McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 May 1930, p. 6

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M . - v . v t - j % • . * • v'$ JOHNSBURG ; ^ ; / ' v ' .: if?+ •dj^l ><S, «•? n*t, »->*3r'.,',< *,V W^is> >j - n « ' 4 - , ^ I «< y *,^- • « * " > " •^j'^i,li,fe"t^^-i^." ' fe'^* '"" •"V^""*'*- "' •' "' - v •'$£',- "•-•• *•' - %' !•*••••• •••S< < l- : -i- 'J - - .iiifli »' V j.. M.-t/jf... Mft.*a.&h.Yj*r: w'.-Lw.ii. *,•'•• A *1 * .•: •Si-V't.V-' "'•••• -•/ •' '•••Vv- Ji..,-.- ,f - ,5 >, ^ i . * *> . * ' -* • A . . . . . "8W *W^i »3?< «r » ^ -~ - >4*"->"•*v., "'-,*•,'" WKHRY PUUHDKftU*. TH0MDAY, HAT 8, 1930 fe & £ -#|iss Mildred Schaefer of Grayslake •ad Mrs. Henry Stoffel and daughter, Marie, of Volo were visitors at the home of Ben J. Schaefer Wednesday. Mrs, George Michels and Mis3 Mildred Schaefer visited with Mrs. Anthony Freund Wednesday afternoon. Louis Oertel and friend were callers hlK Tuesday and Wednesday. Mr8. George Michels and son, Donald, and Miss Helen Schaefer were Woodstock callers Tuesday evening. Elmer Huemann burned his arm father severely while working on his car. Miss Helen and Florence Smith and Helen Schaefer were callers in McHenry Tuesday. Miss Marie Hiller was a McHenry Caller Tuesday. Miss Helen Schaefer, was A 'Grayslake visitor Tuesday. Earner Schroeder of Chicago was a caller here Thursday. ^Phe children of this school motored to St. Mary's school, McHenry, where they were entertained with a show by Mcjffenry children Thursday. Mrs. Peter Offelinp and daughter, Kathleen, visited with her mother, Mrs. Joe Michels Thursday Peter Oeffeling and Steven Klein .were callers at the home of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Offeling Thursday evening. Louis Oertel and friend of Woodstock were callers here Thursday afternoon after a trip to Chicago. Miss Florence Scharlan and friend of Chicago spent Wednesday at their sstbmer home near Fox River. Mrs. William Smith of McHenry and children were visitors at the home of tier mother, Mrs. Joe Michels, who Mr. and Mrs. George Michels and son, Donald, spent. Saturday night at the home of the latter's mother, Mrs. Eliabeth Oertel of Woodstock. Mrs. Joe B. Hettelmann and Mrs. Joe Thelen spent Saturday afternoon with Mrs. Joe Michels. Miss Martha Hettermann and Miss Helen Smith motored to Janesville, Wis., Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kempfer and son, Frank, and daughter, Marie, of Chicago spent Sunday with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Chamberlin and daughter, Bernice, and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Schroeder and son, Walter,, and daughter, LaVerne, all of Chicago spent Sunday with relatives. Mrs. William May was a McHenry caller Monday. Mrs. William Tonyan Sr. returned home after spending a few days with "her daughter, Mrs. Brefield of Chicago who was ill. Mrs. Joe Michels is still on the sick list. Johnsburg won the bait game Sonday, the score being--Antioch, 1 and Johnsburg, 18, seven innings being played. Miss Elsie Regner of Chicago spent a few days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Regner. Mr. and Mr3. Alex Freund of Chi cago spent part of Saturday and Sun day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs* Steven H. Smith. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Regner and son, James, and daughter, Betty Jane, were visitors at the home of the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Steven H. Smith on Sunday. The Adam Schillo family of Chicago have started spending the week-ends in their cottage when later on they will remain all week. Frank Kempfer of Chicago is spendis Quite ill, on Friday evening. ing a few days with friends. I quaiiy KB Mtsuch Imprices } VJxJF mm m "HIIW ppMtlJWL'UMMi *• Built by the WorliTs Largest Producer t, *HESE PRICES DEFY j COMP AB$jK$f f® • v Mere's the biggest tire value for your money, for these reasons-- first--The Peerless, despite Ml low price, is built of extradurable Web Cord eonstrvc- Jioa. Secoad--It's built by the world's largest producer of ^rabber by exclusive strength- 'giving processes. ' Third--Its extra thick tread, •tardy side walls and narrow road grip afford greater driving ease, better allround performance and • handsomer appearance. f Walter J. Freund and Tube Vulcanizing Battery Charging and Repairing CRANK CASE DRAINING A SPECIALTY Quaker State (Ml--the best in the world All Work GuaraafMtf • Phone 120-R Wert McHenry Misses Mildred and Susan Frett and John Freund of Chicago spent Sunday at the homes of relatives. .John Pacek returned to Chicago a f ter having spent a week with his parents. Miss Elsie Naverml and mother of Chicago spent last week at their summer home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pitsen spent Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Miller of Volo. Frank Freund was injured while playing ball Sunday, his ankle being hurt. Mrs. William Tonyan was a visitor of her son, George Lay, Sunday/ Mr. and Mrs. Joe Miller and daughter, Marie, and son, Gerald, of McHenry, visited her parents Sunday. Miss Marie Miller was a Chicago caller Saturday. Ben J. Schaefer and sons, Roy, Raymond and Ralph, spent the evening with ithe former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Math Schaefer where they spent the evening playing cards. Visitors at the home of John Hiller Sunday were: Mr. and Mrs. William and children, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smith and daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Ben Stilling and children. Mrs. Frank Kempfer, Mrs. John Pitzen and Mrs. Peter Freund were visitors at the home of Mrs. Joe B. Hettermann Sunday. Math Lay of Spring -Grove Visited his mother-in-law, Mrs. Mary Schmitt, one day last week. Mrs. J03 Thelen had visitors who spent the day with her Sunday. Miss Catherine Freund spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Freund. Mrs. Frank Kempfer and daughter, Marie, of Chicago and Miss Alvera Hettermann were visitors at the home of Joe Klein Sunday afternoon. Miss Rose Miler and Miss Emily Sjftnon were McHenry visitors Sunday. Prank Miller and of Jc&nsburg visited Mrs. ret MUft Orereiae ^i, ...4 •2x4 .'. .... 19.19 30x5, S-ply H. Q. ^ .... 22^9 32x8, 1 S-ply H. D. .... 35J9 29x4.49 6J9 89x4J&9 - 7.99 31x5.99 ..... 9.69 31x6.28 ....y 19 J5 32x&99 1 33X6J99 -- 13J9 Henry Stilling with Mr. and reter J. Miller Sunday. Smitty, the barber from Hampshire, visited with Frank Michel Sunday. Alvis Steffens visited in The Little German hall, Kenosha, Saturday evening. Fred Smith, Arnold Michels, Helen Smith, Martha Hettermann and Clemens Freund motored to Janesville and returned with four new Chevrolets. Mr. and Mrs. William J. Meyers visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John King Sunday. Miss Julia King and John Bowman of Wilmette visited with Mr. and Mrs. John King Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Steffes and family visited at the home of William J. Meyers Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller visited at the home of William J. Bteyers Monday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Mike Pitezn of McHenry visited at the home of Mrs. Joe P. Michels. Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Michels, John Schriener, Evelyne Michels, Mrs. John Degen and daughter, Jeanette, motored to Wonder Lake Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Huff visited at the Otto Adams home Sunday. Mr. and Bin. George King visited with Mr. and Mrs. Joe P. Miller Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Michels Jr. and children of ,Harvard, visited the latter's parents, Mr. and- Mrs. Joe Michels Sr. Miss Mary Althoff of Elgin came home Friday evening and motored back Sunday evening with her uncle, Henry, of Elgin, and his sister, Catherine. > Miss B. Alls and her sisters and mother went to Twin Lakes Sunday afternoon with Henry Althoff of Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Huff and children visited wit1! Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schmitt and family Sunday night. Clarence Michels started his early spring job at Butch Freunds Monday morning and he thinks there is no better cowboy than Clarence. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Bildner motored to Chicago Monday where Mrs. Bildner stayed till Thursday and Mr. Bildner returned the same day. OOMEBS AMD GOERS 07 A WEEK IN OTIS CITY % •"one. .. y e a r Frigid,- '^c a v e con 8Uarao'<* hH°n^long h 'end*? be - e*»»ed. m m fh I Jacob Jtisten & Sons Green Street, McHenry m1!,- As Seen By Plaindealer Reporters and Handed In By Our Friends Paut'Brefeld was a Chicago visitor Friday. Rosina Karls spent the week-end in Chicago. • Miss Lillian Freund was a Chicago visitor Friday. Miss Clara Schiessle was a Chicago visitor Friday. Edward J. Buss was a Chicago visitor Tuesday. ;• Edward Smith saw the ballgame in Chicago Saturday. / Jacob Buss of Belvidere visited relatives here Sunday. Robert Johnson of Chicagp visited friends here Sunday. Miss Ethel Jones w§s a. Chicago visitor last Wednesday. \ : William Martin of Chicago spent Sunday with home folks. • Leo Smith of Chicago Heights spent- Sunday at his home. Ted Breyer of Chicago spent' Sunday at McCollum's lake. Mrs. Thomas Kane Spent the first of the week in Chicago. Ben Wegener of Chicago spent Monday with home folks. Mrs. Josephine Heirr^r visited in Chicago over the week-end. Miss Dorothy Freund of Lake Villa visited relatives here Sunday. Miss Leta Jacks of Evanston visited friends in this city Sunday. Mrs. Rufus Davis of Joliet spent the week-end with relatives here. Mrs. James Beavis spent the weekend with her sister at Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs, Floyd Colman of Chicago visited relatives here Sunday. Mrs. Eliza LockwOod of Crystal Lake called on friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Althoff and family visited at Burlington Sunday. John Duby of Chicago was a Sunday guest in the Albert Vales home. Dr. and Mrs. C. W. Klontz and children visited at St. Charles Sunday. Misses Hannah and Rosina Glosson visited their sister in Kenosha, Wis., Sunday. , Miss Caroline Miller of Wilmette spent the first of the week at her home here. Mrs. E. F. Kelter spent a few days this week as the guest of relatives to Chicago. Edward Vales of Chicago was a Sunday guest in the Albert Vales home. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Vogt and family of Geneva lulled on friends here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Mat Karls and son, Bobby, of Chicago spent SunCay in McHenry. ' Misses Mary and Theresa Brefeld of Chicago spent Wednesday at their home here. Mr. and Mrs.-Ford Jackson and family spent Sunday with relatives at Johnsburg. Mrs. Harry Alexander of Hebron spent Monday with her sister, Mrs. R. A. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Laurence Senten and son of Chicago sptent last week in the Fred Karls home. Mrs. Leo Walmsley of North Dak., spent the first of the week with relatives in this vicinity. Miss May Aylwyd of Aurora spent Sunday in the home of her aunt, Mrs. Margaret McCarthy. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Besley of Woodstock were callers at the W. A. Sayler home Sunday. Lois Bacon returned h6me Saturday; after spending last wtek with hetf sister at Kenosha, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Wienke and sons of Chicago spent the week-end with Mrs. Emma Kennebeck. Miss Maisie Aylward of Round Lake visited in the home of her aunt, Mrs| M. McCarthy, Friday evening. Miss Grace Martin of Chicago spent Saturday in the home of her parents*: Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Martin. Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Martin and children of Belleview, Fla., arrived at, their home here Thursday. Mr. %and Mrs. Robert Sutton and children of Chicago were' McHenry visitors over the week-end. ; Mildred Callahan of Chicago spent, Sunday and Monday as the guest o£ Mr. and Mrs. Peter Doherty. Mrs. Elizabeth Brooksbank of Chicago spent the week-end in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Nickels. Mr. and Mrs. Corr and Mrs. Peter" Glosson of Waukegan spent the last Of the week in the Fred Karls home.; Mr. and Mrs. Martin H. Freund" of Johnsburg visited in the home of their daughter, Mrs. John P. Freund, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. John Buss, daughter, Marie, and Mr. and Mrs. Meyer- of; Chicago called on relatives here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Zoia and little daughter, Jean Ellen, of Woodstock visited in the Peter Doherty home! Sunday. Mrs. Fred Eppel, Mrs. L. C. Ben- Well and Mrs. E. A. Thomas attendcd|^ Home Bureau meeting at Ringwoodi Tuesday. ' Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heckman and children of Chicago were Slinday visitors in the home of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Burke. Mrs. Margaret Gilles of Woodstock •pent Saturday with her sister, Mrs. Peter Doherty. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Rosing -and «on, Alan, of Libertyville spent Sunday afternoon with her parents, Mr N|nd Mrs. Joseph May. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Janosek aikt daughters, Sylvia and Gladys, 0% Chicago were Sunday guests of Mr. #nd Mrs. Albert Vales. . Mr. and Mrs. William J. Kenn^S Ibeck returned to Clevelandl Ohio, Sat! Urday, after spending a few weeks h| ~4*the Mrs. Emma Kennebeck home. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hare and soni ^ ^ and Mrs. Emma Wilkening of Chi* • Cago Heights were Sunday guests in the home of Mr. apd Mrs. John R* JSmith. 1930- , - - - • v-1 . 2-' • 1 1 1 1 - ' l i ' ; • f - ' Y - ? - if; 1 < ' 1 " rm' r f -V 11 T^lii"•"7"I':MI»" r V -nm art - I FVDrat*" Flkw at Food Uligon flies, fried In cocoaflut ad, are considered a great delicacy by the natives of Bali, in the Dutch East Indies. Catching them provide# great sport to the children, who W a long pole, with a dead dragon fly as bait to attract the live ones. V>u Or4«al Missed by J«|^ ... We won't vote Job the title of the world's most patient and long suffering man until we know how he would have reacted to a flat tire on a colii night--Ohio State Journal. VETERAN PEORIA POLICE • KONJOLV'SAN" Known Officer Praisess of New and Different Medicine MR. FRANK E. COBB "Konjola did for me what no other medicine I tried could do," said Mr. Frank E. Cobb, Police Officer, 1220 East Wilcox avenue, Peoria, Illinois. "For a long time my liver and kidneys were badly out of order. I had to rise every night several times, and my general health suffered greatly as a result. Constipation caused me such misery that mealtime was no longer a pleasure, and I kept getting worse instead of better. "I had just about lost confidence in any medicine when I began to hear so much about Konjola, that I decided to try a treatment. I certainly was surprised at the results Konjola gave. The constipation disappeared right away, and it wasn't long until I was free from liver and kidney trouble. My appetite grew, and today I feel healthier than I have in years. If more sufferers knew about Konjola it would have a billion friends instead of a million." Konjola has become the most talked of medicine in America because it makes good. And Konjola makes good even in those most stubborn cases when given a fair trial. Six to eight bottles are recommended as a fair test. Konjola is sold in McHenry at Thomas P. Bolger's drug store, and by all the best druggists in all towns throughout this entire section. • v> ' •• « , ' v / " s t , ' • * ; j * t v ^ * 1 < V*" . ?'-- -J-i * • , . * 1 ^ /* - - - X&F *M!"~ fjpiy v>-; a;/ i is# WfienYou ReJlre-- When You " w ? A Glass of Milk fnty good for you too--if it's Community Dairy Milk-- for it comes from choice, thorobred COWB. Direct to you from our dairy, in clean, sanitary and air tight bottles. Delivered to your home every day in the year--step to tKe yfcoiie apd ca41660-J-l. v, - 04 Community Dair^ Ben J. Smith, Prop. ^. v" '*y. *\4 Phone 660-J-l v.«5r . -i ri ' M •1 Peterson Garage and Repair Shop Located in the Morrow Building, West McHenry, recently known as the Chevrolet agency. I am now fully equipped to handle all kinds of ear and truck repairing Alvin p, Peterson • Business Phone 256 Residence Phone 137-W | TRAVEL VIA LAKE ERIE S to Niagara Falls, Eastern and Canadian Points 53 T pN E beyourhoMlbr ft delightful, refreshing oithfittib K JU between ClrveUnd and Buffalo or to Port Staoky, Caa Every coSStioa oft modero hotel awatu you. Autos carried. Stanley* MM! AU ¥7P E 'fr. iven oil CnginpCfS get a thrill out of 11# ' X • JLt is a simple experiment but the dnunatic results excite even oil experts themselves. A quart of "used" New Iso-Vis, black with the usual crankcase dirt, is drained from a car after many hundreds of miles of driving. Five minutes later we have a quart of oil that might have come straight from the refinery. It has the clear amber color. The same heavy body. Yet it is exactly the sanu quart of oil that wasjusttakmt from the crankcase! tlFi What has happened is simply that a special clay filter has removed the dust and dirt. This is one of the many tests that prove beyond question that New Iso-Vis will not thin out in the crankcase. New Iso-Vis has other important advantages. It brings a radical reduction of car* bon deposit. And it gives lubrication overs wider range of temperatures. This important combination of qualities means less wear and longer life for your engine. New Iso-Vis Motor Oil is on sale at all ^Standard Oil dealers aad service stations. T. THIS experiment proves that New Iso- Vis does not "break down" in the crankcase. A special filter removes the crankcase dirt from "used" New Iso-Vis and the oil itself is exactly the same as when freshly distilled. TofH E LONG lubricating range New Iso-Vis covers the whole thermometer. Some oils are defeated by heat-- Others by cold. New Iso-Vi bNy w AMw it mtm gMmmmg* tiut wmm cfficicmcpyn wcbtwidtkt-- it *Txbc*-- pdreicde 9 mitf y3 5k yc eNntesw m Isqom-Vsifst,. I T i S PA&D O t l > ISO-VIS clVIotor OiL C O M P A N Y (1 3Ofm flnSfand) v

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