McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Jul 1925, p. 10

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r IP £ ' *£•':7 * . »; •K -St i-E In i if *•• > . K Gas Ove No marc of the stirring and pot WhlBK at canning 'time. Ton oan can In a cool fcitclten with yoar fruit cooking in the KM ovm. Ifs the modem, economical and 'way to oaa. Aafc our to show yon , a stove. - Yv" E>vs«V* W W*ternTfiiiteaGas tad Electric Company C. a. CoStM, Dtot. Mcr.. Klein, IU. SHERIFF RAIDS HOTELS The grand jury will be recalled in the McHenry county circuit court Saturday, at which time it is expected to take up two cases, resulting from the raids made by Sheriff Edinger and his deputies Thursday night. One of these was at the -old Herrlek Hotel at Lily lake, operated by Otto Broecker. Several bottles of liquor were confiscated there. Broecker and his father were bound over to the grand jury on Friday under $2,000 bonds. > About the same time Chief Deputy Hibbard was making afraid at Nell's Hotel near the lohnsburg bridge. Sev eral gallons of alcohol and other liquors were confiscated there. Frank Nell, the proprietor, was held to the grand jury under $2,000 bonds Friday. COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR BUSY CITY AS SEEN BT PLAINDEALER REPORTERS AND HANDED 4N BY OUR FRIENDS If yoo reside in McHenry township your lega\s belong in The Plaindealer. Dont' let anyone tell you any different. Our prices for legals are the same as any other paper published In McHenry county. Overcome by gas while playing a hose on a pile of hot ashes, Ralph Pipher, 40, of Kirkland, was nearly cremated, Sunday, when he fell backward into the blazing mass. He was severely burned before being found by fellow workmen in the C. M. & St. P. railroad company roundhouse, at Davis Junction. liitf • ssf m k m i : . E^nk Where You - Will Feel At Home ' - i < • * About this bank there is none of the chill, the fort mality and the solemnity sometimes associated f with financial institutions. Here you will find a group of very human folk, ready and willing to serve you promptly, efficiently and cordially. a There is no unnecessary red tape, no undue stiff* ness--in fact this is just a strong financial home " for you and your neighbor. MCHENRY * "The Bank That Helpt ILLINOIS^ to Get Ahead" I $ m Summer Furniture •*pi Now is the time to equip yourself with summer furniture. Our line includii all the l^test in Lawn Swings Porch and Lawn Benches Porch Swings And the many other things that add to summer pleasures and comforts. \) Goods delivered and set up. Jacob Justen & Son Furniture and Undertaking McHenry, 111. r N YOUR GLASSES WORK! YW? optometrist today. My gl That's because a man also knows and fits frames. good to the eyes." lenses Dr. Henry Freund, Opto Next to Brda's Hardware Store, McHen Every Evening from 1 to 9 excopt Saturday AM 4*7 Wed--daya from* a.m. to? p. a. Main wearing ey% nervous and "feel knows Mrs. John Kegg and daughter were Chicago visitors Monday. Charles Fay, Junior, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fay for a week. Mrs. Margaret, Wallace passed the week end with McHenry freinds. Fred Sterbenz of Chicago spent the Fourth with McHenry relatives. Mr. and Mrs. M. Carlz and son spent the Fourth with McHenry relatives. Mr. and Mrs. J. Wattling spent Saturday and Sunday with McHenry friends. Mrs. G. Robison of Woodstock spent Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. William Welch. Mr. and Mrs. G. Peters of Woodstock spent the Fourth with McHenry friends. Joseph Kotlengar of Elgin is visits ing at the home of Mrs. Josephine Heimer. Miss Helen Pries is spending a week at the home of Miss Grace Pohle of Chicago. Mrs. Lucy Thomas spent last week at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Wattles. L. Heimer of Chicago spent a few days last week with Mr. and Mrs. M Heimer. Mr. and Mrs. Louis King and children spent Saturday with McHenry relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Sullivan of Chicago spent the Fourth with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pick. Mr. and Mrs. J. Pufahl and daughter, Adele, left for DeKalb Wednesday morning. , Attorney David Joslyn, Jr., of Woodstock visited attorney A. H. Pouse Monday evening. Mrs. F. E. Boger and daughter, Elizabeth, spent Wednesday of.last week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Feltz spent the Fourth at Harmony court, their cottage on the Fox. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith of Belvi-) dere visited Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamholz last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Kanblesberger of Chicago spent the Fourth with Mr. and Mrs. J. Schaeffer. Frank Belasco, the WQJ radio boy tenor, is spending a week at the home of Mrs. P. Rothermel. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Gary and son, Jack, of Wauconda, spent Tuesday with Mrs. H. Schaeffer. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Howard and children and William Casper left on Tuesday for Montana. Misses Arline Harrison and Pauline Pufahl of DeKalb passed the week end with their parents in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Edward McCormick and son, John, spent Tuesday with Misses Gertrude and Kate Weber. Mrs. M. McCarthy entertained over the Fourth Misses Margaret, Virginia, and Marian Stonesifer of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hanson and son, Harry, of Elmhurst passed the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Herman Fisher. Mrs. M. McCarthy returned Friday from Springfield, where she was sent as a delegate to the W. C. O. F. convention. » Mrs. Edward L. Hayes and children of Minneapolis, Minn., came last Wednesday for a visit in the home of her mother, Mrs. D. A. Whiting of Ringwood, for several months. «• HOW TICE BILL EFFECTS SALE AMENDED SECTION OF INTEREST TO DAIRYMEN McHENRY'S : or AMUSJIEHT "WE C4II'T PLAY THEM ALL SO we PLAY THE BEST" Thursday--Friday, July 9--10 U»e'S WiMetaps . --with-- -V* ' Griffith H 5 Broadway Celebrities fjNIVERSAL COMEDY Saturday--Sunday, Jaly 11--12 frve" ----WITH--> M SPECIAL :*||UN0AY MATINEE 2»30 BIG TIME WTB FEATURE PICTOE Saturday, Jidy tl . WED.* • --with-- Desmond Helen Holmes AND VAUDEVIfcL® The following bulletin from the Milk Producers' association has been received by The Plaindealer and will be of interest to all dairymen: SECTION TWENTY-SOL Of Tice Bill 176 We wish to call the attention of dairymen everywhere to the fact that in amending the Tice Bill No. 176, Section 26, which pertained to the selling of dairy and breeding cattle at public auction was so amended, that any dairyman or breeder can hold an auction and sell his cattle without having to tuberculin test such cattle, if he hat> owned seventy-five per cent of them for a period of ninty days. Below we give the section in full. Sec. 26. "All breeding and dairy cattle to be sold or offered for sale, as such, at public auction, within the State of Illinois, unless seventy-five per cent (75 per cent) of such cattle shall have been owned by the seller for a period of not less than ninety (90) days immediately preceding such sale, or unless from an accredited herd or a modified accredited area, shall be tuberculin tested by a qualified veterinarian within the thirty (30) days immediately preceding the date of sale, and a copy of such test shall be forwarded to the office of the State Veterinarian within two (2) days preceding the date of sale and before such cattle shall have been shipped, driven or otherwise transported from the premises where sold." iy, July ll' "HKMIBIOBIK" • with ^ Herbert Rawliiiim Madge Bellamy AND COMEDY fuea.--WetL, July 14--15 Celebrated Playeta --starring-- • MABEL FORREST --in-- "Hie Sitii Girt" AND COMEDY-?^ "SOME TOMBOf*( Thursday--Friday, July 16--17 A Thief in Paradise --with-- Darts Kmjou Ronald Colman Aileen Priqgel AND COMEDY notorious cycle f Out of nearly 80,000 deaths in the state last year scarcely more than 600 resulted from senility or thd natural process of wearing out. Any cause of death except senility may always be regarded *s Inventive in character. Smallpox has been more prevalent in the United States this year than in any other country of the world except India, according to a report from the health section of the league of nations. Last year Russia was the only country that reported more smallpox than the United States. In New England, where socalled personal liberty gives way to public goad teethe form of compulsory vaoeinattan laws, very little smallpox is #ver reported or seen. The greatest personal freedom and liberty comes always from obeying rather than breaking the laws, whether man-made or natural. The fellow who steals finds himself incarcerated in prison at worst or shunning the presence of him he robbed at' best, while the man who refuses to be vaccinated finds himself confined in bed with the HEALTH GRAMS Short hours and mm pay have at least one disadvantage to general public good. They provide the means for frequent and varied travel in limited areas and this, in turn, gives wide opportunity for contact with contagious disease patients. Instead of going to bed the average fellow insists that an automobile trip through the fresh country air is exactly the right stuff when he feels something like the onset of a cold. Such feelings may be the introductory)' symptoms of any of half a dozen contagious diseases that may be carried far and wide by an auto party. Anyway, a trip of any kind is about the worst thing a sick man can do unless, perhaps, he is headed for a hospital. Even with contagion left out of the question automobiles are not an unblemished blessing, leaving xout the economical aspect. It seems next to impossible to persuade a party to leave the automobile except for a dinner or some kind of eats. The only exercise the body gets Is that of the eyes and the stomach and this hardly seems enough to satisfy a long and healthful life.* Used properly it is hard to imagine a machine better adapted to promoting health than the automobile. It ought always to be used as a means to select activity rather than an excuse for idleness. Fresh air is good. So is exercise. The automobile, then, could take the passengers to the country where hiking, fishing, hunting, swimming and all manner of wholesome exercise could be indulged in to add pleasure to the mind and health to the body. The falling of Montana Imountains which have dammed up rivers and obstructed railway traffic is the result of insidious forces which have been at work for long periods of time. Infections and physical defects in human bodies exercise the same kind of a force that may result sooner or later in a collapse of health when they are allowed to persist. A chronic sore throat, for example, constantly discharges into the blood a tiny stream of poison which is transferred to all parts of the body. In the course of time this frequently leads to rheumatism, dizziness and so lowers the resistance <Jf the individual as to make him an easy prey to the fprces of destruction which for lack You will notice the qualifying. o_f a better name are called dU1iEs eases. clause which reads, "Unless seventy- It even affects the heart, the most five per cent (76 per cent) of such) vital organ of the body and one of the cattle shall have been owned by the hardest to repair. Prompt medical seller for a period of not less than ninety (90) days immediately preceding such sale." attention to sore throat usually prevents the body from being saturated with poison. Of course a person has to die some time from some cause, but why not !fPP m smallpox at worst or-shunning almc the name- of this disease at best. I|^ c like manner the abuse of appetita« t-- much swivel chair and too littfo (otf * ' i': and in short too muqh aefWeg iuid „ ^ ^ too little everything, brings alwayl ' the limitations incident to various ail|| v V ments that always follow and excessiveness. ^ ^ Nearly everyone likes chocolate. Try some at Bolger's. " , You save when you trade at Ericlo* Son's Dept. store. ? if. i-t&V • /V, f J* •ysf. 'S;;i y It Takes a Lot of Time .• ' " jf?v* -,»• , • - . * ,-v ,-»,7*rr4* < : 'V' F••"ith- • A If you pay your bills with cash you should f*|ways wait for a receipt. f / £v '"-T \ s :r But, by issuing checks you can save the timI$sfc: f , otherwise required to fgp.about paying bill# and getting receipts.' - Clhecks, written at your convenience, ar| valid receipts when endorsed by those t*|\ whoaiyouafe.indebted. You need no introduction to checking account at this bank. - - .•-".4 "The Bank That Service Built' ' V. Wfev McHENRY ICE CREAM Sold at These McHenry^ Places: John J. Buch & Son Mrs. John Niesen Orchard Beach Hotel Miller L. Worti q. Untl:^ . ;: ' Also served with special orders 41 these places Justen Hotel McHenry House Puch's Summer Resort y .,, Niesen's Restaurant | Polly Prim Tavern Orchard Beach Hotel : • V in the minds of the manufacturers of McHenry Ice Cream. We use nothing but the best of ingredients. When you buy ice cream at any of the above places you can rest assured thaM^ you pre getting tfcte finest ^ Ice Cream fs a food, ntrt It fs good for, the children, as well as the grownups. They all like it, too. If you are not already a user of McHenry Ice Cream you should try it at once. We know you will beconp a satisfied customer. • ^ " •:sm 11L Read the Plaindealer and McHenry, Illinois . 'i . . _A ..." lii •t;S? ' iA.} •<0£ .i'lsStfSek'.'-

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