McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 Jul 1920, p. 5

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•# •v#v: Wm < ' "*• ... J *-v *<-,*« i^^-w *#> * « *-.-«v \.<*» . * . --».„ .. » *»«*, , V -*-* *.**»«**<MI ' **.*•«.*» * , •. *. ""'* i*; v'^•w'"m r%% >"Si-^.. '-":•••£*;'• *2^ TOLDME XLVI MoHKNRY, ILLINOIS. THURSDAY. JULY 29. 1920 NO. 7 WEEKLY PERSONAL ITEMS COMERS AND GOERS OP A WEEK *• IN OUR BUST VILLAGB **'Aa Seen by Plaindealer Reporters u(| Handed Into Oar Oflke by Ov £•' Friends W. J. Donavin passed Monday in :a the metropolitan city. Earl Boyle and Wm. Justen were >;•' ty^ikegan visitors Sunday. Miss Belle Carey of Elgin was the guest of relatives here over the week end. Mrs. Wm. Spencer and daughters passed Inst Thursday at Lake Geneva, Wis. Mr. and .Mrs. Asahel Hitchcox and children of Belvidere visited relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. J. Sutton of Oak Park spent Sunday as the guests of relatives here. Miss Eleanor Larkin of Elgin is spending the week as the guest of relatives here. 'James' P. Haxton M Chicago spent the week end at his summer home at Emerald Park. Irving Carey of Wilmot, Wis., passed Sunday as the guest of Mc- Henry relatives. Miss Mayme Barbian passed a couple of days this week with relatives in Chicago. Miss Myrtle Huck of Chicago spent the week end as the guest of relatives at Emerald Park. Frank Marmon of. Chicago was a week end guest in the home of Mr. * t V v Unusual Tires 'IRES that are different in their distinctive good looks and in their construction. An extra ply of fabric, an extra heavy tread and generous oversize make a tire of remarkable :4ndurancili.. Next Timer-BUY FISK • AYJO* SALE air • John Vv. Schaffer Garage .Overton & Co wen Garage " • v j • ;i *• '.A --WHAT DO YOU- Want a Tractpr For? o i^QodandTradorCa qoo THE first thing you will think of is plowing. But don't stop there. If your tractor is to be a profit-maker for you, it must do much more than plow. It must be able to do practically all the work aroupd your farm that you have been in the habit of doing with horses or mules and do it bettef and more cheaply. It must be able to do your harrowing and fitting and seeding. It must be able to' do your haying and harvesting. It must be able to do your hauling. It must be able to do your belt work. And it must work in all sorts of soil, too--sandy soil* volcanic ash soil, wet clay, hard soil, soft soil, heavy and light soil. ? ^ It must be able to handle your work on side hills and grades, as well as'on level fields. In short, it must be able to do all kinds of farm work at all times of the year. The Cletrac Tank-Type Tractor was designed and built with a full knowledge of the various kinds of farm work it would have to do in order to solve the farmer's tractor problems. The more you investigate the Cletrac, the better satisfied you will be that it measures up to these requirements. Machine Work, Welding of all kinds, Expert Repairing ([IIM1 MM S Ml# SHOP i'f&fv/1 . *• ' v, Hettermann Broe. & Bickler, Prop*. Johnaburg, HL HEDTOP TIRES and Mrs. J. W. Fay. I Mr. and Mrs. Chas. J. Reihansperger and daughter, Ruth, were Powers Lake visitors Sunday. William Bickler of Chicago is spending a short vacation with his parents at the McHenry House. Miss Elsie Wolff passed the week end as the guest of her sister, Mrs. Chas. McArthur, at Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Tabor of Chicago passed. Sunday as guests in the, home of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fay. Misses Lillian and Marie Burke of Chicago passed the week end as the guests of their parents here. Mr. and Mrs. M. D. Smalley and children of Woodstock were Sunday guests of McHenry relatives. Miss Varina Wentworth is spending a week's vacation with her sister, Mrs. S. J. Frazer, in Chicago. Miss Esther Stoffel of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of her ^parents, Mr. and Mrs. Simon Stoffel. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Gierke and son of Chicago were Sunday guests in the jhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Wentworth. Miss Rose Oertel of Chicago spent the week end as a guest in the home pf her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel. Miss Margaret McDonald returned to Highland Park last Saturday after ia several weeks' stay in McHenry and vicinity. Ed. Knox of Chicago passed a few days this week as a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Knox south sof town. Mf. and Mrs. Arthur Cox of Chicago spent the week end as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. H,. Asmalsky. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Salzmann of Woodstock passed the week end in the home of the latter^ parents, Mr. and Mrs. Math. Bauer. i Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Frazer and A1 Frazer of Chicago were week end guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Wentworth. • Mr. and Mrs. Fred, Ernst and children of Chicago spent several days last week as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Welch. Mr. and Mrs. Will Block, Mrs. Bertha Block and son, Leonard, and Ed. Block of Dundee passed Sunday as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Block and other relatives h$re. Miss Mae Noonan was a Woodstock visitor last Saturday. A. M. Schiller passed Tuesday in the metropolitan city. Miss Vera Buss passed a day last week in the metropolitan city. Alfred Richardson spent Tuesday as the guest of his parents at Ridgefield. Ray McGee attended to business matters in the metropolitan city Wednesday. Lisle Bassett is spending a few days as the guest of relatives at Woodstock. Miss Alice and Theodore Miller are spending their vacation with friends at Decator, HI. • Harry F. Eldredge of River Forest passed the week end as'the guest of McHenry friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Wegener and daughter, Marion, were Lake Geneva visitors last Sunday. Howard Simpson of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel. James Walsh of Chicago and Thos. Muldoon of Whiting, Ind., called on relatives here Monday. Mrs. Mary Ferguson entertained a company of friends from Burlington, Iowa, over the week end. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Dahlstrom and children of Chicago passed the week end at their cottage here. Mrs. N. Q. Ensign spent last Thursday evening as the guest of her sister at Genoa Junction, Wis. Miss Helen Pint of Chicago passed the week end in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Pint. Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Freund of Woodstock were the guests of McHenry relatives Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Math. Steffes and children and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rosing motored to Libertyville last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Paul EfFer of Chica' go spent the week end as guests at the Kling cottage on McCollum's lake. Miss Marie Michel of Caledonia is spending the week as a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Erickson. Frank May of Sycamore, 111., is spending the week as a guest in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jos. May. Mr. and Mrs.«Harry Alexander and Gordon and Jean Losee of Hebron spent Sunday in the home of Mrs. Alsena Smith. Stephen Adams of Kenosha pased the week end as a guest in the home of his mother, Mary K. Adams, on John street. Miss Marie Miller of Wauconda spent Sunday as a guest in the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Math. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. William Meyers and Henry Meyers of Elgin passed a few days recently as the guests of McHenry relatives. Miss Ruth Noyes of-Genoa Junction, Wis., is spending a few days in the home of her aunt, Mrs. -N. Q. Ensign. Mrs. Patrick Costello of Elgin is spending the week as a guest in the home of her sister, Mrs. Chas. W. Gibbs. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walsh and son of Chicago are guests in the country home of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McAndrews. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Michel and children of Caledonia Were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Erickson. Frank Kraniaka, well known insurance man of Milwaukee, Wis,, spent Sunday and Monday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Brott. Miss Margaret Aylward of Chicago passed the latter part of last and the first of this week as the guest of relatives in and around McHenry. Mrs. Mary Ferguson went to Chicago Monday, where she passed the day with her son, Lowell, Who was leaving for an extended stay in Texas. Misses Lillian Olson and Myrtle Kling and Robt. Dunne of Chicago were week end guests at the Kling cottage at McCollum's lake. Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward, Misses Marion Bowen, Mayme Aylward and Minnie Conway of Elgin passed Sunday at the Quinn cottage on Fox river here. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kist and Miss Emma Pint of Chicago are spending a few days as guests in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs.* John Pint. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fleming and sons, Laverne and Melvine, and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ware of Woodstock were guests in the home oi Mrs. B. Frisby Sunday. Mrs. Henry Kittlemann and daughter, Irene, of Chicago spent last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kamholz. Mr. Kittlemann passed the week end here. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Dunn of i^t Geneva, Wis., passed the week end as guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A Whiting, northwest of town. Mrs. Emma Colby and Mrs. Lola Sherburne and little Glendora Sherburne of Crystal Lake were guests in the home of Mrs. Sarah Sherburne and daughter, Anna, one day last week. • Misses Lulu Mock and Agnes Kroger and Messrs. Harold Campbell and George Smith of Elgin were visitors in the home of Miss Fanny Ckxagv Sunday. ; Miss Rose Handel, who 'has been spending the past two weeks with Mrs. Ernest Brott, has departed ^for Chicago enroute to her home at Manitowoc, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Math. Fates and children of Chicago and Mrs. S. J. Deinlein and daughter, Evelyn, of Libertyville visited in the home of Mr. Mrs. Math. Steffes, last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Kent and little daughter of Chicago passed the latter part of last and the first of thi« week as guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Freund. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stenger, daughter, Margaret, and sons, Richard and George, left last Saturday morning for a two weeks' visit with relatives at Green Bay and other points in Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Dryer returned from their honeymoon trip on Monday evening of this week and are now spending a few days : s guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Block. Mr. and Mrs. Al. Krause and children, Mr. und Mrs. Jos. W. Rothennel and daugther, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Daley and children and Mrs. Peter Schreiner motored to Twin Lakes Tuesday and passed the day picnicing. Mrs. Wm. F. Cowen and mother, Mrs. Fannie K. Overton of Solon Mills, have returned from a two weeks' sight seeing trip to Detroit, Marine City and Port Huron, Mich., and Sombra, Canada. The trip from Port Huron to Detroit was made on one of the large passenger boats thru St. Claire river, Lake St. Claire aad Detroit river. They report a fine time. Sales of this tire have increased 96% the first six months of this year, proving the balanced tire, the Firestone 3& has accomplished what Firestone sought for it, more mileage, greater economy, greater comfort, which has been passed on to the public at low cost--most miles per dollar. Balanced! That means to you more than mere thickness of tread, greater air capacity, more plies of fabric, greater cushioning, or the gauge of the sidewall. It means that all component parts of the Firestone 3& are scientifically balanced by specialists who have put years of study and practice into a single "purpose--to meet your demand in a small car tire. You can now have all four tires on your car give uniform service if they are Firestone. M ' '-li 30*38 (non skid) '3 Gray Tube $3.75 Red Tube $4*50 5 skiSeLSZ t I mmi

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