3 - J:" .-"! ** *"' * /. -r>"%: >XA? .#%*** ;r r THIM'HENBY PLAINDEALKR, THURSDAY, NOV. 21,1929 RINGWOOD <t * $H"~ : Xn. 0m Justen entertained the tunco club at her home 'Tuesday afteroon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Viola Low, first; Mrs. Ben Justen, Second; and Miss Eva Williams, the Consolation. The punch prize went to Jtfrs. William McCannon. At the close dainty refreshments were served. Mrs. Lon Smith, assisted by Mrs. G. A. Stevens and Mrs. George Shep- ; r ard, entertained the Home Circle at the home of Mrs. Lon Smith Wednesday. A one o'clock dinner was served followed by the usual business meeting after which a fine program and frames were enjoyed. Prizes for the jpuessing games were won by Mesdames Walter Harrison, Charles Peet, Frank Gilbert and George Shepard. Miss Lorena Jepson entertained the girls of her Sunday School class at a six o'clock dinner at her home Tuesday evening. • / • Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Bacon entertainer" ' Id at a Bunco party Thursday even- : . r • lag. Prizes were awarded to C. D. ^ r Ipacon first, Mrs. F. Johonott second, ,.v pnd Mrs. Frank Buchert the consolation. A pleasant evening was had by -y;-" ~ 4frll. • ! - j'> Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard and family spent Sunday afternoon at McHenry. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Schafer of Cincinatti spent the week-end in the W. A. Dodge home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kelley and %fe^aughter of Crystal Lake spent Sunday evening in the William Kelley s "home. Mrs. Merrifield has returned to the home of Mrs. Spaulding, after a weeks visit in Chicago. Rev. and Mrs. Balfe of Williams • Bay were Ringwocd visitors Sunday. Mrs. Tina Carlson and two sons and wives of Chicago spent Sunday in the Lewis Hawley home. Lyle Hutson and David Stanley of Woodstock were callers in the William Kelley home. Mesdames Edgar Thomas, William McCannon and Viola Low were Wood, stock visitors Wednesday morning. Byron Hitchens of Chicago spent Wednesday with his parents. MTS. George Bacon and Mrs. Lester Nelson of Antioch spent Wednesday afternoon and night in the W. A. Dodge home. Mesdames G. A. Stevens, H. M. Stephenson and Thomas Kane attended a Social Wheel meeting at the home of Mrs. Cox at McHenry Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Bruno Butler were visitors aft Woodstock Wednesday , evening. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens were Woodstock visitors Wednesday even' in*. ' George Noble, E. P. Flan* dere. Minnie Coates and J. F. Laughlin were Richmond visitors Fri- $»y afternoon. C. W. Katti&on, Clayton Harrison, Lewis Erickson and brother, and Dr. Wells attended * Shrine Ceremonial at Rockford Wednesday Mrs. Clyde Bell of Solofi Mills was & Caller in the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Harrison Sunday; Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard were Harvard visitors Thursday afternoon. Andrew Hawley spent the week- , end in Chicago. Mrs. Hannah Walker aftd 80ft, Fred, were visitors in the Irvin Walker home at Waukegan Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper were Woodstock visitors Thursday and Friday. Carl Fay and grandson of Chicago spent Sunday with Mrs. Jennie Spaulding. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Block and daughter of Kenosha spent Sunday in the Dr. Hepburn home. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ladd, Mrs. Walker and son Fred, were among those from Ringwood to attend the Allen trial at Woodstock Monday. Miss Mina Lawrence' spent Satur day night and Sunday at Crystal Lake. Mrs. Charles Peet and daughters and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and daughters were Woodstock visitors Saturday af ternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Justen and fam ily and Mrs. Marie Bopp spent Sun' 'day with Mr. and Mrs. M. Deutsch at Richardson, 111. Mr. and Mrs. George Adams and daughter, Catherine, spent Tuesday at Rockford. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cristy and family spent a few days recently at Wtoupaca, Wis. Edtl Swanson of Wilmot, Wis called in this vicinity one day this week, - Mr. and Mrs. Frarik Hay and family spent Friday evening at Lake For- • Mt. v Miss Norma Whiting is spending a ftP/r days in Chicago. ^ i? Mr. and Mrs. Fred Krohn and famf^*/ fly spent Sund&y at Harvard. •^•5Mr. and Mrs. Francis Adams and r ~ «on of Elgin spent Wednesday eveni i Sag in the George Adams home. ? Mr. and Mrs. Fred Krohn and fam- • {|y were Woodstock visitors Friday. v% . George Adams was a caller in Wauconda Saturday. *. m Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters spent Sun- . day at Belvidere and Hunter. ; Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens spent |||ike week-end in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Fleet and daughters spent Sunday in the Will Beck home at Dundee. Mrs. Marie Bopp of Evanston is spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Ben Justen. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Henzie of Crystal Lake spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mrs. Fred Gilbert of Brockville, Ont., who has been visiting her parents, accompanied Mr. and Mrs. Ray Schaefer to their new home at Norwood, Ohio, Sunday morning. She will then go to Detroit for a visit and then return here for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. M. Stedman of Greenwood and Miss Grace Amberpoo of Woodstock spent Sunday with Mrs. Emma Merchant. Mrs. Herman Molidor and baby of Libertyville spent Sunday with her mother, Mrs. Jfinnie Cossman. Mrs. Frank Stephenson is visiting at Woodstock for a few days. Mr. and Mrs. George Young entertained their 500 club at their home Friday evening. Prizes were won by Mr. and Mrs. Ford Jackson first, Mrs. Math Blake and Thomas Kane secend. At the close of the games refreshments were served. The girls of Lorena Jepson's Sunday School class held * bake sale at Lewis Hawley's market Saturday. They cleared $6. Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Schroeder and daughter, Jessie, and Steve Liicas spent Sunday at Oconomawac, Wis. MOUNTED POLICE 6ETJEIR MAN But Timet Have Changed and They Hunt N<nr Type of Criminal. r TERRA GOTTA Miss Phyllis Huffman sport _ the week-end as the guest of Mass Jacqueline Schabeck in Evanston. Glenn McMillan of Chicago visited at his home here Sunday. John A. Bolger of McHenry visited relatives here Sunday. Mrs. B. J. Shine was a recent guest of relatives and friends in St. Charlea and Elgin. M. J. Walsh of McHenry was a caller in this vicinity last Wednesday. Mrs. Ray McMillan was taken to the Sherman hospital in Elgin Saturday, where she is under observation. Mr. and Mrs. J. Schabeck and daughters of Evanston were callers in this vicinity Sunday. Harold and Robert Knox attended the Notre Dame-Southern California football game in Chicago Saturday- Earl Whiting of McHenry was a caller in this vicinity Saturday. Andrew H. Henderson of Chicago spent Monday evening at the home ot F. A. Huffman. Misses Mildred Flanders and Martha Woodbury of Crystal Lake called on Miss Florence Knox Thursday evening. Phillip G. Huffman of Spring Grove visited at the home of Frank Mc- Mc-jMillan Sunday. Vernon J. Knox of Notre Dame spent the week-end at his home here, and attended the football game at Soldiers' Field in Chicago. Mark McMillan was an Aurora vis toi" Sunday. Mr. and MfS. Prank McMillan were Elgin visitors Sunday. Misses Florence, Mabel and Marie Knox spent Saturday-in Chicago, where they attended the football game. Mrs. George Dunkley of Elgin spent Wednesday with Mrs. Henry McMillan. Edward Sund and daughter, Darlen, of Carpentersville called on rela tives here Saturday afternoon; Miss Mabel Knox of Rosary College spent Sunday at her home here. Mr. and Mrs. Henry McMillan and son, Glenn, visited relatives in Carpentersville Sunday. Ray McMillan and daughter, Alice called on Mrs. McMillan at Sherman hospital in Elgin Sunday. BOY BLOWN TO SEA RESCUED AND FINED Found Paddling Around With Seat as an Oar. ••w:: t M Mr. and Mrs. George Young and sons spent Tuesday evening in the James Bell home at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and family spent Sunday afternoon at Wood- •lock. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and sons spent Sunday with relatives at $ake Geneva. r Ethel Biggers and Virginia Carlson fTere McHenry visitors Thursday. Mrs. Viola Low and son were McHenry visitors Saturday afternoon. 1 Mrs. George Herbert and Miss Flor- , Spce Beck of Woodstock were visitors the Sam Beatty and J. F. Mc Xaughlin homes Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and son of IfccHenry spent Sunday in the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family spent Sunday afternoon with Mrs. Ada Mann at Woodstock. Miss Frances Helms of Chicago spent Thursday with Her parents Hingham, Mass.--A strange tale of the sea was told in the Second District court by Arthur Blckford, fourteen, of East Boston. He had been picked up, while being blown out to sea, by a boat which towed him into the Hingham harbor, where he was observed paddling about the bay in a row boat using one of the seats for a paddle. The police were notified and Patrolman George Berry went to the Yacht club at Crow Point, where Blckford was found aboard the Foster Trainor yacht, Grey Goose, whose lookout had discerned him paddling about the bay. Before Judge Edward B. Pri/tt, where he was arraigned on the charge of stealing a row boat, Bickford said the took the boat from the Enst Boston Yacht clubhand rowed to Governor's island where he went ashore. Coming back to the boat he discovered that the oars were gone. In his effort to get back to East Boston the tide carried him down the bay and far out to sea. All the time, he said, he tried to make headway by using a seat. He stated far down the bay near a lighthouse a power boat came along and offered him a tow and when Inside a point of land which he believed was Nantasket they cast him adrift. He then continued on paddling until sighted by the lookout on the Grey Goose. He was fined $15 and allowed by the court to pay the amount in $2 weekly payments. - Pn»» Largely Mythical ' Those »ho compare the* age in which their lot has fallen with a golden age which exists only in imagination, may talk of degeneracy and decay ; but no man who is correctly informed as to the past will be disposed to take a morose or desponding view of the present.--Thomas Babington, Lord Macaulay (1800-1859), "History of England." " Winnipeg.--The Royal Northwest Mounted Police of Carada have bad to change their methods as the times have changed. They are not so much called upon to cope with cattle rustling and horse stealing as when the ranges were broad and the ranchers few. The night riding rustlers now are forgers. They doctor documents Instead of smearing brands. Their Improved penmanship lets them make a high priced pure-bred beast out of a graded animal picked up from some bard-up homesteader. j?hcre do not appear to be many of these gifted breeders, but one, who lives near Calgary. Alberta, was fined *1.000 when the mounted police proved that he had faked a registration certification to make pure-bred Percherons oat of scrubby draft horses, says the New York Herald Tribune. Another cattle dealer might still be pawning off pure-bred cattle on American buyers if it bad not been shown that the bull he recorded as the nlre ef stock he sold at fancy figures had been butchered many years before. The price of silver fox puppies IS In creased by tampered registrations. Drug trafficking seems to have the place in police records once taken by whisky trading. The war on narcotics was a prominent part of the year's mounted police activities, and the fight is still on. Some headway Is being made. Superintendent Allard of Winnipeg, Manitoba, thinks "the situation has somewhat Improved." 9 To Deport Convlcta. The policy of the mounted police is the apprehension of the principals rather than of the addicts. The superintendent of the British Colombia district reports that "a number of Important members of the drug ring have been fonnd guilty and are at present serving long sentences, which, in the majority of cases, will be followed by deportation." When Lord f!p, described "as the third most important dealer In narcotics in Vancouver," last year was beginning his Imprisonment for three years, Lee Go, "who is a very astute man," was blandly engaged in banding cabbages and lettuce to customers In bis vegetable store. But Lee Go had other interests. He is shrewd, and he Is rich. He bad dealings with Gulan Hohammed, a Hindu, who is less astute, and is very'poor. Lee showed £ulan how the desire for a little more money might be fulfilled by performing a very little service for Lee. Lee is now serving five years in jail, and Gylan two. ^7 Three Months on One Cas^^ Before they could be convicted Sergeant Fripps took months to unravel the trade cunningly devised by the astute Lee Go. When Lee Go received an order, perhaps with a purchase of parsley in his vegetable store, he would instruct the buyer to meet the vender of the drugs at a certain place. There he would meet Gulan, In whose cabin Lee Go's drugs were stored. But when the buyer met Gulan, the Hindu would not have the drugs. He had hid them and would tell the buyer where they were to be found. The place of the hiding was changed with each purchase. The mounted police do not do all the detective work in these drug cases. The drug principals employ detectives •fto shadow the police informants. In ~ m group of sucb cases In Winnipeg last spring, "the suspected persons employed a private detective agency to follow and expose a valuable informant" of the police. Catch Suspect for Germany. The mounted police still "get their man." Traditionally, the mounted police always got their man. Old-timers used to amend the tradition by agre& lng that the police always got a man. It is not bard to Imagine why it must be harder than ever for any police to "get their man" in these days of rapid transport and easy concealment. And If it Is harder to get their man, It is even harder to prove they have "the man." Yet the mounted police still get. their man often enough to prove they ask only a chance in a hundred to make good. Johann Klimek, a laborer of foreign birth, entered Canada in March, T927. The German government last May charged him with having committed a murder, and whither be bad gone none seemed to know. The police got on his trail. He lived for awhile in a foreign settlement In and near Fort William He came to Winnipeg He went west on a harvester's train He bad been searched for In many lumber camps and In many quarters. The bunt was kept up. He was pursued till be was arrested in Alberta last September, when be was returned to Germany. It was last year that Henry Venegratsky, alias Henry Vine, "perhaps," in the opinion of the mounted police, the most important personage In the illicit drug business of Winnipeg," received a sentence of six months In Jail and a fine of $200. Appeals Court Increases Sentence, •gainst the lightness of that sen tence the crown appealed, and It was then increased to three years. Super tntendent Allard observes, "This is the first ti-ne In the history of the Courts of Manitoba that *he Appeals court has seen fit to Increase a trial Judge's sentence, and the decision can. therefore, be considered an Important and far-reachlngjone." ft was a narcotics case bere which led, too, to the disclosure of the notorious system of "straw bonds,"* which Is not so much in evidence now as It was. Of course the mounted police pass Information from detachment to detachment. From Information received from Montreal came about the Seigel seizure, which further resulted In three Informations being laid against "one Louis Rando, probably the most Important offender against the act In this district Rando Is now being sought and it la thought that he is In the United Statea. ' Last of First Chiefs of Old South Elk Point, S. D.--A. O. Wnnsrud says be is the only person now living who held a state office wben South Dakota became a state in 1889. Wben men were chosen to fill governing offices of the new state Ringsrud was elected secretary of state and served two terms. He bad held county offices for ten years before that time. He was elected registrar of deeds and county clerk for Union county In 1878. After holding that office sis years, he was elected county treasurer. This office be held four years. He was Republican nominee for governor in 1806, but was defeated by Andrew B. Lee, populist candidate, with a majority of only 819 votes. In March, 1917, he was appointed a member of the South Dakota state board of charities and corrections, and served as president of tbat board ten years. Meantime be bad served as mayor,^ and member of the city council; president of the Union County Old Settlers' association; and for twelve years was a member of the Elk Point school board. Since 1885 be has been engaged In the mercantile business here. Rlngsrud arrived with his parents In Union county, on July 4, 1867, having come direct from Norway. At that time the railroad extended only as far west as Denlson, Iowa, so the Ringsrud family waited there for friends from the Brule settlement, nortb of Elk Point, who escorted them to their new home. In* true ting the Bliad The American Braille Press has per fected a system of teaching simple mathematics to the blind by means ot the touch system. Raised figures and symbols are substituted for the dots which were used formerly. , -M»< r, . ^ ...H'v Recipe tmw Comfort ' ^ The chief secret of comfort Ues In not suffering trifles to vex us and in prudently cultivating our undergrowth of small pleasures.--Archbishop Sharps ^ h ...-.fey' --.if".-.',-,!,'. Hottermann Motor Sales 7>~ ** ' i r kinds of car and truck and general repair^ 3' < •; fftg, also welding-, done toy expert mechanics. Main St., West McHenry * phone 191:: Highest Quality--Xowest of the Century : 1 Need Cheerful Mind to \ Cure Blood Pressure Washington. -- The United States public health service warned persons afflicted with high blood pressure not to become "high blood pressure fiends," constantly thinking, talking and living the disease. High blood pressure can be relieved and effectively cured, the public health service said, "only if a cheerful frame of mind is adopted and frequent estimations of pressure are shunned." Treatment, consisting principally of proper regimen, should be undertaken under the advice of a competent physician. The amoabt of exercise should be decided upon by the family doctor," It was advised. "Food is a factor in the treatment; but It is now believed that a consideration of the quantity of the food--a restriction lb amount-- rather than quality Is of greater Importance. The giving of drugs is usually disappointing, but In emergencies they may be life saving." ^ % T Now We Know About Plumber and His Boston.--Tho mystery as to why a plumber always has to go back for his tools was solved at the Massachusetts plumbers' convention. Vice Preadent William E. Moore explained: "Yes, we're a big laugh to the man In the street But I'd like to see the same man stsgger to a Job with 800 tools, which make up a complete plumbing kit That's the only way we could be prepared for all emergencies-- bring the whole lot." Form«r Slava Is 110 Marysville, Ohio.--William Peppers, a negro, Inmate of the county home here, claims to be one hundred and ten years old. After being sold three times as a slave, Peppers related, be escaped bondage when a body of Union soldiers marched past a field io which he was plowing for his master. Be said be Joined the soldiers and came to Gallipolis, where be found employment on a farm. The aged negro attributes bis advanced years to good, regular habUs, bard work and the use of tobacco. Goodyear Tires Make Excellent-A, •• ; Christmas Presents Ask for Special •«; ft;*:- h: ^Trade-in on All leathers and Double Eagles f 4 ^ecause millions more people buy Goodyear Tires--because ^Goodyear builds nearly one-third of the world's tire output and thus enjoys lowest costs--we can offer you history's low-' est prices on the finest Goodyears ever produced. Furthermore--before you buy--we can demonstrate and prqye the Goodyear superiority of tread and carcass which protects you from skidding, puntures and blowouts and assures you more miles of troublefree service. , & 9 Come in and see this demonstration r' """"\ ' •mi' All tires expertly mounted free and yon also get our year round service Non-skid Chains, Alcohol and Prestone for Radiators, Crank-ease Draining, Top dressing, Etc. TIRE AND TUBE VULCANIZING * /BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING ALL Wm* GUARANTEED Phone 120-R West McHenry, DL -*• Political Problem If a cat has nine lives, how many has a lame duck?--Woman's Home Companion. tt n Low Child Death RtU London.--Great Britain In 1928 bad the lowest Infant death rate ever recorded. Out of every 1.000 children who lived to be one year old only «V died. •xStf eeeeeeeeeeeeeeseeeeeesee > Find Ptolemy's Will Inscribed on Slab Rome.--The Italian Archeological Mission, now excavating the ancient town of Cyrene, to nortb Africa, announces the discovery of a marble slab In a perfect state pf preservation inscribed with the will of Ptolemy VIII, king of Egypt and Cyrene. bequeathing his kingdom to the Romnns in the case of bis deatb without Issue. Ptolemy was succeeded In 116 B. C. by his son Apion, on whose deatb in 96 B. CJL Cyrene passed under the Roman dominion. Patriots Honored Among the counties in Virginia so named after Revolutionary patrlota are: Bland, Campbell. Carroll, Clarke, Franklin, Greene, Matthewa. Montgomery, Pulaski. Russell and Warren - Sticking Windows If a Wlndowj sticks, take hold ot Hie ropes at each side, draw them down as far as possible and let them snap. This Is almost sure to Jar the window so tt moves easily. \ Four Ont of Fhro Art Oat Four out of five of the pianos In the country are declared to be out of tune But It's a question if four out of five of the owners have discovered the saddening state of things.--Manchester (N. H.) Union. " WWro I. tW Family? What has become of tbe grandmother who used to knit wool stockings and socks for the whole family?-- Danville tyse|ta ; 'S mart • Smooth«Safe* •d . • t't". i'w' '• '*S:' |)6p6nddbl6--and Pric6<| Within the Reach of Alii new, Chevrolet was designed and built to biing the advantages of sixiylinder performance within . v t t'M- ^ie reach of all thosewho can '» ftfford any automobile. For that reason it has met with j|ensational success--more gban a million two hundred and fifty thousand on the fpoad in less than nine monthsl We cordially invite you to J tome in and see this remarkable car. Its smart Fisher Ijodics are styled in the latest ^ iifnode--with tasteful mould- ^|ngs, concave front pillars and |>blong windows. Its great six- 2 j^igylinder valve-in-hcad engine is smooth, powerful and uir v usually swift in acceleration. It is designed throughout for' " greater safety and dependabUity. And its low first cost, combined with its outstanding economy of operation, makes it truly "Everybody's Six." Come in today for f demonstration! . Tk» KoanbM*, HMf Tto MMnMk.4SKr Tfcn • Coach; 9995: The Coup*. *595; Thm Sporf• Otmpm, S64S: The Man, M73; Thm Imperial* SmSan, MS: The Sedan Delivery, *595: Ligh$' ' - Dwtfiwry (ChastU only). MOO; Ton True* {ChmttU only). <545; IV4 Ton True* (Chatsit with Co*). MM. All price* /.•>*• J actor y. Flint. Michigtm. OiuSilW the (l»Uwii< prtc« -- iwflfcn the U«t ; (|. o. b.) price what comparing automobile (•IttM. Chevrolet delivered pricea liurlud* --If authorized chargea (or freight and Uelirffy, nod tha charge for any additional aocM m Hetterman Motor Sales HI fMt McHenry, OL. * SIX IN PKICB RANGE OP THE fOTTK w