McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 29 May 1930, p. 5

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>7 ^ THK H.HKNBY PLAINDEALES, THUESDAY, EL TOVAR THEATRE Crystal Lake Phone 644 iy •j: - LAST TIMES TODAY MARILYN MILLER i» - "SALLY?? j W-* v'^-. .'.'Y*- FRI.SAT., May 30-31 ...inea. SUNDAY, JUNE 1 ^ Continuous 3:00 to ll:Sf" > # "FRECKLES" star of "Our Gang" Comedks In Person On Scree* ' jh PATSY RUTH MI&LBC'-; E. E. HORTON ; A -"WIDE OPEN" • Monday, Tuesday, Jane 2-3 NORMA SHEARER fit ! ^Divorcee Now Playing in Chicago CHESTER MORRIS with CONRAD NAGEL "" "ADULTS ONLY WWWESDAY. JUNE 4 V l \ & SCHENCK I s 3* Twica Told Tale# Interesting Bite «f News Tskm From the Columns of tl» Plaindealer Fifty and Xwwiy-five Imh Aff Fifty Years Ago A new bridge now spans the creek between the wagon factory and the residence of E. M. Owen. The suit in the circuit court between A. H. Hanley and Richard Bishop, in relation to water-power has been settled, we believe, to the satisfaction of both parties. David Powers is putting up a new building west of Fitzsimmons & Evarson's store, near the depot, which, when completed will be occupied by him as a saloon and residence. We are pleased to be able to announce to the patrons of our public school that the directors have secured the services of Prof. S. D. Baldwin for another year. This will be his sixth year as principal in the school. Twenty-five Years Ago Again has one of our homes been darkened. Last Monday evening at the hour of nine the Angel of Death came to take Mrs. Mathias Weber to her final reward, after a suffering which covered a period of nearly six months. As the Woodman's lease expired on June 1, the hall is again in charge of its owner, Simon Stoffel. The hall will undergo a thorough cleaning and for the evening of the Fourth of July, ^Irs. Stoffel announces a grand reopening of the popular dancing hall. Simon Bros., who it will be remembered conducted a general store in the Simes block in West McHenry about five years ago, are now tha proprietors of three general stores in St. Charles, Geneva and West Chicago, Memorial day in McHenry and Ringwood will go into local history as having been most fittingly observed. The services at Ringwood were ,in the forenoon, thus letting those who desired to attend the exercises at both places. A bus load of the G. A. R. post drove to Ringwood in the fbrenoon, returning in time to be in McHenry for the exercises here. On Monday, May 22, 1905, occurred the marriage of Theodore Worts and. Miss Catherine Cushman at Waukega ft. a. Vu * > V i * * & T * i 29} 1830 -s ft n < *>*•* Mr tv ^ -* * * T ~ *4 • RINGWOOD V :/ And a Costly On* ••Ere George," cried a navvy to his mate, as^ they passed a lecture hall, where an address on "The Era of Cleanliness" was announced, "let us go in and bear what the bloke's got to say. I always thought it was an error myself."--London Answtfti.- ; Slow to Gauge Inaanity •' The Greek physician Hippocrates Asserted that certain mental diseases were brain disorders, but even in the Nineteenth century insanity was still looked upon by many people as a mystCrfew malady of divine origin. i/ . I Linking Ancicnt and Modem * dbch modern and andent industries IBS aviation and sheep grazing are combined in France at the Aln airport Airmen have been warned to make a circuit of the airdrome before landing to give the shepherd time to collect his flock. Hydrogen Gas The bureau of standards says that the atom of hydrogen has not been split into two different gases. What has been discovered is that hydrogen gas contains two different types of hydrogen molecules, and a partial separation of these two types has been effected. Point to This The most winsome and wayward of brooks draws now and then some lover's foot to its intimate reserve, while the spirit of a bursting water pipe gathers a gaping crowd forthwith.-- James Russell Lowell. Something to Build On We would all be surprised if we knew what people say behind our backs; and there Is some foundatioq for the terrible talk about us. --Eld Howe in Howe's Monthly. f f :" Ir % • pf. wt r£b GUARANTEED FOR LIFE! This quality tire is built to outlast aad outclass any tire at its low price. Its extra-thick tread and patented road-gripping design give *' great riding ease and durability. ow offered at amazing low prices. Buy while yon can save. ^ 1 31x5.00 9.60 31x5.25 10.95 . • % . - ' • * '• , . #2x6.00; -,#3x6.00 13.20 13.60 i *.. 30x3'/z Orersise 5.60- ^ 3 2 x 4 . . . . . . . ;1 0 . 1 0 6J0 H™D IL1 BY THE WnyOjaR*Mj"'Sa I* - 30x4L6f T2^ JO***., 7.0* . * ' j Walter J. Freund and Tube Vulcanizing Battery Charging and Repairing CRANK CASE DRAINING A SPECIALTY r ' State Oil--the best in the world All Work flinnnlHi L20-R West McHenry V , Tk» Ladies Aid society will- hold a baited ham and salmon loaf dinner at the M. W. A. hall on Decoration day. It is hoped a good crowd will attend. Mr. and Mrs. Juttas Randall of Richmond spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Boyd and daughter, Alice Luella, of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Smith and Mrs. Rae DeGrant, of Oak Park, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dugan and daughter, of Western Springs and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and two children of Deerfield were Sunday guests in the Sam Beatty home. Miss Gwendolyn Jackson of Solon and Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen were afternoon callers. Mr. and Mrs. Geonge Harrison and son, Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Harrison and son, Earl, and Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hinzie called on Mrs. Martha Harrison at Wauconda Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Harrison was S8 years old and held "open house" to her friends between the hours of 2 to 5 o'clock. She is in good health. Mrs. G. A. Stevens attended a bridge party at the home , of Mrs. Schevillion at Richmond Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and son of McHenry spent Monday evening in the Nick Young home. Mrs. Frankie Stephenson spent Tuesday with Mrs. Harry Darrow at Richmond. Floyd Hopper of McHenry was a caller in the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Hopper, Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Hopper of Chicago spent Tuesday night and Wednesday with relatives. , Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son of Chicago spent Tuesday night and Wednesday with William Beth. Mesdames Howard Buckland, J. C. Ladd, Roy Neal, MaryA Hodge and Miss Flora Taylor spent Tuesday afternoon at Lake Geneva. ' Mrs. Nick Youii? spent Tuesday in the home of her daughter at McHenry. Mrs. C. E. Hawley and daughters spent the past week with Chicago relatives. • Mr. and Mrs. Clark Huson of Elgin C. J. Jepson. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters spent Monday at Belvidere and Hunter. Mrs. Bruno Butler spent Thursday and Friday in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and family were visitors at McHenry Wednesday evening. \ ® Fred Krohn of Chicago spent Wednesday with his family. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and family were Woodstock visitors Wednesday evening. Clay Rager of Chicago spent Wednesday with his family. , Mrs. William Blake of McHenry was a guest of Mrs. Edgar Thomas Wednesday. Mrs. Rillah Foss and son and Mrs. Frankie Stephenson were visitors at Elgin Thursday afternoon. Mrs. W. A. Dodge was a McHenry visitor Wednesday evening. Wayne Foss and Elmer Hopper attended the township exercises at Richmond Thursday evening. Mrs. George Noble and Mrs. Minnie Coates were McHenry shoppers Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young were visitors at Woodstock Wednesday. Miss Ruth Cunningham and mother of Woodstock wer° callers in the G. Shepard home Thursday evening. Mrs. Viola Low entertained tha bunco club at her home Thursday afternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Nick Young the punch prize, Mrs. Ed Thompson first, Mrs. George Young second and Mrs. George Shepard the consolation. Refreshments were served at the close of the games. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Mann of Woodstock were callers ill thcEdgar Thomas home Thursday. Mrs. Randall and daughter, Mae, of Keystone spent Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Gus Carlson. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young, Mrs. Viola Low, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen, Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Smith, Mercedes and Bernice Smith attended the township exercises at Richmond Thursday. Mrs. Ada Mann of Woodstock spent Thursday with her daughter, Mrs. Edgar Thomas and family. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr, Mrs. B^n Justen, Miss Ellen Hall, Mrs. W. A. Dodge, Mrs. E. P. Flanders, Mrs Viola Low and Mrs. G. E. IShepard were Woodstock shoppers Friday Rolland McCannon was a Woodstock caller Friday. Adrian Thomas of Chicago spent Saturday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Thomas. Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch were cdllers in Ringwood Friday and were accompanied home by Mrs. Jennie Bacon who will visit them for a few days. Miss Medella Rawson of Greenwood was a caller in the W. A. Dodge home Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dunhanf and daughter of Chicago spent the weekend in the B. T. Butler home. Mrs. Ruthford of Savannah, M*»., died at her home May 16. She was a former Ringwood resident. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Harrison and family were Woodstock visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean and Mrs, McBroom of Woodstock spent Sunday with Mrs. Frankie Stephenson Ben Walkington was a, Woodstock caller Friday'afternoon. Carl Fay of Chicago was a guest in the home of his brother, Frank Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chi cago spent Sunday in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield spent Sunday in the home of Sam Beatty. Ralph Simpson of Chicago $pent Sunday in the William Beth home. Mr. and Mrs. Mahaffey of Chicago were callers in the E. .P. Flanders home Saturday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kelley and daughter of Crystal Lake spent Saturday evening in the William Kelley home. Mr. ahd Mrs. 'Frank Block and I daughter of Kenosha spent Snnday with Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn. Mr. and Mrs. Math Nimsgern and family of Spring Grove were callers in ^he Nick Young home Sunday afternoon. Mrs. William Kelley and daughter; Mrs. Hepburn, Mrs. Rager and Alice Wilcox spent Thursday afternoon with Mrs. Phillips at Solon Mills. Byron Hitchens of Chicago spent' Monday in Ringwood. Floyd Hopper of McHenry spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and MILf mrms . EV . JT. HU oApntp>AeWr. ! Mrs. Abe Lawrence and son, Will, and granddaughter, Helen, were shoppers at Waukegan Wednesday. Mrs. Kelley and grandson, Zane, are visiting in the Harold Kelley home at Crystal Lake. Mr. and' Mrs. David Stanley af Woodstock spent Saturday in-the William Kelley home. Miss Dorothy Carr and girl friend of Chicago spent Sunday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr. Fred Wiedrich spent Monday in Chicago. Loretta Fisher is visiting in the home of her sister, Mrs. Harold Wiedrich. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr were Woodstock visitors Saturday afternoon. Charles Jacobs end three friends of Darien, Wis., spent Sunday afternoon in the Frank Wiedrich home. Charles Coates of Genoa City spent Sunday in the home of his sister, Mrs. Fred Wiedrich. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stevens and family of Milwaukee spent Sunday in the G. A. Stevens home. Mrs. Mabelle Johonnott and son of Chicago and MT. and Mrs. Wade Sanborn of Spring Grove spent Sunday in the T. A. Abbott home. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard and family spent Sunday with McHenry relatives. Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, Mary, of Evanston spent the weekend in the G. A. Stevens home. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and family were Sunday guests of relatives it Mundelein and Wauconda. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. Stevens, Mrs. Agnes Jencks and daughter, Mary, were Woodstock visitors Saturday evening. Miss Mary Jepson' of Wauconda is visiting her cousin, Virginia Jepson. Mrs. Harold Whiting and daughter, Ethel, of Chicago spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives here. Mrs. Ed. Thompson and son, Edward, and daughter, Grace Mary, "visited relatives in Chicago Friday and Saturday. Fred Krohn is in a hospital in Chicago suffering from an attack >f appendicitis. Mrs. Ray Merchant is spending a few days visiting her sister, Mrs. Howard, in Kenosha, Wis. Mrs. Frank Elis and daughter, Maxine, Mrs. Frank. Wilson and son, Edward, and friends of Rockford spent the week-end in the home of Joe Biggers and family. 'Miss Gwendolyn Jackson of Solon Mills is spending .a few days with her aunt, Mrs. Elmer Olsen and family. Frank Lawson of Elgin called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Young Saturday afternoon. FloVd Foss and Miss Muriel Menf-- zer of Woodstock called on Mrs. Martha Harrison at Wauconda Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Matson and family of Chicago spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Gus Pearson. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and family visited relatives in Chicago Sunday. Edward Harrison of Elgin spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mrs. George Young and children were McHenry visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Frank McAssey of Richmond were business callers :n town Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Freund and family were Woodstock visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. James Conway of Libertyville were calling on old -friends here Sunday. Oscar Tabor and Alvin Phillips spent Monday forenoon in Elgin. Rev. and Mrs. Dibble and children of Greenwood were calling on friends Monday afternoon. . Mr. and Mrs. Will Hendrickson of Richmond were Ringwbod callers Friday. The 4-H calf club had an organization meeting at the Ringwood school May 21st, with six members joining. The officers elected were: President, Earl Harrison; vice-president, Jerome Justen; secretary and treasurer, Francis Harrison; reporter, Charles Freund; song and cheer leader, Donald Adams. At the close of the meeting there were two games played. The Ground Floor The first congress met March 4, 1790. And no doubt the first lobby went to work the next day.--Country Home. ' WOMEN'S APPROACH TO CONSERVATION "Most women are not hunters and fishermen; just a few are privileged to enjoy those sports; and yet women have -always been conservationists," declared Mrs. Frank M. Warren, Chairman, Committee of Water and Waterways of the General Federated Women's Clubs, before the general assembly of the*recent National Convention of the Izaak Walton League of America, held in Chicago. "Thffe interest of the women began in early times whqn they wished to save the trees, particularly around their homes, or to plant flowers around pjoneer homes. With the coming of their citizenship, women have a new realization of responsibility. The increasing use of the automobile and, hence, the increase in the knowledge of the country, together with the development of such organizations as the Federated Women's Clubs and the Boy and Girl Scouts, have opened up new fields of service for the women, so that the work of women in conservation has followed a very different line from the work of men, who have originally approached it largely from the sportsman's angle. "There is no question but that the women of the country are becoming more and more conservation-minded. Among the unorganized women this is evidenced to me largely because of the fact that the popular women's magazines are frequently including articles and editorials on conservation. "I think that the women of America are perhaps more interested in retaining the beauty of our lakes and streams 'fend rivers than in any other thing, and waterway development which will partially despoil the beauty is something which we are working hard to prevent. "Women are greatly interested iri the preservation of our wild flowers and also in the reforestation of our country. In almost every state some program of great scope is underway, and American women are playing an important part in, bringing these conservation measures to a successful conclusion." Love's Test . -tip jrlcar of Benfleet, Essex, England, estimates that during the average marriage a man sees his wife's face at breakfast 10,000 times, "a pretty severe test of human nature." Advocates Toy Circulation A probation officer In a children's court suggests that a circulating library of durable toys would be a means of keeping children out of mischief after school hours. Broke, but Lucky Most of us know from doleful experience what It means to be "broke." But did we profit by our experience? Often a man gains more wisdom from being "broke" than from years of handling large sums of money.--American Magazine. Phone McHenry 133-M JOHN OEFFLING Sk, Distributor of flritna Smragea Distributor Sheridan Springs Soft Drinks McHENRY, ILLINOIS 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 kind# of oar and truck repairing Alvin C. P#tor*on Business Phone 256 Residence Phone 137-W Fox River Hatcheries > ; SPECIAL PRICES * ; f ^ oo to $12.00 iter bmi&H Change of prices effective at once. . Call and reverse charges. We deliver to your door in lots of 300 or more. Duck hatching every week. fhone 1537 or M1Q •' 58 S. Spring St iBlgin/lU. mmmmumm VOLO GARAGE Jtate Highway 20 and Band Road a4-HOIIR SERVICE v ^Expert Mechanical Work Rapid Flat Rate Know what your job is going to cogl before we start work Phone McHenry 628-R-l WEST SIDE GARAG& Adams Bros., Props. Tel. 185 general Automobile Repairing Res. Phone, 639-R-2 S. H. Freund & Son I General Building Contactors Phone 127-R . Cor. Pearl and Park Sts. McHenry, ILL 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 USE THE CLASSIFIED COLUMNS TOK QUICK RESULTS 1930'S BIGGEST n AD r> AtWC IN THE LOWDAHwAlrlf PRICED JPELJI Curs "that ATTENTION ou.r> Mopvsmc Many of our customers save money and get wonderful service using taese fine quality but loifpriced Qoodyears. Real bargains--a big money's worth possible through Goodyear's huge output, nearly one'third of all tires sold in America• Here, too-- More p«k>ple ride on Goodyear Una than on any other kind. }-% Forget your car ^ has tires--get your lN>UBLE EAGLES NOW! - fll Fresh Stock--Aff firsts -Standard Lifetime GuarMand Free Mounting •4?: * ljS0x4.5e^ %z5.oe. 31x5.25 S2x6.(HI . 7.00 9.60 10.95 13.20 33x6.00 30x3 Vz Oversise .. 32x4 ... 29x4.4# |»iii in • 1S.6T $ 5.6* 10.ll ..6.30 Walter J. Freund AHD TUBE VULCANIZING Phone 120-R V BATTERY OHAROINQ AND REPAIRING GUARANTEED West McHenry, 111? '

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