McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Oct 1920, p. 5

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Houaekold Goods range, oil ***** V. 6eo. Voyrl, :: :: Aactioneer ,, . having deei&d to quit farming and *»ove to W«iwt>n, the undersigned ' •>: Will sell at pubffc auction on the L. J. labdrfl farm, situated 2Vt miles west Of Sound Lake, across from the Snnny s |rook 'sanitarium, o«t '•$^jTHURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, lf2S <> &mmencing at i0:00 a. mv sharp, the g described property, to-wit: 61 HEAD OF LIVE STOCK - --consisting of-- 4- . 17 Hotstein Cmra 8 new - milkers, 5 springers, 6 taroi §6cr old heifers, 2 yearling heiftoM and | yearling bull. * 6 Head of Horses Gelding, 4 years old, wt. 1500 lbs.; \ ,i J|rown mare, 5 years old, 'wt. 1300 Ibe.; J llack mare, 3 years old, wt. 1100 lbs.; I*. §rown gelding, 9 years old, wt. 1000; k c ' %rown mare, 14 years old, wt. 1000; ^"% black mare colt, 1 year old. ^- 22 spring pigs, weight 126 pounds £ 'X faeh. 8 sheep. Geese, ducks *nd chickens. . Hay and Grata I|Nmh' timothy hay, 12 tons elovar and attalb^clean of all foalawdifOO bu. oats, ISO bu. barley, 100 ho. nlwt, 15 acr« com _in shock, r>QQ t*L husked corn, 5 acres corn stalks, £0 ft: silage in 14 ft silo. Farnling Tools Deering grain binder, good shape; Deering corn binder, Buckeye seeder, 2 cultivators, nearly new; pulverizer, sulky plow, walking plow, corn planter, McCormick mower, Keystone side delivery, hay loader, horse rake, oorn King manure spreader, 2-sec. drag, 3-sec. drag, basket hay rack, new; combination rack, surrey, single bugby, ii4n wheel wagon, milk wagon, truck wagon, bob sleigh and cutter, sleigh runners for buggy, 2 sets of hefivy harness, set driving harness, single harness, 2 sets dump boards, fanning mill, Fairbanks-Morse engine, 1% h. p.; pumping jack and washing machine, 9 milk cans, 3 pails, strainer, 2 galvanized water tanks, 50 pal. gas tank, Atlas 1000 lb. scales, ice tools, mason tools and other articles too numerous to mention. Good kitchen cubbard, round oak" dining table and 4 chairs to Snatch, side board, new brown leather couch, 3 center tables, 6 rocking chairs and 4 other chairs, oak • music cabinet, 4 beds, 2 good dressers, 8 eomatodes, Brussels rug, 10x12. Good Free Lunch it Noon Terms of Sale: AH sums of $10.00 and under, cash; over that amount a credit of six months will be given on good bankable notes bearing interest at the rate of 7 per cent per annum. No property removed until settled for with clerk. P.fJ. Bauer. Chas. Brainard, Cleric. Auction Sale! Chas. Leonard, Auctioneer The farm having been sold, I will sell at auction on the farm known as as the Jule Clemens farm, situated 4 miles south of McHenry, 4 miles north of Crystal Lake and 8 miles east of Woodstock, on the Mason hill road, ymM v • '* * » -i : y >;* *' ^ • < ••: W'-y ;*m F* * k 'f : j \ ' v -• ; v-i* 'K -¥ • iff ff; " 1'.:^ * »:vfr v r f , DON'T MISS THE COTILLION CARNIVAL DANCE -AT AMERICAN LEGION HALL (FORMERLY STOFFEL'S HALL) ItfEST MeHENRY, ILLINOIS near Crystal Lake THURSDAY NOVHMBMt4» 1910 compSncjsg at 10:1© a.***arp, the following deacribed property, to-wit: 115|IEAD OF LWE OTQCK 115 --Consisting of-4v^' r *v' > " ; < • 13 Head of Cattle _ fl milkers and springers, 3 twoyear- old heifers, registered Holstein bnll, A. R. O., 4 yearlings, 1 bull. 7 Head of Horace S blade geldings, 9 and 11 yean did; t own gelding, 15 years old; brown marc, 15 years old; black gelding, 8 years old; black driving horse, 6 years old; white mare, 16 years old. 24 Hogs Pure bred Duroc Jersey boar, eligible to-register; 2 O. I. C. boars, 2 Poland China sows with papers, 4 brood sows, November farrow, all registered or eligible to register; 15 stoats. 38 choice sheep. Hay, Grain, Etc. 20 acges corn in shock, 400*bosbels oats, about 3 tons alfalfa and clover hay, about 2 tons timothy, a quantity of straw. Farm Machinery, Etc. 16 ft Champion binder, 16 ft. McCormick mower, 7 ft. Champion mower, Deering corn binder, new Deere riding plow, P. O. sulky plow, wooden beam walking plow, 16 disc harrow, 3-sec. drag, 2-horse grain drill, hay rake, hay loader, 2 1-row cultivators, 5-tooth cultivator, corn sheller, Litchfield manure spreader, 2 fanning mills, 1-horse mower, Janesville corn planter and 60 rods of wire, LaCrosse Happy Farmer tractor, iron beam walking plow, new; wood beam walking plow, new; LaCrosse tractor, 3 bottom plow, narrow tire wagon, springs and treble box, surrey, wide tire truck wagon, iron wheel truck, hay rack, 22 can milk wagon, 5 milk cans, 2 sets breeching harness, slip tug harness, 2 pair fly nets, driving harness, wheelbarrow, Old Trusty 120 egg incubator, Fairbanks and Morse pumping engine and jack, 8-horse evener and whiffle trees, 2 grindstones, some household furniture and numerous small articles COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR BUSY VILLAGE Aa Seea by Plaiadealer Reporters aad Handed Into Oar Oflte bf Ov Ftieada of Miss Margaret McCabe of the West Side hospital, Chicago, spent the week end- in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Patrick McCabe. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Frisby and children motored out from Chicago Sunday and passed the day with relatives hare. . • Y, 5 1 , v * • 8-30 P. M. Isr tvERTmnntr tie best mid biggest of tie teak? War Tax, ltc, Total S1.1J BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW GOOD FREE LUNCH AT NOON 5; ^ * '.r Terms of Sale: All sums of $10.00 and under, cash; over that amount a credit of 6 months will be given on good bankable notes bearing interest at the fate of 7 per cent per annum. No property to be removed or possession of same given to purchaser until settled for with clerk. Andrew Eddy, Prop. Chas. L. Page, Recording Clerk. C. W. Stenger, Settling Clerk. One farm has already been pur chased and a deal for a second is now under way by the Salvation Army in Lake county. The two farms com prise 118 acres, located on Sand Lake, owned by Frank T. Fowler. The tract will be used as a great recreation center to the poor families of Chi cago. It has a lake frontage of 830 feet It is reported that the purchasers will spend a half million dollars in making this one of the finest recreation centers in the country. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wood and children of Glen Ellyn spent Sunday ill guests in the home of Mr. and Mvt* M. A. Conway. Nicholas Meyers of Kenosha, Wit, was a Sunday guest tin the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Meyers. if# 1 -- (v, r(| ;'R •" V \v ,1 k / * -i / - ^ri • i, ',e.<i > > : T# " .',1 TRADE MARtl \ -i ^ J *trhe Ford sou Tractor was made to meet the demands and necessities of the evqry day American farmer. tt wis made with th§ thought that it was the necessity of the Aian of forty acres as well as the man with one thousand acres. It was made not only for plowing, harrowing, discing, drilling, seeding, mowing, reaping, but for all othef work oq the farm where power is necessary. It was made to bring conveniences to the far mer's home as well as for the cultivation of his fields. It was made to furnish power for the cream separator, silo filling, cutting feed, sawing wood, furnishing power for milking, washing, supplying the house with running water, electric lights, and the hundred and one things on the farm. It was made to do all this economically and in.a reliable way. It was made to be the big protjtable servant on the farm. ^Vnd it has not failed in any of the expectations had for it It has been tested as no other Tractor has tested. It has been proven reliable and can furnish proofs impossible to any other Tractor.- It has ( done these things not only in America but in Europe. Asia, Africa, and in the Islands of the Seasr It has u^t fiucessfully the demands of farmers in every part of the civilized world. ' - Therefore, the Fordson Tractor can meet all the conditions of your farm. Whed yo^ bay a Fordson, yon sre not buying any experiment--you are buying a servant and a money-maker for you that you can depend upon absolutely from the first day you put it to work. It is easy to understand. It possesses all the power ' ; you want.* It is simple in control. It is more flexible than you imagine. It will help you cultivate every foot of ground you have, and every day in the year you will find use for it on the farm. Its appeal to the t lafoer is in its dependable service and the wide vaiiety of work it can do. 4 . ; We'd like every farmer that reads this, if he hasn't a Fordson Tractor already, to ootne to mi and let vs sell him one. Let us demonstrate its powers, its values, on your own farm. Let's get into details--power, V « reliability, economy. .While the sale of a Tractor gives us a small profit, the purchase of a tractor to the - farmer means a money-making servant every day for years. So the sale of a Fordson means more to the ~ purchaser than it does to us. We are arguing for your good, Mr. Farmer. Come in and talk it over. ' Yonr Ui»# against ouvs. It is worth it. ( <And remember, when you bay a Fordson Tractor, lie are right here to keep that Tractor in reliable " fcj#^ning condition every day. You won't have to wait v if anything should get out of order. We are right if ^ here to keep it right, because one of the conditions of the Fordson Dealer is that he must keep on hand always a complete supply of parts. This is a guarantee we don't believe you can get with any -JX, 9tfo$r f&xox Tractor - %, x . STAR GARAGE ^ - • • • • •• » « 'i Ray F. Conway was the- gnest relatives in Elgin last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Heaney of Chicago were McHenry visitors Sunday. Jacob Justen transacted business matters in the metropolitan city Monday. Mrs. Ov W. Stenger and daughter, Margattit, Were Chicago visitors M6n day. Mrs. Cleve Carney and daughter, June, were Chicago visitors last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward of Elgin were goecits of McHenry relatives Sunday. Jos. Hoffman of Chicago was a Sunday guest in the home of Mrs. Helena Heimer. Atty. A. H. Pou.se transacted business matters in the metropolitan city Monday. Alfred Richardson passed a few this week with his parents at Ridgefield. E. S. Yotmg of Chicago spent the week endthe guest of his daughters here. James Burke of Chicago passed the week end aa the gueat of relatives and friends here. James T. Perkins attended to business matters in the metropolitan city last Thursday. Michael Weston of Woodstock spent the week end as the guest of *Mc Henry relatives. Miss Aileen O'Reilly spent the week end as the guest of relatives in the metropolitan city. Eberhardt Diets -of Chicago spent Sunday as a guest in the home of Mrs. Christine Brefeld. Miss Helen Dickman of Chicago was a Sunday guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Justen. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and children were guests of relatives at Elgin last Sunday. Miss Lena Stoffel is spending the week as the guest of relatives in Chicago and Kenosha. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ward spent Saturday and Sunday as the guests of friends at Elgin. Miss Mary Monroe of River Forest was the guest of McHenry friends over the week end. Edwin Heimer of Chicago, was the guest of McHenry relatives and friends last Sunday. Geo. Heimer of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of his mother, Mrs. Helena Heimer. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. J. Sutton of Oak Park were guests of relatives at Emerald Park last Sunday. W. Dr Wentworth passed the week end in the home of his daughter, Mrs. S. J. Frater, in Chicago. Misses Pauline and Adelle Pufahl passed Sunday as the guestB of relatives at Lake Geneva, -Wis. Miss Helen Pint of Chicago spent the week end in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Pint. Miss Verena Brefeld of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of her mother, Mrs. Christine Brefeld. Misses Margaret, Lillian and Marsha Wickham of Hebron were guests of friends here Saturday. Mrs. Leach and daughter, Laura, are ^pending the week as the guests of relatives at Lake Geneva, Wis. Miss Verena Justen of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. J. Justen. Miss Ellen Walsh of Woodstock was a week end guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walsh. Mrs. W. A. Martin of Woodstock is spending a few days as a guest in the home of her daughter, Mrs. E. E. Bassett. Mr. and Mrs. William Dryer of Oak Park were Sunday guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Block. Mrs. John Meyer and daughters, Mary and Catherine, and Miss Villa Rothermel were Chicago visitors last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Al. Krause, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bishop and Miss Barbara Weber were Waukegan visitors last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W-lter J. Walsh and nephew, Earl R. Walsh, and Wm. Buttner wore Sunday guests -of Elgin relatives. Ed. L. Martin and Mrs. E. J. Mansfield of Woodstock were guests in the home of their sister, «|frs. E. E. Baasett, Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. W. Rothermel and daughter, Audrey, and Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Niesen were guests of relatives at Kenosha Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Dunn of Lake Geneva, Wis., were Sunday guests in the home of the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Whiting, northwest of town. Misses- Agnes and Cecelia Sutton of Sioux Falls, S. D. passed the latter part of last and the first of this week with relatives in and around McHenry. Floyd Cooley has returned from his visit to Washington, N. C. Mrs. Cooley has also returned from the south and is now with relatives at Naperville, 111. Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Walsh and Mr. id Mrs* Jordon Lucas and daughter, Loraine, of Rockford were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Walsh. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kroeger and Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Marshall and children of Morton Grove motored to McHenry Sunday and spent the day as guests in the home of Mf. and Mrs. Greatest *¥, Ever Held'in McHenry Co. Tues^Nov. 9, 1920 At Killrest Farms - ; f lH HEAD of Registered DUROC JERSEY SWINE consisting of Tried Sows, Fall and Spring Boars and Gilts. This herd has been vaccinated against Hog Cholera by double method and also against other infections with Pitman-Moore Products. . ^ Fpur hundred bushels of Alfalfa Seed including 75 bushels Grim Alfalfa and 125 bushels White Blossom Sweet Clover Seed grefwn in Western South: Dakota. Seed will be recleaned and guaranteed. ^ Killrest Farms are located 2$ miles west of Rich- , mond, 4 miles east of Hebron and 2$ miles southwest of Genoa Junction, Wis.; 60 miles northwest of Chicago and 38 miles southeast of Janesville, Wis., on the Janesville line of the C. M. & St. P. Ry. Will arrange to meet trains on the N. W. Ry. at Richmond, Hebron and Genoa Junction, Wis., and all trains on C. M. & St. P, Ry., will stop at the farm--Belden Station-- on day sale. jSale will be held under canvas, rain or shirie. -hGOOD LUNCH WILL BE SERVED AT NOON-- Sale Begins at 1:00 o'clock P. M. J AUCTIONEERS' * v~t3ol. M. R. Clark, Brimfield, 111.; L. li Freenpaa, Htebron, 111.; Col. E. L. Downs, Chicago, ID. Clerks--H. F. jGreeley, Richmond, Dl.; John { |hra8ch, Burlington, Wis. 1 j ; Pedigrees, John L. Fisher, Janesville, Wisconsin. Pfedigrees tarnished with every animal soldi ^ 2 *1 For Catalogue address : Killrest Farm Richmond, Dl. iTour money is not wasted here; your money goes for qlpthe&pnly JK " YOU SAVB ll' OFTEN MORE You and a lot of other men have got your backs to the wall and you're ready to fight the clothing man who makes you pay a premium in Sept so he can cover his high co6ts, and his big profits--then cut his prices later in the season and still make money--you ought to fight that kind oi a* business. , 528, $29, $33 $37, $41, $45 Take those for fair prices on our all wool custom made suits and overcoats. Come and get your answer; we're ready to prove that you save $10 to $25 here. We've done it manj; times. FALL VALUES m "f.. • Why pay 15c, 25c; & Hiffh prices do not prevail here. when y6u can buy heavy Wool Union Suits at Heavy Fleece Lined Union Suits sf... Heavy Woolen Socks Cassimere Socks Silk Lisle Socks at All Silk Socks at Washable and Novelty Ties All styles in Silk Ties at Dress Shirts at : Flannel Shirts at Young men's all Wool Trousers... Cassimere Trouseia 1,. --^4 Latest Cloth Hats Latest Fall and Winter Hats. *^1; Heavy J umbo Sweaters...... Large Assortment of Caps , AM, Latest Arrow Collars 1.2$ & tM & 4.M & $Mtto $5.75 to $1.75 to $3.75 to $8.11 to 12JI IN lie 3.M 2.25 35e 35e 5#e l.N 35c 1.51 2.51 5.M 8.75 8JI 2.50 MO WE CLEAN AND PRESS Y ' JTOU ARE S YOint SUITS TO LOOK LIKE NEY INVITED TO CAI4* f'-; irM McHENRY,

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