Ik-." ^ N*, * - % , «* . > *» . 'V . <^' • « "4 THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1929 ' ' - /' ' - ^ n' *1r'* - -* £ -- ' rh lf 1111 ' " """!"'Tlirr' "*•"" nl ""* ' TO' •* '**• ' hs I^^WM. M. CARROLL* V Lawyer Oflee witk West McHenrv State Bank Krietf Wednesday PtMM 4 McHenry, IUiaois DR. JOSEPH C. FEELEY Dentist t &"'•* ^ McHenry - - Illinois " in McHenry: Fridays 10 a.m.t6 8 p.m. Satordays9 a.m.to 7:30 p.m. Sundays by appointment. Artificial teeth made by the Da vies I,-?-^process. Latest electrical equipment fe-W: »nd modern methods. Riverside Drive otot Barbiaa's Grocery and trarket MCHENRY GRAVEL %• s ; EXCAVATING CO. ';; «}k*P. Freiind, Prop. ^ * V; Road Building and Excavating . of Every Description Estimates Furnished (IS Request . High-grade Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small orders given prompt attention. Phone 204-M McHenry C. W. KLONTZ, M. 1*. s . Physician and Snrgeoi | (Also treating all diseases of the Eye, Ear, Nose and Thioat and the Fitting of Glasses) OOM Hours--8 to 9 a. m^ 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sundays by Appointment Office at Residence, Waukegan Road. Phone 181 McHenry, III Phone llf-W Reasonable Kates A. H. SCHABFER % McHENRY Draying ILLINOIS Telephone ^ 108-R ; .y",, Stoffel & Reiham^erger Insurance agents for all classes of property in the beat.companies. WEST McHENRY - * ILLINOIS Insmre-- In Sure --Insurance K\' --*WITH -- Win.G. Schreiner ^ > Auctioneering . OFFICE AT RESIDENCE Phone 93-R McHenry, Illinois HERMAN J, SCHAEFER Moving* ft&d Long Distance Hauling PHONE lOUT v':. • >- McHenry, Illinois EENRY V. SOMPEL General Teaming Sand, Gravel and Coal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract or By Day V Phone McHenry 649-R-l * y P. 0. Address, Route 3 ; k i; McHenry, HI. Introductory Sale! To introduce Dr. Clyne's Red Top Capsules to every family in McHenry and surrounding towns, they will be sold, for a limited time, at the Special Introductory Price of only 39c. (Regular Price 50c.) I Dr. Clyne's Red Top Capsules are highly recommended for the relief of Colds, Headache, Flu, Neuralgia, Neuritis, Tonsilitis, Rfceiimatism, Toothache, Aches and Pains They are made according to a prescription used in hospitals and private practice for many years with very satisfactory results. They're "EASY ON THE HEART" Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded. Sold at Bolter's and Wattles' Drug Stores. it S. H. Freuild & Son General Building Contractor! Phone 12741' < Cor. Pearl and Park Sts. McHenry, I1L JOtSB 3»0 % • > ! Central Garage JOHN8BURG FRED J. SMITH, Proprietor Chevrolet Sales. General Automotive Repair Work ' Give us a call when in trouble EXPERT WELDING AND CYLINDER REBOR1NG Day Phone 200-J Night Phone 640-J-2 •J?* and.it ^uUcdoi T r daferin zero weather In n field of twenty-one medium-priced automobiles, only Oakland has the Croatflow Radiator. Yet this radiator is recognized as one'of the greatest automotive developments of recent times. Its design is revolutionary. It practically eliminates losses of water and alcohol through Jboiling. And aa a result it is safer in zeiro weather. Dozens of other features combine with the Cross-flow Radiator to make Oakland America's finest medium-priced automobile. Come in and learn how i you can own an Ail-American Six. rrfaM, ma t» tisrs. /. •. *. rmntimc. JtficMM». »lM dMwwty efcygo* SprinM camri mnd Shock Abimrbmr* inehidmd _ ^ in Cist pHcai. Bumper* «n^ rmar fmndmr gumrda «itm. C#iMTal • | | yl • ~«. fc. ) prtem fontimc 4»- . __ _ __ _ Timt* Pmy fka mvmilmbl* CWIIIJCT th« dmlivrred prlrm M wll mm tkm Uat (/. •fcw tompmrimg utomskilt nlun . . . OaUmd-rowMc Hmmrail priemm irtelud* only muthorimmi charge* for freight A N D U * ' dtHrmry mmd thm ehmrge for mny additional icmnriw «r finunring domirod. !t;. /' It Was a Drawn Game . J ^5-88-^5 Bs H. IRVING Ki»ta (Copyright.) «< AND I I I ** again," never speak to yon concluded Ethel, to which John replied, "Very well," and went his way. This was the conclusion of one of those little atmospheric disturbances known ns "lovers' quarrels." They had Just drifted into It--as sometimes happens. When they came to think It Over afterward neither of them could tell Just exactly how it started or Just What they had been quarreling about, hut each was sure that the other had been In the wrong. Why two young people as sincerely in love with each other as Ethel Barnes and John Warland should quarrel in this absurd manner It is hard to say. Of course,Ethel and John were very miserable after they had Just parted in anger. And Just how obstinaie they were, too, you can imagine--how determined each was that the other should "speak first." That there was to bo no more speaking between them did not enter^tfhe heads of either party to the disturbance. Ethel and John were two obstinate young people. The fact that they were inuch in love with each other predicated the final yielding of onp of them. Among the other desperate things that Ethel did in the disturbance of mind caused by her quarrel with John was to buy a small car--or rather she persuaded her father to buy one for her --and to learn to drive it, after a fashion. At this stage of the game came Harry Benson. He and Ethel were old schoolmates, and she frequently gave him rides in her car. And such was Harry's admiration for Ethel that he was willing to i^sk life and limb for the privilege of sitting beside her while she did weird things with the steering wheel of the machine. It is Just possible that Ethel figured {hat seeing Harry ensconced in the car bjr her side would make John jealous and perhaps relent. As a matter of fact, It did make John jealous; so jealous that, fully recognizing^ Harry's peril, he did not in the least care what happened to him. He hoped, however, that, In the impending smashup, whenever It should take place, Elhel would not be hurt. Yes, he told himself, in spite of the manner in which she had treated him, he sincerely hoped she would escape unhurt. If Harry Benson only knew anything about driving a machine, he thought, It would be different; he would not have worried so much. But Harry did not know, and Ethel's driving was certainly far froriT that of an expert. As a matter Qf fact, had Harry been the best driver in the world, John would still have l>oen disturbed at seeing hlu^ ih the car with JStbel. John had a machine <>f his own in which, before their "tlarew>," he and Ethel hah had many long trod pleasant rides together, and he never took his seat in it now without sighing. That machine was filled with memories which would not be silent. Sometimes it seemed to John as if every noise its engine made kept repeating over and over again, "Ethel. Ethel." One day, in an unfrequented highway, John rolling along in his sedan, came In sight of Ethel's cac hove to in distress. Something had gone wrong with it, and Harry and its fair owner were fussing about vainly trying to set it right. John hesitated, stopped, got out and, addressing Harry, said: "What's the matter* Can I help you?" Ethel turned her back and gazed at the distant horizon while Harry an awered: "I don't know, the blamed thing won't go somehow." John discovered at once what was the matter, did a few things to the mechanism of the car and had it working in a , jiffy. Then he entered his own machine and drove off, never once looking back at Ethel, whom he had ignored wholly In the adjustment proceedings.' * Ethel was grievously disappointed that John had not attempted to speak to her. Also she waji extremely angry, and all the way home berated poor Harry for his Ignorance of automobiles and his general inefficiency. She declared that she would never let him ride in her car again. She did let him MURDERER OF 12 ^ CIRLS IS FOUND HIDING IN PRISON Hungarian MLandruM Lives Tranquilly Ten Years (& " "Safe Refuge." Budapest.--Bela Kiss, red-bearded Hungarian' Landru, who in 1912, it is alleged, strangled 12 of his sweethearts and burled the dismembered bodies in sealed tins in the garden of his home in the village of Cinkotu, was discovered in the m6st original hiding place any murderer has as yet devised for himself--the Rumanian penitentiary at Arad, writes Jay Allen in the Chicago Tribune. For ten years Kiss has been leading a tranquil existence, free of alarm, behind the walls of the prison in what looked to him like complete security of a life sentence. ! To get there lie stole the papers of one Franz Wimmer, an escaped convict, and "gave himself up." ? . Prewar Sentences. The. alleged crimes of Beta Kiss were one of the sensations of prewar Europe. Short, powerful' and very much like a gorilla, Kiss, who was a tinsmith In those days, was .popular ilde with her again, however, and the . -very next time she did so the long-expected happened. Ethel's car took on a skittish mood, evinced a disposition to climb telegraph poles, jump fences and otherwise displayed an exuber ance of spirits quite Inconsistent with the safety first idea. John, coming down the road in his sedan, saw the car lying in the roadside ditch with Harry hung limply over a neighboring fence and Ethel crawling in a dam ged condition from beneath the k < He stepped on bis gas; the sedan . fairly jumped to the scene of tue disaster; he stopped with a suddenness ""Which nearly wrecked his machine, sprang out, and ran toward her; she looked up and saw him. "Oh, John!" "Oh, Ethel 1" they cried Simultaneously. 1 Ethel and Harry had been pretty •>adly shaken up, but neither of them was seriously Injured. John took them home in his car, of course. He and Ethel were married shortly afterward, but to this day It has never been decided which spoke first. Fortunately, they have agreed not , to discuss the question,' ^ Alien Motor Sales Tr*eHBKB¥, ILLINOIS OAKLAND ^3 Mi ALL-AMERICAN SIX - rioDVCT or cinbru motoki Ml Muf Snake Victims estimated that about 20,000 gfr> ions in. India die of snake bites In year. Few of the natives wear shoes .'(and Hindus will not kill snakes, so tha 'mortality rate is higii^ J«d Tnnkmi Jud Tunkins says he never lost a friend, but he has met several folks »*ho started in friendly, for business purposes, and afterward strayed off on their own account.--Washington Star. The Bandage Was Removed and Tat* tooing Revealed. with the village belles. One by one, the prettiest of the unattached beauties of the region came to share the tinsmith's vine-wreathed cottage. Some came surreptitiously, and some brazenly for all to see. But all "went away" after two or three weeks. Even the relatives of the girls accepted this explanation for a while., Then Kiss quietly sold out and disappeared. Suspicion centered about him., The garden was dug up and there was found the remains of 12 of the "fickle" maidens. Twenty girls were missing. In 1919 the false "Wimmer" presented himself at Arad with all his papers and was Imprisoned. He was a model prisoner and wore a bandage on his right arm, of which nobody took much notice. Recently "an energetic clerk who was sorting old records discovered that Wimmer's description did not fit the prisoner of that name. The bandage was removed and tattooing revealed £}iat Wimmer was none other than Bela Kiss. ;f Cull««ry Movie* ' *ftie bride inuy not know much about the other details of (housekeeping, but she's usually a canny cook.--Arkansas Gazette. ALIO HuwmoieF TOP EVtRV UN* OF. RfcTAILBUCINKK £ teem IP VOG5I,. GENERAL firm Sales a Specialty P. O. Solon Mills, 111. Tel. Richmond 264 Reference Parft Salee SATISFACTION GUARANTEED .J&*1 Vl" i - » • fa * Zfr ' ~ v'" '• a < , " -V • / • *v V a w s •?'%- /;,, • yw ; »" :4 -k j v " < 1 v ii -f ^ :- y A -Hi • -V. -i *• " > ^ ' * • ' * * ' • '.V# •> . . . . . Cooa Cookffig Requires' * Pure Milk This dairy ii proud to state that Milk provides the housewife with thte necessary, purity to result in the successful preparation of foods that will satisfy every meinber of the family. ^Kone yout *>fder todaj^, ^" «s iniw 't- :•$* '" • --;; v^.-^ GWiiittiuiiity Phone 660-J-l . Ben J. Smith, Prop. (" * $1.00 Discount on All Oxford Dress Shoes J^bur-in-hand $1.00 Tie anck " 1 Bow 50c Tie for $1.00 Men's Gold Seal 12V&C grade White Handkerchief 12. for , Men's Blue Denim $1.25 Bib Overall for 1 ®oys* $1.50 Grade Knicker - Pants, Sizes 5 to 10, for Men's 25c Fancy Hose, 5 W $1.00 flf^l 0% v Men's Caps, $1.50 value, for $1.0£ Men's Blue Chambray 90c Work . Shirt for ; Paralytic Cured int.;\ V Trying to Self Santa Cruz, Calif.--Amandus J. Paulsen, crippled Oakland lawyer, attempted to commit suicide today and cured himself of paralysis of the legsi, fingers and hands. Paulsen has been under treatment several years for injuries suflfered when ie was struck by a hit-and-run" driver while on his way to open ne# legal offices. 4" Paulsen attempted to end his life today by cutting his throat with a butcher knife, lying in a bath tub full, of water and turning on the gas. Police too'r him to a hospital whera he regained consciousness to find that' he again had control of his legs, hand* and fingers that had been almost useless for five years. "I never felt better in my life," tyf said, "and I want to live." Doctors said he will recover front his W9und and the doses of gas and water. . ^ Scores* Gives Sleuth Anti-Devil Medicini New York.--Detective George Robert's stomach-ache was caused by th£ fact that a man lb Chicago was pol sonlng him with "grave-yard dirt," and three women, living, respectively^ in Chicago, New York and St. Louia, were casting a spell over him. At least tliat was the diagnosis of Mrs. Cosmos Battlce, and it resulted in her being sent to the workhouse for thirty days by Justices Kern®- chan, Caldwell and-Walling in Special Sessions, on a charge of unlawfully practicing medicine. Both the woman and the detective are negroes. For $50 Mrs. Battlce concocted two bottles of liquid absolutely guars a teed to smoke the devil out of the d*: tectlve. Being somewhat skeptical about possessing satanic qualities, Roberts arrested the woman. Snakp TerroricM Towa Baltimore.--A rattlesnake more tha* sir feet long was killed by residents of Westport after the community had been terrorized by the reptile, according to a report made to E. Lea Li Compte, state game warden. Health Hint Splinters should never ba neglected, especially In the foot, on account possible Infection from sock or stock' Ing. When using a needle to remove a splinter, be sure to heat it over a flame first to sterilize It For this % burning match will do. H*r< to Eadara How bitter a thing it Is !» Into happiness through another i eyes!--Shakespeare. As } ^ • Men's 25c Cai*v§s 5 pair for $1.00 Men's Drefes Shirts, Broken lots, • ,• 1 for $1.00 " Boys' Mackinaw Coat4 sixes 5 to 8, for V ,$1.00 JOS. W. FREUND Street, McHenry, 111. HEVR Jbr J£c»»»mioal Trmn*f^*H0»^ 'f:' ' "U 'I I . \ Ty V the Carlo}[ UruverscU Appeal, i INGE January 1st, over a million one hundred and thirty-five thousand six-cylinder Chevrolets have * produced. Naturally, this is an outstanding^.> Industrial achievement. But it is more than that. It ils a great public endorsement of Chevrolet's policy of! Progress: to build a quality automobile whose design^ "incorporates every possible feature of progressiv engineering... whose beauty is distinctive, smart and rf~~y$atisfying. . .whose reliability is assured by fine •'%f materials and precision manufacture . . . and whose price is so low as to be within reach of the great majority of the people. We want you to, know what: this policy meant in the development of the Chevrolet Six--the modern car of universal appeal. We ^want you to-knowthat Chevrolet has brought within^;| ^ ^the reach of everybody, everywhere, all the advantages! of smooth, six-cylinder performance. Come in today! 'tA- \ I? 7 ,Check / Price for Price « Value for Value SMTCOUR. Sedan '675 Thm IMPOUAL •695 a^DAN •AUpricmsf. o. b.fmctory. riini, Stichit M SMDcm... *525 *525 SoACH ,.y,4 *595 few. .'595 jwntitirit^liiirfprtr^ m mil m the 1l«t (f, >» V) • irice whra compArlngautomobile <rmlucs. Our d«ler»*S^ lelivered pric-- Include only authorized chtrtet (of i.ju Iraight au dethwjr, in4 tha charfta for any additional actioriel or financing doaired.' IS CHEVROLET NATIONAL DSMONSTATION WEEK \ Phone 191 West McHenry, 111. COMB IN--TAKE A RIDE IN THIS SENSATIONAL SIX ••h#