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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 27 Sep 1928, p. 2

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t v > "W2 ' . ™ ® S ; ^ j f i t f " f T i t * • ^'"** , tfflS M'HENRY PLAlHDEALEIt, WipPWS •V-'vr^^;y" ' ; r v . - : . - * . ^ • r*;'T. ;.v ', SEPT. 27, 1928 ^ " *** "'" * ' ' 1 " "~f' " ^ * *' 4 '*"' * C *' ^ * »•»•»•»•»•»•»••»»•»»»•»»»•»•»•»»»»»»»»•»»»»•»»»»»•»•» at the text Door to National Tea Co.] • , • . % - . - ' • „ - • • • ^ Pig Pork Roasts ... Boston Style Pork iButts Round Steak Roasts . . , Boiling Beef ^ . . . . . Smoked Meats Swift's Premium Hams . . Sugar Cured Bacon, whole or half . . • • • • • ., • Sugar Cured Smoked Butts Sugar Cured Bacon Squares lb 23c lb 18c CITY COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS Council Room, Sept. 20, 1928. The city aldermen, with Mayor Frett presiding, met Thursday to take up the unfinished bupiness of the adjourned meeting of Sept. 7th. Aldermen present: Bonslett, Doherty, Frisby, Knox, Kreutzer and Stoflfel. 1 Motion by Knox, seconded by Frisby, that the John Ward Co. bill of $2,663.90 be ordered tabled until such time that the city council is satisfied that the sewer system is water tight. Motion carried. Motion by Frisby, seconded by Kreutzer, that the bill of the McHenry Gravel and Excavating Co., of $100 be paid. Motion carried. Motion by Knox, seconded by Stoffel, that the City attorney write the State Highway department in regards to the refund on pavement on Elm street. Motion carried. Motion by Frisby, seconded by Doherty, to ^adjourn till the £all of the mayor. ^Motion carried. j PETER W. FRETT,-*i R. F. CONWAY, Clerk. layor. lb 30c lb 28c lb 38c lb 22c METHODIST CHURCH Services Sunday: HO a. m., Sunday school; 11 a. m., worship, communion erv!?e, sermon, "Jle Answered Him Nothing."^ ^ The services Sunday morning will be Mr. Loughlin's farewell to the McHenry church. i The 1928 session of the Rock River annual conference of the Methodist Episcopal church will convene At the Morgan Park church, Chicago, wjth an opening program Tuesday evening, Oct. 2. During the session reports from ^all the churches in the conference, which covers all of northern Illinois, will be presented, and assignments of ministers for the coming year will be made. Mr. Loughlin will leave Tuesday morning and it is necessary that all financial matters for the year and all details of church business be completed before this time. The market price on all meats at the present time is high. We offer here an opportunity for a saving by taking advantage of these Special Saturday offerings. JOHNSBURG Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Adams and Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith have returned from their trip to Oklahoma and Nebraska. Alex Adams is spending a few weeks at St. Louis, Mo.,- and in Kan- S. , \ ... r fc. p- K:; . ' ' if R Tre Your Preparations NOW To spend next Summer and the following summers in riar & [Beautiful Garden! 0 Fox River's Super Subdivision • /' 4 Buy the lot right now while the .choice selections are available. Then you will be all ready to ( complete the plans before next spring. l Desirable lots, 50 x 150 feet, can be purchased as ld%-as .$750 With a small down payment and four years to finish. 1 • $ We can arrange to finance - the home you want if desired Iji" U Come in and let us talk it over Kent & Company Phone 8 Subdivi4ers and Builders . McHenry,, IH WEEKLY PERSONALS COMERS AND GOERS OF A WEEK IN OUR CITY As Seen By Pl&inde&ler Re . visiters and Handed Itt , >v By Our Friends Ed Boyle spent the week-end in Chicago. \ • P. J. Cleary was a Wauconda visitor Wednesday. . Miss Helen Freund is working- at Winnetka. Miss Lena Stoffii was a Chicago visitor Thursday. S Mrs. Christina Going was a recent Chicago visitor. Mikand Mrs. Will Buchert visited at Richmond Sunday. -- " Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dowevisited in Chicago Sunday. Miss Dorothy Freund is assisting in the Nobby Style shop. Bernie Newman of Chicago spent Sunday at his home here. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Karl's were Waukegan visitors Sunday. DAIRYMEN BEWARE OF WHITE SNAKEROOT "That the white snakeroot plant, when eaten by livestock, causes trembles, and that milk from cows thus poisoned is the cause of milksick, a disease that dually proves fatal, should cause us all to realise that a grave danger exists where this weed grows and cattle graze," Stillman J. Stanard, director of agriculture, warns. "Repeated tests have proven that this weed is poisonous tq cattle," he adds, "and there has been, down through the years, a heavy toll of human life attributed to this mysterious malady. History tells us that the mother of this staters most illustrious citizen, Abrahaqi Lincoln, died of milksick. The Lincoln family, according to tradition, moved to Illinois to escape the hazards that mjlksick presented. "Death from this cause, in recent years, is less frequent than formerly. Many plans have been employed to warn the public of this danger. Yet, deaths occasionally follow the use of milk from diseased cows grazing in woods pastures and the poisonous weed is given as the cause. ' "In an effort to learn more about this menace, and to work out some cure, if possible, this department of Miss Cora Steinsdoerfer 8*«nt few days last week in Chicago. ^ _ MV. and Mrs. George Cronin spent |8tate service) jn the past two summer a few days last week in Chicago. j seasons> carried on experiments Miss Hpzel Bacon visited with her that have been partially successful but sister, Fern, at Waukegan Saturday. | that as yet &re incomplete. Our tests Miss Theresa Karls of Chicago is spending the week at her home here. Rosina and Paul Karls visited with relatives in Chicago over the weekend. Fred Breyer of Chicago spent the have laid the foundation for a cure that we believe eventually, may be successfully developed. "In this experimental project, we are indebted to such eminent specialists as Dr. W. A. Evans, noted health week-end at his cottage at McCollum's authority, and Dr. Bernard Fantus, of Lake. I Medical College. They have Mr. and Mr%T Roy Hankermeyer, of colaborated with us, giving freely of Waukegan were visitors here Monday their time and talent to assist the evening. j state in gaining worth-while informa- Mrs. C. J. Reihansperger and Mrs. tion. } Gerald Carey were Chicago visitors,! "We believe that what we have Monday. . i learned about thife poisota is only a be- Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Senten and ginning. Much remains to be deterlittle son visited in Chicago over the mined. In time, this can and should week-end. - j be done. ' Utitil some means for the Mrs. Elizabeth Gruenfeldt and Mrs.; removal of this poison can be success- A. Gritzmacher attended a funeral in funy developed through some project >:-/*go Friday. i such as the experiments now under Mr. and Mrs. John Buslee and chil- ( way, the weed remains a menace, dren of Park Ridge spent the week-. There will be danger of the fatal ailend at McHenry ^ ^ I merit known as milksick so long as Miss Eleanor Kinsala is enjoying a cattle graze where the weed flourishes vacation from her duties at the Erick- 1 an(j no remedy is available, •on department store. I "To attempt complete eradication of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Justen and Mr.1 the weed seems futile. In some pldces and Mrs. Peter Freund are enjoying a at least, the cost would be prohibitive. tjnotor tripthis week. Mrs. John Fay and Mr. and Mrs. fWalter Fay motored to Lake Geneva, Wis., one day last week. Mrs. A. G. Barbian is enjoying a -two weeks' visit in the home of, her laughter at Detroit, Mich. Mrs. Simon Stoffel and - daughter, Clara, spent several days last week at Aurora and Starved Rock. Mrs. Ellen Bolger, and son, John, were Sunday visitors in the home of Dan Fitzgerald at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. J. Pauly and daughter, Helen, of Elgin were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Barbian. Clarence Niesen, Roy Kent and Albert Barbian have been enjoying a motor trip to Niagara Falls and different interesting points in Canada. Miss Corrinne Petelle of All we can do, 'until more is learned relative to a cure, is warn the public of this dange*. Newspapers, farm advisers and other agencies have cooperated with us in this, and their helpfulness is1 deeply appreciated. Until some better plan is found,' all We can say is beware of woodland pastures. Search shaded places for the weed, and avoid the use of milk that comes dircot from any cow that grazes where the deadly snakeroot grows." was a guest in the home of Mr. ajQd Mrs. Louis McDonald over the week- <fnd. Mr.and Mrs. Leo Zimmer of Palatine .were visiting at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Zimmer, Sun. day. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Renehan and Jason Renehen of Long Lake T^ere guests at the John Boyle home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand J. Frett and daughter of Chicago spent Sunday ivith their parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Frett. Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Mullen and •daughter, Virginia, of Oak Park were Sunday guegts of Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Barbian. Mr. and Mrs. B. Ji' Brefeld and daughter, Theresa, spent a day recent, ly in the Edw. J. Brefeld home in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Hart and children and Mrs. Nick Schaefer of Chicago /Visited relatives fyere over the week-lend. ' N. C. Klein and 'daughters,. Mrs. Ed Voang^nd M^s. Fred Schoewer, attended a surprise party in Chicago on Friday of last w^ek. Mr. and Mrs. Glen Shales and children of DesPlaines visited in the home cf her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. E: Barbian, on Sunday. Attorney and Mrs. A. C. Kelly and son, James, and Mr. and Mrs. James Carlin of Chicago were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Schreiner. Miss Gertrude May returned home Friday, after spending several days last week in the home of her sister, Mrs Albert Rosing, at Libertyville. A. E. Nye and Herman Nye left' Wednesday morning on a motor trip to Ohio, where they will visit with relatives. They will continue on a trip through Canada before their return. * Miss Mary F. Knox, teacher at the Clemens school }s quite ill at h*r home on Green street and is under the care of a trained nurse. Mrs. John R. Knox is substituting at the Clemens &chool. i Mr. and Mrs. Earl Monear, in company with Mr. and Mrs. James Jackion of Solon spent several days la^t week at Rockford, la., where they visited with relatives. They report the roj;s and the state in general as looking, fine and the trip an enjoyable one. Mf; and Mrs. Will Buchert were Elgin visitors Friday, at which time ihey called on tfce latter's brother, Charles, at the Sherman hospital, where he is recovering from injuries received while working in a gravel pit at Crystal Lake, Miss Maud Curr spent' Friday in Chicago as a guest in the home of Mrs. Harold Graham Smith, former-: -ly Miss Margaret Stenger, She enjoyed a most delightful visit with her Old friend and former pupil, who isE Very happily situated in a beautiful tiome over which she presides in a charmiag efficient manner. Hikers' Club Mrs. T. J. Walsh was hostess to the members of the Hikers' club at her home Tuesday afternoon. A pleasant afternoon was spent at bridge and the first prize was won by Mrs. Minnie Miller and the second prize by Mrs. Chicago' George Kuhn. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. A. C. Reynolds j-i The t "IIP; Home Paper" 1 Council Bluffs, la. Sept. 1, 1928. enry Plaindealer, - * ^ McHenry, 111. Gentlemen: , -» ' - . - • Am herewith enclosing check of $2.00 in payment of my subscription to what I call "my home paper." Although I have been living away from there for over 52 years it siill seems like home and I find a great deal 10 news in tfce Plaindealei> Yours very .truiy, F. J. SCHNORR. Don't delay too long in laying in * supply of cotton and wool blanket^* Select thefn riow while our stock tocomplete. Erickson Dept. Store. • A room to rent? Adrertia« H ift our classified department. ; :X WEST SIDE GARAGE Adani Btn., TeL 185 General Automobile Repairing % Bes. Phone, 639-E-2 Bowman's Milk contains the food elements that help build boys into big, healthy men. A phone call to 660-R-l will assure you receiving a fresh supply each day. We handle nothing but Bowman's Pasteurised ind Degreed Producil Community Dairy Ben J. Smith, Prop. Plaindealers at Bolger's. jti 'Hfenamfflaf ftmi/vrtofl** fCHEVROLET! This Car h«» beta carefully checked •• shown by v mark* below OCA v Motor V Radiator v-Rear Axle V Start! Lighting v Ignition Reconditioned to Assure Thousands of Miles of Dependable, Satisf a c t o r y S e r v i c e Due to the (rea( popularity of th« Bigger and Better Chevrolet in thi* community, we have now in stock tome reconditioned used can net represent exceptional values. These can have been thoroughly inspected by our #tpert mechanics and completely reconditioned whertver necessary. They are good for thou* mnds of miles of satisfactory service. And be> they are sold under the famous Chevro ™ KedO.K.Tagsy«t<em, you can buy them with the utmost con&tkncti assured of their Voidability sad qualky. See *m can today. few of our exceptional used Gar Valu«t "with .an OK that founts" - J 8tudebak«r Special Six Touring 1928 Chevrolet Coupe, A-l Condition 19X7 One-Ton Chevrolet Truck, with stake body' 1927 One-Ton Chevrolet Truck, Chassis and Cab ; Hettermann Motor Sales Phww 191 West McHenry Satisfaction and Honest Value • £ - k * ' ' * ' 'l ""-'Ux- '• / .• ' ~ : • • ' > ' - y , ' •• »

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