McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 21 May 1925, p. 5

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

•' •." v: ;'>rv' • iPBarasEs^ ""fef :** V. T ^*11 $IL v ,4 , ** '¥ i' fK;V ;-^ ", -V V Big selling out sale now on at M. M. Ulesen's grocery. Great bargains await yon at 1|. M Niesen'8. All goods will be sold oat at cost. at;: :t\ Telephone No. 10S|t t-. i ,-V " " [ Stoffel & Reihansperger Insurance agent for all classes of property in the beat cnmpani--. DRS. M GHESNEY & BROWN (INCOIPOBATK) DENTISTS Dr. J. W. Brown. Dr. R. M. Walker Established over 45 years and •till doing BdiIuu at old stand Pioneers in First-Class Dentistry at Moderate Pricea Ask Your Neighbors and • r Friends About Ua 8. t. Cor. Clark & Randolph 145 N. Clark St., Chicago PBONFT'CENTRAL 2047 Daily 8 tn 5! Sundays ft 11 Pickle (ontrdcts WEST McHENRY. WEEKIVPERSONALS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK , IN OUR BUSY CITY ILLINOIS - It has been demonstrated for years that there is big money in raising pickles for pickle factories. We pay cash, every load, for pickles delivered to our factory at West McHenry. We furnish seed free to all our contracting growers. Our representative here is Mr. Wm. Sayler. . For contracts and seed see Mr. Sayler or either of the following: West McHenry State Bank, Louis Erickson, Smith Bros. L. Woodard Pickle Co. Main Offiqe, Marengo, 111. Fluff and Raa Rus* made to order una. »B. nHiIrPrP WEST MP«HJIOENNREY lt. fI LL -We carry a line o$-- Feeds AS FOLLOWS: GRAINS--Corn, cracked corn, wheat, barley, kaffir corn and buckwheat. Ready mixed scratch grains --course, medium ana fine. Laying mash, baby chick mash, grit, oyster shells, meat scraps, bran, middlings and Red Dog flour. We do not deliver and our prices are made accordingly. Ndlenry floor Mills West McHenry, III. 3 A*new* carfor theprice of apair of shoe*/ DEVOE FOR the price of a pair of shoes, you can with Devoe Motor Car Finish, banish the 'used car look. It is very easy to apply. It is self-leveling; "sets* smooth and even, and dries quickly without brush marics or ridges. Tough -- Durable --Rust preventing. Made in standard automobile colors. A$k At Devoe Horn* Improvement PUm whereby you cm pmmt ymmr t--muide mJ out--cud p*yfor it m tern momtkfy hutmUmemU. JOHN F. BRDA McHENRY. ILL. .Wire Fence Come to our factory for the fence you need. You can select what you require from our entire stock and you will find a distinctive, strong fence for every purpose-- and at factory prices.' MEDIUM HEAVY STOCK FENCE iws* 8 ban, 32 indies high, 7-inch stays .... 34 9 ban, 42 inches high, 12-inch stays 3CA&I' • .n tH?* ™ jnc^e* ^h, 7-inch stays .... 38$!< 10 bars, 50 inches high, 12-inch stays .... 32 « MEDIUM HEAVY POULTRY FENCE 14 bar s , 46 i n c h es high, 8-inch stays ..... 37%c 16 bars, 58 inches high, 8-inch stays 43i%C BARBED WIRE-* Mod f t r & i o l I J h r j ^ a a f 2-potet Hog . . . $3.66 4-point Hog . . . $4.15 2-point Cattle . . 3.44 4-point Cattle • . X66 8TEEL LINE POSTS BtA 28t PLAIN STEEL DRIVEWAY GATES 10 feet wide. Pifh . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5.65 12 feet wide. Each 6.25 14 feet wide. F a r h . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 . 2 5 STEEL POULTRY GATES 48 inches high. Each $235 60 inches high. Each 2.55 POULTRY NETTING--l^-fec* Meth 48. inches high. Per 150-foot roQ . . . . « . * $4.78 oD iivV* high. P(t 150>foot poll . . . » • V. SJ97 7 LAWN FENCE ! 36 inches high. Per foot ...*••••• .. . . 10^4c 42 inches high. Per foot 11 c 48 inches high. Per foot............. 13 c CHAIN LINK LAWN FENCE 48 i n d i e s Per foot.............. IJt American Wire Fence Co. Llbertjrville, imttnii. -- [.MiiiisiiHlmiiL i. i-- AS SEEN BY PLAINDEALER REPORTERS AND HANDED IN BY OUR FRIENDS Wm. Bonslett was a Chicago visitor Monday. \ Robert Taylor passed the first of the week in the metropolitan cityi, Mrs. Ed. F. Kelter passed last week with relatives in the metropolitan city. Miss Lou Schneider passed the first of the week with relatives in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fay passed Sunday as guests of relatives in Elgin. Mrs. Anna'Barron spent the week end .with friends in the metropolitan city. Misses Gerfevieve Knox and Eleanor Conway were Elgin visitors last Saturday. Mrs. Johh H, Kennebeck and daughter, Pauline, were Chicago visitor* Monday. John B. Kelter of Chicago spent the latter part of last week with McHenry relatives. Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward of Elgin passed the week end with McHenry • relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Unti passed the week end with relatives in the metro* politan city. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Pich of Chicago passed the week end at their home in this city. • C. S. Owen and sons of Chicago passed the week end at their summer home in this city. Miss Celia O'Donnell of Elgin was a Sunday guest in the home of M. A. Conway and family. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Kamholz returned the last of the week frojn their honeymoon trip. Elmer Koerner passed Saturday and Sunday as the guest of frieiids at Naperville, 111. Miss Nellie G. Millar passed Saturday and Sunday as the guest of Chicago friends. Miss Gertrude Webber of Aurora spent the week end as the guest of Miss Anna Frisby. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bohlander of Chicago passed Monday as the guests of McHenry friends. Mrs. William Gillespie of Chicago spent the week end as the guest ox Miss Blanche Meyers. Mrs. Alma* Wis wall of Chicago was: a week end guest in the home of her sister, Mrs. Henry Dowe. Mrs. Raymond V. Powers, Mrs. Ed. Conway and Miss Anna Fristy were Elgin visitors last Friday. Dr. S. J. Fowler and mother of Woodstock passed Sunday as the guests of McHenry friends. Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Knox and daughters, Genevieve and Dorothy, were Elgin visitors Sunday. John Givens of LaPorte, Ind., spent several (lays this week in the home of his mother, Mrs. Mollie Givens. Miss Thyra Alderson of Woodstock passed the weeV: end as the guest of Mrs. Nellie Bacon and family. Thomas Knox of Chicago passed the week end in the home of his mother, Mrs. Anna Knox, on Center street. Frank Convey of Ridgeway, Wis was the guest of his sister, T»Irs. Anna Barron, the latter part of tty; week. Misses Mayme Donahue and Ann O'Nei! of Chicago were week end guests of Miss Elizabeth K. Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Buhr of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Millet. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Garner and sens of Chicago were week end guest? in the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Stoffel. Atty. Ed. L. Wagner of Chicago attended a meeting of the directors of the West McHenry State bank here Monday. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Frett and children spent Sunday as the guests of friends at North Prairie and Genesee .Depot, Wis. Mis. Vincent Martin of Wauconda was a guest in the home of her sister, Miss Eleanor McGee, the latter part of last week. Miss Marie Warnicke of Chicago passed the latter part of last and the first of this week as the guest of Miss Helen Welch. Herman Nye, who is attending school at Madison, Wis., passed the week end in the home of his father, Dr, N. J. Nye. Percy Davis of Wall Lake, la., passeel the latter part of last and the first of this week as the guest of relative* in and near McHenry. Al. Barbian and Harold Bacon passed Sunday with the former's brother, Ernst, who is confined in the Presbyterian hospital in Chicago. John McEvoy returned home the st of the week from a visit in the home of his daughter, Mrs. John Mc- Hugh, at Cincinnati, O. Mrs. Al. Wagner of Chicago is spending the week in the home of her sister, Mrs. Ed. F. Kelter. Mr. Wagner was out the first of the week. Mr. and Mrs. Leo Schuenemann and children of Chicago passed the week end with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.. John Schuenemann. Mrs. Walter Warner and children of Elgin passed the latter part ol last and the first of this week in the home of her mother, Mrs. B. Frisby. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. N. Miller and daughter, Carolyn, and John P. Schreiner passed Sunday with Mrs. Miller's brother and family at Racine, Wis. Mrs. May Foulds of Alton, 111., passed a few days last and this week as the guest of her daughter, Miss Vina Foulds, in the home of Mrs. Martha ***** + - vr- ; ' f .1 . - , Miss Lillian Freund was an Elg?> visitor last Friday. Ed. Buhr of Chicago passed several days last week with McHenry relatives. Miss Mabel Conway spent the first of the week with friends in the metropolitan city. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Jacoby and children of Chicago were guests of McHenry friends Sunday. Miss Ida Kealin of Chicago passed Saturday and Sunday in the home ol her brother, Theo. Kealin, and family. Mrs. Earl Thomas and son, Gene, of Elgin were Sunday guests in the hom£ of the former's brother, Ray Page. Miss Dorothy LaSalle and brother of DesPlaines were week end guests in the home of., Mr. and Mrs. E. E Bassett. See M. Mother's M. Niesen for geraniums for day. May 10. You save when jou trade at Eriek-i Read the Plaindealer and son's Dept. store. ! ed on local happening Mr. and Mrs. John Elliott and children of Chicago were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thurlwell.. Misses Inex and Doris Bacon of Elgin were guests in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Bacon, over the week end. Mr. and, Mrs. Geo. Garrity of Chic- aero were week end guests in the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs P. J. Schoewer. Mrs. E. E. Bassett and children and ^guests, Dorothy and Walter LaSalle, were guests of the former's rejatjves at Woodstock Sunday. Mrs. Thomas Sidler, Mrs. Loyal Bigelow and Mrs. James Brandt of Chicago passed Tuesday as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Page. Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Schoewer and daughter, Ruth, of Chicago passed the week end with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Schoewer. / Mrs. James Marshall and little son. James Wentworth Marshall, of Champaign, 111., are spending a couple of weeks in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Wentworth. Mr., and Mrs. Richard B. Walsh of South Bend, Ind., passed the latter part of last and the first of this week in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Walsh. Mesdames Robert Thompson, Edward J. NiclB^s and A. H. Pouse and Miss Nellie Clemens were Woodstock visitors Monday, where they called on Mrs. H. N. Foss, at the Woodstock hospital. Mrs. H. L. Ritter passed Tuesday and Wednesday in the metropolitan city, where she attended the funeral of Mrs. Fred Lobeman, who has been a guest in the Ritter home here on many occasions. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Walkup and chi'dren and Mrs. Anna Mollohan of Ridgefield; Mrs. Christine Going and Miss Mary Frances Brandt of Ghicago were recent guests in the home of Mrs. Going's daughter, Mrs. Ray Page. • Opening of Channel Lake V/' : miles west of Antiocll > ^V^^CHANNEL LAKE J' By the 1 Antioch Fire Dept. , - On the Eve of Decoration Day • Friday, May 29 Saturday, May 30 Saturday, June 6 Saturday, June 13 MYSTERY DANCE NOVELTY DANCE Saturday, June 20 BALLOON NIGHT The music will be furnished by the Chicago Blue Devils orchestra of All concessions run by the Firemen. Regular prices OUR MOTTO: IS TO DO EVERYTHING HUMANLY POSSl- BLE TO SEE THAT EVERY NIGHT IS A BIG ROUND OF PLEASURE i •0. E feel justified at this time to call your attention --to the fact that Price Slashing and Quality not traveling together. The Home of Good Eats features Quality and at that our prices are not high. We buy only the best grades--nothing is too good for our trade--we cater to that* class Are you one of them? Make us prove it, buy your next i>iece of meat or order of groceries from us and appreciate the service you are entitled to. Your charge account is welcomed. We deliver, and remember, you're no further from us than you are from your telephone. FOR FRIDAY 1 ALBS. SUGAR & SATURDAY With your grocery order, Yes, Delivered and Charged if you need the accommodation. I &-/• V , * Jo our Meat Dept. as well as our Grocery Dept. we have made it possible for you to trade with us. FRETT'S MARKET PHONES 3 and 39 WEST McHENRY* •RRi

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy