McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Jun 1925, p. 6

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WEEKLY_PffiSONALS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR BUSY CITY AS 8EEN BT PLAINDEALBR REPORTERS AND HANDED IN BT OUR FRIENDS Miss Rose Huemann passed last Friday in the metropolitan city. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Martin of Round Lake were McHenry visitors Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fay spent Sunday as the guests of relatives at Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bohlander passed l&onday as the guests of McHenry friends. Francis Bonslett of Chicago attend ed to matters of a business nature here this week. Raymond V. Powers passed Sunday : with his wife,at the Oak Park hospital in Chicago. Mrs; C. M. Bickler passed the latter part of* last week as the guest of Chicago friends. Dr. and Mrs. J. E. Spurling and Mrs, Wm. Bacon were Elgin visitors last-Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Knox and children of Chicago were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Edmund Knox. N. C. Klein and daughter, MiMred, and Miss Theresa Knox spent a few days last week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Erickson ahd daughters spent Sunday as the guests of relatives at Caledonia, 111. Mrs. George Kamholz of Chicago was a week end guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz. Mrs. Patrick Kelleher and daughter, Helen, of Elmhurst, were week end .guests of McHenry relatives. Miss Mary Stoffel of Chicago spent the week end as a guest in the home of her mother, Mrs. Kate Stoffel. Mrs. A. A. Landwer and Mrs. Ed. Becking of Woodstock were the guests of McHenry friends last Friday, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Houlihan and children of Park Ridge are spending the week at their home on Fox river. Mrs. Mollie Givehs and family and Miss Anna Frisby spent Sunday as the guests of relatives at Fox Lake. Mrs. Harry Oder of Chicago passed last Thursday as a guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Fay. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Wagner and son of Chicago were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Kriter one day last week. , Mr. and Mrs. Frank Janvh-n and children of Harvard were guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. McDonald Sunday. Mrs. B. Maynard of Crystal Lake spent Saturday and Sunday as a gvest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Ensign. Mrs. F. E. Covalt and children,are Spending the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Himler, at Pullupulp, Wash.' ' Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel, daughter, Marie, and son, Louis, are spending the week as the guests of relatives at Sheboygan, Wis. Mrs. Howard Simpson and children of Chicago aire spending this week as guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel. Mr. and Mrs. John Aylward, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cleary and Miss Anna Farley of Elgin were the geusts of McHenry friends Sunday. Mrs. Fred Kamholz has returned to her home here after a several weeks' visit in the home of her daughter, Mrs. Carl Schmidt, at Belvidere. Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Sullivan and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Sullivan of Chicago spent Sunday as the guests of McHenry relatives. Misses Josephine and Rose Stoffel of Chicago spent the week end as guests in the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Stoffel, here. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schmidt and daughter of Belvidere were guests in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz, over the week-end Mr. and Mrs. John Halstead of Chicago spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Jake Thies. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. A. Sayler attended the graduation exercises of the high school at Woodstock last ThUlliAy evening. Rev. Robert M. Freund ieft Monday 6n his return trip to St. Paul, Kansas, after a visit in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Freund. Mr. and Mrs. John Miller and Mr. and Mrs. George Stoffel and daughter, Rosemary, passed several days last week at the Dells of Wisconsin. Mrs. Patrick Moriarty of Chicago spent last week as a guest in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John ^*int. Mr. Moriarty came out for a week end visit. Misses Carolyn M. Steffes, Elsie and Helen Vycital left last Thursday for a six weeks' trip to Denver, Colorado Springs, Salt Lake City' and other points in the west. Misses Arline Harrison and Pauline Pufahl and Math. P. Freund, who are attending summer school at the De- Kalb Normal, passed the week end at their respective homes here. Mr. and Mrs. Richard B, Walsh of South Bend, Ind., passed the latter part of last and the first of this week as guests in the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Walsh. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Voss and children, Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Haveck and Misses Margaret and Magdeline Hack of Chicago were Sunday guests in the .home erf Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel. Mr. and Mrs. William Schoen and children of Sheboygan, Wis., Mrs. Joe Porter, Mrs. Fred Hack, Mrs. Elizabeth Rennwald of Chicago spent Thursday of last week as guests in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Oertel. Mrs. Clarence Klinger of Lima, O., at one time supervisor of music at the McHenry high school and better remembered here as Irene Harruff, spent the latter part of last and the first of this week as a guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Thompson WEEKLYJXCHANGES AS TAKEN FROM THE COLUMNS OF OUR EXCHANGES GOOD SERVICE ALWAYS CARDIES, CIGARS, ETC. West 9 - • • HcHenry Station NOW OPEN mFOR BUSINESS ^ Sinclair Gas and Oils • / CHI CASES FILLED CRANK CASE SERVICE FREE E. S* Brink, Prop. .wwm- • Insure-- Ii Sare "Insurance WITH Wm. G. Schreiner ; Auctioneering McHy Hphtotriat K||Z BROTHERS ASSORTMENT OF NBWS ITEMS III CCVtVDBNSED FOHtt FOR BUST PEOPLE The Poppy at Crystal Lake this year amounted to $161.95. Fourteen hundred poppies were sold. Business men of Harvard have voted toy:lose their respective places all day on main holidays thruout the year in the future. The annual meeting of the federated women's clubs of McHenry county was held at the community high school at Harvard Tuesday. The fourth annual reunion and homecoming of the Harvard Alumni held in that city one evening recently brought out ^n attendance of 350. j • Harvard business men have arrano i ed with the high school band for ten! open-air band concerts to be given in that city during the summer months Woodstock and Harvard are two of the McHenry county cities whose citizens greeted President Cooljd^e as his "special" passed thru on Tuesday morning of last week. The summer camp of the Y. M. C. A. College opened its forty-second season on Geneva lake last week. The enrollment was approximately 750 students. They came from nine states. Seven Genoa City high school boys were arrested recently for obtaining and carrying liquor on their persons to a hfigh school party. The arrest was made on complaint of the father of one of the students. A monster Fourth of July celebration is to be held at Grayslake under the auspices of the combined American Legion post and members of the fire department. The proceeds-are to go into a building fund. A class of seventy-three students graduated from the Woodstock high school last Thursday evening. On Friday evening a class of forty, the largest in the history of the school, was accorded a similar honor at Crystal Lake. One hundred students of the Chicago university visited the Yerkes observatory at Williams Bay one day recently. The visit was made for the purpose of making observations to comply with requirements of their science course. Property owners* in paving district No. 2 will receive a seventeen percent rebate. The total amount assessed in this district amounted to $123,486.40 of which $18,734.28 is to be rebated. The average lot in the district was (orrginally assessed at $582.01 and thru the rebatement this amount is reduced to $498.54* Judge Edward D. Shurtleff has grifited Judge C. P. Barnes and Atty. V. S. Lumley of Woodstock a change of venue in the case brought against them thru indictment by the May grand jury. The casewill be tried by either Judge Claire C. Edwards of Waukegan or Judge Earl D. Reynolds of Rockford. Mrs. Victor Holmes of Chicago was instantly killed and her two sons, Robert and Thomas, badly injured last Friday night when their car left the road and went into a ditch, on the Rand road, south of Lake Zurich. Robert, who was driving, was unable to keep the ear in tfce road after it had struck a hole. The city of Woodstock has granted permission to the Chicago & Northwestern railroad company for the erection of a flag house at the intersection of Clay, Benton, Church and Washington streets. The building will be more of an ornament than an eyesore and most be approved by the city council before its erection. Woodstock merchants arent so sure that thtir places of business will be closed each Thursday afternoon during the summer months. Some of the merchants appear quite keen for the closing while there are also several who do not approve of such a step. It Will be known very shortly whether or not the county seat's stores will be open or closed during the summer morttha. The Southern Wisconsin Electric company, which supplies energy to Lake Geneva, the lake shore, Genoa City, Hebfon and Richmond, has just completed the installation of three new six-ton transformers at'their sub-station at Lake Geneva. The installation of these additional units were found necessary because of the ever-increasirfg demand for current. Quite a bit of excitement prevailed at Genoa City and Hebron last week when a report became current that Christophere C. Deignan, long time resident of the former named city and whose death occurred there on May 31, had made- a statement just before his death revealing the identity of the murderer of a man at Genoa about fifteen years ago. The mystery of the man's slaying had never been solved. The report as circulated last weefe, attributing the death bed statement of Mr. Deignan, proved to be without a foundation. Sheriff Lester Edinger of Woodstock who, accompanied by Vesty Muldoon, Harry Buckley, William Cairns, Bert Dietz and State's Attorney A. H. Pouse, took Clarence and Earner Hicks and Thomas Lowry to the state penitentiary at Joliet on Wednesday of last week, were very much disappointed in nut being able to go thru^ the institu tioft. On account of a measle epidemic I at the "pen" visitors are not allowed' just now. The three men taken to the prison to serve terms were recently sentenced to serve terms from one to twenty years tfor robbery. They are the fellow* who were apprehended several weeks ago after they had robbed a number of summer homes along the Fox river and the lakes. OFFICE A* RESIDENCE -;'V?' Shop Phone 93-R JVICHENRY, ILL •i i. J. LANDT / DRS. M'CHESNEY & BROWN (INI.OKI'OBAIB) DENTISTS Dr. J. W. Brown, Dr. R. M. Walker Established over 45 yfcara and •till doing Business at old stand Pioneers in First-Class Dentistry at Moderate Prices Afk Your Neighbors and - Friends About Us S. E. Cor. Clark & Randolph 145 N. Clark St., Chicago PHONE CENTRAL 2047 Daily 8 to 5; Sundays 9 to 11 Furniture repairing and made to order. Refinishing and Antique Work Go to Nye's for gift*. Long Distance Hauling Good Service at all times DI and DANCE • ® •' • •' * V-V-- • ' • ' * : " ' ' LOUIS PAVILION .NX RIVER GROVE, ILL. Every Saturday Night Music by BANKERS* 8 PIECE ORCHESTRA New Restaurant Now Open GENTS, $1.00 - LADIES, 28C Including war tax Phone McHenry 57*1 ljpBSSCn bR'DEftjK&Si LY ' i n - ( ' . I \ - K V ' ' / fpj'srn of r;<t 3407 N. PAULINA b T. COR.ROSCOE Afw> LINCOLN AVf Careful and Obliging * Phone 204-J McHevy, ffl. My spectacles and eye glasses are cnown all over America. Thirty years experience testing eyes and grinding glasses to order oflly. We make all repairs. Absolutely guaranteed. Dr. C. KELLER, Optometrist and Optician Chicago Address McHenry, 111. 3407 N. Paulina St. Phone 157 Phone Graceland 9540. We carry a Itneof-- Chicken Feeds AS FOLl OWSr > GRAIN S -- Corn, cracked corn, wheat, barley, kaffir corn and buckwheat.- - Ready mixed scratch grains --course, medium and 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. Nclieory flour Mills West McHenry. III. NATIONAL TEA 00. Qualify Cor/ Green and Elm Sts., McHenry, III. We are not content to offer foods of exceptional quality at attractive prices, but it is our aim to supply your wants with a personal interest that makes shopping in a NATIONAL TEA STORE pleasant as well as profitable. FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SOAP Amber 10 BARS Raspberry Beverage PINT 25c One part of this delicious syrup to six parts of water makes a moat refreshing drink Red Kidney Beans No. 2, Can 12c PORK & BEANS Van Camp's No. 2 Can 3°™ 25c SALMON Sailoa Tall Can Queen 19c Spanish . QUart Jar Green 50c CHEESE r Philadelphia pkG Cream 12c SHREDDED WHEAT l** 19c Preserves National / Strawberry1 28c GRAPE FRUIT Sweatened Ready to Serve NO. 1 Caa 24c Wesson Oil o* 48c p«. 26C CHIPSO °s"ug Large 2 PkS®- 41c FULL LINE OF FRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES to. A«ak&a»-!iraMt, '<<£

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