McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Nov 1920, p. 5

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uction Sale! ek & Froelfch, Auctioneers Having decided to quit farming the iersigned will sell at public auction Farn 'r~ farm, 2 miles north of faucomia. cn FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1920 Commencing at 10:30 o'clock a. m. i 23 HEAD OF CATTLE 23 ' Two year old springers, cows, tpringr rs, and mikcrs, three year old registered Holstein-Freisian bull. 14 Horses ; Bay mare, 10 yrs. old, wt. 1100; fmy mare, 7 yrs. old, wt. 1300; gray mare, 6 yrs. old, wt. 1300; gray mare, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1200; gray mare, 4 yrs. old, wt. 1200; bay horse, 9 yrs. old, wt. 1400; gray horse, 10 yrs. old, wt. 1350; black saddle horse, 8 yrs. old; black saddle horse, 10 yrs. old; 2 black colts, 5 and 6 months old; bay colt, 2 months old; black Percheron stallion, registared, 7 yrs. old, wt. 1800. Pure bred Duroc Jersey hogs, 3 yaarling sows with pigs, 2 gilts. Farm Machinery ; JlcCornjiek grain binder, Jiay rake, gang plow, walking plow, corn planter, Deering corn binder, drill, 2 row cultivator, pulverizer, manure spreader, 3 section harrow, 2 hay racks, fanning mill, corn sheller, truck wagon, lumber wagon, milk wagon, wagon box, bob sleighs, stone boat, 2 seated cutter, cart, buggy, tank heater, scales, clipping machine, sixty gal. kerosene tank, with pump; 3 sets double harness, single harness, belt, 2 stud bridles, 2 fifty gal. oil tanks, Sampson bottom plows, double disc Fordson harrow, vise, garden cultivator, bone cutter, Sampson tractor, 4 unit Empire milking machine, 1 ton Ford truck, forks, shovels and many other articles. Usual Lunch at Noon Terms of Sale: All sums of $10.00 and under, cash; over that amount a credit of six months will be given on pood bankable notes bearing 7 per cent interest. Absolutely no property removed until full settlement of same. Jennie W. Farnswerth, Prop. Willard Darrell, Clerk. V Misses Bersie Costello and Maty Osborne of Elgin passed Sunday as the guests of McHenry relatives. Auction Sale! Blanek & Freolich, Auctioneers Having rented my farm, I will sell at public auction on the premises known as the Bert Paddock place, at Cloverdale Corners, 2Vi miles east of Volo and 2% miles southwest of Round Lake, on SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 6, 1920 commencing at 10 o'clock a. m. sharp. 82 HEAD OF LIVESTOCK 82 31 head of cattle, 9 cows with calves by side, balance close springers; f> two year old heifers, 7 one year olt1 heifers, registered Holstein bull, bom June 25, 1920. All young stock in this sale is by a 2000 lb. son of a 2800 lb. bull. 8 Horses and 2 Mules Bay team, 4 and 5 yrs. old, wt. 2600; black team, 6 and 7 yrs. old, wt: 2200: span of mules, 9 yrs. old; bay horse. 7 yrs. old, wt. 1400; gray horse, 6 yrs. old, wt. 1300; 2 three year old colts'. Hogs 28 shoats, wt. 150 lbs. each; 3 registered Duroc Jersey boars, sired by Top Orion. '• «. DON'T MISS THE COTILLION CARNIVAL DANCE ATAMERICAN LEGION HALL , (FORMERLY STOFFE1 ,'S HALL) WEST MdHENRY, ILLINOIS THURSDAY, NOV. 11th, '20 8:30 P. M. FUN EVERY MINUTE! THE BEST AND BIGGEST OF THE YEAR! Tickets, $1.00 per Person Corn and Hay 40 acres of corn in shock, 10 acres of standing corn, 50 tons timothy hay in barn, 10 tons of clover hay in barn. 200 chickens. Farm Machinery, Etc. Bell City silo filler, Lightning grinder, Appleton grinder, 3 section harrow, pulverizer, Deering com binder, hay loader, side delivery rake, mower, com planter, Victory milking machine, milk cart, 2 buggies, cutter, 800 lb. scales, 16 milk cans, sulky and gang plows, 3 walking plows, dump rake, planker, 3 sets double harness, single harness, Litchfield and Cloverleaf manure spreaders, 2 row cultivator, 2 sulky cultivators, single cultivator, gravel planks, 2 milk wagons, iron truck wagon, narrow tire wagon, If? h. p. Fuller & Johnson engine, grindstone, 2 hay racks, combination rack, corn sheller, 3 section iron harrow, wood stove, 1 h. p. I. H. C. engine, Airmotor pumping engine, incubator and brooder, hard coal stove, tank heater, and many other articles. Usual Lunch at Noon Terms: Six- months' time will be given on good bankable notes bearing 7 per cent interest. ; ^ A. Paddock, Prop. Will Dairell, Clerk. Miss Blanche Meyers spent the first of the week as the guest of' relatives in the metropolitan city. Rev. H. E. Ouimet of Elgin spent a recent day as d guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Conway. Miss Lillian Freund is spending a few days as a guest in the home of her brother, John Freund, at Burlington, Wis. War Tax, 10c, Total $1.10 BUY YOUR TICKETS NOW Having enlarged my shop and secured one of the best mechanics, we are ready to take care of your repairs or new work as follows: Radiator repairing All kinds of metal work Hot air heat Hot water heat Steam heat Gasoline tanks Stock tanks Hand and power pump installing and all kinds of repairs. Yours for Service VYCITAL & PIRNA McHenry, 111. w TRADE MARK It is a habit of Henry Ford to thoroughly try out and test any product he manufactures before he puts it on the market. He personally must know it will do all he wants it to do before he will allow anybody elso to buy it. For thirty-five years he worked on this Fordson Tractor. He kept buying land until he had something like eight thousand acres in order that he might get a great variety of soil conditions containing the plowing problems that meet the farmers of the world, and then the Fordson Tractor was jiut to work and made to take all sorts of practical tests for years before Mr. Ford put it on the market. And, therefore, when it came on the market, it was right, it was reliable, it would do the work he said it would do. People have bought it, have tried it out, have tested it, and it has proven to be all that Mr. Ford claims it to be, and this is why that while farm Tractors have been on the American market more than twenty years and while three hundred thousand liave been sold one hundred thousand of that three hundred thousand are Fordson Tractors, and yet the Fordson has only been^on the market two years. It has sold rapidly because when one farmer bought one, he practically converted the neighborhood to the desirability and profit of the Fordson Tractor on the farm. The Fordson is made small, compact, flexible, dependable. It is made to be much more convenient to handle than a horse. It was made so that anybody of ordinary common sense could Operate and take care. of it. We wanted to make it so that a mechanic would not have to be sold with every tractor. It was made by a farmer for a farmer, and it has the endorsement of the farmers--the little farmer and the big farmer. Some farmers have one, some farmers have ten and fifteen, and one farmer we know has tifty-six. It worksjuSfTas well in the West as it does in the East. It is just as flexible in the North as it is in the South. It is just as profitable in the wheat tields as it is in the sugar and rice fields. It is just as flexible and useful ou the fruit ranch as it is among the fields of fiats and barle. y It is just as useful and profitable in the lumber camp) railroad yard, coal mine, as it is in the oil tields or any other commercial line. But especially designed for the farmer, it is especially his necessity. Because it increases the production of every acre by enabling the farmer to cultivate his ground to better advantage than he can with mule or horse power. It takes the sting and drudgery out of farm work. It is a great conserver of labor expense. Ob, it has so many money-saving advantages that the farmer can't do without it and be progressive and make money. So we ask every farmer to come in and let us tell him more about this Fordson Tractor. Let us make a demonstration for him on his own farm. Let us test it out to his soil conditions. Let's show him. Don't delay because there are' only so many Fordson Tractors to come to this territory. Get your order in now, and remember that the Ford son after service is prompt and sure. We are supplied with everything necessary to keep your Fordson going every day in the year. Come in and let's talk it over. STAR GARAGE John R. Ian, hop. c Phone » WEEKLY rERSORAL ITEMS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK 1 IN OUR BUSY VILLAGE ! mag. Greatest Atty. and Mrs.* Chas. B. Whittimore | Harvey Nye left last Friday evettof Marengo were recent day guests, ing for Kansas City, Kan., where te in the home of Mr. and Mrs. James .will take up a course in the Rahe aoto B. Perry. school. Ralph and Glenn Van Natta of Chi-1 Mr. and Mrs. Chas. J. Reihanspergar cago were Sunday guests in the home j and little daughter, Ruth, spent Su»- Aa Seen by Plaindealer Reporters and of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L.I day as the guests of relatives at West Handed Into Oar Office by Our Van Natta. |chi Friends Edwin Knox was a Chicago visitor Monday. • John R. Knox was a Chicago visitor last Saturday. " Dr. D. G. Wells was a Chicago visitor last Friday. M iss Alice Knox was an Elgin visitor last Saturday. Miss Barbara Weber was an Elgin visitor last Saturday. George J. Donavin was a visitor at West Chicago Sunday. Martin Knox passed Thursday last in the metropolitan city. v j Misses Anna and Ett* ;'Powers passed Saturday at Elgin.- V L. A. Erickson passed Friday of last week in the metropolitan city. Mr. and Mrs, Ben Kennebeck motored to Batavia last Saturday. Mrs. Nicholas Steilen was a Chicago visitor the first of the week. • Miss Mary Burke passed Saturday? as , the guest of Elgin relatives. . Miss - Ella Nickels of Woodstock was a week end guest of Miss Pearl Feltz. Mr. and, Mrs. Geo. Worts spent Sunday as the guest of relatives in Elgin. \ Henry Flyihi of Duluth, Minn., was a Sunday guest in the home of M; A. Conway. Mrs. James T. Perkins and daugh- 'ter, Adeline, were Elgin visitors last Saturday. Melvin Bethke of Dundee spent the week end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Block. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heuser of Chicago spent Sunday as the guests of McHenry relatives. Mrs. Jos. N. Miller and daughters, Carolyn and Marie, were Elgin visitors last Saturday. i Mrs. Peter M. Freund spent last week with her daughter, Mrs. Nick Justen, at Ringwood. Mrs. Fred Kamholz and children were guests of relatives at Belvidere Saturday and Sunday. I Mrs. S. B. Knox and Miss Elsie Fagan of Chicago were week end guests of friends here. Miss Emily Weber of Elgin passed the week end in the home of her father, Mathias Weber. Miss Josephine Worts of Chicago spent Sunday as a guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Worts. Henry Foss of New York City has returned tp,,jhis home after spending a month's vacation with relatives and friends here. Mrs. Harry Kist of Chicago spent Friday and Saturday last as a guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Pint. Mrs. Eugene Fagan and son, Paul, of Chicago spent the latter part of last and the first of this week in the home of Mrs. Nellie Bacon. j George Phalin of Notre Dame, Ind., passed the week end as a guest in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. I M. Phalin, south of town. i Mr. and Mrs. Robert Rosborough and children and Miss Edith Ijauok of ; Elgin were recent guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Claxton. 1 Mr. and Mrs. Val Ziilicn, Erma and Richard Zillien and Mrs. Plank of Chicago spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis McDonald. Joe Smith of Kenosha, Wis., spent a few days last week as a guest in the home of his parents, Mr and Mrs. John R. Smith, at Emerald Park. Mrs. John Reihansperger and daughter, Mary, of West Chicago were guests in the horne of the former's son, Chas. J., and family the first of the week. Mrs. Charles G. Thomas of Woodcliff- on-Hudson, New Jersey, and Mrs. C. S. Owen of Chicago were the guests of Mrs. £. M. Owen on Thursday of last week. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Aylward and Misses Anna Farley and Marion Conway of Elgin were Sunday guests in the home of the letter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Conway. Mrs. Fuller Boutelle and children of Lake Geneva passed a few days last week as guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Smith, at Emerald Park. ^ Misses Margaret Costello and Gertrude Hawley and Messrs. Geo. Westerman and Royal Cleary of Elgin spent Saturday evening as guests of the former's relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. John Karls and dau^i ter, Evelyn; Misses Elizabeth and Tracy Karls of Woodstock; Mr. and Mrs. Math. Karls, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Karls and Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Coleman of Chicago were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karls. Executor's Notice Estate of Catharina Justen, Deceased. ! The undersigned having been ap- ' pointed Executor of the last Will and ,Testement of Catharina Justen, de- 1 ceased, late of the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that he will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, at tfhe January Term, on the first Monday in January next, at which time all per- • sons having claims against said .Estate | are notified and requested to attend ; for the purpose of having the same 1 adjusted. All persons indebted to said I Estate art requested to make imme- ' diate payment to the undersigned, j Dated this 22nd day of October, A. D. 1920. 121-St N. J. Justen, Executor. Ever Held in McHenry Co. Tues., Nov. 9, 1920 ^ * • v. - X At Killrest Farms 1*0 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 pther ija4 -; Actions with Pitman-Moore Products."TTJy - Four hundred bushels of Alfalfa Seed incltidihg1 .75 bushels Grim Alfalfa and £25 bushels White Blos- ;soiu Sweet Clover Seed grown in Western South. Dakota. „ Seed-'will be recleaned and guaranteed. Killrest Farms are located 24 miles west of Rich- -- mond, 4 miles east o£ Hebron and 2i 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 of sale. Sale will be held under canvas, rain or shine. --GOOD LUNCH WILL BE SERVED AT NOONSale Begins at 1:00 o'clock P. M, AUCTIONEERS Col. M. R. Clark, Brimfield, 111.; L. H. Freeauut, Hebron, 111.; Col. E. L. Downs, Chicago, III. '-i Clerks U. F. Greeley, Richmond, 111.; John Prasch, Burlington, Wis. Pedigrees, John L. Fisher, Janesville, Wisconsin. Pedigrees furnished with every animal sold. For Catalogue address; Killrest Farm Richmond, E Yotir money is not wasted here; your money goes for clothes only YOU SAVE $10 to $25 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 costs, and his big profits--then cut his prices later in the season and still make money--you ought to fight that kind of a business. $25, $28, $29, 533 $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 many times. FALL VALUES High prices do not prevail here. Why pay more when you can buy 34 heavy Wool Union Suits at $ 3.0# Heavy Fleece Lined Union Suits at ... • 2.25 Heavy Woolen Socks at 35* Cassimere Socks at -- -- .^iSc, 25c, & J5c Silk Lisle Socks at 5#c All Silk Socks at 1.W Washable and Novelty Ties at _ . _ J5« All styles in Silk Ties at.--LW, 1.25 & LSI Dress Shirts at _ . ...... 1.5®, tM & 2.5# ,Flannel Shirts at .. Young men's all Wool Trousert -- $I.W to 8.75 Cassimere Trousers - $5.75 to 8.M Latest Cloth Hats .. - $1.75 to 2.51 Latest Fall and Winter Hats, $3.75 to $M Heavy Jumbo Sweaters... ' . .. $8.W to 12.0# Large Assortment of Caps 75c to tM Latest Arrow Collars. 15« WE CLEAN AND PRESS YOUR SUITS TO LOOK LIKE NEW YOU ARE INVITED TO CALi- John D. Lodtz McHENRY, ILLINOIS

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