McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Jul 1927, p. 7

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.'i: "#• JUNOWOOD Mb. Lnris Hawley and daughter, Irley, spent Saturday afternoon at McHenry. , Mrs. Ray Barthoff and daughter, uelah of Richmond spent Friday afernoon in the C. D. Bacon home. Mrs. George Bacon and Mrs. Leslie elson of Antioch spent one after- . |ioon this week irt Ringwood. . Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bacon spent • ? feunday in the home of their grand- < daughter, Mrs. John Wolfe find fam- * '- illy of Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. George Sprenzel of "Chicago spent Sunday with Mr# and Mrs. Lewis Hawley.. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal are entertaining relatives from Chicago over v . the holiday. Mrs. Lewis Schroeder and daughter, Jessie, were recent callers fn Hebron. Little Irene and Marion*- Hopper " Ivho have been visiting their grandmother have returned to their home •; "/-'-In Crystal Lake. 4 v ^ Mir. and Mrs. Elonzo Smith and 't:- v/jamily and Mr. and Mrs. Chancey V garrison and family spent Sunday . i :-;1vith Mr. and M^s. Roy Harrison and /'. family, * Mr. and Mrs. George Noble and 'amily spent Sunday in the S. H. eatty home. Mrs. Prankie Stephensen spent • ' \ ^Sunday and Monday in the home of |4r. and Mrs. Robert MbLean of Wood- ^•:>.^tock. • Mr and Mrs. H. B. Gaston and amily of Antioch spent Sunday in he home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank itchens. Mir. and Mrs. Allie Hawley of Elgin spent Sunday in the home of Iris brother, E. C. Hawley. Mir. and Mirs. Maxwell Beth and •on, Billy, spent Sunday evening in Greenwood. BAr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and two children of Deerfield spent the Jpourth in the S H. Beatty home. Mrs. Lewis Schroeder and Mrs. Wm. 'jprown spent one afternoon this week it Williams Bay. Mr. and Mrs. William McCannon and Mrs. Emma Merchant and granddaughter, Darlyne, spent the weekend at Greenwood. James Bell and Jack Kuntz of Chiifai I nwrffffrf of the UMVHtSAL COOLERisdue to its Supreme QuafiftMlow cost THERE no ic _ any need for you to deny yourself the priceless advantages of clcotrical refrigeration. The Universal Cooler, a quality product in design and construction, offers you modern, cleanly, trouble "Cm* refrigeration at an exceptionally low cost. JUniversal Cooler is positive and automatic in action, quiet in operation and so simple there is practically nothing - to get out of order. You can have The Universal Cooler in a fine •elf - contained dueofinished metal cabinet or you can have the electrical refrigerating units installed in your present ice box. In ,either case. Universal Cooler will meet your need fully, satisfactorily and economically. Universal Cooler ii moderate in price, negligible in upkeep cost, purchasable on easy See Universal Coalv today ™ iWUWfecraol CootoMb m Universal Ncsd. 8m the Universal Cooler on Dm* owtntioB at oar Store H. E. Buch & Co. fci- : mhyUihMCoilirOsp) : 4-;% eago called in Ringwood on Monday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young and daughters spent Tuesday evening in Antioch visiting relatives. The Jolly Sitxeen Bunco club" met at the home of Mrs. Steven Ingalls After several games of bunco were played, the first prize went to Mr >. William McCannon, second to Mrs. George Worts, third to* Mrs. Claus Larsen and consolation to Mrs. Edgar Thomas. It being the anniversary of Mrs. Ingall's birthday, the club presented her with a beautiful gift. The next meeting will be with Mrs. Viola I .owe. Miss Frances Young and sister spent Thursday with Mrs. Viola Ingalls. Mr, and Mrs. Lewis Shcroeder and daughter, Jessie, spent the Fourth out of town. Mir. and Mrs. Raymond Wagner and family of Chicago spent Saturday with their aunt, Mrs. Nick Young and family. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young spent Sunday with Mrs. Walter Huff and family. Joseph Young and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Matt Shaid. Mk^s. Karl Bradley and children spent Sunday and Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Heimer of McHenry. Mrs. Paul Meyers, Mjre. Harry Kist and Mrs. Pat Moriarty of Chicago spent Monday with Mr. and Mta. Ed Thompson. Nick Young, Charles Olsen and Albert Schaefer spent Tuesday in Milwaukee. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinze of N. Crystal Lake spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, George Harrison. Mrs. Clay Rager and daughter, Mae, who have been visiting ""three weeks in South Dakota have returned home. William Giddings spent the weekend with Hebron relatives. Mrs. Robert Antcliff of Hebron spent Tuesday in Ringwood. Miss Dorothy Carr of Chicago spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr. Mirs. Frankie Stephensen spent Tuesday laftemoon on the Charles Carr farm. Mrs. John McDonald and daughter, Nellie, of Keystone spent Wednesday in Ringwood. Fred Shaw of McHenry spent Wednesday afternoon with his daughter, Mrs. Lewis Hawley. Mr. and Mrs. Clay Hughes spent Wednesday evening at McHenry. Mrs. S. W. Brown spent Wednesday afternoon in McHenry. Kirk Harrison of Elgin was a Ringwood caller on Wednesday afternoon. Virginia Welter spent a few days this week at Spring Grove. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr were Woodstock callers, recently. Mr. and Mrs. H. Ober and children of Richmond spent Sunday evening with Mr. and Mrs. George Young. Mrs. Nick Freund and Mrs. George Young spent Friday afternoon in McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. John Shofteg and Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Hoik of Crystal Lake, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Weingart, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Buss, Mr. and Mrs. Pete Weber of McHenry spent Saturday evening in the George Young home. Mirs. Herrick of^Twin Lakes was a caller at Fred Weidrick's Wednesday. Fred Weidrick and three sons spent Sunday with friends at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Benwell and family spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. C. Jepson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Huson and Mr. and Mrs. Crocker of Libertyville spent Sunday with C. J. Jepson and family. Ralph Young and Gerald Meyers of McHenry spent a few days this week with Frank Young. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beatty entertained the following friends Sunday: Mir. and Mrs. Clyde Duggan of Brookfield, Mr. and Mrs. George Wilson and son of Woodstock, Mr. and Mrs. William Hendrickson and Mrs. Eva Perkins of Richmond and Mrs. Elmer Olsen. Mr. and Mrs. H. Miller of Sharon spent Sunday with Grandma and Frank Weidrick. Mrs. Robert Antcliff of Hebron spent Tuesday in Ringwood. Abe Miller and son, Sigmund, of Elgin were Friday callers in Ringwood. Mrs. Emma Merchant spent Friday with her mother, Mrs. Lewis McCannon of Greenwood. About $200 was cleared at the cafeteria supper held in the M. W. A. hall on Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe McCannon and family were Wednesday evening callers in the home of Mrs. Emma Merchant. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hayes and children of Minneapolis are visiting her mother, Mrs. Ellen Whiting. Mr. and Mrs. Wheeler of McHenry called in Ringwood on Friday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Bacon of N. Crystal Lake spent Friday afternoon in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Carlson have returned home from visiting relatives in Wisconsin. Henry Vogel of Richmond was a Ringwood caller on Friday morning. Mrs. Jennie Cushman entertained her daughter, Merle, of Eight on Thursday evening, Mks. Ray Peters is visiting her brother at Belvidere for the remainder of the week. Dave Hodges and Adrian Thomas -are leaving for a two week's vacation with relatives at Erie, Pa. Miss Flossie Carey of Florida is visiting her sister,/TBfs. Thomas Doheity. Mrs. Frank HitcheHs spent Friday in Chicago. 0* This is a store where men can be outfitted as well as women and children. A store for the whole family. Erickson Dept. Store. ;f ILLINOIS! State News I .#l«ur in Indaatry Ftrrr IK the name applied to any substance which is used in the smelfr log furnace to gather up the foreign substance and to form it into a kind of scam, which can be easily removed, leaving the pure metal behind. Thus, In smelting iron, sand and limestone are mixed with the ore for the por> pose of forming a flax. . i n n m n t i n i i M M n m Le Salle is preparing to celebrate the seventy-fifth anniversary of Its 'incorporation on August 4. An extensive program is being formulated. With the city of West Frankfort In debt $146,177.58, the council voted to submit to an election the propo-1 sltlon of bonding the city for funds to pay off the debt. • Thomas Williams, seventy-two, a worker in the Salvation Army for 65 years, was killed in Rockford by a fall into an elevator shaft at the Thayer Action plant. The First National bank of Farmereville, organized in 1910, is In the hands of national bank examiners. It had loans of $100,000. Bad crops and decreasing land values were given as reasons for the failure. , Burton Brooks of Chicago pleaded guilty to forgery in Cambridge' and was sentenced to Joliet for one to fourteen years. Brooks had 'drawn a fraudulent check of $10 on the Savings Bank of Kewanee against the account of Frank Kirley. Ralph Van Vechien, president of the State Bank of Chicago, and for more than two decades one of the prominent figures fn Chicago financial affairs, died at his home. For more than a year Mr. Van Vechten, who .was nearly sixty-five years old, had been in poor health. A wife and eight children await the return home of Joseph Hrejsa to Villa Park. Because of debts he deserted them May 22, A. W. Bruhn, juvenile investigator for DuPage county, said. Bruhn stated investigation showed Hrejsa had many friends who would belp him and that creditors were willing to wait. Two armed men gained entrance to the home of Mrs. Fanny Bishop Henderson, seventy-eight years old, in Aurora, one of that city's wealthiest women, bound Mrs. Henderson and ,her maid, Mrs. Ada Itoyer, to chairs, gagged them, and then robbed the house of %300 in cash and, more than $20,000 in jewelry. , Four years of university work and 118 hours with a grade of A out of her total of 123 hours, is the record of Esther Barnett, Decatur, just graduated from the liberal arts school of James Millikin university. Talbot Hood of Cairo was not far behind and had a total of 110 hours of A and ten hours of B. Both of them were graduated "surama cum lauded Elmer Wehunt, a farmer near Mount Vernon, called Sheriff Hal Smith by telephone and told him he had just killed Lora Wicks, a neighbor, and wanted to surrender. Wehunt fired one shot with a rifle at Wicks Tn a quarrel, in which he charged Wicks with visiting his home while he was absent. Both men aremarried and have children. William McNeal, alias William mown, a section hand arrested on a tip from a farmer that he was missing the day the Farmers' State bank at Bismarck was robbed, June 1, was bound over to the grund jury in Danville. Brown's wife, also arrested, has been released. She spent over $100 for clothing in $1 bills after the holdup. Only $1 bills were taken la the robbery. A pHotless airplane, carrying a woman passenger, bopped over 200 yards on the Lincoln park flying field in Galesburg before it crashed Into a barbed wire fence and smashed its propeiior on a parked automobile. Ned Hatch, the pilot and owner, had seated the woman passenger, and then twisted the propeiior. Then as be .was about to aasist other passengers to the plane it sped away. A coroner's jury, investigating the .death of Mrs. Lory Price, whose body was found in an abandoned coal mine near Marlon, returned an open verdict in the case after two weeks' delay. The Jurors said they were forced to return an open verdict because of the failure of Franklin county authorities to co-operate in the furnishing of witnesses held there, who were needed for testimony before the coroner's Jury. James £. Corcoran, chief of the Joliet police department, was re-elected president of the Illinois Police association at the convention held at La Salle. No convention city for next year was named, although Moline and Quincy extended invitations. Other officers elected, were: T. M. Rohan. Chicago, financial secretary; Daniel A. O'Hara, treasurer ; Samuel Henderson, sergeant at arms. The vice presidents are Frank E. Clark, Chicago; M. A. Clifford, Venice; E. J. Leitner, Peoria; R. S. Berry, Hock Island; John lverson, Winnetka; Frank Michels, Aurora; Barney Koseol>erg. Chicago ; John W. Golden. Springfield and Herbert Wilklns of Chicago. Dedication of the bronse statue of Abraham Lincoln in Urbana attracted a distingunshed assemblage. Dr. William E. Barton of Boston, author of "The Life of Lincoln" and a foremost authority, delivered the principal address. Lora do Taft, sculptor of the statue, spoke upon Its subject. The Tounger Lincoln." The unveiling was by Mrs. Annetta Ayers Saunders of Chicago, niece of the donor of the statue, the late Judge J. O. Cunning bam. Judge Franklin H. Boggs, one ,.T the trustees of the statue fund, piesided. knitting good. Last reports some of the broken bones were not doing so well. Ray Thomas and wife and baby eirl, Waneta, were over night visitors in tile Kaiser home. The milk produced at Henry Ho- Hart's farm now goes to Chemung, a truck ifrom that place calls every morning for it. Henry Hobart, wife and son, Roy, celebrated at Greenwood, July 4th. The little town was full. Earl Sherman and wife and children and Paul Hilderbrand and family spent July 4th at Crysatl Lake. They report an immense crowd in attendance there. Our grocery department is filled "with all the wants of the campers. We carry a full line of fresh vegetables and fruit, also smoked meats. Erickson Dept. Store. • " C*- < « ! v &.I W: «KS "Does a fisherman ever tell the truth?" *Yes, when he calls another fisherman a liar.".. ..Kansas City Star. The 54th Annual Graduating Class and women, shown above. The exer- colleges of the system uniting: in'the of the Metropolitan Business College, cises were held in the Municipal Pier occasion. - Chicago, numbered 819 young men Auditorium, June 17th, all of the 15 J ^ ORDER YOIIR RU^ER STAI9TS JH1 TBE OFFICE \ eeA Picture is worm a Million Words" Just open up a newspaper and see which advertisements first catch your eye. Isn't it the ones with pictures in Sure!--We all like to look at pictures. And after we see the picture we want to know what the ad says. 0STEND Mrs. Hoppe and son are now riding in a new automobile. P. W. Freund and wife attended a dancing party the evening of July 4,, Farmers are all very busy with harvesting hay, every spare moment between putting in barns is used in cultivating corn. Henry Hobart has several acres of fine hay he would like some one else to cut. Not so good reports from C. E. Jecks this week. Last week reports ho was, 4ms fine, a»d hemes ad service, including cut and copy, is, FREE. The cost of this service alone frequently equals the entity cost of your ad in this papery Phone 170 and we'll show you .!; V'V; •\v ; . y. V;

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