McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Dec 1926, p. 5

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'J#?-1' "^' mm £«• l •"•*'\\ V-'\»-\?..-A•c??^.'*!*'/-;::. , . , ^ "v.-.x.Jr'.w, ;..•>. V . *"'.. -,'• ';.•'• m M'HEWRY PtAIWDSAtrtt, THTJ*S»AY,T*C23,192B •/K ' 5 y< " v ^ « '. ' ^ -* -f 1 *> " * U *„ „ 1,' ' ' WEEKLY PERSON ALS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR CITY By Plaindealer Renters and Handed In By Our Friends Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thies of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Wilson. Thomas P. Bolger was a visitor at Woodstock Monday. Mrs. Martin J. Weber visited at Johnsburg Tuesday. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontx visited at Waukegan Tuesday. Mrs. C. Larson of Ringwood visited in the home of Mrs. Paul Meyers Monday. Mrs. J. W. Rothermel returned to her home Monday, after spending a week in Chicago. James Kennealy and son, Richard, Edward Kenpeaiy and Prank O'Flaherty of Elgin were Sunday visitors at the James Frisby home. 's Still Tittie to get that gift THESE BUGQESTIOSS MQHT HELP TO naomi Parlor Snites Bedroom Suites Dining Suites **oover Vacuum Cleaners Thor Washing Machines Kitchen Cabinets smoking Stands Sewing Cabinets Secretary Desks > • Spinet Desks xelephone Sets Occasional Tables . .wing Machines Carpet w weeper* Traveling Bags tampa^ M i r r o # ^ " ' • jtugs "r: _' : Ferneries .»-* Easy Chaii^'f; Fibre Rockers Cedar Chests Walnut Chests, Lined Trunks FOB THE CHILDREN Sleds, High Chairs, Kiddie Cars, Wagons, Doll Cart* Jacob Justen & Son FURNITURE Green and Elm Streets McHenry The Best Compliment You Can Pay a Business Man-- is to My that he knows how to make a dollar buy 100 cen^s worth of real value. The man (or woman) who buys a Ford car is certainly entitled to this compliment. ( ttoNi ±e*rot rv jrou ci ear tor le ;an buy a Fer|tf is than mm epia 1 WE WILL SOON ENTER INTO OUR SEVENTEENTH TEAR OF SUCCESSFUL, SATISFACTORY . FORD REPRESENTATION. KNOX MOTOR SALES Phones 30 and 31 M'HENRY William Green was an Elgin visitor Friday. George Donavin spent Satarday in Chicago. Mrs. Anna Meyers spent Tuesday at Johnsburg. Miss Vera Doherty Spent Saturday in Chicago. Miss Pauline Pufahl spent Saturday in Chicago. • Mrs. Ray McGec spent Saturday at Woodstock. Mrs. F. R. Eppel was a Woodstock caller Tuesday. Miss Mildred Welch was an Elgin visitor Monday. Gerald Newman was a Chicago visitor on Sunday. Miss Adele Pufahl was a Chicago Visitor Saturday. Miss Nellie Doherty was a Chicago visitor Saturday. Will Smith was a business visitor th Chicago Tuesday. Mrs. Henry Freund and children apent Saturday at Chicago. Joe W. Rothermel spent the weekend with friends in Chicago. Mrs. George Phalin spent Saturday With relatives at Woodstock. Mrs. George Freund visited relatives at Johnsburg Tuesday. Mrs. Anna Mollohan of Ridgefield failed on McHenry friends Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosing were <Waukegan visitors Monday. : Mr. and Mrs. George Weber were Waukegan visitors Monday. ' Lyle Dowey of Chciago spent the Week-end at the E. R. Sutton home. Mrs. Ed Thompson of Ringwood apent Monday with Mrs. Paul Mey- •rs. Weston Bacon of Elgin spent Sanday with his mother, Mrs. Nellie Baton. Miss Lillian Dqherty returned home from school in Chicago for the holidays. Mrs. Mat Steffes and Mrs. Ben Rosing of Volo spent Monday at Waukejran. Mrs. J. M. Phalin and daughter, ftfarjorie, were Crystal Lake callers Monday. Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson of Ringwood were McHenry callers Tuesday. Mrs. J. M. Phalin and daughter, Ruth, visited friends at Woodstock Saturday. m. Mrs. Fjjed Nickels ' and children visited relatives in Chicago ever the week-end. John Schreiner of Elgin spent Sunday in the home of his sister, Mrs. A. Krause. Mrs. C. Ferwerda spent the last of je week with friends and relatives }6i Chicago. Mrs. Peter Winegrfrt and children Of Volo visited in the Frank Rosing home Thursday. Mr. Ramus of the Junior college at Elgin is a guest of Arthur Krause Over the holidays. V Miss Lou Schneider of jChicago will apend the holidays in the hotne of Dr. and Mrs. N. J. Nye. 5 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Peterson of I*istaqua Heights spent the first of the week in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. James Burk of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of Mr. •nd Mrs. M. J. Walsh. Mrs. Edith Williams of Elgin was • Sunday guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Krause. Mrs. F. E. Cobb spent several days last week and the first of this week with relatives in Chicago. Niel Doherty is spending his 3Emaa vacation in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Doherty. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Breyer and son, Ted, of Chicago spent Sunday at their eottage at McCollum's Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Walkup and children of Ridgefield were calling on friends in McHenry Tuesday. Frank Page of the Junior college at Elgin is spending the holidays with his mother. Mrs. Martha Page. Mrs. Ed Young and daughter, Adele, «T Ringwood spent Monday afternoon as guests of Mrs. Paul Meyers. Miss Mary Brefeld of Elgin is en- Joying a vacation at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Brefeld. Mr. and Mrs. P. H. Moulton and daughter of Elgin spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Krause. Mr. and Mrs. George Kamholz and little son of Chicago spent Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kamhole. William J. Welch and John M. Phalin left Sunday for Cleveland, Ohio, where they attended the funeral of a relative. Romo Bobb returned Friday from tiie Madison university to spend Christmas vacation with his mother, Mrs. AdacBobb. Richard Stenger of Waukegan called on friends here Sunday. Dick is enjoying a two-weeks' vacation from school duties at the Marquette university at Milwaukee, Wis. - Fowls are Now We are prepared to provide: TURKEYS GEESE DUCKS CHICKENS for your holiday dinner Large well-selected fowls-are to be found at this market. ^ ' ' Central Mar M'gyw|Y'p BJESI j|UIAT MARKET Phone 80-M McHenry Rag Rugs $1.45 Just jar this Ghtubmas Get them while this small amount lasts. Come early and have your choice. Celluloid Windows for i«.uto Curtains Ice Skates Sharpened and Repairing dotfe on all makes of sewing machines and Victrolas. Fluff and Rag Rugs Made tp order -- p. Popp Phone 162 West McHenry Mrs. Gerald Carey spent Monday at Evanston. Mrs. Simon Stoffd apent Monday in Chicago. Miss Clara Staff«1 apent Monday at Evanston. » Ray Page was a caller at Woodstock Sunday. Miss Harriett Bobb visited in Chi» cago on Friday. Ed Frett of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives hero. ^ Miss Lenore Cobb was a Chicago visitor last Friday. Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Hughes spent Saturday at Elgin. B. F. Martin of Bound T <alaq. visited friends here Sunday. Mrs. Ed Copley of Solon Vrma shopping in town Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rosing visited relatives at Volo Sunday. LeRoy Conway visited friends and relatives at Elgin Sunday. Miss Dorothy Marshall visited in Chicago over the week-end. Pender Walsh was a caller at Crystal Lake one day last week. Miss Genevieve Knox visited in Chicago over the week-end. Miss Dorothy Knox visited friends in Chicago over the week-end. Harold and Marjorie Phalin * were Crystal Lake callers Monday. Miss Irene Conway of Elgin spent the week-end at her home here. Mrs. Fred Justen and daughter, Mae, were Elgin visitors Saturday Miss Rovina Marshall speht the week-end with relatives in Chicago. George Stenger of Waukegan spent the week-end with McHenry friends. Mrs. A. C. Reynolds and daughter, Ida, were Elgin visitors last Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hughes and children were Elgin visitors Saturday. Mrs. Christina Going spent the last of the week with relatives in Chicago. Mrs. J.. E. Freund was a business visitor in Chicago the first of the week. Mrs. George Kuhn spent the weekend at the home of her brother in Chicago. Miss Berteel Spencer of Chicago is spending the Xmas vacation at her home here. Miss Theresa Karls of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of her par' ents here. Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Barbian spent the week-end at Elgin, where they visited friends. Mrs. A. Gausden of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. Thies. Miss Laura Karls of Chicago spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karls. Frank Vales of Chicago spent several days last week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. Vales. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Frett and family of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives in this vicinity. Richard B. Walsh of Evanston spent the first of the week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Walsh. Miss Maud Granger of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of her slater, Mrs. R. A. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Colman of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karls. Mr. and Mrs. John McEvoy left today for an extended visit wfth relatives at Cincinnati, Ohio. Mrs. Caroline Schiessle and daughter, Bertha, spent Sunday in Chicago where they visited relatives. Miss Marcella Kennebeck spent last week in the home of Mr. and Mra. Ray M. Wineke at Irving Park. Mr. and Mrs. Mat Karls and aon, Bob, of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of Fred Karls and family. Mrs. Jacob Justen spent last Thursday at Chicago, where she visited her daughter, Mrs. A. J. McCarroll. Howard Phalin of Notre Dame university returned home Sunday, wheM he will spend the Christmas vacation. The mother of Mrs. A. Vales returned to Chicago last week, where she will spend the winter with her son. Mr. and Mra. J. P. Claxton visited in the home of their daughter, Mra. George Shepard, at Ringwood Sonday. Mrs. George Kuhn went to Chicago the first of the week, where she will spend the holidays in the home of her brother. Mr .and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin and daughter of Ringwood spent Sunday at the Thomas McLaughlin home, ea*t of the river. Miss Elizabeth Miller spent Monday night at Waukegan, where she attended a meeting of the Daughters of America. Mr. and Mrs. William Karls and daughter, Katherine, of Chicago spent Sunday in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karls. Mr. and Mrs. Merritt Cruickshank and Virginia Lee of Elgin spent Sunday in the home of Richard Thompson on Waukegan street. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meyers spent Tuesday of last week in Chicago, where they attended a party at the home of Mrs. Charles Egan. Mr. and Mrs. William Conley of Chicago are spending the winter at Bilox, Miss. Mrs. Conley is the daughter of Mrs. A. G. Barbian of this city. Miss Genevieve Brefeld, friend, Joe Kaveney, Mr. and Mrs. Owen Kaveney and daughter, Bernice, all of Chicago visited in ^ie home of Jacob Freund and family, recently. Mrs. E. E. Cropley of Solon Mills was in Sown Monday bidding her friends good-bye, preparatory to leaving for Orlando, Florida, on Sunday, where she and Mr. Cropley will spend the winter. TRIBUNE SUGGESTS PARK FOR COUNTY Picks ^ Out Fox River Valley Aa Practical Location For Forest Preserve' Monday's Chicago Tribune carried an editorial advocating the establishment of a Forest Preserve for McHenry county. This Is an Interesting suggest'on, one which can easily be approved by the people of McHenry county, providing the cost does not fall on the people of this county. We don't know what particular beauty spot in McHenry county the writer in the Chicago Tribune had in mind. There are many thousands of wooded land in this county which should be preserved as play grounds for future generations. We are just on the edge of the great metropolis, the second largest city in the United States and the county is dotted vlth beauty spots. The beautiful Pox river runs through the entire east part of the county, with a branch extending west through the heart of the county. A project to make a Forest Preserve of parts of the county is worthy of serious consideration. Whether it is practical we do not know. The article la the Chicago Tribune follows: "A contributor " to' the Voice of the People recently reminded readers of The Tribune of the existence of two preserves along the east shore of Lake Michigan, the gift to the public of tht late Edward K. Warren. There is a stretch of duneland extending a mile along the shore and a tract of virgin hardwood forest. These areas, both in Berrien county, Michigan, have been intensively studied by geologists and botanists from universities throughout this region. They have attracted many tourists and as they become better known will attract visitors in increasing numbers. They constitute an asset to the entire Chicago region and will become more valuable each year as the population becomes denser. "On this side of the lake, in northern Illinois, there are many sites of equal interest which should be set aside for public enjoyment now, before real estate prices become prohibitive. We have already mentioned in this connection Dresden Heights, overlooking the source of the Illinois river. An other park or parks should be established in McHenry county, lo the northwest of Chicago, where stretches of the Fox river and at least a few of the smaller lakes should be preserved In their setting of rolling hills for the enjoyment of the public forever. Such parks will pay for themselves from the start by attracting tourists from the city and in a few years will become among the moBt important to the country." v Tire and Battery Specials ^ Prices Good Until Christmas : ? v* ; • rtak or O. 8. Tires, 88.75 Batteries for Ford Cart' - ;; ' $10.80 Also batteries for all sizes of cars and radios, including radio "B" batteries and Hot Shots. 9 We repair all tires and batteries and do charging of batteries. All work guaranteed. Car and radio battery rentals. .3 Buy your tires at a tire shop. Have your tires repaired by a tire man. Walter J. Freund | Tire and Battery Shop WKST H'HSNBT, IUL * 4? v* Mullet's Legal Slanctthg The bureau of fisheries says that tho >»ullet is a flsli. The question arose pnany years ago, when au attempt was made to restrict the catching of certain kinds of fish In North Carolina, the mullet among tham. • fisherman was apprehended who had caught a mullet. His defense was that the mullet had a gizzard Instead of a stomach --therefore, it was a fowl. The Judge agreed with him. Metal That Resists fieat Tungsten, used for the filaments of •lectric light bulbs, is a rare metal of the chromium group. When pure it Is white and pliable. It can stand great heat and melts only at 6,150 degrees Fahrenheit. $6.50 Will secure the McHenrjr Plaindealer and Chicago Tribune • or Chicago Herald-Examin ,-p • ONE YEAR • Retd Home Joy Simile--As self-satisfied as a fellow who has juat succeeded in threading a Madte for his wife.--BaltiaMtw gaa. Onnanatximk An Eskimo, brought to New York on a sight-seeing tour, describe* tbo An.erican girl as "onnanutziak." That leaves only "onna" and "zlak" to bo explained. -- IDetroit News. IDEAS from the Public Service Qitt Book KtiJL *'. $6.50 Send yonr snfaitfipitlbiis to THE M'HENRY PT.anmgATjfl McHenry, IE Look over this list tor : Uth hour «H«P9«gr» A large assortment of silk undie to select from at Erickson Depl Store. The Lunch Box Cor. Waukegan and Elgin Roads The Season's Greetings and Best Wishes for Christmas and the Coming Year1 . MRS. P. J. HEIMER, Prop. • Phaao MMI Christmas T ree Outfit Eight colored lights on an eight-tt ot cord <ind witit tapping device tor add ing extra units a cheery g ft '01 every household. Omfy $| 50 CwmQlrt* PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OT NORTHERN flimOlt 1«>1 Williams St. CRYSTAL LAKE Telephone 280 . J. A. Schabeck,Dis.Mgr. W«Mh far Other GIFT IDEAS 4 FOR DADDY Pocket Knives Searchlights Razors Saws Hammers Tools of All Kinds F0J& jftOiilER Aluminum »v are Fancy China Set of Dishes Glassware Crockery Silverware " Scissors * A¥ashing Machines Gas Stoves Sporting Goods. FOR Ti**. KIDS Fishing Tackle Base Ball and Bat Footballs Skiis Sleds Tricycles Kiddie Cars Wagons Scooters Guns . Electric Trains Mechanical ToyB (iamtiB - Dolls Doll btigjnes Toy Furniture . Painting Outfits- • * * ••• . .A 1 «Bring the children in to see the » have loads of fun . • si&b. John J. Vyrital m

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