McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Dec 1930, p. 6

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BIRO WOOD ^43;*v, fe?t^ ^ 1 Rejoice Mly's ChrbtMS Ffowers for Mother Crystal Ltki By Martha Banning Tkomu p®sspp Our Wish for Christmas Y^ir^K aryv MERRY *iw • i <> •* t.- * .- ay this day stand out as M tthhee ddaayy ^o f Good Will and Jollity. On that day-- Christmas we wish a lifetime ji Peace and Prosperity to our friends ^nd mir dew N. P. Justen Standard Oil Service Station Cor. Elm Street and Richinond Road * May Your Joy t>e Ample SK'J lie season's greetings to our friends. May the joy of Christmas-tide be yours in a sufficient quantity. That's our sincerest wish. ThoMas P. T , f The McHenry Druggist" McHenrv Til# Bridge club held tMr Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Lewis Schroeder Thursday evening. Prizes Were awarded to Marjorie Whiting «nd Nellie McDonald. The home and table decorations were in keeping with the season. Lunch was served. The Bunco club held their Christmas party at \he home of Mrs, Leon Dodge Thursday afternoon. Prizes were won by Mrs. Thomas iJoherty, Mrs. Leon Dodge, Mrs. Ed Thompson «nd Mrs- William McCannon. After the games, gifts were exchanged and lunch was served. Mrs. Ada Mann ajjd Mrs. Homer Mann of Woodstock spent Thursday morning in the Edgar Thomas home. Mrs. Ben Justen was a McHenry Tisitor Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. William Beatty left for their home in Roswell, N. Mex., Wednesday after a month's visit here. Mrs. Nick Young spent Wednesday ih McHenry. Mrs. Ben Walkington spent Thurs- -4ay with Woodstock relatives. Mrs. Lester Nelson and daughter and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch were visitors in the W. A. .Dodge home Thursday. ' , Mr. and Mrs. Ji>hh Dreymiller, Mr?, jgenry Foss and son and Mrs. J. F- (Jlaxton of McHenry spent Thursday evening in the Shepard home. , Mrs. Belle Boyd of Chicago is visiting in the Mrs. Jennie Bacon home. Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Brown were Elgin visitors Thursday. f. P Mr. and Mrs- George Shepard were McHenry visitors Friday. -- Mr. and Mrs. Axel Carisota and family were Woodstock visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. lieon Dodge and family and Mrs. W. A. Dodge were-visitors at Woodstock Saturday after- !/•' ' . " h* Ik y.~ r' _ K f:, St$ it I::i ' ' Tf r , ' fi Christmas P. H. Freund Pluming, treating, Electrical Wo4 '^'%KEL©ASSC"*? . n > \ , V. , • • _Elm Street, McHenty Happy New Ywr, fricmlanc! patron, Joy, success, gaod luck untold! ^ Every brigHt-wisK for your futUK, Central Garage Johnsburg . Fred J. Smith, Prop* Telephone 200-J Soon. , „ „ r Mrs. Mayme Harrison of McHenry (pent Saturday with her daughter. Mrs. J. C. Pearson. Miss Alice Low of Glasco-r, Scotland is visiting her niece, Mrs. Viola T .nw Miss Nellie McDonald was a Wood-i ftock visitor Saturdays evening. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Jacksm and ^family of Solon Mills spent Sunday in the S. H. Beatty home- Mrs. Charles Peet and daughters and Edward Harrison spent Saturday 4h Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson and daughters were Woodstock visitors Saturday. - Charles Coates of Genoa City and Mr. and Mrs. Lester Carr and son •pent Sunday in the Fred Wiedrich home. , „ Mr- and Mrs. Charles Carr and Mrs. frankie Stephenson were Woodstock •Visitors Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lon Smith and fqpily spent Saturday in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and Roy Wiedrich spent Saturday evening in Richmond. Lora Harrison came home from Evanston Friday to spend the hoilda^s *vith her parents. Frank Wiedrich and daughter and •Fred Wiedrich were McHenry visitors Thursday morning. Mrs. Viola Low, Mrs. S. H .Beatty, |}Sfrs. Edgar Thomas and Miss Alice ?liOW were Woodstock visitors Friday. I Mr. and Mrs. Wm. McCannon were iMcHenry visitors Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Dugan and daughter" and Mrs. Belle Boyd of Western Springs spent Sunday in the S- H. Beatty home. Mrs. Jennie Bacon with Mr. and •fjMrs. Leo Karls spent Monday in Elgin. ^ Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent # Monday with her parents. Edward Harrison of Elgin is spending the week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison. Mrs. H. M. Stephenson attended * Legion Christmas party at Elgin, Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Nick Adams of McHenry spent Sunday in the Ed Thompson home. - Mr. and Mrs. Ray Petem r.pent Monday with relatives at Hunter and Belvidere. Mr. and Mrs. George Young spent Saturday evening at McHenry. I Mr. and Mrs. Ed Thompson and daughters were McHenry visitors Monday afternoon. Ben Stevens and George Biggers spent Sunday in the James Bell home at Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. George Young and family spent Sunday in the Peter Weber home near McHenry. SCHOOL NOTES •*#- HONOR ROLL Neither absent nor tardy for four months* Hiley Jean Thomas, Lawrence Freund, Amy Harrison, Robert Adams, Sylvia Freund, Neil Harrison, Russel Laurence, Walter Low, Peari Smith, Shirley Hawley, Reta Mae Merchant, Mae Rager, Floyd Freund. Those having perfect spelling lessons for December*. Hiley Jean Thomas, Gladys Shepard, Mae Rager. 313 ILLY loved flowers, particularly red ones. From the moment he could toddle around alone, he had gone straight to the poppies in his mother's garden and pulled off all the heads. This was out of sheer love, not naughtiness. When Billy -grew to be three year# old he still loved red flowers, but he did not pull off their heads. He kept them tightly in his fist, and smiled with contentment. One afternoon his mother took him shopping with her. There were a few last things she needed before Christmas. Billy was -enchanted by the gay stores and happy looking people. He chattered by his mother's side and looked at everything with all his might. Onc^ when they were waiting to cross a street, Billy's eyes grew rounder than ever, for they were looking straight Into a large, red polnsettla in a shop window. He had never seen' anything so beautiful. The policeman's whistle blew. People streamed across the street. But Billy's mother found that her little boy had not come with her. Someho# he had slipped away. She felt a rnqm'ent of panic and ran back to the policeman before the traffic light changed. "My little boy," she gasped, "I don't know where he is!" Then she heard a clear call. "Mamma! Here's -- a -- present -- for you!" Billy's voice. She and the big policeman looked toward the other Curb. Wedged In between peoples' legs and bundles stood Billy waving "a great red flower. His face was all smiles. "A-- SSSmas present!" called Billy again. His mother and the policeman made a dash for him. The lights changed. Traffic roared by. "I found it in a said Billy, "right there!" A surrr'sed clerk was looking out of the flower shop window. "Lots and lots of pretty flowers," caroled the child, "not deaded like our ga«>n." •"i Lank heaven!" breathed his mother, "and thank you, Billy, for my present." The policeman grinned and Billy's mother went in to pay for the flower. "He doesn't knpw any better. He thinks your shop is a garden," she explained. "I'll ^try to make blm understand." "Oh, that's all right,** replied the clerk, "Mevy Christmas, I'm sure!" Billy's mother hugged - the- child with a prayer of thankfulness in Her heart, and shuddered to think of what might have happened. "This is a Merry- Christmas!" she smiled, and Billy wondered why she held him so close. (®. 1930. Western Newspaper Urfton.) FAMILY MATINEE Xmas Day 2:00 to 5;00! good ~ol Christmas, Thur.-Frl, Dw, 25-20 "Up The River" The scream of a lifetime! A riot of fun and nonsense! 4- Don't Miss Itl An All Star jOOl Also- (Jfrew», Comedy, Solo ^asMonecl , replete with $heer and jollity to you and your dear ones. May the blessings of the day attend upon that's thf>, , con- ? :Vey to all of yep, 'i'Xp'? John J..- Vycital V.Yt "iTIw Orange Front Store" • f . 'J A: y&- . t Sat., Dec. 27- -Matinee 2:30 , "Svii; High" laughs, Loves, Tears tJnder the big top A Real Pictuii g|An All Star CeM i'jAlso Cartoon-News May the Guardian Angel. PtoR." Sunday-Monday, pec! 28-29 Family Matinee Sunday 2 p. m.| to Mao" World's Masicai Stattdmrd International pitch is the one adopted by. the Vienna congrdts in November, 1887. It had been adopted In France in 1859. Previous to the Vienna congress, held for choosing a standard pitch, there had been great confusion, due to the variety of pitches used. International pitch has 435 double vibrations a second for the tone A. It Is.now the standard for the whole world. i Sere it is! Not just a picture,! but an incident in anybody's lilt. It might have been you.] ' v • Come and see it! - with ' Phillips Holm# Grant Mitchell Lucille Powers " George Marion Also News-Comedy-Organ SoloJ rotect you andT yours from all the ills of the day from this day forth--that's an earn- &sL wifth (qt this Yultitid&u I " Agatha $ f : . - :';*5 gifts Stmt Tues.-Wed., Dec. 30-3|. Bert Robt. Woolseyi] ia 'M. to announce the hppe that each peal of the Christmas chimes brings in a bit of good luck ^or k>ur friends.' at Sunrise* Sinclair Super SeryicaSt^ianyf -ft# " - John TL Knox, Proprietof * • , • " " - . hit^fMctipn Routes 61,• fg:,. •: • • . -.. .in.Tit.ii Merry Ckristmas! Aa a friead tried •nd true. Mad frcctint* la Failed to a Motor Fuel a§ Good • For weetu ia the jrMT Aiity-ooel Rosebud Beauty * Green and Elm Streets McHenry 1 oppe Holidays! Jolly Days! Joy to every friend! Glad New Year! Friends to Cheer! Success without an end! £8 Geo. P. Freund x Feed Grinding 'at Your Door f ^ Green Street, McHenry ^ I- • • Wis* Sanitary RtgaUtloat The Egyptians filtered the water of «be Nile, and the Chinese In remotf ages clarified their water supply. Joseph's well, near Glzeh, drivun through 300 feet of solid rock. Is a model for obtaining nurlty. The Coman aqueducts, tapping mountain streams for city population, are later examples. Ventilation was another Roman hobby. The soundness of Mosies' health regulations, adopted into the moral code, Is confirmed by present-day theorfes. . , ANTI-KNOCK COMPOUND ETHYL GASOLINE CORPORATION NEWVORK.U S A Inn Fat fo C«fBBMrc« " » Lanolin Is wool fat or wool grease In' a purified condition. It fs a substance consisting chiefly of the esters of cholestrin with certain higher fatty acids. Prepared commercially from wool as a yellowish white, unctuous mass, it IS ntiscible to a certain extent with water. It is used widely aa a basis for ointments. Form of Aircraft ~ An "ornlthopter is a form of alrflraft heavier than air, deriving Its chief support and prepetUag fovea from flapping SgTO A Better Gasoline Plus Ethyl Every claim made for competitive ga^liac has been checked and double checked i* Parco laboratories. In* no cast has a motor fuel been found to compare with the, att> ground goodness of Parco Ethyl--the oat uel which combinea lightning volatility ith sustained power, speed and mjlcajgiy t to "A better gasoline plus Ethyl." Valvollne Oil Company , m. M«y »!1 good«Mendi ^ surround you To bring you Christmas * chcerl May all good thing* be with yon ~ , ugbout the ia%, N«wY«s*t" ••• ':P.: : ' •;% • • * ^ .1$ IS Jacob Justen &; S,ons "* FURNI1TTREJ / • - v^m'" Green Street "m 'if. •xk, '%!• ..., "•ft:.:,,;/ vi ji I'll

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