Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Apr 1936, p. 6

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PaeeSix 1 .v .. •« Trf *T T"n > vr-r* Try ti "!/ >. > . *HE McHENRY PLAINDEALER thuidajr, April, #, IMS THE M'HENRY PLA1NDEALER Published every Thursday at McHenry, HI., by Charles F. Renich Entered as second-class matter at the postoffice at McHenry, 111., under the act of May 8, 1879,, One Year $ix Months ..... .....--.$2.00 $1.00 [A. SL MOSSIER* Editor and Manager Lillian Sayler, Local Editor Telephone 197 Nl" CARD OF THANKS In appreciation for the McHenry 1Ptre Department, I extend thanks to those who- answered the call to Mc- Colhuns Lake a week ago last Sunday 46 - -TED BREYEK. ' You will be interested in the new convertible collision coverage - when placing your automobile insurance. EAJRL ft, WALSH. Phone 48. 46-tf Mr. and Mrs. Ford McDonald of Yolo visited his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Newman, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Aglese spent the weekend at Morrison. Mr. and Mrs. William Marum and children of Edison Park spent Sunday here. Mrs. Marum's mother, Mrs. N. J. Justen, returned home with them, atler spending ^ week in Edison Park.- \ • Dr. and Mrs. G. W; Hess ware in Chicago Tuesday. :, Delicious •••"• j HOT CROSS BUNS or Filled v' ' f '* 'f 7] * COME IN AND GET •' V 'Tbv W DONT FORGET -- SMARTING SUNDAY, APRIL 12, WE WILL OPEN SUNDAYS AGAIN WITH A FULL ' LINE OF FRESH BAKERY GOODS. I " I | I Hi - / Phone Us and We Will Deliver Your Qrder ; " iK " .::r McHENRY BAKERY Gran St. Phone 287 When You Go to the Polls, Tuesday, April 14 « i ... **<•>>,#.>* ' v . >•' '-V'"' v ' ' - '5. You can rest assured thai no canvassers or workers will bother you in my be*; _Jtnalf. I am seeking the precinct committeeman's job in McHenry's second precinct. I will appreciate your vote and support* Vote for the last name on the ballot. ^ J3 CHAS. W. GIBBS FOR YOUR EASTER DINNER Easter HAM Whole cr Halt Smoked Milk Fed Leg O'Veal, lb. 23c Veal Shoulder, lb.... V. 19c Any Cut of Pot Roast, lb. 21c I Tender Sirloin, lb. ; 29c Veal Chops, lb. 25c Lean, Meaty Veal Stew, lb. . ... .... 17c -- HOME DRESSED PORK Fresh Hams, Whole or Half ... . 27c Pork Shoulder, 5 -.6 lb. average . .... 19c oomt seen mm KCM>* CHANOCD •wm&i Pork Chops 25 c Veal Chops 19c Jtib 25c Home-made Ring Liver Sausage, Fine Flav., per lb. 18tf* McHENRYS "Spic & Span' Market LEN SMALL KNOWS INTERESTING NEEDS OFFARMERS NEARBY NEWS Fanners of McHenry county will do well in choosing a candidate of Governor to* remember that' Len Small has been a farmer all his life. He was bom on a farm. He taught a little one-room school in the cquntry and with his first savings he bought four cows and peddled milk. Then he got hold of a few acres of land, purchased a few more cows, began taking milk into Chicago, buying a bit more land and continuing until he had become the owner of a nationallyknown successful dairy farm. Len Small knows the labor it takes to make a dollar, tie does not come forward with a lot of quack farm relief remedies, such as are proposed by city men with an ey< to the farm vote but no personal knowledge of farm life. He has taxes to pay, and that payment must be made with a view to the prevailing selling price of grain produced on his farm. Len Small is, no poser. He does not foist upon his audiences clever repartee aimed to belittle his opp6nents and to get a laugh out of his hearers. He has no beautiful program of Utopian promises impossible of fulfillment. Soap box oratory is not in his line. His hope is to give useful, permanent employment to the needy-- not boondoggling jobs of the payroller variety. The people who know Len Small believe in him. What he has promised in the past he has fulfilled. His feeling for the people of Illinois grows out of a long and useful life, spent in the service of those people, and not with the cosmopolitan background of Cook county politicians. Every voter who is proud of Illinois and whose ancestry has built our state should look carefully into the issues so all important. If Len Small is elected governor, there will be no man or group of men who can dictate to him, from remote metropolitan areas, concerning the policies he knows ard needed for this agricultural state. He is eminently suited for a governor with an authentic understanding of the needs of downstate Illinois. Small elected governor means a happy, prosperous state. " T~r:d::. TAKEN FROM COLUMNS OF OUR EXCHANGES FOR SALE--Carload of chicken wheat, $1.68 per 100. Bring your own bags. McHenry Flour Mills. SEED CORN FOR SALE--Minnesota No. 13 yeltow dent, germination 90 per cent or better. Ptfce $5.00 per bu. Supply limited. J. A. Killey, Round Lake, 111. *44-3 ! The first near-drowning of the coming - season was reported Sunday of last week from Diamond Lake, where two Chicago men spent more than 20 minutes in the cold water before * rescue boat reached them after their canoe capsized as they attempted to change sailing directions. I Five first aid stations were established in the Lakes region recently under the requirements and examinations of the American Red Cross in an effort to reduce the death rate caused by accidents in rural areas. Word wa« received Sunday of last week of the death in Aurora on Saturday morning of the Rev. Father Daniel J. McCaffrey former pastor of Sacred Heart Church,' Marengo. The laet summons came to him after. a short illness at St. Joseph Mercy hospital, where he had been staying since his retirement 12 years ago. I Warren Kranig, 12-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kranig, Libertyville was bitten Monday by a police dog said to belong to A. J. Argraves. ' Injury to the boy was not serious, Dr. M. D. Penney reported to Chief of Police Frank Druba, and an examination of the dog by police showed the 'animal to be in good condition, so that no complications from the bite are expected. I When Harold Hanson, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hanson of Round Lake, went upstairs. to go to bed Wednesday' evening, of last week, he found a baby owl in his room. The little fellow, who is about 7 inches tall had evidently been seeking shel- WANTED-Experienced salesman to ter from the storm, and had somehow ca„, on Uv with full line of found a way to get into the attic, Addreu «w/, McHenry -MENTAL HEALTH By LEONARD A. BARRETT If there ever was a time when we need healthy-minded persons, it is now. Not only does our Itolitical and social leadership demand mental health but the need 19 sorely realized in the les& conspicuous realms of daily toil. Regardless of social rank, the effects of the depression hit e v e r y o n e . T h e r e have been no exceptions. Of course, some have suffered more than others, but all have paid a price incident to the liquidating process. Some lost fortunes over night. Many homes were sacrificed because of unpaid mortgages. In the struggle, some voluntarily opened the door and let themselves out. The problem of unemployment still stalks abroad in the land. It is a remarkable credit to the strength of our citizenship that so large a number came through the experience still optimistic and hopeful. Upon b smaller group, cruel experience wrought nothing short of tragedy. " They became cynical. Bitterness dominated their mental, attitudes. Many lost courage and became fatalists. Physical disease is worse. This cynical attitude is frequently expressed in statements Indicative. of ^remorse and in ' some cases, ; despair. Life holds ho meaning. It | h;is. lost fits zest. It is nothing more 1 than "a meteor in an infinite abyss j <>f nothingness, a rocket fired on a I dark night, a fleeting moment of music • I and warmth aBd color between- two i fternlties of silence." 'Consummate I pessimism! Bitterness dams up men- I tal and spiritual resources; the spirit | of love and good will releases them. A mother may be wf>rn to her limit j both nervously and physically but her j love for her phild, especially if it be I dependent, impels her to forget herself in sacrificial service for the one who has a just claim upon her love and loyalty; So. love, good will, call it whatever you will, taps new reservoirs of strength and energy. Our modern psychology informs us of levels of strength hidden deep In the subconscious mind. When one level Ms exhausted, the next is tapped, and on. As long as there is a sufficiently vital incentive to impel us to "carry on." tfie needed strength Is supplied. The future of our country as well at our own personal welfare depends upon our mental as well as physical health. Avoid the perils of the cynic and the pitfalls of the fatalist. Find some appealing need which you can help to assuage, or abide in the presence of some radiant personality and you will find released within you those hidden resources which will heal the mental diseases prevalent today. tt Western New»»aper Union : . from there to the bedroom. The bird will be given shelter until milder weather, when he will perhaps be able to fend for himself. While helping to install a 500-pound water tank at Volt* Lake Wednesday of last week, Grant Tyler of Wilmot, an employe of the Carey Electric and Plumbing Co., of Antioch, was seriously fnjured. Tyler watf caught under the heavy tank which had slipped crushing the pelvic bone and paralyzing his right leg from the knee to the ankle. He was rushed to the Burlington hospital by Dr. S. Pagisson of j Wilmot for X-rays and treatment. I Fire that developed from an unknown source last Friday night destroyed 500 spring chickens and a large chicken coop on the property of Richard Antes, Waukegan rd., Deerfield. Antes and members of his family wertf away from their home for a time on Friday night and returned to discover the fire which, by that time, had nearly consumed the structure. No other buildings on the premises were damaged. Stanley Muska, Cuba township, sustained painful injuries Monday afternoon of last week when he was struck on the face by a falling timber while repairing a barn. Mr. Muska was on the ground assisting in hoisting lumber to carpenters working on the roof when the accident occurred. A board fell from the roof, striking him on the forehead and nose, barely missing his eyes. He was taken to a doctor for medical aid and several stitches .were needed to1close the wound. I Edgar Hippie, Jr., age about 20, and the son of the Clinton township supj ervisor, is in the hospital at Waterman as a result of injuries received while working with a combine. The accident occurred on the Russell McAllister farm, two miles north of Waterman on State Route 23. The young man was working with the FOR SALE FOR SALE--Seed Wheat at $1.50 per bu. McHenry Flour Mills. 44-4 FOR StALE--Used Norge refrigerators. Carey Electric Shop. Phone 251. McHenry. 43-tf WHY BUT IMPORTED Grass Seed when you can buy home-grown seed cheaper? I have timothy seed, $2.00 per bu. • red clover, $12.50 per bu Wm. Staines, McHenry. Phone Richmond 842. 45-3 FOR SALE--Baby Chicks, from B. W. D. free, trap nested; single comb white leghorns. Dams--200 to 327 eggs pullet year. Sires--289 to 332 dams record. $10.Q0 per hundred. A. C. Parfrey, Spring Grove, or call McHenry Flour Mills. 45-4 FOR SALE--Team of good horses, two ponies, one mare. Will be sold cheap. Kent and Co., Inc. .46 FOR SALE--Seven Good Work Horses. Lewis Schroeder, Ringwood. 46 WANTED WANTED--Neat girl for general housework, small family. No washing. Call McHenry 55-W. *46 plaindealer. 46 WANTED Experienced, garage mechanic. Address "M," care of McHenry Plaindealer. 46 FOUHD FOUND--Pocketbook Sunday morning. Owner can secure same by proving property and paying for this ad. Frank Bradley, McHenry. 46 MISCELLANEOUS I WILL PAY $4.(H> to $14.00 for old and disabled horses. They must be able to walk. Call or write FRANK M. JAYNE. Phone Woodstock 209. 19-t£ WE PAY $2.00 FOR DEAD HORSES AND COWIS weighing 1,000 lbs, or more. Phone Dundee 10--Reverse Charges. MID-WEST REMOVAL CO. WE HAVE CASH BUYERS--For farms in McHenry County. T. J. Stahl Co., . Waukegan; 111. Twenty Years of Service. *43-4 SEWING MACHINES REPAIRED-- Before you buy a new sewing machine, let me see your old one. I guarantee it will work just as good as a new one, no matter how old or what model. POFP, Shoe Store, West McHenry, Phone 162. 43-tf. FREE--1 Cardboard mash feeder free with every 100 lbs. of starting mash. McHenry Flour Mills. 44-4 WARNING--No dumping of rubbish is permitted at the West Side Service Station, McHenry. Violators will be ,. prosecuted under penalty of the law, combine when something went wrong if they persist in this dumping. 46 and he is thought to have used his'. foot in attempting to rectify the I SPRING HOUSECLEANING--Have trouble. His foot became caught and your rugs and upholstery cleaned in WILL PAY CASH--For a farm from 40 to. 160 acres, MoHenry County. Address "Z," McHenry Plaindealer. *48-4* Mrs. William Seelbeck returned to Chicago Friday, after a visit with her fnother, Mrs. K. McCabe. Charles Newman of Chicago called at the home of his parents Wednesday morning. Mrs. Kate Stoffel spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. Ev« Weber, lit Johnsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Courier have ttirned to Woodstock to live, spending the winter with her mo1 Mrs. .Nellie Bacon. Plaindealer Want Ads brine results Mr. and Mrs. Stephen N. Schmitt and Mr. and Mrs. John R. Schmitt visited the latter's little son at Mercy hospital, Sunday. 'M before it could be extracted from the machinery the little toe had been severed from the foot and the foot othermutilated. your home. Electrolux method. Reasonable rates. Call 87-J. *46 Public Liability insurance on your Tools and auto parts valued at $35 automobile defends any legal action, and small change totaling $3.75 were! ^e^ra^s expense, court costs and stoleji from the Leech Auto Parts Co.,l pays any judgment up to the limits Barrington, by sneak thieves who of your P01"^' _EARL R. WALSH, forced the lock on the rear door to j ^one 46-tf j gain access at some time between) ,ir,., ' I closing hour Saturday night and ID Wh,le stock lasts' Pocohantas Mine opening hour Monday morning of last Run at $7-50 Per ton. delivered cash I week. M. G. Schram, manager, dis- pnce" Alexa"der Lumber Co., Phone | covered the theft when he opened •the j'®* 46-bp| cash register early Monday to make ; .-- - --. -J- - bb? I change for a customer. No currency to ~Eive the machine enough room on I had been left in the register, but the road to Pass her safely, Miss! more than $4 in small change which1 Newsom's car was struck on the "rear! had been left Saturday night was 'fender with sufficient force to cause taken by the thieves. Small autoiher to l°se control. The car plunged toels, a blow torch, a hot water heat-j°yer ^he embankment on the north er, chamois skins, etc., were among j s*de of the highway and turned over the purloined articles. - • as it struck the bottom. Although | Mrs. Robt. J. O'Brien and her two! rendered unconscious by the impact of daughters, Mrs. Fred Kennedy andj**1® cr*sh, Miss Newsom suffered no M iss Recrina O'Brien, of Harvard, are|ser'ous injuries, an examination rein the Community hospital at Harvard jvealed. The driver of the car which as a result of an automobile Collision caused the crash failed to stop after on Route 14 Wednesday morning, April 1. The junior daughter, unmarried is most seriously injured, receiving a fractured pelvis. Mrs. O'Brien and Mrs. Kennedy escaped with bruises, according to the attending physician. Three of the five occupants of the car which collided with the O'Brien machine are patients in a' hospital at Woodstock. They are John Terborer. Garrett Borsma and Mrs. Dena Smith. Broken ribs and sprained ankles comprise their injuries, according to information imparted by the hospital in which they are the accident. Louis Lange, night policeman at West Dundee, was locked in jail following a surprise attack made by three burglars whom he had apprehended while they were attempting to enter Riverside Garden tavern Tuesday morning of last week. Patrolman Lange was making an inspection round when he'came upon the youth> Drawing his gun, he covered them, and took a small jimmy bar away from them. He then made a hasty search for weapons and failing to find any, ordered the youths to the jail. POTPOURRI Secretary Bird In South Africa is a large falconlike bird some four feet long called the secretary bird. It Is so named because there projects from the sides and back of its head, tufts of feathers resembling quill pens behind the ears of a clerk, or seore tary. Because Its principal food Is snakes, a fine Is imposed for killing the bird. <£) Wextern Newspaper Union.. patients. Two of the five occupants! When they reached the cellroom, of the Terborer car escaped uninjured, j Lange dropped his guard for a mo- Her automobile struck by a hit-and- ment while he made arrangements to run driver, Miss Eleanor Newsom, place the trio behind the bars. One Libertyville, narrowly escaped serious of the gang pulled an automatic pisin. iury Wednesday morning of last tol from his clothing and ordered week, when her car plunged over a Lange to drop his weapon. He threw steen ambankment and tanned over!his gun upon a table but refused to on Route 176 just west of the Deis-| relinquish his keys. The trip found Plaines river. Miss Newsom was on j they could lock him in without keys her watf ,to< Fort Sheridan, where she and did so, immediately making a is emnloypd.- early Wednesday mora- break for liberty. Lange released sho r^norted to Chief of Police himself immediately but the gang had T>r"Hn..when she noticed a tan disappeared without a trace. They RfHan enn>in<» toward her at a bierh have not been apprehended as yet nrid hue-pine the center and no definite description of them io road. Although she attempted could be obtained. PINK HARRISON'S The Playground of Pistakee Bay Invite*'Yo* OtTIt SEASON'S OPENING 8AT. EVE. APRIL lit1936 Fried Chicken or Baked Ham Plate Lunch 50c • ,! bAHCING EVERY SATURDAY NIOHT THROUGHOUT THE SEASON Music By Barbara Horick's Orchestra V, i'*?* * Sv.... Easter Party at ; SCHAEFER'8 TAVERN SATURDAY EVENING, APRIL 11 thicken Dinner 50c ---- Music and-Daaciag FISH FRY FRIDAY 5®$ - :'f • A WEDDING DANCE THE BRIDGE BALL ROOM McHenry, I1L WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15 Mnsic by Mrs. Kay Bruner and Her Evening Stars Admission -- 25c Election Returns at th€ Bridge by special wircrApril 14. JOE FRIEND, Prop. DANCING at Jie RIVERSIDE HOTEL • SATURDAY NIOHT, APRIL 11 FRANKIE OANS' ORCHESTRA Chicken Plate Dinner 50c Riverside Hotel : : " ' V X: FRIDAY NIGHT, APRIL 10 FREE FISH FRY Wm. MERTES, Prop. DANCING EVERY WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY Beginning Saturday, April 11 Johnsburg Bridge -- 3 Miles North of McHenry BILL BENSON and His 10-piece Band This orchestra has been engagdd for the entire season ADMISSION -- 25c per person --Grand Opening-- OF EDDIE'S HIIBB GRILL 3 Miles East of McHenry at Lily Lake on Rt. 20 Saturday, April 11 FREE DANCING BEHM'S MUSIC Mixed Dancing for Both Young and Old 7 Every Saturday Night PRAGER BEER ON TAP 5c - 10c All Kinds of Sandwiches -- Mixed Drinks EDDY J. MILLER, Prop.

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