McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jun 1927, p. 2

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

RINGWOOD • tli«odore SduodibMV and §2*W soa, Peter, of Belvidere, spent Tossf, ' feV; day afternoon with her daughter, 4&rs. H. E. Kelley. Mrs. Lewis Hawlsy spent Wi day in Chicago. • "V* 's / East Side Garage ^oAB^onS'mm ACCESSORIES ^ "3d' - Also Moving and Long Distance Hauling HERMAN SCHAEFER Phone 49 FP-4:% ?Sv" k*i& J i for BUNIONS Hew 9bm-- With J*y You can do it with JIFFY, A home treatmeJ&:; thin as paper, easily applied; and it stops the growth. Absolutely guaranteed, and you are the only judge. Also Jiffy for. Ckwns and Callouses. Each 25c. "« r - ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED Thomas V . Bolter M£:- Wi,voh -W'-'H i'tr }•' ) : $ 'rj 'fi ' W. Stop Heat Loss Thru the L 65f0 of heat loss in ordinary houses is thru the roof You can prevent this needless fuel waste with Thar* mofill, the Dry Fill Insulation. Installed simply by pouring (dry) into the space to be insulated. You can do the work yourself if you wish. Thermofill is gypsum. It can't burn or decompose and will not harbor vermin. It offers maximum insulation because of the large number of dead air cells and the excellence of gypsum as a non-conductor. The cost is low* THERMOFUl The Dry Fill Insulation McHenry Lumber Co. Phone 46 West McHenry 344,679 car owners •ay BuickwiH be tkrirnexX car A gemisi mad impartial mitrey of saoendy conducted bjr a great ocganizatioa, show* tlMt 344^679 owners of other CMS intend to chafes to Brick Mat time they boy a cat. These owners have compared <•--« with Bukk«4i p^f^wnc^mtCTOomy, in comfort, horary and it ponds Basmiaa a Buid at your earliest o|i|miti--iiy. Rnd eat why so many owners of other cars are < i.«^i to Boick everyday. rHBN BBTTBR AUTOMOBILBS ARB BUILT# BUIGK WILL BUILD THBM S" 1 Overton & Cowen Snick Dealers Wee MJss t*ra Harrison of Evanstan spent Tuesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. The Dorcas society of Greenwood and the Home Circle of Ringwood will hold a joint picnic at Barnard's Mills, July 18. Everybody welcome. Mrs. C. J. Jepson and daughter, Virginia, were guests of Libertyville relatives, Sunday. Mrs. Gus Parson and Mrs. C. A. Miatsen were Woodstock callers on Wednesday. Mrs. Steve Ingalls of -Spring Grove spent Thursday morning in Ringwood. Miss Mildred Lynch spent Tuesday evening and Wednesday with Miss Prances Young. Mrs, Caroline Schiessle of MfcHenry spent Monday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Young. Mr. and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin spent Wednesday afternoon at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. George Noble and family were Wbodsfeock visitors on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Prank Lawson of Elgin spent Sunday evening with Mfr. and M>rs. George Young. Mrs. Joseph Wegener and daughter Marion, of West McHenry spent Thursday with her mother, Mrs. Abe Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. John W. Bell of Hartford, Michigan, spent a few days this week in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. George Sprenzel of Chicago spent Friday in the Lewis Hawley home. MSr. and MVs. Maxwell Beth and son, William Henry, of Irving Park are spending a few weeks vacation with his father, W. J. Beth. MJrs. William Roth and two daughters who have been visiting her have returned to Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young and daughter, Adele, of Ringwood and Mr. Joseph Weber of McHenry attended the wedding of her neice, in Chicago on Saturday, returning home Sunday night. Mr. and Mrs. Colby Moss of Libertyville spent Wednesday evening with Mrs. Ruth Hopper. Mrs. Paul Meyers and Mrs Roy Smith of MfcHenry spent Friday with Mrs. Nick Young. Mrs. Ed Thompson, -entertained friends from Elgin Saturday and Sunday. Miss Viola Ingalls of Spring Grove spent Thursday with Miss Frances Young. Henry Heimer of McHenry spent Friday with his daughter, Mrs. Karl Bradley and family. Mir. and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Sunday in the Charles Bacon home. The Jolly Sixteen Bunco dab were entertained at the home of Mrs. William Thomas of Woodstock. After several games of bunco were played, the first prize was won by Dorothy Peet, second by Mis. George Worts, third by Miss Viola Lowe and consolation by Mrs. William MjcCannon. Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell Beth and son, William, Henry and Cora Beth, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack McLaughlin, and daughter, Julia, are spending a few days at the Dells of Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hawley and M!r. and Mrs. Lewis Hawley and two daughters, Shirley and Marion, spent Sunday at Crystal Lake. Eugene Oxtoby of Spring Grove spent a few days this week in Ringwood. Mrs. Florence Smith and Mrs. Jessie Smith are enjoying a several week's trip through California and Oregon. Mrs. William Kelley and .Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Kelley and daughter, Betty Lou, spent Sunday afternoon at English Prairie. Mk*s. Lewis Schroeder and daughter Jessie, and Mrs Ray McAndrews and Miss Mary McAndrews of Woodstock spent Tuesday afternoon in Elgin. Miss Nellie Roe who has been spending a few days with Miss Viola Rager has returned to her home in Genoa City. Mir. and Mrs. Henry Williams spent Monday in Johnsburg. Mrs. Charles Stephensen who spent the week-end in Woodstock has returned home. Nick Freund of McHenry called on Ringwood friends Tuesday. Mrs. William Dodge who has been visiting her daughters in Canada and Michigan has returned home. Mrs. Clay Hughes and Mr*. Jennie Cossman spent Tuesday morning in Woodstock. Mir, and Mrs. Roy Neal entertained friends over the week-end. Miss Viola Rager was a Waukegan caller on Monday afternoon. Mk*. and Mrs. H. E. Kelley and daughter, Betty Lou, were Monday, afternoon callers in Greenwood. Miss Dorothy Howard of Kenosha is visiting in the Ray Merchant home. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Merchant were recent callers in Ringwood. Miss Frances Helms spent Sunday afternoon at Waukegan and Zion City. Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Carr and family of Ostend were Sunday callers in the D. A. Abbott home. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and two children were Sunday callers in the W. A. Dodge home. Mr. and Mrs. .C H. Carr spent Sunday afternoon at the County-Seat. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Sanborn of Spring Grove spent Sunday afternoon in the D. A. Abbot home. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Oxtoby and children of Sprign Grove spent Sunday afternoon in the ML L. Welter home. The Pentecostal sunday school from Ringwood, Genoa City and Keystone held their picnic at Barnard's Mills on Saturday, June 25th. C. J Balfe, Chaplain of the Bridewell in Chicago gave the children a fine address. A fine crowd was in attend ance and a good time was had by all. Robert Thompson of Chicago spent the week-end with his children Bobby and Alice at the Ellen Hall home. C. J. Balfe, chaplain of the Bridewell of Chicago, will give a very interesting meeting and talk at the Keystone school house on Sunday afternoon, July 3, 1927. Everyone is cordially invited to attend at 2:80 o'clock. Have you seen our attractive line of hosiery? All the new colors and styles can be had at Erickaon Dept. INCOME TAX YIELD SHOWS AN ADVANCE lor If*9 Thirty Million Dollars Over That ef 1928. Washington,--Substantial Increases la revenue from taxes on Individual and corporation earnings for the calendar year of 1925. in spite of rate reductions and new exemptions allowed In the 1926 revenue act under which the returns were Hied, are reported ia statistics of Income mode public by the bareea of Internal revenue. The analysis shows that although, as a result of Increased personal exemptions granted In the 1920 act, both the number of Individual returns and the total net Income reported were greatly reduced, there was an increase of $30,289,793, or 4.3 per cent In the total tax assessed. The number of returns filed was 4,171.051, the aggregate net Income reported was $21,894,576,403 and the net tax was $734,555,183. As compared with the returns filed for the calendar year 1924, the returns for 1925 Show a decrease number of 3,198,737, or 43.40 per cim and a decrease in the total, net in* come of $3,761,577,051. or 14.0(1 per cent The average net Income in 11)25 was $5,240.16, the average'amount of tax was $176.11, and the average tax rate was 3.35 per cent, as compared to the preceding year, when the average net Income was $3,481.26, the average amount of tax $95.56, and the average tax rate 2.74 per cent. The number of corporations filing Income tax returns was 430,072. of which 252,334 reported net Income amounting to $9,583,683,097, on which they were to pay taxes aggregating "$1,170,331,206. For the preceding calendar -year the number of corporation returns was 417,421, of which 236.389 reported net income aggregating $7,580,652,292, on which the taxes were fixed at $891,549,546. Leaders Not in Accord a* to Tax Redaction Washington.--Slight hope for a substantial tax reduction In 1928 Is held out by Representative William R. Green (Rep., Iowa), chairman of the house ways and means committee, who arrived In Washington to confer with Secretary Mellon. Present indications, according to Mr. Green, are that, if there is any surplus in the national treasury at the end of the fiscal year, June 30, It will not be large enough to permit such reductions as were made In the last revenue bill, which authorized cuts aggregating $400,000,000. In this view Mr. Green takes sharp issue with other Republican leaders, notably Senators Edge (Rep., N. J.) and Reed (Rep., Pa.), who have predicted a surplus exceeding $300,000,- 000, and probably running as high as $400,000,000. NEW" NSW MEANING Urge* Canada to Pwuh St,- Lawrence Seaway Niagara Falls, Ont.--C. Alfred Magulre, member of the Ontario hydroelectric power commission, voiced a demand on the Canadian federal government- here for prompt and favorable consideration of the St. Lawrence seaway project. Mr. Maguire, who, because of his commissionshlp, can be regarded as speaking for the Ontario provincial government, called upon the Joint On atrio hydro-power and utilities organization In convention, to do everything In their power to push the seaway. He suggested an immediate International conference to talk business. Car Aatfcerity Tells Haw New Is Dedge Brothers Six Dodge Brothers Six, preempting the center of the automotive stage, is being warmly greeted as a happy expression of the progressive spirit of the organization that produced it. Orders are being rapidly booked end this smart and sprightly new arrival will soon be a conspicuous figure in the passing motor car parade. * Though long in preparation, thd Senior, as the new product is designated. is Dodge Brothers first con-i tribution to the six cylinder motoring. It is, therefore, a completely new car, but the word new as applied to the Senior has an even wider meaning than is usually associated with it i The Six, first of all, represents * new chapter in Dodge Brothers history. It also reflects the new spirit of the times, the new tendency toward a joyous freedom in decorative design and finish and the new demands of buyers who, rather than the manufacturers, now dominate the market. Niran Bates Pope, who for years has made an intimate professional study of all cars as fast as they come out, says o£ Dodge Brothers Six: "Every structural detail that is visible conveys the idea of the rugged and permanent type of car that has always been associated with Dodge Brothers name, but withal a car so new and so different as to stand entirely in a class by itself." M}r Pope, in his exhaustive article in Automobile Topics, has much to say on the subject of "newness" emphasizing not only new features as expressed in the car itself, but also the new plant where it is made and the new manufacturing methods that produce it. Mr. Pope says: It is a new car in every way, built in a brand-new plant entirely separate from all the other establishments of this huge business. In this plant alone Dodge Brothers had already invested four and one half millions of dollars before a single car was shipped. "The new idea in manufacturing motor cars is entirely different and demands not only flexibility in specifications but flexibility in manufacturing programs and schedules to a degree never before contemplated. Thus the new plant from which the Senior is being sent forth is quite a little study in itself. This huge independent establishment is the very embodiment of the new spirit that today pervades the Dodge Brothers organization. It is 1900 feet long and 225 feet wide, for the greater part of its length, with loading docks inside of its own four walls. Adjoining the plant is its own mile-long test track, around which streams an endless procession or one-way traffic Senior Sedans on their way out. "This addition of more than 500,- 000 square feet of manufacturing space, raised Dodge Brothers total plant area to 6,068,000 square feet of floor space, or something like 140 acres. "Plant Six is not only newly equipped. Dodge Brothers always have been one of the most forwardlooking organizations in the industry so far as the development of new machinery and the adoption of new methods of manufacture have been concerned. Thus while the mm rifld >ng tke character ef tfce the graateet fidelity, it hiiffeeen passible to go on improving from time to time without muring prices beyond the range of quality market. VThis characteristic eagerness for finding new things to do and new ways to do aH things has never been more evident in the factory titon it is today It ramifies in every direction and crops up in all sects of ways is the •MiiinfsBtlus ef Ae latest Hedge Brothers product--the Six--which has t i n m a r k e t . ^ isc m, "<3 < >7*^ Her Choice The modern girl wheo called to chooee between sn and aa excel l«at Jeb felly--and takes the fearg Telegraph. • f. .. -PERMANENT WAVING done fry H&- OPKKATOK8 ONLY J' Claire Beauty Shopped Main Street One Block West of Community High 8choql ALL BEAUTY WORK DOKZ .- ^ " For Appointments Call 208-R - • * ^* 1-- -'i. Phone 100 Grayslake, HL HART-PARR TRACTORS, X-B and JOHN DEERE PLOWS and DISCS, WOOD BROS, and J. I. CASE TH&JSSHERS, U. S. HUSKERS, ORAIN JUJC- ' ? V4T0RS AND DRIVE BELTS WE& Hudson and Essex Cars Schuneman Will Have Charge of Building9 Washington.--Supervision of the Inrevenue bureau Is to be transferred from Assistant Secretary Schuneman To Under Secretary ^Jills, and Schuneman will devote his entire time to the $160,000,000 treasury building program which contemplates erection of federal buildings and Improvements in every state. Mr. Mills also will assume Jurlsdictton over the gfflce of chief clerk of the treasury, but will relinquish super vision of the federal farm loan board. Secretary Mellon is saI3 to feel that the building program Is s gigantic task that will require the undivided attention of one man. Big Sale of Fox 25,000 to 30,000 per week CASH AND CARRY PRICES FOR MAY, Barred Rocks, White Rocks, Buff Orpingtons, White Wyandottes, Rhode Island Reds, per hundred ^ : 1 $12.00 White Leghorns, per hundreds*. Brown Leghorns, Anconas, .111.00 Salesroom open TNieiiljr^ Fridiy nights during May FOX RIVER HATCHERY Telephone 1537 63 Grove Ave., Elgin, HI. Robineon Named Chief Investigator for Drys Washington.--W. B. Robinson, formerly chief of the Washington division, Internal revenue special Intelligence service, was appointed chief Investigator for the prohibition bureau. He succeeds Philip Ilamlln, who will return to Boston as assistant administrator. < Heeds Disabled Vmt El . Paso, Texas.--William H. Tate of Atlanta, department commander of Georgia, has been elected national commander of Disabled American Veterans. Denver was awarded the 1926 convention. Oust Trotxky and Zinovle0 Moscow.--Leon Trotsky and (in-gory Zinovleff have been dismissed from the central committee of Uie All-Russlan Communist party for violating party discipline. insects Resist Famigatiem k great variation has been found In the resistance of different species ef Insects to carbon dlsulphlde fumigation. In s saturated atmosphere of dlsulphlde st about 90 degrees Fahrenheit, a bumblebee will die In a few seconds, while the saw-toothed grata beetle will live twe fcouni. in Haegele's Hickory Point Subdivision ' on! Shore of Beautiful Lake Elizabeth and ALL LARGE LOTS Or any other dfcy; there Is a man w tlifniindJt ill timas cheerfully give yon full information ~ v ' HAEGELE'S HICKORY POINT is juat 12 milei from McHenry, between Genoa Junction and Twin Lakes, Wisconsin. Terms to Suit YOU! Every lot TAnHing has privilege of a Beautiful Bathing ALL IMPROVEMENTS IN and Boat Chtm a Home on the Shore of 'Beautiful Lake Elizabeth .•'•v IttL. ,_'ki Fair Test esry good Intelligence test |s a tweatydoftar bU ta year pocket Ms,' "Jr --V-" "hml ... ...' .. I.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy