McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 7 Feb 1929, p. 3

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

V:;^' THE M'HENKY PLAINDEALKR, THURSDAY, ttBKUAHY 7,1929" <*.**• >*. #.• "g^f-.11^'^.^ •••? i|' ** " "»*• *?• •» *V **., > M ,-' „ ,4 i'*f. " * ,' „ ' ai. - > - • - 'v * ' * > '< «Af* A group of tourists were looking trer the inferno of Vesuvius in full eruption. "Ain't this jast like hades?" ejaculated a Yankee. *" •Ah zese Americans," exclaimed Frenchman, "where have been?"--Sample Case. ley not "WvjUJ; C(JT$ SEPVlCf ~)prcjaA->rT/P7/}0. 'iniD/epjikppar -jp o#/cpdm/c7Ne ?or your use. GIZZARD CAPSULE flM WORMS CHICKENS! }fSt* °' «11 chicken* arc 1blljd with intntinal worma, according to wmltrjr anthoritiea -- vorna which rob a of its food, lower vitality, dccreaa* "ft production, retard growth--rob yoa of jrowr poultry profits. Tfce GIZZARD CAPSULE will quickly rid yodr chicken** of both tup* worm* and round worm- F-ve iimrs as eDwtlve as worm remedies given in food or drink. Why? The GIZZARD CAPSULE is insoluble and carrier the medicines intact to the gizzard where it ia broken like a grain of com, releaaing the medicines into the worm-infested intestinea in full strength and undiluted. VOLO A* eaay to aaminuter as giving a pill. Adult ire for cnlckeos 3 lbs. or more and tnrkeya I Iba. or more. Chick aize for chicka 1 to 3 Iba. and turka 2 to 6 lbs. Don't feed worma. Stop thia waste and increase your profits. Give GIZZARD CAPSULES now. Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. tHOMAS P. BOLGBR - - 'The McHenry ftruggist** Phone 40 , IkcHenrjr, III. Chrles 0"Boniy spent last Week in Chicago. Leslie Davis has rented the Pfannenstiel farm. Mrs. Clark Nichols spent Wednesday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Maker spent Sunday in Libertyville. Mrs. Esse Fisher spent Thursday with Miss Loretta Seymour. • Frances Nichols of Elgin spent the week-end at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Nichols. Rev. Schark spent Thursday in Chicago. Joe Rossdeutscher helped Joe Len- League party at Grmyslake one evening last week. Jim Kirwan is under the doctor's care. Joe Weiser is also ill. OHorny8 at Pish Lake are fiillng their ice house with ice cut from the lake. Mjrs. Brown attended the funeral ofher sister, Mrs. John Heimer, at McHenry Sunday afternoon. Blanche Converse is taking part in a musical play to be given at Iibertyville this week for the benefit of the new hospital, Herman Hossdeutscher and Bob Camp spent Sunday at Jbe Rossdeutscher's. Herman D&ita, who is known to Volo people, having been employed on several farms here, has joined the army and is located at Fort Sheridan. Joe Weber drove Ylfred Meade to California recently and was gone about a month. He is not so pleased with the west. Arthur Vasey, Nelson Converse, Clarence and Howard Hironimus drove to the basketball game at Gurnee Friday night. Lloyd Russell has had Public Service electricity installed in his farm buildings. Earl Paddock, Philip Wagner and Lew Lusk will soon have Public Service electricity. Tom Vasey injured his knee so badly that he had to go to Victory Memorial hospital and undergo an operation. He is now at home. Nick Miller did his farm work for him while he was away. Charles Davlin and Irene Dowell were married at Wauconda last Friday. They motored to Louisiana for their honeymoon. The groom is a son of Vincent Davlin f south of Wauconda and the bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Dell Townsend were Chicago visitors Monday. ' Bernard and Chub Vogt were Waukegan business callers Thursday, of Vincent Davlin of south of Wauconspent Sunday with his parents, Mr, and Mirs. Defl Townsend. Mr. and Mrs. L. V. Lusk and daughters visited at the C. J. Jepson home at Itingwood Sunday. Spring goods arriving daily in every department at Erickson Dept. Store, West McHenry. Hiram. LI Directors of various state departments are busily engaged in checking up on surplus help and preparing to submit their reports to Gov. Louis L. Emmerson, In accordance with a cleanup letter which he recently Issued. The governor has directed that all help not needed be dismissed from the state service and it is probable that a number of persons on the payrolls will be dismissed soon. Developments of the last few days indicate that the provisions of the administrative code will be adhered to during the Emmerson administration. Hie most recent economy move on the part of departmental directors has been made by Leo H. Lowe, recently appointed director of trade and commerce. Twelve employees have been eliminated from the division of Insurance of this departi wnt. The saving to-the state tn this one department alone will be over $15,000. Fores! fires In Illinois burned more than 4,700 acres of timber in 1928. R. B. Miller, chief forester of the department of conservation, has reported to E. Murray Butler of Louisville. Ky., district fire inspector for the U. S. Forest reserve. Mr. Miller's report reviewed Illinois' first year's work In forest Are prevention. Co-operation with the United States Forest service started in 1927. Harry H. Cleavland. Rock Island, has been appointed director of public works and buildings by Governor Emmerson. Mr. Cleavland. who succeeds Col. C. R. Miller, is president of the Central Trust and Savings bank of Rock Island, has probably the largest Insurance business on the west side of Illinois, and Is a large landowner. & "Be Sure to Write Once in aWhile* THESE WERE o«ce the parting words when friends moved; : to another city--in times when aseparatkm of a few miles f equalled a hundred today. Out-of-town telephoning was a novelty then. So most of4 us were content with an occasional letter. How different today! A town a hundred miles awayon the map is only a minute or so away by telephone. And places even farther off--Boston, New York, Denver, New Or! cans, cities and towns across the sea--they, too, are next door by telephone. Yet out-of-town telephoning costs very little. Are YOU letting the telephone help keep alive the spirit of friendship with those living or visiting in other places? Use it today instead of writing that letter you owe. You'll be surprised how easy it is--how quickly you get your number--how little it costs--how satisfying it is. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM One Policy ' • One System - Universal Service Makes Baby Happy Bowman Milk is the Aiilk that makes baby happy and well. It's pure and good. Rich in cream value, we deliver it fresh every day. We handle nothing bat Bowman's Pasteurised and Degreed Products Community Dairy Phone 660-R-l ^ Ben J. Smith, Governor Emmerson has announced that Frank T. Sheets, chief stafe highway engineer, will remain In his position to continue directing the state's road construction program. Mr. Sheets, who is in charge of the technical part of road work, has been In the highway department for a number of years. He Is a graduate of the civil engineering school of the University of Illinois and is a member of both the American Society of Civil Engineers and the Illinois Society of Engineers. • A decrease of $43,782,717 tn thfe total taxes collected by the govern*- ment In the calendar year 1028^ was shown by figures recently released. The total tax collections from all sources in Illinois in 1928 was $224,- 8nS.133.98. Charles Herrick Hammond, Chicago, has been selected by Governor Emmerson to replace William J. Llndstrom as state supervising architect. Mr Hammond Is president of the American Institute of Architects, the leading organization of Its kind In America. He fs a member of the Arm of Perkins, Chatten and Hammond, (conservative Chicago architects. The history of Illinois college, Jacksonville, by President Charles H. Rammelkamp, which has been published this year as a part of the centennial celebration of that institution. Is a very valuable contribution to the history of Illinois and, the Middle West, as well as a fascinating picture of life In the pioneer days of this state. The account is a microcosm of the whole process by which higher education developed in the Middle West and a> sveh inevitably becomes a parital, at least Interpretation of Its cultural make-up today. President Rammelkainp has vividly chronicled the mishaps and difficulties, the ever-present financial worry, the anti-slavery controversies, which conditioned the early life of the college. In contrast to all this he shows the triumph* and Indomitable growth and incalculable influence the Institution had even in its blackest days. The book will stand, to American history students, as the epitome of the rise of education in the prairie countries. Representative George C. Dixon of Dixon has offered a bill In the house which would provide for an extension of the absentee voters* law to include Invalids and others kept away from the polls on account of Illness. The objection to some of the hills for this purpose Is that the law would he used for fraudulent purposes hut Mr. Dixon has included a provision whereby an Invalid or sick person would be required to file an affidavit of a physician. As the absent voters' law Is now it relates only to those who are nhsent from their home county on business although It la quite generally used promiscuously by anyone who Is away for any purpose. In this hill Mr. Dixon has provided that anyone who is absent from his county my. vote under its provision. Judge Harry Higbee. circuit and ap pel late court judge in Illinois for thirty years and state senstor for four terms, died at his home In Plttsfield. I'ike county, a few days ago. Judge Higbee was born in I'ike county, and was graduated from Yale university in 187.1. He won his law degree at Columbia university the following year. He was state senator In the thirty-sixth. thirty-seventh, thirtyeighth and thirty-ninth general assemblies from 1S88 to 1896. He was a former president of the state bar association. * Gov. Louis L. Emmerson will head the delegation from Illinois that will witness the Inauguration of President- Elect Herbert Hoover on March 4. Mr. Emmerson, other state officials, members of the house and senate and other party leaders will make the trip to Washington aboard an inautjurnl special, probably over the Baltimore and Ohio railroad, which will leave Springfield, February 28, and return March f«. According to the tentative arrangements the trip to Washington and return will be iiiiule without missing a single legislative day. Adjt. Gen. Carlos E. Rlack Is in charge of the arrangements for Illinois. Already 200 reservations have been made for the trip. Governor Emmerson ,h$| received resignations from the following that were not reported last week: E. E. Crnhtree. Jacksonville, as a member of the state highway advisory board. Dr. Thomas B. Doan, Palmyra, and Mrs. E. N. Monroe. Quincy. as members of the board of public health advisers. Judge Joel Churchill Fitch, as county judge of Edwards county, who Is to go Into Attorney General Carlstrom's office to replace his brotSier, the late Edward O. Fitch. , Oitrle on feed on fartm to Illinois are ®!^ht per cent more numerous than a year ago. white sheep on jr«»»d have Increased a third over the same •period last year, according to a joint report just Issued by the United States and Illinois, departments $f apiculture. If You But Knew! The stupendous losses this stock is taking--the wonderful bargains in every department you would "M M W: U $-3 . ' •" A resolution has been «H»»red h> Representative Weber. Chicago, asking for a committee of seven members to Investigate ways and means of obtaining an airport along the Chicago lake front, to be completed In time for the World's fair to be held there In 1M33. The committee will eo-opernte with the Illinois Central railroad, the South Park board and the city council of Chicago in furthering plans. Expenses for the committee's work ore to he taken from the contingent fun<l of the house. Hugh Luckey of Potomac has Introduced a bill In the legislature which wouM specify that all paper used bv the state be manufactured from cornstalks. At present there Is one company In Illinois manufacturing pulp from cornstalks. It Is- the CornstaJk Products company, located In Danville. The nulp is manufactured Into paper by the Kalamazoo Vegetable Parchment company of Kalamazoo, Mich. With a comparatively light dvtl and rrllftfnal docket, the Febrilary session of the state Suprpme court will convene within the nSSt few days. A large number of cases are on the ad- j vl8ement docket and opinions in some j of them probably will be handed down j February 19 when the term may end. ! Frederic R. DeYoung, Chicago, Is the ; presiding justice. Betting a new record fsr time In selecting committees. Speaker David E. Slianahan has announced the list of committee assignments and the necessary organization work is nowwell under way. Only twenty days was consumed in the task, the shortest space In time consumed at a session In which there was inauguration of state officers. Former Speaker Scholes turned the trick In the same time, but It was when the Installation of officers did not interfere. Business Vij • - •• •• ' -* -• Sale Which is now in full blast A general stock is being sold out to the bare walls. Hurry-- get the pick of this big stock now going REGARDLESS OF COST. ^ ~ ^ A word p the wise is sufficient ^ JOS. J.MILLER Pearl ^Street and Riverside Drive McHenry, III., -j Representative Charles D. Frsns of Freeport has offered a bill to compel motor busses and trucks from othei| states using Illinois highways to carry Illinois licenses. '. J* S----»*--/ Wi^tiwuw Director Rodney Braj&Mk Of "the state department of public welfare has announced that Col. Frank Whipp, managing officer of the Illinois sciiooi; for the deaf at Jacksonville, has been? named acting assistant director of thef department. Colonel Whlpp will main until the program of the department has been worked out and will also remain In charge of the Jacksonville institution and will come to Springfield each day. Before going to the Jacksonville school, Colonel Whlpp was In charge of the St. Charles School for Boys and prior to that time was fiscal supervisor in the department of welfare. He is familiar with all divisions of that department. A resolution proposing that the question of calling a constitutional convention be submitted to the people at the next general election has been offered b.v Representative Frederick W. Rennick of Buda. He called attention to the need for a complete revision of the constitution, which has not been done since 1870. His resolution has been submitted to the Judiciary committee. Representative Walker of Jollet has proposed a tax for chain stores. Representative Gaines of Chicago has suggested a jury trial for persons accused of contempt of court and to raise the •mount «£, petit larceny frwn IK to Siori i ^ r • --'tlonal highway la lUlnoto through places associated . i «l> .ilium Lincoln before lie became President, is proposed In a Mil introduced in congress recently by Senator Charles S. Deneen of Illinois. The measure would create a Lincoln highway memorial commission. composed of the secretary of war as chairman, and the secretaries «<f agriculture and the treasury. It would provide for a survey of the best route for a road connecting Charleston id Farmlngton, through Shiloh eem ty ft*td other places In Coles county. Uncle Sftas (visiting efty relatives who use electrical appliances for cooking at the table): "Well, I swan: You make fun of us for eating in the kitchen. I don't see Conductor (somewhat irritated after stumbling over obstacle in aisle): "Madam, you must remove your valise from the aisle." Colored Lady: "Fo" de lan' sake, as it makes much difference whether j Mistah Conductor, dat mint no valise you eat in the kitchen or cook in the dining room."--Good Hardware. feat's mah footr"--Open Road. What a superb thing it would be If it keeps on, the parking of Amer- if we were all big enough in mind iean airplanes may become another of t$ see no slights, accept no infiul Eurspsla trottUtS. Cdanftitt Pis- cnerish no jealousiesand'aiiami patch. to our hearts no hatred. '/ ( Ht \ ROI K 1 The COACH '595 «595 Jit. *675 Tkm Sport UQC Gibrloirt .. . rh*Conv«rt- $7')C Me Landau. ' *9 Dativer?.... *595 &L°: *545 lHTonCh«.-$ZCA •ia with Cab . All pricetf. •. t. factory, rlint. Michigan include th lewcat bandits j)M. Il»amcln tiHHflM oval* i with increased Speed and Acceleration! Marvelous si*-cylinder smoothness throughout the entire speed r^nge! A freedom from vibration, drumming and rumble that makes driving and riding a constant delight! Increased speed and acceleration,, with 32% more power for hills and heavy going! Such are the qualities of performance now available in the price range of the four. Such are some of the outstanding reasons why the new Chevrolet Six is enjoying the most triumphant public reception ever accorded a Chevrolet car. If you have never driven the new Chevrolet Six, yam ere cordially invited to come in for a demonstration. •*« Si* in the price range of the four Hettermann Motor Sales 191 "mti Q U A L I T Y A T L O W S C O S T '1M

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy