pepping at Spring Grove Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. "Emit Simon of Chi* cago visited with Mrs. Koae Mueller Friday. Misses Oliva Hetermann, Mabelle King and Florence Smith metered to Wonder Lake Sunday. Mrs. John M. Pitzen visited with Mi»s Frances Michels Monday, who is ilL Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michels and family of Harvard visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michels Sunday. Mrs. Ray Horrick and Mrs.' Joe Reigner of Chicago visited Kith Mr. and Mrs. George Lay Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. William Akhoff visited with their daughter at Woodstock Sunday. Misses Mary and Kate Althoff visited at home Sunday. Mrs. Steve Schaefer visited at the home of Mrs, Joe King Monday, who has just returned from the hospital. "Told Tales Bita af Neva the Cehuaaa of i Plaindealer Fifty and Twauty-lve YeaJS • *«• c itiet a Haul Brtakw Another peculiarity Is that no financially poor man ever breaks a heart.-- Aransas Gazette. Fifty Yetos Age The water in the Fox river is lower at the present time than it has been for a number of years. If we do not get rain soon the fish will be obliged to take to the lakes to avoid dry land. We have received a sample of butter, made at the new butter factory of James Overton, near Solon, and find it fully equal, if not superior, to any batter we ever tasted, which proves that as a butter maker Mr. Overton is certainly a success. Mathias Freund, who resides near Johnsburg, died suddenly on Thursday last. It appears that he received a severe fall some time last winter, but his friends supposed he had fully recovered from its effects. Chas. Kuhnert and daughter of Johnsburg narrowly escaped a fatal accident on Saturday last. While coming to town something- broke, letting the tongue of the wagon drop down, and throwing Mr. Kuhnert and daughter to the ground. T*«ty4i« Yean Age Last Saturday afternoon Mrs. C. C, Colby and Mrs. P. C. Peterson and 1- year-old daughter, who reside Just north of town, started out for an afternoon drive. They were driving toward McHenry, when they met an auto coming up the main highway at a terrific speed. Thinking that the driver of the machine would keep on the main road, as most tourists do, the ladies stopped their horse until the devil-wagon should have passed. To their horror the machine dashed around the corner into the machine, throwing the occupants of the buggy onto a barbed wire fence. McHenry has again been separated from one of its old citizens, the ange) of death coming Wednesday afternoon last, May 17, 1905, taking away Mr. Thomas Phalin, aged 70 years. John Pint will soon begin to erect a handsome new residence on the lot he recently purchased from Mrs. Frank Winkle, on the corner of Maple avenue and Pearl street. A young mason arrived at the home of Ben Hosing at Volo on Thursday, May 16, and the elder is now contracting large jobs. The opening danoe at George Nell's pavilion last night was quite well attended and everyone present fully enjoyed the event. Fox River Hatcheries SPECIAL PRICES ,,,v All Heavy Breed*--$8.00 to $12.00 per hnndreS : Change of prices effective at OHM. Call and reverse charges. We deliver to your door in lots of 300 (Nr ape, Dock hatching every week. t Phone 1537 or 5410 58 S. Spring St. * Elgin, f£ It Was Her Intuition By SHEILA MAC CULLA j >•«••»»»« «»«»»»»»•••»• Peterson Garage and Repair Shop Located in the Morrow Building-, West McHenry, recently known as the Chevrolet agency. I am now /ully equipped to handle all kinds o£ qur «IUI • track repairing "W Alvin C. Peterson Business Phone 256 Residence Phone 137-W S. H. Freund & Son General Building Contractors Phone 127-R Cor. Pearl and Parte Sts. McHenry, IlL WJEST SIDE GARAGE >, Props* T*L 186 General Automobile Repairing , , • Res. Phone, 6S9-&-2 Central Garage joHNsauac * I**D J. SMITH, PnfriMW Chevrolet Sales. General Autonotive Repair Work Shfe us a call when m tnmble EXPERT WELDING AND CYLINDER REBORING Day Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 (Copyright.) "^T ANCT DARBX parked her bine •*•^1 sedan before an artistic Spanish hoase with a coral-tiled roof and enclosed patio, and hurried op the graveled path. Her light tap was answered by a Filipino batler. "Is Mrs. Martin In?" she inquired in a voice quivering with excitement. The butler said, "She'll be right down." At the sound of light footsteps, Nancy beheld Sally's neat ankles tripping down the curving steps so quickly that the tiered skirt of her new crepe ensemble flew out as though strpek by a sudden wind. Nancy shook her finger at Sally as she began to talk nervously. "What's this I've been hearing about yon and Ray? I'm horribly interested because you know how things stand between Bert and me since the Langley house party. Too can teU me everything, my dear. X*ni sitting with folded hands." "Nancy, I intended to tell you the whole thing, but my time's so taken np lately that I haven't had a minute to myself. Even today I'm tied up from two until six o'clock at that welfare center. I ordered the car for 1:30 and It's now," looking at her new platinum and diamond wrist watch, "exactly 1:15." "Say, why eant I take yon over there, and yon can teU me while we ride?" Nancy's inquisitive eyes saw her friend's new gift. •Okay." Sally stepped Into the car. and the gossip began. •Well, you know, that night gfter the bouse party, Ray and I sat before the fireplace watching the crackling flames. Believe me, I was peeved!" "Yeah!" Nancy held out her monogrammed cigarette. "I said to him. and these were my exact words, 'Yon saw me-in Rand Trevor's arms kissing Mm and what're yon going to do about it?'" -lost like that?" asked Nancy, admiring Sally's nonchalant manner and wishing she could be that way with Bert "Yes, and he said. In that drawly tone that always stirs me like sn earthquake, 'Rather cool and indifferent, aren't you?' Yes, he said that, and exactly the way I'm patting it, tOO.** r "Can yon imagine?" went on Nancy, slowing np In the heavy traffic, her foot on the brake. "And then, be looked me straight In the face like he was searching for something, I don't know what, and he used that Irritating 'M-m-m-m' gf his, you know how he 'does It, 'Divorce, maybe?' I was squirming over that rising note." "Sort of goosefiesh feeling!" Nancy acquiesced, knowing just how Sally felt. "That's It. Well, he wasn't going to pnt anything over on me, you bet, I told myself. I came back at him with, 'So that's the game, is it?1 Just as cool as I know how to be. 'A frame np,' I told him. 'Ray, you gave me that extra glass, threw me in the way of Rand Trevor, and our natural proximity did the rest.'" "Oh, how did you think of that, Sally? Clever, I'll say!" "Well. I kept cool, believe me! 1 asked what his plans were, rather aloof-like as though I didn't care one way or the other. And he answered that when a man found his wife in the arms of another fellow, It usually ended np in divorce. I was so het op with that slow provoking smile of his that my brain burned with a white heat and--" Sally took another puff or two and calmly flicked the ashes out of the window as if making ready for her big climax. Nancy leaned forward breathlessly. "And then?" she questioned. "I retorted, 'Not if his wife saw him kiss that peroxide blond, Erna Dixon, the same night when be thought she wasn't on the veranda.' I could see that burnt him op. And If he didn't seem amazed, then I dont know a pitcher from a batter. Honestly, he looked guilty," and Sally Angered the watch tenderly. "What happened then?" Nancy's eyes danced with excitement. "You haven't heard all of it, by any means, Nancy. Now, listen. He says, •Well, can't we say what's sauce for the goose Is sauce for the gander and resume our marital serenity?' Yon know his yen for the big sounding words since he took that correspondence course. And then, he sat down and put his arms around me. And I nestled down into a more comfortable position. It was so nice to make up," and Sally smiled as "if to herself. "But how could you forgive his kissing that golddigger?" Nancy asked. "Oh, I never saw him kiss her. That was just a yarn I'd made up. I wonder now how in the world I ever thought of it, but I guess it was my Intuition," and Sally looked admiringly at her watch. They stopped at the curb and 8ally got out. "See yon Thursday," she said. Waving good-by, Nancy remarked aloud, as she drove out of her friend's hearing, "Yeah! Her intuition! But why was Ray so ready to forget?" A Speeding Clock Policeman--This won't do, madam rve been watching yoor clock; thla car's been parked here twenty mln ueee. Lady Motorist--Oh, you can't to by that; it's test.--London Opinion. Ga(th| Ss» »1»> • yoong New Yorker recently went to a famous mid-western hospital for a highly specialized operation, and has returned bearing word that, "out among the big things," be has been set down as a mental case. But It comes out even, for he thinks the nurses were a set of mental cases. He found, he saM, that his $8 a day nurses wonld give him no service. If he asked for something, they replied, "You don't want that now." So he devised the scheme of holding a water pitcher high in the air and saying, "If you don't give me what I want I'll drop the pitcher." After the nurses had cleaned up two broken pitchers, his requests were ' granted, but the hospital officially Set down a* a maniac. Eveiy building Pet Clinic ? Saturday afternoon. St;* In lower Seventh avenue^ may be found a line-up of pet lover* at a free clinic for animals. Here, at the headquarters for the Humane society^ come those who can't afford to pay for veterinary services, and those who can--for the reputation of the society's veterinarians is great. The other afternoon I dropped in to see Harry Moran, the superintendent, and to get a line on the sort of sere* ices dispensed. Animals, Moran told me, have Just about the same Illnesses that human beings do. While I was there a woman arrived In her limousine, carrying a $eaiyham terrier that was suffering from a case of nerves. And someone brought a billygoat that was suffering from--believe It or not--indigestion. One of the regular visitor* is a cat with ingrowing toenails, brought in for a--tell me If I'jn wroaf-Hnanleart.f * • * e ; New tUm ^ Ultra smart New Yorkers who have tired of .Guggenheim, anagrams ant other childish pastimes have devised a new means of amusement. It is the' game of larceny. If yon are invited to the Smiths for dinner, you snoop about the apartment looking for Smith's wallet or Mrs. Smith's pocketbook. You try to steal $5. You win the game, of course. If you get the $5 without being caught. Then, If you're an ultra smart New Yorker, you it* turn the money a week later, accony panyinf tt with a light Jest. • * • Miner Upheaval One of tlw minor upheavals caused by the waistline and-long-sklrt epidemic has been in the window display business. Store proprietors have found that their w^c mannequins are completely out of touch with the mode, with their lack of feminine curves. So many a sculptor's work of aft has been confined to the Junk heap, and th% sculptors are working night and day turning o^( m^nngqulns witjj * • * Trii Story I can't mention tlie name, without getting into trouble. But here la the story: A press agent for a well known producer was reading in bed the other night after a hard day's work giving out press passes, and he came upon a startling passage In his book. "Why!" he exclaimed, 'That's my bo*s!" It read like one of those Broadway novels In which the char* acters have fictitious names but everyone knows who is meant. Not willing to trust his own imagination, the press agent took the book with him to the office next morning, and read the passage to close associates of the producer. "Who's this?" the press agent would say, and then would begin1 to read. "You don need to go any further," the listener would reply shortly. "It's the boss. Somebody has been writing another Broadway novel." The book the press agent read from was a scholarly biography of GetftmL Borgia! - 7: " (A kr th« Ball Sjmdlc&U, Im) fuller turning Stores. Wfc*le*s Hid* V*l««Me The hide of a single whale has made 200 pairs of boots, 25 pairs of shoes besides large quantities of heavy belting, shoestrings, etc.--Capper's Weekly. Hope Hope caret more grief team or prayers; it leads like a trusty guide through the deepest night--American Magazine, Now P*rsp«ctiv« "Do not destroy all that dlspl you," said Hi Ho, the sage of Chinatown. "Think of the future, which always works changes of opinion."-- Wellington Star. , _ Jt«lnd»or*» Winter Food Reindeer dig through the snow for the succulent lichens or reindeer moss, upon which they feed in the winter. Hoot tad CoU is Irftafaa f»* The maximum temperatnre of tftfll sir in Great Britate£«f** » 2 shade at 4 feet above the groandrW 100 degrees Fahrenheit. This waa efr» ? served at Wilton house, SalMsK July 15, 1881, and at Greenwich app servatory on August 0, 1911. Tha lap* ./ est temperature of the air recoide0 in the shade at 4 feet above tbegroMft --23 degrees Fahrenheit, at Plsrkaifr der, Berwickshire, December 4, '•hi pj t ^ * v' ""| Grasp this chance to get fine new flre* for holiday driving at barfiin prices. Come in today and see the hashing redactions on our entire Hne of U. S. Tires. These are ike World-renowned tires built by Ike world's largest producer of rubber and gvaranteed for Mfet Under any kind of service they will oat" last any other tires in their varioip price fields. And if you want nail» aim mileage at minimum cwfc how is the time to get it! pHee cuts we are offering are sensational. Bay while yon tail save--today! < • Some of the bargain* now Offered V.S.Ha*LUS4pljr TKAXIOV V.S. TIRE AND TUBS VtJLOANIZIHO BATTERY OHARMNO AND REPAIRIHe MMM Phone 120-R ALL WORK GUARANTEED Chick Is Some Chicken; Crows When 2 Days OM Bl.vtheville, Ark.--A young chicken which bfgan crowing at the age of two days is the prise possession of Mrs* Chuck Burns. "Chickie," a handsome Plymouth Rock, recently startled the other barnyard fowl and his owner by crowing lustily in imitation of a grown rooster. Since then he rises early each morning, flaps his wings and greets the morning sun with a ringing crow. Each time he performs this unusual feat he has an audience of several unbelievers who go away convince# "Chickie" is "some chicken." pot Title Fran Bnnyaa "Vanity Fair" seemed to Thackeray an appropriate name for his great book, and wss chosen from "Pilgrim's Progress"; "And the name of that town is Vanity; and at that town these is a fair kept, called Yanity Fair." Man Turns Robber to Pay for Divorce San Francisco--A "robbing Peter to pay Paul defense" failed Harry Schilder in Superior court here and he must serve one year to life in San Quentln penitentiary. Schilder, a baker, told the court that be had held up a man In order to pay a divorce attorney fees. "I had no other way to get the money," he said, "and court had ordered me to pay It." %Nb" in Wrenght Iron Wreegfat - iron has a "grain" like wood which may be seen without a microscope, if the substance Is etched On* Tees Wfthont our toes we could net keen, our balance. Dancing, cycling, toot*: hall, running, would be impossible^ Nature, in toes, has not eadrart a# with useless appendages, V " t Wsst Mc&enry, JR. 1 his • i - 1 atlil i " '%& i You may see for yourself thai New Iso-Vis does not thin out Ask to see the Ball and Bottle Test at any Standard Oil Service Staiiejll* 'HAT New Iso-Vis Motor Oil will not thin out in your crank* case is almost unbelievable. Yet it is a fact* In each of four small bottles of oil is a -tiny metal balL The speed with which |hese balls drop to the bottom of the pottles shows you the heaviness of the Oils. If the oil is thinned out, the ball |alls more quickly. * ' This test enables yon to oompqp* •used" New Iso-Vis with fresh New J|so-Vis--also "used" New Iso-Vis with |ther kinds of used oiL New Iso-Vis Is ,|he only motor oil that will not thin out. The carbon deposit from New Iso- Vis has been shown by tests to be 50% less than the average deposit of various better grade oils. Also this new oil lubricates at high temperatures, yet flows in icicle weather. Never before has one oil rated so high on so many important points... points that are vital to the long life of your engine. You will find New Iso-Vis at all Standard Oil dealers or service stations. Best RocoasModatien A Scientific mags sine publishes an alluring dream of abolishing the law of gravity. Any law So generally otv served deeerves to stsy.--BufTslo Ceefier- >/7h*Nm*JVl*rimSsim is pndmcmfbmrmm rdhhmift ISO-VIS i M AM. tHiri h twtmtdwdmiif kfHtm S TAI 9 W^lWotor OiL * *