VOLO 1 r m 1 " ""* 'y'Ww^ "»uw^ #wfpuiii^^ws? «w •'• •jpifc1-; §£i;nw-^ "-*». : " • ' ^ '* V"' ' \ - '" ' THE M HENRY PLAIHDEALER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1928 s m - •„ :-J.. #.JN«.v <*«» 1 17 •- Mrs. S<Am Kirwan mot to Elgin Monday to spend a few days with Ci her sisters, Mis^ Anna Compton and V „••,•»;' Mrs. Martha Simons. ['•;'«• ?*} Mrs. Jake Wagner is ill. £•£•£.•5" William Hanson of Chicago spent ||Sunday with his sister, Mrs. Peter p' Stadtfield. r ) Mr. and Mrs. Hanson of near Madi- • J - son are visiting with their daughters, A* , Mrs. Earl Townsend at Richmond and > Mrs. Peter Stadtfield of Volo. ' Miss Margaret Wagner, who is atl • • tending school in Chicago spent the |;v week-end with her parents here. Mr. and Mrs. Hoessler attended a party at Barrington Saturday night. Misses Codella and Agnes gave • shower in honor of their aunt, Helen Wagner, at their home Sunday night. Catherine and Alice McGuire of Highland Lake attend the Catholic school here again this yeAr. They go back and forth on the bus. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oaks sad family of Chicago spent Sunday wi$k Mrs. Oaks' relatives, the Rossdeutchers. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Frost of Cht cago visited the former's mother, Mra* Kate Frost, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Bowman, who have been working for Charles Rossdeutcher, have gone back to the city. 'C. G. Brainard has traded the VaUdenboom farm for a Waukegan flat building. Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker of Crystal Lake spent Sunday at the G. A. Vasey home. Mrs. Levi Wait is supertendent of the missionary department of the M. E. Sunday school at Grayslake. She gives a missionary talk once a month. « i Miss Mary Vogt is helping Mr*. Fred Converse for a few days. The following ladies met at the heme of Mrs. Alvin Case last?- Thursday afternoon to make plans for work for the church for the coming year: Mesdames Ed Bacon, T. Bacon, Lloyd Fisher, Esse Fisher, T. Fisher, L. Lusk, Harry Passfield,^ D. V. Wa;^ Levi Wait, Leslie Davis, and Miss Emma Bacon. They decided to start writing news for the papers again, each taking their turn and the others helping. By so doing they earn nearly $100 a year for their church. If yon know any news the ladies will be very grateful to you if you will call either Mrs. Harry Passfield, Mrs. Lusk, or Mrs.'Levi Wait. Blanche and Nelson Converse drive to school at Libertyville in their new Buick coupe. Blanche is a sophomore in high school and Nelson is in the 8th grade. Hazel Townsend, Frank Vogt, Flor ence Benwell, Esther Lusk and Mary Era' Pence, who lives on the Vanden boom farm, all go to Warren township high school on the bus. Laura Weiser and Priscilla Wagner go to a Catholic school at Woodstock on the North Shore bus. Clarence Hironimus, Beatrice Wilson and Edward Wegener drive to Wauconda to school. Herman Berg is teaching the Fort Hill school. This is his second year. Miss Marie Shippen is back at the Brick school. She boards at the Roy Pence home on the Vandenboom farm. Earl Paddock, Herb. Davis, A. B. Combs and Mr. Vanderspool are send iag their milk to a Chicago market Tift a truck which comes after it daily. Miss Vera Vasey.is a member of Beta Sigma Omicron sorority at the University of Illinois this year. Edward Lusk is the secretary of the Theta Upsilon Omega fraternity and Kenneth Mosher, who drove one of Converse's gravel trucks part of the summer, is president of the same ffrat," at the University of Illinois. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Converse motored to Waterloo, la., Thursday to visit with relatives and attend the dfiry show for a few days. G. A. Vasey and Ed Bacon have both bought 10-20 International tractors of A. J. Smith of Round Lake< Bernard Vogt accompanied- Archie Rosing on a business trip to northern Wisconsin. Mrs. Joe Vogt spent Monday at the Ray Seymour home near Wauconda. LaVern Paddock, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen I*addock of Chicago is very ill with heart trouble. Martin Wegener, son of Mrs. Margaret and the late Ben Wegener, and Miss Helen Wagner, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mike Wagner, were married at the Catholic church, Wednesday morning, Oct. 10 at 9 o'clock. Both are very popular young people and have the best wishes of a host of friends." Dells of Wisconsin. They also visited the capitol building at Madison, Devil's Lake, Prairie du Sac dam and Delavan Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughter, Dorothy, were Sunday dinner and afternoon guests of Mrs. Jane Eatinger at Wauconda. Miss Myrtle Darrell of Crystal Lake and Elmer Esping of Moline spent the week-end with the former's parents, at Oak Glen farm. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughter, Dorothy, Mr. and Mrs, Joe Dowell aad family, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Francis, and Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and children, and Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter, Vinnie, of Roseville saw "Jack & Gene," of WLS, at the Miller theatre at Woodstock, last Thursday evening. Mrs. F. B. Carr returned to her home at Spring Grove Sunday, after spending two months at the home of Mr. »and Mrs. Harry Matthews. She was accompanied home by Mr. and Mrs. Wiliard,, darrell and grandson Robert Matthews. Mrs. Carr'a health was not as good as usual. * t John Blomgren, Mrs. E. Anderson and Mrs. Sigrid Blomgren spent Saturday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lusk. Mrs. E. Bacon and daughter, Vinnie, spent last' Tuesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wayne Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Page Smith and twins, Douglas and Mae attended the show at Barrington Sunday evening. Mildred Hoffman, Mrs. Willard Darrell and Mrs. F. B. Carr spent last Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. LaDoyt Matthews at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dowell and daughter, Dorothy, attended the movie at Barrington Sunday evening. make their home this winter. Charles Hubbard of Los Angeles^ Calif., was a caller at the W. iS Brooks home .Saturday. Chesney Brooks was a McHenry caller Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Converse and daughter, Frances, were Sunday guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Davis. Mrs. Darwin Granger and children church parlors last Friday evening. Mrs. W. E. Brooks and son, Chesney j and Mrs. A1 Granger of McHenry were and Ortis Phillips spent Sunday at the | callers at the W. E. Brooks home of Mrs. Ella Parks at Park Sunday. Ridge. Dr. and Mrs. L. A. Werden and Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Werden left for New Hampshire this week where they will tended the party in Mr. and Mrs. Willard Darrell and daughter, Myrtle, and Mrs. Harry Matthews and Chesney Brooks at- Federated Emotional Emotion Is a good servant, Hot 'a bad master It must be put to Ae service of right thinking and true action. In this transference of feeling to conduct It may seem to lose Its freedom, but It acquires new powers and' finds new ways for its expression. The worth of religious sensibility is to be tested in the adventures of truth and goodness to which It calls men, and ip the eagerness of self-sacrifice to which it Inspires them.--Grove Patterson, in the Mobile Register. FRANK 0. CANS AUCTIONEER Specializing In Farm Sales References: West McHenry State Bank or Citizens State Bank Home Phone 214-M McHenry v-,|: SLOCUM'S LAKff Ray Dowell was a caller at^ Lake Zurich Sunday morning. Mr. and Mrs. Page Smith spent last Monday at .Waukegan. x Mrs. Wayne Bacon and chili en and Mrs. E. Bacon of Roseville spent Saturday at Waukegan. Page Smith spent Tuesday at Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon and family spent last Saturday evenihg at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Dowell and George Eatinger saw the Cubs-Sox . game at Cubs park in Chicago last Friday. Miss Ruby Grantham, who is attending school at Waukegan, spent the week-end with home folks. John Blomgren, Mrs. E. Anderson and Mrs. Sigrid Blomgren accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Lusk and Mr. and George Lundgren of Wauconda, visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs«Fred Etman in Chicago last Thnrsday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Baseley and Mrs. Hary Baseley of Union, and Mrs. Maud North of Chicago were Sunday callers at the Joe Dowell home. Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Williams and son of Crystal Lake were Sunday afternoon guests at the home of Mrs. Clara Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Matthews and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Boehmer of Wauconda -spent the week-end at the ow Every Minute Sees Another GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR ; V ' , / ' ° Placed In Some .American Home IAST YEAR, General Electric Refrager- J ators stood in 29th place in the household market* Today they are first! They were being placed in homes at the rate of one a day* Now they are going into American homes at a rate of one a minute every day,. A Nation- Organization .Has Been Created' At the beginning of 1927, fourteen dealers handled the General Electric Re* frigerator. Today there are more than 5500. Where only 70 people were engaged, today there are 11,500a This swift but sound growth is a tribute to the newest product of the Research Laboratories of General Electric--a complete justification for the fifteen years of research and experiment which were put into the development of this "years ahead" refrigerator. Public Preference Has Been Won -- The miracle of general public acceptance, all in a year's time, has come to pass-- an acceptance which is "keeping nine factories running at top speede Thanks are due to the foresight of the electric light and power men of the nation who have brought electric service to eighteen million homes. They have made it possible for General Electric Refrigerators, in ever-growing numbers, to aid in^ reducing the annual seven hundred million dollar las* in food spoilage in American homes. Refrigerator ><*' *tr Moke* it Safe to Urn Hungry* CAREY ELECTRIC SHOP flay Carey Phone l$i Green Street "tP m - - v j - ^ * •;v* "'-'SI • *