McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Aug 1921, p. 5

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#. >$•&* • ^ i ••'•• * ^ •' v"«C*Mf«Wia '^:t & ..- •-,- • * *"¥ "" „*, '«" > «* ^ r ' I'i-.^a-.: VOLUME XLVH IffOHKNRT, ILLINOIS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 18. 1021 NO. lO "THE MILK FAIRIES" rrOSORAL ITERS QUARTER OP CENTURY . w- w Ileau Clipped From The Plafndealer of Twenty-are Team Ago Pigcut to Be Given at Fair UWEK Supervision of Hone Buret# COMERS AND GOERS OF A WKEK IN OUR RUST VILLAGE ta Seen by Plaindealer Reporters and Handed Into Our Offire by Onr Frienda ' The Place! . Edgewater, for combination ,k'^ and winter homes. Low taxes, oufc- •$' . fide corporation. • y Fox River Realty Co. lJ'/ Sheet music, all the latest and moat }&•, popular numbers, at Hie Everett music itore, McHenry. DR. N. J. NTS Physician and Surge-- gjtyr Treatment and Office Hours: 7:«0 to 9:00 a.14*, 1:00 to 8:00 p. til. ;< 7:00 to 9:00 p. m. *Plw»e 62-R McHenry, irck^ichblli PITCHING AND TILING Also Wd| Drilling : Phone 122-1L Al»t r jdcHeraT, HI. rHOlC^T 8PCA0 Executor's Notice > Alford H. Pouse, Atty. Estate of Adolph Krepel, Pteceftisad. The undersigned, having been appointed Executrix of the last Will and Testament of Adolph Krepel, deceased, late Of the County of McHenry and State of Illinois, hereby gives notice that she will appear before the County Court of McHenry County, at the Court House in Woodstock, at the October Term, on the first Monday in October next, at which time all persons having claims against said Estate are notified and requested to attend for the purpose of having the same adjusted. All persons indebted to s^jd Estate are requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. Dated this 25th day of July, A. D. 1921, 'Henrietta Krepel, Executrix. Edgewater Lots - Are easy of access to the river and within walking distance to the village. Fox River Realty Co. Phonograph records for all makes of machines at the Everett roysic store, McHenry. The Plaindealer fear naws. fV> BREAD that appeals by reason of its innate de* liciousness and light, nourishment- giving quality is the kind that you want on . your table and 1o your pantry. If you use our flour we can assure you that your bread will be all of this. Tiy bur flour--you'll like It McHENRY Flour Mills -The KOHLER Automatic POWER and LIGHT Plant • • requires no storage batteries lor power and light --produces standard 110 volt electricity has a capacity of 1500 watts or pwo electrical horsepower opirstrs simply at the touch of any button anywhere on the circuit Writs for illustrated literature. Come in and see the plant in y. L BOWEH £ &r McHenry. in. A pageant, entitled "The Milk Fairies," was given under the auspice? of the National Dairy show last winter and aroused no end of comnjent. It will be presented at the McHfenry country fair on Wedneeday, children's day, under the supervision of the Home Bureau. Be sure to attend that day and see this presentation of the value of niilk as a food told in story form. A synopsis is as follows: Little Johnnie, pale and looking rather underfeed, wants to go and see the parade before eating his breakfast of oatmeal and milk. • His mother pro tests and urges him to eat his breakfast first, but Johnnie complains that he doesn't want it, he doesnt like it and goes off to see the parade while his mother* at home is discouraged because she cannbt induce him to take milk. " The second scene shows Johnnie just returned from the parade. He meets the doctor and tells' him he is going to be an athlete some day like some in the parade. The doctor warns him that unless he drinks more milk he can ngvet-^be strong and healthy. When his mother again offers him his oatmeal and milk, like many other ill-advised children, he prefers giving it to the ^cat or the calves. But Johnnie is tired and goes to sleep and while asleep he dreams of and sees the guardian of good health and the milk fairies who represent «the essential elements of milk, the butterfat fairies, the vitamine fairies, the protein fairies, the fairies of sugar and of mineral matter. These all tell him what they can do for children who drink milk. Johnnie also meets in his dream a boy who loves milk and drinks "lots of it," a big, husky boy with the making of an athlete, just such an athlete as Johnnie waifts to be, and Johnnie is convinced that milk is good for him and decides to drink it, much to his mother's and the doctor's delight. Children are now drilling for this, which will be given with pretty folk dances and songs, and will make a very interesting and entertaining spectacle. .. Lots in Edgewater can be purchased at moderate price and on easy payment plan. Fox River Realty Go. WMt McHenrv. HI. $ & M. r KHODA W. J. fralshwaaa hutinemvisitar in Chicago Monday. Wm. Buttner of Chicago passed the week ead with McHenry friends. Miss Alice Sutton is spending & few weeks with friends at Round Lake. Miss Mayme Barbian passed a few days last week with relatives in Chicago. . Stephen Healey of Chicago spent the week end as the guest of McHenry friends. Mrs. M. A. Thelen and ton, Leo, passed last Thursday in the metropol itan city. Mrs. Jos. N. Miller and daughters.. Carolyn and Marie, passed Saturday in Elgin. Miss Esther Stoffel passed the week end as the guest of friends in the metropolitan city. Mrs. Mayme Harrison and daughter, Arline, Were Batavia and Mooseheart visitors Sunday. Mr. and^Mrs. Wm. Heaney of Chicago were guests of relatives hfcre over the Week end. Mrs. Harry Alexander of Hebron passed the latter part of last week with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. John F. Miller, daughter, Alice, and son, Theodore, passed Sunday at Mooseheart. Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Rohman of Wauconda were calling on McHenry friends last Thursday. Miss Myrtle Gans of Chicago spent last week in the home of her parents Mr. and Mrs. F. O. Gans. Mrs. Jos. Wegener and daughter, Marion, passed a few days last week with relatives in Chicago. Mrs. Fred Lang of Chicago spent last week as the guest of relatives in McHenry and vicinity. Mrs. Henry Dowe and son, Charles, spent several days last week as the guests of Chicago relatives. Dr. C. H. Fegers, Misses Eleanor McGee and Elizabeth K. Miller motored to Waukegan last Friday. Cloice Wagner and Harold Bicon passed last Thursday in Chicago and took in the Pageant of Progress. Mrs. Louisa Lawless has returned from a three weeks' visit with her niece, Mrs. John Tully, in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Arnold of Bartlett, 111., were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Bassett Sunday. August 12, 1896 Bradford Smith has been wrestling the past week with a felon on his right hand John H. Miller has moved Into his new home just completed on Green street Quite a large delegation from here attended the race: ait Richmond on Saturday. Miss Kate Howe and James Colby went to Griss Lake on their wheels on Tuesday. A fine baby girl arrived at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Anton G„ Barbian on Tuesday last. Ed. Granger is now jogging a fine three year-old colt /that is * beauty. He is a pacer. :• One h undred and fourteen couples attended the Forester dance oh Wednesday evening. Geo. Hoy and family of Woodstock are occupying the D. T. Smiley cottage at Pistakee Bay this week. L. H. Owen went to Algonquin on Tuesday to catch for the "Indians" in their return game with Dundee. The entertainment, given at the city hall on Thursday last for the benefit of the M. W. A., was well attended. Milo Howe, who is engaged with R. H. Owen in the music business in Chicago, spent Sunday with his parents. Six Fox Lake hotel keepers were fined $20 and costs each at Waukegan on Thursday for violating the liquor laws. The Chicago & Northwestern road contemplates adding 5,000 new freight cars to its equipment during the current year. The members of St. Patrick's church to the number of about sixty held picnic at Pistakee Bay on Thursday of last week. In the county court of Lake county on the 21st, an order was entered authorizing tha.incorporr.tion of Lake Zurich as a village. Timothy A. Daeey of Woodstock was struck by a St. Paul train on Saturday evening and killed. He was fifty-eight years of age. The ice cream festival, given by the Y. P. C. U. at the park on Wednesday evening, drew out a good crowd. The proceeds were nearly $50. Fred Goodman of this village won the first prize in the five mile handicap bicycle race at Richmond Saturday The first prize was a $25 diamond. T. J. Walsh and S. Reynolds have formed a partnership and leased the Bishop mills in this village, which •wTW HERDS OF CAMELS-SACRED CATTLEj^BOFFAtO GREAT MILITARY ' 1000 COWBOYS -INDIANS - SQUAWS AND COWGIRLS SO FUNNY CLOWNS SO TWO PERFORMANCES DAILY • SEE FREE PERFORMANCES"*DAIL.Y IOW EXCURSION RATES .lor tills Big McHENRY, ILLINOIS Date. No advance in prices. One 60 cent^;- ticket admits to everything. Children un- JL 116SQ<iy der 12 years half price, 30 cents. Prices include war ^. Wesl Side Show Grounds. •%> „ < Mrs. Simon Stoffel spent the latter part of last week as the guest of her daughter, Mrs. C. C. Westfall, in Chicago. Mrs. Tillie Wooley of Chicago spent several days last and this week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Job. W. Freund. Miss Mabel Krumpen of Glencoe, 111., spent the week end in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Anton Krumpen. Mrs. N. I. Justen and MHb #• M. Justen and son, Daniel, have returned home from a several weeks' visit with friends at Denver, Colo. Miss Eva Stenger of Green Bay Wis., is spending a few weeks as a guest in the home of her brother, C W. Stenger, and family. - Mr. and Mrs. Walter Warner and children passed last Friday as guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Math. Warner, at Elgim Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Meyers and children of Elgin were week end guests in the home off the former's parents] Mr. and Mrs. George Meyers, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hovat and children of Elgin passed the latter part of last week is guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Peterson. Misses Ellen Walsh and Lenore Freund, in company with Miss Ethel Callinan of Woodstock, passed several days this week at Starved Rock, 111. Mrs. WiUDgs^y left Monday for her home^ln^eraey City, N. J., after a several months' visit in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. J. Welch. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hartm^p and sons, Roy and Jay, of Orangeville, 111., spent sevesal days last week as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Bobb. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hoelscher and son, Robert, of Wheaton passed the latter part of last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Sutton at Emerr Id Park. Mrs. Chas. McArthur and daughter, Ruth, of Elgin spent last week in the home of the former's mother, Mrs. A. Wolff. Mr. McArthur came up for a visit over Sunday. ^Misses Maybelle Hauswirth and Virginia Harrison of Chicago passed the latter part of last week in the home of the former's parents, Mr, and Mrs. J. E. Hauswirth. Mr. and Mrs. Milo Loomis and daughters, Maxine and* Mildred, (of Niles, Mich., passed several days last and ) this week in the home of his Mrs. Jas. T. Perkins, and fam- --* Th« Dancer-- 'How did you get that new stap ao ctrvrr'v, " -ilit i" Hit Partnrt pr»rttr<ng with Charlie Q: t ,1a^ -\g liiiaftfc llJiB Improved lince we got theOulbnowo." r Anyone can play the Gulbransen without effort. Take your turn and chat while you play. It gives .4.... everyone the oft' wished for excuse to rest. And pldying the Gulbransen is really delightfully restful.' On other occasions, when better music invites -you to play with feeling and intelligence, the Gulbransen invariably brings compliments to the musician. It is the one player-piano which has been developed to assist true musical interpretation. If you doubt that you could learn to play ^ player-piano so it could not b^ distinguished from . hand playing, we invite you to try the Gulbransen ; only ten-minutes. Nationally ^Priced Gulbransen Player-Pianos, three models all playable by hand or by roll, are sold at the same prices to everybody, everywhere in the United States, freight and war tax paid. Price, branded in the back of each instrument at the factory, includes set of Gulbransen instruction rolls and our authoritative book on home entertaining and music study with ;'tj the Gulbransen. 1921 reduced prices: White House Model $700, County SeatMq^elHH, W.:y Suburbag Model $495 . J J N. A. NIEMANN, WEST McHENRY Miss Dorothy Buss of Glencoe, 111., passed the week end in the home of i they propose to fit up in first-class her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Buss, shape for trade in flour, feed, etc. A. J. Raymond of Volo received a car load of fresh milk cows at this station one day last week and took them to a farm near Volo, where he sold them to the dairymen in that vi cinity. August 17, 1896 Harry McOmber had the misfortune to mash one of his hands quite se verely on Monday. J,ohn J. Buch has just put in a new "get of scales in front of his building near the iron bridge. Miss Julia A. Story gave a pleasant progressive euchre parly at her .residence Friday evening. "One hundred and five guests regis tered at Ben Stilling's summer resort at Pistakee Bay Sunday last. Notwithstanding the extreme hot weather, the Woodman picnic at Wauconda on Thursday was attended by a large crowd. ^ C. E. Lamphere has' sold out his grocery business in the Kelter block to John Lee, the baker, who has taken possession of same During the thunder storm on Wednesday night last S. S. Sherman had two valuable cows killed by lightning on his farm west of towfi Fred Huemann ef Johnsburg had the misfortune to lose his valuable young horse, "Broncho H.," hy * runaway accident on Tuesday. Mrs. Alford Trebbin of /Chicago, aged about twenty-four years, died at Stilling's hotel, Pistakee Bay, last Saturday. Her remains were taken to Chicago. Harry Baeon put down a drive well on H. C. Mead's farm west of town last week and at the depth of nineteen feet struck whj|& proved to be a flowing well. Robert Sherburne, Jr* of Akron, Neb., is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sherburne, in this vil- la£e. TThhiiss iiss hhiiss ffiirr :-;tt viissiitt hhoompee :f or twelve years. " '/> j The ground^Vround the npblic school Lading lu.ve be^ri nandsomely graded and leveled up\the past week and present a much ymproved appearance. The work wjjr done under the supervision of-Jfimtor Brents. Hunter Boat Lino la \Bow making regular daily trips from McHenry to all points along the river and lakes, leaving Riverside pier at 9:00 a. m. and 2:00 p. m. Special Saturday night trips, leaving dock at 8:00 o'clock. Stops made to take on or leave passengers at any river pier. Also boats for charter by hour, day or week. r-WPicnics a special- *4t Water mcmnefy Does Every Power Job You can plow, disk, harrow, harvest, thresh, bale hay, grind feed, fill tho w wood, pump water, pull stumps, do road ork or any other iwer job around e farm quicker, ier and at less cost toyouwithth®, Fordson Tractor. Twenty-four hours day, every working day in the year it will give maximum service. Light bat powerful it gets from job to job quickly. Easy to operate and control--efficient, economical aodafaovi all DEPENDABLE. Get in the power-farming frame of mind now. Call, phone or drop us a card for facts. See the Fordaoo in STAR GARAGE John R. K-nox. Prof* ::-*3 :*v Phone 4

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