McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 9 Jun 1927, p. 2

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RINGWOOD The Lidiet' Aid dinner in the M. W. A. kali on Wednesday netted •bout 131.00. Kenneth Noble, who has been sick, is^again able to be out again. Mr. and MVs. S. W. Brown spent Teesday afternoon in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Van Alten of Flint, Mich., are visiting Mf. and Mrs. Leo Shepherd, their cousins. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Peet and sons of Greenwood were the guests of Mrs. E. Hopper on Sunday. Miss Hannah Glossen and brother, Joe Glossen, of Ostend 6pent Friday in Ring-wood. Joseph Young and family spent JFriday rvcninp at the county-seat. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr were recent callers at Woodstock. William Green and Miss Charlotte Madden of McHenry "Were Tuesday evening callers in Ringwood. Miss Lora Harrison returned to her duties at Evanston hospital after a month's vacation. Mrs Joseph Miller spent Wednesday in Ringwood. Frank Foley and sons of Richmond were recent Ringwood callers. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hawley and children, Mr. and Mrs. Eli Hawley, Clarence May spent Sunday at N. Crystal Lake. George Shepherd is having a two weeks' vacation from his duties at Bowman Dairy company. - Mrs. Ed Hamilton of Richmond spent Saturday morning in Ringwood. Mrs. George Shepherd, Mrs. George Young, Mrs. Elmer Olsen and Mrs. Viola Lowe and son, Bobbie, were Modernize Old Homes r at negligible cost • v • 1 ' Insulation is built right into modern homes, but - you can insulate and modernize an old house in a few hours' time by using Thermofill, the Dry s -Fill Insulation. Thermofill is installed by simply rv pouring {dry} into the space to be insulated. > . .. " f . Thermofill gives real protection because it coiBi* ' ; ' , bines the insulating qualities of confined air cells and gypsum--one of nature's best insulators. It cannot burn or decompose and will not harbtr vermin. The low cost will surprise you. 1HERM0FHL The Dry Fill Insulation McHenry Lumber Co. Phone 46 West McHenry GRAND BALL AND FAIR Given by the Antioch Chapter No. 428 ORDER 0? ^^3 HELD AT ANTIOCH PALACE ^ One mile south of Antioch on Route No. 21 Friday, June lp . 9:00 p. m. Daylight Saving Time 'CHUCK' BRICKER and His COLLEGIANS From Valparaiso, Ind. Hooiser State's Greatest Collegian Orchestra Park Plan Dancing, Bowling, Billards, Pool,, Refreshment*, Grill Admission 25c Everybody Welcome J I F F Y tor BUNIONS Wear New Kmm With J«y You can do it with JIFFY. A home treatment, thin as paper, easily applied; and it stops the* growth. Absolutely guaranteed, and you are the only judge. Also Jiffy for Corns and Callouses. Each 25c. v. " ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED Thomas P. Bolger Why Not You? -they aay It Is a bit different and yet w\° ar* soon have not expensive. tTOB* IS NBAB TOIJ Grow An. JOL.IET «2M1b EJ HTGprrmonnn| , iANBSyiLLB *02 CLAIR* 40* S. Bartow ®55JOSH 1J Main ft PIORIA ,.82f S. A<iama DECATtlR 482 N W»t« MADISON 117 Stat* SL .GREEN bAY 408 W WnlmR" »TOND DU LAC. .60-62 N. Main Si." MORJU8. . .112 W Washington St. HOOPESTON 219 E Main St. APPtXTON. 10t-10ft Collar* A»* A. LEATH & COMPANY WW-. Woodstock shoppers, Saturday, Mrs. Clay Rager and two daughters, Viola and Mac Lucille, spent Mtonday with her mother at Richtnond. Miss Nellie Rae of Genoa City was a Sunday afternoon caller with Mrs Rager. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepherd in company with Mr. and Mrs. Leon Van Alten were recent callers in Woodstock. Mrs, Frankie Stephensen spent Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. I Carr. Mrs. George Harrison was a recent j caller with her daughter, Mrs. Henry i Heinze of N. Crystal Lake. j Miss Arline Webster of Greenwood is visiting her grandmother, Mrs. Emma Merchant. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Schiessle and two daughters of N. Crystal Lake spent Monday in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown spent Wednesday at Janesville, Wis., and Mxs, Leslie Olsen assisted in the drug store. Thomas Darrow of Richmond spent Wednesday with friends in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Merchant and Miss Violet Webster all of Woodstock visited their mother and grandmother, Mrs. Emma Merchant, on Thursday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Chancey Jepson and family were callers at Volo on Saturday afternoon. Mrs. Carrie Weter and two children of Chicago are spending the week-end with her sister, Mrs. L_ E. Hawley. Frank Fay went to Waukegan on Friday evening to drive back his new Pontiac. Mr. and MJrs. James Rainey had as their guests on 'Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Moffett and friends of Chicago Miss Byrd Hodge was a recent guest of Mrs. Mary Hodge. Mr. and Mrs. Clay Hughes spent Monday at Aurora. Wayne Foss left Monday for a six weeks' term of school at DeKalb. A. L. Lawrence and son, Joseph, spent-Saturday afternoon in Chicago. Mrs. Clay Rager spent Saturday afternoon in Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean of Woodstock and Mr. and Mrs. William Beth and two daughters, Audrey and Carol, of Rockford, spent the w'eekend with Mr. and Mrs. Frankie Stephenson. Mrs. Jaunita Carlson has been sick for a few days, but is better at this wrliirsr. Miss Frances Helms spent the weekend with friends in Elgin. Joseph Joung and family spent Sunday mornnig in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Butler of Chicago spent the week-end in the K. M. Bradley home. M*. and Mrs. Frank Worts" and son, Francis, of Hammond, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wegener and daughter, Marion of McHenry were Sunday afternoon callers in the Abe Lawrence home. Mrs. Delbert Bacon of Crystal Lake spent Sunday afternoon in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Hopper and son spent Saturday evening in the home of his mother, Mlrs. Ruth Hopper. Jesse Allen of Richmond" spent Saturday evening in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Ora D. Harrison and two daughters, Bernice and Olive of (Wfoodtsock spent Saturday evening in the C. W. Harrison home. Mr. and Mrs. Clay Rager and fan* ily spent Sunday evening with her mother, Mrs. Antcliff of Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepherd and two children spent Sunday afternoon at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Nelson and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Sunday afternoon, with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Matt Nimegren of Spring Grove spent Sunday with Mrs. Nick Young. Miss Viola Ingalls of Spring Grove spent Sunday evening with Miss Frances Young. Mrs. Paul Meyers of McHenry and Mrs. Ed Thompson and daughters spent Sunday with Mrs. Claus Larsen. Clarence Kroufely and Florence Wagner of*Chicago spent the week-end with their aunt, Mrs. Nick Young. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young spent Saturday evening at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Smith and family spent Sunday in the C. W. Harrison home. The Jolly Sixeten Bunco club were entertained at the home of Mrs. Leon Dodge, Thursday afternoon. After several games of bunco were played, high honors went to Mrs. Paul Meyers and second to Mrs. Ray Merchant, third to Mrs. Viola Lowe and consolation to Miss Dorothy Howard. Refreshments were served. The next meeting of the club will b§ at the home of Mrs. Claus Larsen. Mrs. Albert Purvey and Mrs. Cobb of McHenry were M'onday afternoon callers in Ringwood. Mir. and Mrs. W. Beth and son, Billy, of Chicago spent Monday afternoon in Ringwood. John Glossen and daughter, Hannah, of Ostend spent Sunday in Ringwood. Joseph Young and family spent Wednesday in the home of Matt Glossen. George Hohenstein and. son, Lynn, of Woodstock were callers Monday afternoon in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr were Sunday afternoon callers in Woodstock. J Mr. and Mrs. George Shepherd and family and Mir. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Peters attended the dance at Antioch Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Schuer of Waukegan announce the arrival of a son born Friday. Mrs. Schuer was formerly Miss Sue Harrison. Misses Mildred and Lorena Jepson were the guests of Miss Laura Weter of Hebron over the week-end; Mbr. and Mk-s. Henry HJnze of N. Crystal Lake spent Sunday in the home of George Harrison. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Huson and family of Libertyville spent Sunday in the Chauncey Jepson home. Ladies you should see all the new things in wearing apparel we have for summer wear. See our line before you choose your summer ward? reba. Wfkwn Dept. Hww Brevities of Illinois I iiimimtiitiiiftiiuft Miss May McGbee, an actress, was shot and dangerously wounded by Clarence L. Tighe of Dee Moines, Iowa, at the rear entrance of a theater In Danville, Smiling as he went, Fred Sankovltch, forty-five, patient at the state hospital at Kankakee, walked calmly to his death In the Kankakee river and was drowned. The Catholic Order of Foresters will hold Its fourth triennial state convention at Kankakee on June 18, 14 and i>CeP!jra"2DS are under way to entertain" KM delegates!* ^njrrTs ft. T^err. chief counsel for the illinols Mine Workers and formerly member of the Michigan state legislature and public prosecutor of Houghton county, Mich., died In Springfield following an operation. Oept W. A. Tyler, ninety-nine, probably the sole survivor of the fall of Fort Sumter In 1861, was married to Mrs. Martha Jelllson, seventy, at the Illinois Soldiers and Sailors' home In Qulncy by G. V. GoWdy, chaplain of the home. The seventy-seventh annual meeting of the Illinois State Medical society was held In Mollne with more than 1,000 physicians and surgeons of Illinois and Iowa in attendance. Dr. Charles Mayo of Rochester, Minn., addressed a public session. Two men, unmasked, walked into the Citizens' bank at Bismarck, overawed Cashier Hagley and the bookkeeper, Mrs. Hendell, and took $117. The two bank attaches were locked in the vault by the bandits. Several thousand dollars were overlooked by the robbers. Orville Shumate, farmer, caught a four-pound carp In the highway near his home six miles from Decatur and two miles from the nearest creek. Continued rains had submerged the prairie, and as he drove by in his car, Mr. Shumate saw the fish trying to cross the road, got out and picked It up. • Seven prisoners were taken when prohibition agents led by Brice Armstrong and Police Magistrate Homer J. Byrd of Arlington Heights raided a barn on a farm at Gerkin and Schoenbeck roads, between Wheeling and Arlington Heights, and seized a moonshine still capable of 1,000 gi^ilof output. An alleged shortage of $39,800 in accounts of William H. Beckman as president of the Citizens' State Bank of Alhambra, and as treasurer of the Alhambra township school district and treasurer of the Alhambra Telephone company, was disclosed in an audit by W. R. Rodenberger, state examiner. The bank closed. Unveiling of a memorial tablet to Gen. John A. Logan marked the observation of Memorial day In (Jalesburg. The tablet, which bears General Logan's order designating May 80 as Memorial day for the Grand Army of the Republic, was unveiled by the Woman's Itellef corps in the Knox county courthouse. Two armed men slipped Into the mrinage^s Office of the Varsity theater, In Bvanston's main business district and escaped with $1,600 after they had tied and gagged Miss Bernice Robblns, cashier, who was counting the day's receipts. Two thousand patrons, in the theater at the time, were unaware of the robbery. Kev. G. W. James, sixty-five, superintendent of the central Dllnois district of the Anti-Saloon league, died In Galesburg of cancer. Mr. James was born in Wales and before becoming Anti-Saloon league official in the central district he was a pastor In Chicago and Morris, HI. A sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Macaloney of Cknada, survives him. Two boys, rfxteen years old, were forbidden to drive automobiles for one year because of their recklessness, which resulted in the death of Or- •ilia Kemler, eleven years old, at Willlanisflelri. Orvilla, riding in an automobile driven by his brother, Royce, was killed when their car overturned while racing with Donald Wagner. A coroner's Jury held the accident was due to reckless driving and forbade the boys to drive cars for at least a year. Bloomington will entertain the Presbyterian synod of Illinois on June 13, 14, 15, 16 and 17. These gatherings are mainly Inspirational and stress is laid upon religious education. The morning sessions will be devoted to discussion of religious dramas and pageantry, worship for the times, missionary programs, the layman and his church and normal courses for mission study. Prominent divines and laymen from many states will appear on the program. There- will be 1,500 ,delegates, practically every Presbyterian church In Illinois" to be represented by Its pastor and one or more laymen. The annual convention of the Women's Synodlcal society will be held at the same time. Mr. and Mrs. George Bosler claim the record for farm tenantry, having conducted the Oantz farm, three miles south of Deland, for 85 years. They took charge of the farm altar their marriage. Plans for the business and entertainment section of the Illinois Retail Shoemen's convention in Danville Jane 20, 21 and 22, have been completed. A feature will be the annual style show In which more than 100 of the prettiest girls In the city posseesluii the right kind of flset will par- Mr, and Mrs. Harry Passfield and Mr. and Mrs. L. Eddy And daughter spent Sunday with Mr. anrf Mrs. Ida Peterson and daughters at Marengo Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kuebler of Chicago were Sunday visitors at Ed Lusk's. Mr. and Mrs. J. Brown of Waucon da visited at the Peter Wegner hone Sunday. Mrs. Anna Cumpton is visiting at the home of Grace Kirwin. Arthur Peterson is now driving a Dodge coupe. Mrs. Joe Vogt spent the week in Waukegan with Mrs. K. Fitch. Frank Henkel and Joe Passfield were Sunday callers at Joe Vogt's. Mlrs. G. A. Vasey and daughter, Vera, were Crystal Lake shoppers on Saturday. Mr. and Mb*. L. Fisher and £on were callers at the (J. A. Vasey home Saturday. A Sunday School business meeting was held at Howard Converse's last Thursday evening. Esther Lusk, Vera and Walter Vasey attended the spring festival at Gurnee Friday evening. Mrs. L. Lusk and daughter, Ruth, Mrs. Jim Kirwin and Mrs. G. A. Vasey attended the graduation exercises at McHenry Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Townsend spent Saturday in Waukegan. Howard Converse is driving a new Imperial Chevrolet sedan. The Ed Bacon family found wild Columbine in the .woods Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Strang of Gray slake spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Gussie Townsend. L. V. Lusk has Tented the Mrs. Rowling's farm in Fremont. Mrs. D. C. Townsend has been caring for her mother, Mrs. Nellie Harvey, of Grayslake. There will be a young people's meeting at the Volo M. E. church on Thursday evening, June, 9th. All young people are welcome. Robert Townsend spent the week with his grandmother at Grayslake. Frank and Mary Vogt were Thursday evening visitors at Clifford Benwell's. James Neish spent the week-end with his mother at Wauconda . Mr. and Mrs. William Vanderboom were callers in this neighborhood one day last week. Mjr and Mrs. Douglas Wait are planning a trip to Wisconsin Ithis week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Hiarold Stroker and children of Wauconda spent the weekend at D. V. Wait's. Mrs. Ed Steve and Mrs. Harry Lawson and son, and Mr. and Mrs. Williams of Chicago spent the4 holidays with Levi Wait. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vogt attended the graduation exercises at Antioch on Monday evening. The Levi Wait children %re on the sick list '"""l: - SEED CORN " mraovED leaking rooosa oo&n The kind that grows extra tall and is especially ;; good for silage. Buy now. , I Ml LLER'S STORE Phone il4-E * t ^ McHenry, HL ••Ml<!»»»•< 11| !'»»»»«< East Side Garage GAS and OIL ACCESSORIES Also Moving and Long Distance Hauling HERMAN SCHAEFEB Phone 49 r * T tfttt 11 T ttltt It 11 »»M» i Famom Cam*u>ay T%e Giant's Causeway Is a promontory of closely packed basaltic columns on the coast of Antrim, north Ireland, west of Bengore head, eight miles from Portrush. Its true .origin was a great outpouring of basalt In the Tertiary period, but legend ascribed It to Finn McConl or Flngal, who built It as a bridge between Ireland and Scotland, for the giants tgu cross from Antrim to Staffa. - : Summer Housekeeping Easy Don't put msMless years on your strotriders by sweltering over a hot coal range this summer, when you can enjoy every and advantage of a--- : PERFECTION QUICK MEAL OIL STOVE at a price ranging from $17.50 to $120.00 Come la .and let us show you these stoves. Wm. H. Althoff Another Paradox The tronole with being throws your owa tesources is that It so oftw happens when yon haven*t any. Hardware Phone 65-J West McHenry NASH For the MOST in Value at $1485 -- «-- Buy this Nash £ Hawm?• Own Botanists have discovered on the Hawaiian Islands nearly 700 varieties of plants that are found nowhere else. The reason is apparently that the islands are far from other lands and have been isolated in thls way fw many geologic ages. Ink Stain* on Handt A solution of peroxide ol Ujdr«|ai .containing a few drops of axomosfe t jrtll remove lak states from tbe haMto Search as 70a may among for or around this price. Nowhere elm wtU $1485 buy such VALUE, mich costly, LUXURIOUS quality. NONE have the style. NONEhare aoch high character in finish and fittings. Step into the front eeat and SEE the luxury. A costly walnut effect on the instrument board before you, on the door beaide and behind you. Choice Mohair Velvet upholstery all around, cushioned deeply on the aeats* tailored smartly on the side walla. And when it combes to performance, NOT ONE comes even NEAR this spirited Naah. There is absolutely no comparison! Seeponthei Hor-tndGO! The soft even flow oi power is due to the ultra-modem crankshaft. It has 7 main bearings-- three or four MORE than most other cart. A bearing at every possible place to hold the shaft firm and rigid. It hat BIGGER hearings too--wider and stronger ones. MORE bearing surface than any other Six in its price data. ,thenontheacce!e*' IImm Try a long ateep hill and feel the EXTRA power. Nash straight-line drive sends the power DIRECT from motor to rear axle--no energy wasted by anglet or curves along its route. Bring inyour oldcaras part paymeflitMl a new Special Sedan. Among fine sedans at this pricc, there's nothing to equal thfcNath.Comein--'TODAY--andtea. GEORGE A. STILLING GARAGE McHanrv. minnis

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