Mayor Knox , iset WjRgalar session Monevening. Aldermen present: Doherty, Kreutzer, Krause; Overton, Schaefer and Wattles. •>tThe minutes «of t--he l--ast regular J : ipbeting' were read and approved, f "* - Motion by Krause, seconded by ^ Wattles, that the treasurer's report, allowing a balance of $5,837.35, be ae- ' , eapted as read. Motion carried. .. Motion by Schaefer, seconded by £*? * Doherty, that the collector's report be accepted as read. Motion carried. Motion by Kreutzer, seconded 1>y Schaefer that the clerk's report be accepted as read. Moti<Tn carried. Motion by Overton, seconded by J&rwtaer, that the following bills b® w paid as OK'd by the finance commit- 4 tee. Motion carried. John R. Knox, mayor services, ^'three months f 32.00 F&blic Service Co-, power for -.pumping water 42.40 . v 1 Pfablic Service Co., lights at city J &>.< • , 17J&6 > hall Public Service Co., power for / sewer lift . Poblic Service Co., street lights 124.71 Pbblic Service Co., street lights 152.35 : Motion by Krause, seconded by Kreutzer, that the report of William , Bcnslett be referred to the City Auditor and the City Attorney for investigation. Motion carried. • . Motion by Kreutieri seconded bf Wattles, to adjourn. H ^ ^ J0HN R KN0X» Jfe *. CONWAY, Clerk. ' '- Warm tcksons. uittofca, «d ggr.s- 3k • ' 4 Made Bead* for laiiau ' Tl» first glass beads which were traded to the Indians were brought ftom Europe, but in 1021 several Italian glass-workers were imported to manufacture beads for the Indians. v--> i f - . !fi¥* .>* 3v...W •• *». ' &• DR. C. KELLER Optometrist and Optician ; " ^ . will be at w "i' . WALSH'S DRUG STORE •'f:- Riverside Drive < «|ery Saturday afternoon, S to f p. m. and glasses ' order onljr ^ , T" Also all repair* *-- HOM 1« JOHN DUCEY VETERINARIAN ILLINOIS m" McHENRY GRAVEL A EXCAVATING 00. _ A. P. Freuud, Prop. u Building and Excavat Estimates Furnished on Mzm. J«naie Bacon and Wilt Beatty with WlII*4M>drickson and Mrs. Rae DeGr^f of Richmond spent Sunday with Kxa,. Malissa Gould at Elgin. Miss Florence Olsen visited the past week with her friend, Edith Bambas, at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. D. C. Bacon of Crystal Lake were dinner guests of Mis. Jennie Bacon Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Olsen and son and Miss Florence Olsen visited relatives at Highland Park Sunday. Mina Laurence spent the week-end in the home of her uncle, Harold Kelly at Crystal Lake. Mr. $nd Mrs. Davis Walkington, Ruby Davis and John Smith attended the theatre at Lake Geneva Sunday. • Mrs. Clay Rager and family spent Sunday in Chicago. Julius Falkenkor of Chicago spent Monday in the Will Beth home.' Mr. and Mrs. George Young and j 2g! family spent Sunday at Lake Geneva. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson and daughters were visitors at McHenry Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Peet and Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison called oft relatives at Wauconda Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield spent Sunday in the S. H, Beatty home. The Ladies Aid society will Bold their annual chicken pi# dinner and bazaar at the Woodmen hall, Nov 19. Miss Muriel Mentzer of Woodstock was a Sunday guest in the home of Mrs. Rilla Foss. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Stephenson were Sunday callers in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Byron Martin at Dele, van, Wis. Mr. and Mrs- Henry Hinze of Crystal Lake visited in the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison Sunday evening. Warren Jones of McHenry visited his grandmother, Mrs. Rilla Foas, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and son and Mrs. Frankie Stephenson were Woodstock shoppers Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Will McCannon were visitors in the A. J. Schneider home at McHenry Thursday. Mrs..GvA. Stevens spent the weekend with Elgin friends. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hawley of Chicago were Sunday visitors in the E. C. Hawley home. C- W. Harrison, Mrs. £. C. Pearson j|nd Mrs. G. A. Stevens attended an .J" Eastern Star meeting at Union Thursday evening, Mrs. Edgar Thomas and children, r^in company with Mrs. Ada Mann and Mrs. Harvey Arnold of ' Woodstock, spent Sunday in the home of her sister, Mrs. Frank Moska, at Broadhead, Wis. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and family of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs- Math Nimsgern and family of Spring Grove spent Sunday in the Nick Young home. Mr. and Mrs. fl. M. Stephenson were Friday evening visitors at Wauconda. A. K. Burns and son, Robert, of Oak Park called in the homes of W. A. and Leon Dodge Sunday. Wayne Foss was a McHenry visitor Saturday- Mrs. Jennie Bacon and Will Beatty spent Sunday in the D. C. Bacon home to I 'I' •' Bequest High-grade Gravel Delivered at Crystal Lake. at any time--large or small j Miss RoseWice of Chicago spent orders given prompt attention. Shone 204-M McHenry . HENRY V. SOMPEL . General Teaming Sand, Gravel and Goal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract of Every DOcriptUm or By Day ^ Phone McHenry 640-B-l. McHenry, 111. #10. Address, Rotts f V CARROLL _ L*wj« j# OOee with West McH««ry*SUte Bank Every Wednesday flM 4 MeHenry, Illinois tUf." ™ •' ^mh 12S-W ReasonoUe Bat-- A. H. "BCEAEFEft ~ ' Dn|k| - 4 £ '*'> -i ' .. KeHKNl* - - - - ILLINOIS NilM-B ^ Stoff^ it Keihaniperger •gents (or all property in the best co MeHENKY classes If companies. » ILLINOIS hsore-h Sure-hsmiice ^Vm.G.Schreiper OFFICE AT BESIDENCE •&-R McHenry, lllfaHii wrrHHERMAN J. 8CHAEFEE Local and Long Distance Hauling and Moving Lire Stock Hauled Right to the Yard ^ McH *^1 ii ' '41 - i' i "••'vti'ril * " the past week in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and family. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ladd attended the funeral of Elery Harrison at Woodstock Thursday. Mr- and Mrs. Will McCannon were Woodstock visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard were Elgin visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Bigger*, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wagner and Georgia Biggers of Oak Park spent Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Nick Young. Mrs. Lewis Schroeder and daughter and Mrs. Nelle Evans spent the weekend in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Adams and Mrs. j Paul Meyers of McHenry and Mrs. Harry Kist and Louise Meyers of Chicago spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. James Conway and Dr- Betxer of Libertyville spent Sunday in Ringwood. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kelley and -daughter of Crystal Lake spent Sunday in the Wtti. Kelley home. Joe Welter and Albert Tottee of Chicago were Sunday visitors In the M. L. Welter home. Mr. and Mrs. Davis Walkington and son of McHenry spent Sunday in the Ben Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Ball and fam. ily of Hunter were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and family attended the basket social at the Solon Mills school Thursday evening. John Thompson, Ray Tabor and William Clifford of Chicago spent Monday in the Ed Thompson home. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Dodge and family and Mrs- W. A. Dodge were Wood' stock visitors Saturday evening. Ralph Simpson of Chicago spent the week-end with Cora Beth. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Block and daughter of Kenosha spent Sunday with Dr. and Mrs. Hepburn. Leonard Brown, Kirk Schroeder and : Kenneth Merchant attended a show in .Chicago Saturday night. I Mrs. C. J. Jepson and daughters and Mrs. Joe McCannon attended a shower in honor of Lorena Jepson at Mundelein Saturday- Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Beth Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Max Beth and son of Chicago spent Monday in the Wm. Beth home. Mr. and Mrs- Byron Hitchens of Chicago spent the week-end here. Ralph Clay of Rockford spent the week-end in the Ed Peet home. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McCannon spent Sunday in the Charles Thompson home at Greenwood. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Neal and family visited relatives in Chicago Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. ljitchens were guests of relatives and friends at A ahfnW mnA JRIjgiTi SnnHflir vV - ' - 1' •H] f* : ) Tb,, .-j.... f t . - J v - - A*C * '*'*• •£ MCHENRY'S FAMOUS FLOUR MILLS III this aaill, built in the late sixties, but which has been kept modern up to the last and latest development of every kind of flour milling machinery, just as fast as the used equipment became obsolescent, tfcere is yet preserved--and in use--the old French snillstojies imported from Verdun. These impart the most unusual Uhvot to buck wheat and corn meal so that customers come from many miles in every direction to supply themselves with these (lours made by this good old-fashioned process. In its entire til* ha# kmm mmmk bj imttprm families* ito prodacta have been' a nttervf personal priji and Nether Stones yromthe Worth, the South ; the Biast and the West come customers to this mill to purchase old fashioned buckwheat flour and old fashioned corameai ground on the original old mill stones. Grinding cornmeal with the germ left in and the milling of buckwheat on these ol(| stones imparts a flavor not to be had from any other sources foj many, many miles in every-direction from McHenry. The "upper and nether mill stones" referred to in Soloman's Songs are here yet to he seen in actmal use. They are housed in the same wooded covering made of bent wood and wainscoting installed back in the late sixties or early seventies when this mill first went into operation^ The curious may look in and see the black buckwheat grains or the yellow corn grains pouring between the stones which came from Verdun, the famous battle field. The foods made at our mill have n* at any scource for hundreds of miles distant from McHenry. - The processes which turn wheat, corn and buckwheat into healthful and appetizing foods have been preserved in this old mill. Here, yet, are to be had those foods which fed the pioneer stock; the men and women of that long ago time out of which this enterprise grew and became famous. ^ ; * The most accurate gauging and weighing of all grain goes on constantly so that national and international standards of weight and purity are preserved. The same machines and gauges used in the very greatest of flouring mills are used here so that " seller and buyer, alike, are assured of a square deal in the purchase of their milled food-stuffs and poultry feeds. Standards of cleanliness are most rigid. Automatic machines, blowers and pipes carry off all dust and a separate stack built outside the mil building carries away even the fuiii&J of fuel oils used for power. * ~ ' It is literally true that you may Spread your dinner on the maple floor of our mill receiving and hopper rooms with every certainty that the food so served would lose none of its appetizing quality. Steel rolls, equal of those used by greatest of flouring mills, are duplicated here.Flour is ^screened through silk made in China and imported for this very purpose. Sifters agitated by power which take out the very last particle of all foreign matter; agitators which polish the grains until they shine like jewels in a lapidary's window; and all over the place, four stories above the ground, are precautions after precaution that you shall : have the best and the cleanest of flours for %your breads, confections and cakes. What we mean for you to know is that the flours yon get from this mill--yes, and the poultry feeds, too--are of the very highest * standards; of the finest grades of manufacture, and of a purity and cleanliness unexcelled in any mill in the entire United States. c Many, many famiUe*yiaye found this to be true. 7^7 < 4 ' , „: ^ ^ That is Ihe rifeiii thaf lJhn6ost any day Uyou will find trucks and cars waiting their turn at this mill and from their license plates you will find that these customers come §|from Wisconsin, South of Elgin, and West of "Rockford as well as from Waukegan and ;points .north and south along the lake shore. Both of the McHenry bakers use our flours "and when you eat bread baked and sold in ^ -McHenry by McHenry bakers you are using v^foed made here at home from home grown ^materials in the cleanest and the most - - ^fieetive posaibl* maimer^ following . * Made in NcHeory McHENRY FLOOR MILLS , Wm. Spencer, Owner-- SPRING WHEAT FLOTKU*^^ ^ "Early Riser" for delicious, nutritions breads and sncoesaful, delicate pastry. Always good. GENUINE GRAHAM FLOUR-- Named after a famous physician. The entire kernel of wheat being ground. WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR--' The wheat kernel less the coarse bran is ground to powder^ - : - Self Rising BUCKWHEAT FLOtfR-- in a "jiffy," just add or water and bake. Appetizing OLD FASHIONED BUCKWHEAT FLOUR-- - Just like our Grandmothers used; produces cakas "]ike mother used to make! '• CORN MEALThis is ground left in; makes truly wonderful corn . ••• germ bread. BREAKFAST FOOfc-- . Every constituent food dement plus bulk is found in our. bran. 1H>ULTRY FEEDS-- ^ Scientifically prepared to assure t jtoalth, growth and proper egg production. DEMAND THESE BRANDS FROM YOUR DEALER latest and the most approved methods! 'y developed through scientific research. ^i^ake our "Early Riser" Flour,"made from- |j Spring wheat and succeessful in many house- ^ holds for nearly sixty years. Time has tested i and approved this "Early Riser"'flour bothffor lipme and bakery use. "Genuine Graham Flour" ground at this -1 m511 has all the constituent elements of the food left in. Clean and sifted many times, nevertheless the elements of the bran 80 much prized by many dietitians are all at your command. Yet so finely ground that it kneads into perfect dough out of which comes the most wholesome loaf of graham bread you will find in a day's journey. Indeed many ^users of this flour make a day's journey to hay it. \ The ""Whole 1 mill measures up to our own high standards and meets in all essential details every requirement of the most exacting bread make?* , whether home or custom bakery. ' "Self Rising Buckwheat Floor" requiring only the addition of milk or water, as yon prefer, is from buckwheat grown in this section and brought by farmers to this mill in, their own wagons. The chemical formulae®"" followed in all first class mills are adopted here and the additions are such as to give you an instantly accessible food. Remember that this flour is ground on the old burr mills and possesses a flavor impossible to this food when ground by any ether process. "Old Fashioned Buckwheat Flour" is the kind that "Mother used to make" setting it over night in the round wooden bowl down by the. fire place and you can enjoy exactly the same kind of buckwheat cakes ||ie morning after. This good flour, too,is ground on. the old burr stones which came from Verdun ~ and possesses a flavor incomparable to the. taste and equally impossible to describe. The Corn Meal you get here has all theA germ left in. It is a perfect corn meal be^i; cause all the corn oil elements are groundwith the grain and it is safe to say that yon " never ate such cakes in all your life. Breakfast foods are so carefully prepared that we get but six pounds to the bushel of wheat. Our bran is useful for,"bulk" foods and palatable as well. For poultry foods yon will solve all your problems when you feed the foods ground here and for sale at our mill platform. - -mil me and satisfy yourself. Ton era »W(#Ss aodin all wa^s. the Best--Be Sure, Demand the Home Brand--the Brand you know Wic:: •.Hfc. "^4 William Spencer, Owner McHenry f - ' --- * •: . : r141 'j #5r: ^ • ;'•* A SI . . PI mi S?* K ? r?- . * r --"•s J <•$> *k Y si.. " • , ' • V .^ " *':!-K• tfcia iM a • jS1 • . ?J L V •• -• ^ A ' '* Ju •• J ... V I