ttmyiag ud Tnuafcrrinf . McHenry, Dl. PLAtfiR REPAIRING Prompt and satisfactory attention Long Distance Hauling I Phone S. JUNG Woodstock, 111. Early Riser •-S'- V&'im : m-M )^S~«tr4£- most excellent flour, .4* >.i We guarantee it to y,fr, ' please yon ^ * & -\l • '•' rTOKfENtT; Flour Mills West McHenrv. 01. '•^4 (jRttCfKIES s : We keep tab on the public taste, and you will always find at our More the groceries most ia demand by discriminating consumers. , Our years of exper- ;jence are at your service and ready to cater P - v "V-Av S • L , M. M. Niesen McHenry Phone 4• Dancing, Shows, Singers, Entertainers, Concessions, Fish Ponds, Booths. Everything for the entertainment of the public. DIFFERENT ENTERTAINMENT EACH DAY. BIG POPULARITY CONTEST • i;}/^JgnRj^J^iies; from all towns of the cojutfy eli^||| ; * to this big contest Entertainment is given for benefit of disabled soldiers and sailors, for the building fund and for the Women's Auxiliary , c ' DON'T roitca TBI DATES, K0% iy» AND H ' COME! COME!^ COME! THE UNIVERSAL TRACTOR! frgduction i, Mk» every otherbusinew, murt C9t down the overhead. It is not a question $tomjg able fo aflbrd a Pordson; it Is a question of being able to coo* tfaiue farming on the old too-costly basis. The fanner's problem is not all a sales probteqq it is also a production problem. He must ci$V down the cost of production. > The Pordson does more work at a lower and in less time than the old hand methods. Let us give you the proof. Write, phone «£ call today. wi '0(3 ' v*:*V m*' ... -v. r * x** \ r . ' •• _ >- " v ^ i t ^ STAR GARAGE # JOHN R. KNOX, Prop. PHONE 39 [Crystal Lake Herald] Elaborate plans are under way for RINGWOOD Get yo*r winter potatoes at Erickson's. Get your winter potatoes at the & A P. store. 76c per bushel. Mrs. W. A. Dodge spent laet week with relatives at Antioch, 111. Don% forget the school carnival at transforming jthe Charles Herendeen -M- k*U Friday evening, Oct. f*rm near Crystal -Lake into one of 27. the finest country clubs in America. Mr. and Mis. P. A. Hitchens spent Th® proposition has been under conthe week end with friends in Chi-, sideration for some time. Application ca&°- | for incorporation has been made and Mrs. Arthur Morrill of Solon Mills J incorporation papers issued. spent Tuesday with her sister, Mrs. The club will be known a# the Sun- Lewis Schroeder. set Valley Country club and will in- Miss Blanche Pryor of McHenry (elude a golf course, an aviation landwas a Saturday evening guest of Mrs. iing field, provisions for trap shoot- Rilla Foss and family. Mrs. Henry Heimer of West McHenry visited her daughter, Mrs. K. M. Bradley, last Saturday. Miss Grace Pearson, who i& taking a vacation from her bank duties, is visiting friends in Chicago. Mrs. £. D. and Tuesday ing, duck hunting, fishing, bathing, ice skating and winter sports, horse back riding and other forms of recreation. Provisions are being made for an elaborate club house with every modern convenience. | A large swimming pool ia %» be Bacon spent Monday *>mlt adjacent to the club house and with her uncle, John j additional bathing facilities will be provided in the lake. The Herendeen farm includes more Indoor Carnival &veaj>y Peter Umathum Post, No. 412, AMERICAN LEGION V AT • Armory, WOODSTOCK, ILL. • '• 1 • OTNINCS OF NOV. 9 & II ' V";/ ^'•' ; ': ALL DA¥":. ^ ,,, j F.OB. DETROIT Boyd, and wife near Chicago. Frank Fay, Jr., of Kenosha, Wis., was a recent visitor in the home of; than 500 acres of beautiful rolling his parents, Mr. and Mrs, F. E. Fay. [and wooded land. Much of it is virgin Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, tuff, which has never felt the steel of Mary, Of Chicago spent the week end the plow and is covered with a vel * with her parents, MB. and Mrs. G, A. Stevens. vety sod equal to a well kept lawn. It includes the old Barreville mill Chas. Stephenson, accompanied by'pond, which was, until a storm took his son, Henry, started Saturday for j out the dam some years ago, a'lake Olewein, Iowa, to visit the former's jOf no mean size--one of the best fishaged mother. ling retreats in >northern Illinois in Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heinse of fact. Crystal Lake were Sunday guests of J The dam will be rebuilt and the the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Barreville pond recreated, providing George Harrison.; a lake nearly a mile long and a quar The Ringwood Pleasure club is I ter of a mile wide and offering facilgiving its first party of the season on : ities for fishing, bathing, boating and Friday evening, Oct. 27. McAndrews' orchestra furnishes the music. The Ladies' Aid society is very busy these days tying comfortables and making aprons for a bazaar which will be hrfd Thursday, Dec. 7. More particulars later. Joe Schmitt, residing northeast of town, met with a very serious acci dent last Saturday, when he lost his left hand in a corn husker. He is a member of the local camp of Modern Woodman and some of the members have been to visit him at the Wood stock hospital and report him resting comfortably. He has the sympathy of the entire community In lite irreparable loss. TERRA COTJTA ' Men's and boys' Work shoes at Erickson's store. Get your winter potatoes at the A. & P. store. 76c per bushel. Carl Bergman of Chicago spent the week end with relatives here. Dr. H. D. Hull of Crystal Lake was calling on friends here Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. John Heffron of Chicago visited relatives here Sunday. Miss Neva McMillan is spending a few days with friends at Crystal Lake and Cary. Mr. and Mrs. Fraak Peck of Chicago spent Sunday at the home of Henry McMillan. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Burke of McHenry visited at the home of M. Knox Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Green and son of Woodstock spent Sunday evening with relatives here. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Phalin and daughter, Mrs. Robert Knox, called on relatives and friends in Woydstpck Friday. lv.cV,> ADDITIONAL PERSONAL Tablets, pencils and school supplies at Erickson's. Miss Etta Rosenberger spent a recent day in Elgin. Mrs. Nick P. Justen was a Chicago visitor last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Do we and son, Gharles, spent Tuesday in Elgin. E. R. McGee was a business visitor in the metropolitan city Tuesday. W. G. Schreiner passed Thursday of last week in the metropolitan city. No. 1 grade Wisconsin white potatoes by the bag, per bushel, $1.00, at Erickson's store. Miss Eleanor Klein passed a couple of days this week with relsitives and _ .friends in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dowe and son, Charles, spent Sunday Nvith friends at Cenoa Junction, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyers spent 6 couple of days last week with rela lives in Chicago and Morton Grove. Mr. and Mrs. N. P. Steilen and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. C. Steilen motored, to Holy Hill, Wis., last Thursday, returning home Saturday evening. ^ Mrs. John Reihansperger, and daughter, Mary, of West Chicago {Missed the week end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. J. Reihansperger. Mrs. M. C. Wilson of Libertyville Was a visitor in the home of her mother and sister, Mrs. Sarah Sherburne and Miss Anna, one day last Week. Mrs. James T. Perkins and family spent the latter part of last week with relatives in Woodstock, where she attended Eastern .Star chapter on Friday evening. ' Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Kuhn entertained the latter's sister, Mrs. L. Flum, and and brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. y. E. Brasen, all of Chicago, over the week end in honor of their thirty-first wedding anniversary. Mr. Kuhn returned to the city with the partp-J^c, a few days' visit with relatives, i-; ; winter sports. A feature unknown to any country club at the present time will be an electric lighted nine hole golf course, which will be built in addition to a regulation thirty-six hole course for daylight playing. More than ten years age Mr. Herendeen had put in at Beverly Country club an electric lighted nine hole putting course and presented it to the club. For several years it has been his ambition to construct a complete electric lighted golf course. His idea has been made % part of the plan for Sunset Valley Country club aqd a lighted course will be one of the features of the club. Mr. Herendeen and several of his associates were in Crystal Lake Wed nesday and assured the writer that they are going thru with the project. Associated with him is E. J. Mahaffey, who was instrumental in promoting the Lakeshore Athletic club. We have all the preliminary arrangements completed," said Mr. Mahaffey yesterday. "Memberships will be on sale within the next few days. We have, during the past few months, brought a number of Chicago people out here, taken them over the property and given them an opportunity to see the possibilities of this wonderfut place. Everyone is enthusiastic over the project. We expect to create on the Herendeen farm one of the finest country clubs in the country, devoted not alone to golf, but to kindred sports--horse back riding, swimming, boating, fishing, bathing, tennis, shooting and the like. A place where one can bring his wife and children for a week or a week end or longer and where there will J>e recreation for all." "With the virgin turf it will be possible to build the first nine holes of the golf course at once and have them ready for play early in the spring. We do not have to wait for seeding--the grass is there--natural turf that has never been plowed under.' The Sunset Valley Country club has been under contemplation for some time, but the preliminary plans were not completed until recently. City officers for the club were opened last week in the Steger building, Chicago. ADDITIONAL EXCHANGES Theo. H. Wulff has returned to his home^t Cary after a several months' visit with relatives at Grimen, Germany. The total assessed valuation of Lake county, as fixed by the board of review, is $39,099,995 or $470,855 more than a year ago. The county has 5372 automobiles. Fourteen men with teams and eighteen shovelers recently hauled 300 yards of gravel on the County Line road, on the west line of Dunham county, and thereby made into a nicely graveled thorofare a section of road that formerly was nothing more than a mud hole and the improvement didn't cost the tax payers a cent. A fine spirit indeed. A large barn, horse barn, milk house and tool shed, together with sixty tons of hay, 500 bales of straw and about 3,000 bushels of grain, were destroyed on the John Nagle farm, tenanted by Albert Schuring, near Sutton one afternoon recently. The tenant came very near losing his life while rescuing the horses. Leading the horses one by one from the burning building, Mr. Schuring was overcome by smoke just as he was about to rescue the last animal. By a determined effort he succeeded in crawling to the open air after he had fallen to the floor. The loss is estimated at between $12,000 and $14,000. Same was covered by insurance. Confirmation Here Sunday. ' Quite a large class of young people frill be confirmed at St. Mary's Catholic church here next Sunday -morning, the impressive ceremony to be performed by the Rt. Rev. Bishop P. J. Muldoon of Rockford after the conclusion of the late or high jof b Harmsen and will start mass. It is expected that a number"! jmrnediately UpQn ^he work Qf transof visiting clergymen will be present forTning the barn into a comfortable Will Build Home Henry W. Ahrens, who with his family is now making his home in the M E. church parsonage on Main immediately j has purchased a barn and lot m- • A ^ , • ***>• •Am? - •rtpty mum to assist in making the occasion the more impressive and memorably. Winter underwear at Ericksoafa. "" -T " > ' - J-i. - . ». AOi-'1* T-,: • home. The barn has been moved pnto a lot facing Front street on Ae west side of town. • Here a Short Time Trniiij While Touring County A delegation of office-seekers, headed by Congressman at Large Richard Yates, stopped in McHenry a few minutes on Tuesday morning while making a tour of McHenry county. Other candidates for office included in the party were Frank R, Reid of Aurora, Republican nominee' for congress r'Atty. C. H. Francis of Woodstock, state legislative ^candidate; County Clerk Guy E. Still, Circuit Clerk Charles Hayes of Woodstock and several central committeemen from various towns of the county. Hon. Richard Yates was the only member of the party to speak here. Owing to the fact, however, that the delegation arrived in McHenry more than an hour behind schedule his address consumed but about five minutes. First of all he talked Republican party, then told his listeners that he stood for bonus for our boys and believed that the money could be raised thru the channels of foreign obligations. Attorney A. H. Pause of this village, who is also of the central committeemen, introduced tne politicians to the small crowd which had gathered. The Fox River Four will furnish the music at the Hallowe'en dance at the K. of C. hall next Tuesday evening. AtrcriON fiALB of household goods of the late Anna Catherine Bishop at the premises on Park avenue, McHenry, III., on Tuesday, Oct. 31, commencing at one o'clock. Brand new rug 9x12, some small rugs, 2 single iron beds, parlor furniture, leather couch, 2 sofa pU> lows, dining room table, sideboard, chairs, kitchen table and chairs, 7 rocking chairs, 4 pairs lace curtains, dishes and cooking utensils, silver knives, forks, table and tea spoons, 2 candle holder, parlor lamp and several smaller lamps, table linen, pillow cases, towels, 6 gallon jar, wash boiler, coal scuttle, ash sift, 2 wash tubs, wash bench, meat saw, gas stove, heater, and many other articles too numerous to mention. TERM S--Cash. No property to be removed until settled for. Lewis C. Bishop, Administrator. DR. C. KELLER 30 Years Experience In Testing Eyes Grinding by your own optician. The following are some of the prominent citizens who got glasses duiing the past two weeks: Mrs. J. Regner, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Althoff, Mrs. Pulz, Peter J. Heimer, Mrs. Brefeld, John J. Buch, Mrs. Emil Lasch, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Watson, Mrs. Ben Thonneson, Mrs. Ben Justen of Ringwood. --Office Hours:-- Mondays, from 1:00 to 3:00 j>. m. Call phone No. 9. ^ Make appointments by phone. McHENRY, :: J: itLINOIS Fine coffee and tea at Erickson'fe. Men's Underwear After the bath is over, one of < new union suits will make yop -, feel fit as a fiddle. ^ One piece, or separate garments jtt prices so low they'll surprise yon, P. S- Tmka Htm mdhrioo of nrmffiHt authorities. W»mr Premideat Sum- Wm tmU tbmm. SMITH BROS. McHenry, ni. TO HOLDERS OF £ - -- • . To the holders of Victory or other U. 8. Gov-\ < ernment Bonds which will soon be called for pay--W| raent, we are pleased to announce that we are in a 11';^ position to cash all such Bonds as may be presented, ;# v allowing the holders full value, including".interest. ^ * for the same. x ' #• • We also wish to state that we are in a position to, supply other Bonds of the highest grade and yielding* * in excess oi 7%. These Bonds are secured by a first m o r t g a g e u p o n r e a l e s t a t e a n d a r e p a y « y ^ e ^ % v ^ Coin of the United States of America: " ^17 ; i i We shall be pleased to explain in detail concernlit the seci|tit^ipia^ ta . thoso wj^ may be interested. Fox River Valley State Bank •-V McHenry, Illinofl 4,.( ,n 4, l923 Superk>r ^odel § Pa«JS. Touring $525 K'l if*he 1923 Superior models, 6ne of wMt& is here ffitistrated, in^s^nt tty most sensational values in modern, economical transportation ever established. Prices remain the same in spite of added equipment and more expensive construction, which have greatly increased value. s kl McHENRY GARAGE '.-..ij- : J. W. SCHAFFER, Prop 'i tj i; '<r *M': >t *x • t t'i v V-at'vii