McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 12 Mar 1931, p. 2

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•il '•t"'Ms>"«#'" TBH! M'HElfltY %*-t , » ^"Sr i® <M"< ^ V J '¥ '•-** ** v • ^-v^r<£> I * V"i^-' * "* "- V *- ' :; • \^¥• -*»v£ ,v ,- ?t4< ' 'v*! •, f , " * \ * , ' * ** «trtSDAX MJAch 12; 1031 " r ^ ^ ^ gi* S*als Most Learn to Swim .The water Is not the natural habitat the seal and the baby seal must be iven a coarse of Instruction before It learns to swim. The mother seal fives her young the necessary encouragement to enter the sea and by her example leaches it to conduct It- •elf In the water. Comprehensive •*By and targe" has about the same meaning as comprehensively, on the whole, or everything considered. For Instance, Mark Twain says In "Old Times": "Taking you by and large, you do seem to be more different kinds of an ass than any creature I ever saw before." sr^•;; s VYdTAlS 'The Orange Front Store' GREEN STREET Saturday; March 11 SPLIT WILLOW CLOTHES BASKETS, $1.25 value : , .. ii~JRJ..OO BUSHEL BASKETS, heavy corrugated, with rope handles, $1.25 value T_, -_~~4&1*00 ' V-* SKILLETS, one set Oriswold No. 3 and 7 ;y Skillets $1.00 FOOD CHOPPERS, No. 4 Regal $1.00 CLOTHES HAMPERS, steel," green or ivory.„:_. _$1.00 KITCHEN CHAIRS, steel, with solid backs, green or blue .••$1.00 BREAD BOXES, roll top, green or ivoiy____. $1.00 VEGETABLE BINS, heavy steel, three compartments. gTeen or blue _ $1.00 STEP-ON-PAILS, 10-qt Handy Ann, green or hlue $1.00 CONQOLEUM RUGS, 54:54, $2.25 value.. 4&1.69 TOOL BOXES, heavy metal, 6x14, $1.65 value $1.00 USED GAS STOVE, in very good condition $15.00 John J. Vycifal m • « . As a part of this community we take pleasure in joining this community DOLLAR SALE EVENT. Note what a dollar will buy. Finest Granulated .... 20 lbs. 98^ Ivpry Flellccs .5 large pkgs. $1.00 PillAflllllifi American Some Sliced or Crushed, 4 No. 2V2 cans 90 <» Milk National Brand 15 cans Sl.OO; P & O SO0pWhite Naptha 32 bars im PfiftChfifi Fort Dearborn Brand 6 No. 2V2 cans CampbeirsTomato Soup 12cans 1M Campbell^pork & Beans 15 cans 95# NATIONAL TEA CO. # Quality Grocers of the Middle West r^r. y% £&i Gloves NOW it costs than ever to keep your wardrobe perfect condition. We've cut our prices but not the quality of <wr work. Women's Dresses $1 and up Men's Suits (3 pc.) jl J25c Ties .50c ANNA HOWARD PwtoTice • UiJ&i -i tinea St MANY NATIONS NOW USE WOMEN SPIES Strang Heart and Baby Face Are Needed. Paris,--Half of the spies In Europe today wear skirts. Spying is a profession to which many stenographers aspire, and the only stock In. trade needed 1s a stony heart, impervious to dove and flattery, beauty and the fare of a baby doll, to throw the po lire off the track. Many of the chiefs of Europe's underground >espionnge services believe that where secrets of national defense lire to be wormed from young officers, one black-eyed, raven-haired beauty can do more pood than a platoon of men well versed In the art of drawing fortifications In invisible ink. It ts true also that other chiefs feel as strongly the other way. These hold (hat no woman Is able to keep a secret in all circumstances. .They employ no women spies In responsible posts. To take care of other nations' women spies they use personable young men. These young men seek and make love to them. The theory is that when the woman lets herself fall in lore fche tells all she knows. t The Fatal Mistake. . Thus these men use the love lure precisely as do the women spies. Spying seems to be more natural to women than to men, especially to women who like lntribue. Ever sincev Mata Harl went to work for Germany during the World war and used her art of making men fall In love with her, she has been' looked upon as queen of the spies. Mata Harl, like other women spies, made the fatal mistake of falling In love herself, and before long she was caught and faced the firing squad in the moat of Vincennes castle. During and Just before the war Germany used many women to get Information. England, in the few years before the war, > was swamped with German governesses and nursemaids, seeking jobs at any price, and generally In the homes of British army and navy officers. One of the strangest of these was Enftna Stubert, woman companion, who changed over nnd quit her spy job with the central powers and became one of the best spies In the service of the allies. Five spies of the central powers went to the execution. post upon evidence turned up by thergovernness. • ; Woman Works for Lovtft. 8ince the war, no woman .spy has been more successful than m French WOIPan, Marthe Moreuil, before her Arrest, flft# worked for the love of the game and for her lover. Paid dancer in a Paris dance hall, she t_ {; v.'.11 aviation cent*: " r.-.l g:t Info:: latlon concerning new -fcrrtrbj.idroent planes for a group r? yo""g Englishn.rn, William Fisher, John Leather, and Ernest Philipps. Although Bhe ht.l never been In an airplane before, t!'e went to several aviation fields aid asked to be allowed to practice parachute Jumping. Friendly soldier pilots took her for rides high over tl e field and allowed her to leap with her parachute. Once established, she struck up friendships and v.*r.s able to pass to her English friends an enormous amount of information, drawings, and documents before the band was arrested. Then she took her prison sentence of six months with closed lips. Clew to Mystery Mine Is Found in Wisconsin De Soto. Wis.--The plowing up of a piece of ift&d ore by workmen cutting through a hill on Highway 82 just out of De Soto and the arrival of two Iowa prospectors to examine the find has excited this little village on the Winneshiek and re-awakened the story of a secret Indian lead mine never disclosed to a white man. Other pieces of lead have been found on a farm near Red Mound, Wis. As the Black Hawk bridge between De Soto, Wis., and Lansing, Iowa, nears completion, tourists may be expected to join In the search which has been renewed from time to time ever since the first white trader established a post at De Soto for the sole purpose of locating the Indians' source of lead. He was not permitted to do so, and In 91 years later prospectors have fared no better. The site of the Indian lead mine still is a mystery. VOLO -- ' *----- llf. and Mrs. R. C. Hallock «f Wauconda were Wednesday evening callers at the Bacon home. William Rossdeutscher of Joliet •pent a few days here with relatives and friends. ' Miss Stella Hefferman spent the week-end with her sister at Lake Villa. Wednesday dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hironimus were Mr. E. Cochens, Mrs. Richard Cronin of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nicholas of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. William Hironimus of Round Lake, Fred Dunnell, Mrs. Rose Dunnell, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hironimus and daughter and Otto Klemm of Kenosha. Mr. and Mrs. Otto Klemm are the parents ^ot a daughter, born at the Kenosha hospital Tuesday. Alvin Case was a business caller at the Bacon home Sunday. Mrs. H. E. Binnett and children of Chicago spent the week-Mid at the George Dowell home . Little Virginia Mae Passfield is m the sick list. Mrs. Charlotte Knitfel spent the ist week with Mrs. George Case at Wauconda. She returned to the home ,ef her daughter here, Mrs. George Dowell, Saturday. , Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hironimus spent Wednesday evening at the Lloya Fisher home.. Mrs. Roy Passfield and son, Harry, motored to Wauconda Saturday. Mrs. Earl Hironimus and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher were Waukegan shdg>- pers Friday. Mr. and Mrs. George Dowell and son, Raymond, Mrs. Harry Passfield and sons, John and George, were Tuesday visitors at the Roy Passfield home. Misses LaVerne Stone and Miss Bernice Powers of Wauconda were Saturday callers at the Bacon home. Mr. Osgood of Wauconda is painting Esse Fisher's barn and silo. Rumors are going around th*t Jack VanBuren of the Volo Garage was appointed deputy Sheriff by Lester Tiffany. Mrs. Clinton Rauen and family of Slocurg Lake spent Thursday afternoon at the Dowell Bros. home. ' Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and son called on Mr. and Mrs. Art Kaiser on Wednesday afternoon. Mr, and Mrs. Earl Hironimus, Mr.< and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and daughter and Ellwood Dotvell spent Thursday at the Meyers Bros, home in Fremont. Mrs. Richard Dowell and family spent Monday at the Leslie home at Slocum Lake. Mr. and Mrs. William Lohman, son, Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. George Scheid and daughter spent Tuesday evening at the Fisher home. Lester Wallis motored to Wauconda Monday. The Volo cemetery society met at the home of Mrs. Joe Passfield Thursday. Two tables of bunco were in play with prizes going to Mrs. Rose Dunnell and Mrs. Harry Passfield. A delicious lunch was served at the close of the afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. William DilHon and family of Urbana have moved back to their farm here. Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Wilson and grandson, Robert Jene, visited Mrs. Milton Dowell Friday at the St. Theresa hopital. Mrs. Clark Nicholas, Mrs. George Scheid, Milton Dowell visaed Mrs. Milton Dowell Wednesday. "* ~st" - Davis DOLLAR DAY IS SATURDAY Great Eaglislt UniVariiix The population of Oxford, Ekigland, la about 57,000. There are now 22 colleges, all of which are separate corporations In Oxford university. Their names are as follows University, Baliiol, Merton, Exeter, Oriel, Queens, New College. Lincoln, All Souls, Magdalen, Brasenose, Corpus Chrlsti, Christ Church, Trinity, St John's, Jesus, Wadham, Pembroke, Worcester, Mansfield, Hertford and Keble. Eat Everything | without Fear I of Indigestion* Ire there lots of foods you can't «*fc--for fear of gas, bloating, pains In the stomach and bowels? • Do you have to pass up favorite dishes--while the rest enjoy them? That's a sign you need Tanlac! Foif , more than 10 years Tanlac has reV stored to vigorous health thousand^. who suffered like you do. Mrs. Arvena Bowers, of 1280 Jack-* son St., Topeka, Kans., says: "Fiv^ years I was troubled with gas, bloat-« ing and dizzy spells. But-Tanlad toned up my whole system and in-» creased my weight 10 lbs." .-Ay- - 'N • A 'IL -t £ --It's Drive ah?:» Twin - Ignition IV ASH .. . . •**; * '^1 new experience!- y. f /^NE of the chief reasons for the fiash- V-/ ing acceleration and smooth speed and power of Nash Eight-80 and Eight-90 models is aircraft-type Twin-Ignition. In each cylinder, two spark plugs placed opposite each other, fire at precisely the same instant. The highly compressed gas ignites at two points. It is burned more quicklyv efficiently. The result:--A more powerful explosion--instant responsiveness--notable gasoline economy. Let's demonstrate. f m -\t4; $ * • • ~ *•v ' 1fee • : ".' h •I ^The National Owner's Service Policy A ssmrts Nash Ownart Standardized Service Everywhere *" # If you suffer from indigestion, gas, dizziness, headaches, or torpid liver--0 try Tanlac. One bottle often bringap the needed relief. Tanlac is a good, pure medicine, made of roots, barks, and herbs. Get! it from your druggist today. Your money back if it doesn't help you. ~ Six-60 4-Door Sedan $ ! * Eight-77 4-Door Sedsav •-eyl., 1141/4* Wheelbese ' ' 8-oyl., 116Vi" Wheelbaie $910 ( FULLY BQUIPPBD-- \ *1036 ^ Delivered V NOTHING HOKB. JLQ BUY ) Delivered Bght-80 4-Door Sedan D; 8-ejrl., 121' Wheelb«M *1375 Delivered Eight-90 4-Door 8-eyl., 124" Wheeibase *1673 Buy Gas and Oil with what yotf save i^i Freight Compare Delivered Prices Ce A. Stilling Motor Sales Phone 28 12841) 73-Year-Old Prince Is Bade to Stop Begging Reitz, Orange Free State.--Prince Louis Robert George le Bourbon Orleans^ Due de Bourbon, has been ordered to quit begging, Hut still may keep his bed In a stable here. The seventy-three-year-old gray haired figure carries letters to prove he Is the scion of French royalty and maintains he was born in Russia, where his parents had been forced to migrate ag fugitives during the Napoleonic wars. ' Dressed In a shabby black suit, he was seen constantly on the city streets soliciting alms. He is aa ardent churchman, well versed In the Bible, and speaks several languages. n ' Sbmu Is Fatal . . tawrence, Mass.--Frederick R. Con rad, thirty-three, of North Andover, sneezed so hard while at work in the Arlington mills here- that he burst • blood vessel, dying several hours later. Free Shave# for Jobless Seattle, Wash.--Free haircuts and shaves for the unemployed are being given by unemployed union barbers. Good Work of Owl# Sixteen species of owls inhabit North America. The great horned owl is the most powerful and Is of great assist ance to the ranchers of the West 1b keeping the destructive pocket gophers la at McGEE'S - iSafurday, March 14 Men's Collar-Attached SHIRTS Regular $1.65 value, white, blue and green 1 ' ' .. •. One Lol ^ ' Sfen's and Boys' SHOES ^ D0LLAK DAT SPECIAS ° ' x Per pair- $1.00 :r,; , $1.00 " r> •ifiii'O.rt-- 't. 1, ' ' Men's Wool Hose A good heavy work hose, regular 50c values. Dollar Day Special--3 V*** for ' .... $1.0® Sweaters Men's Pullover Sweaters, Shaker-knit, Regular $7.00 vahtss, foliar Day Special S5.6S Men's Shaker-knit Sweater Opati, $9.00 values. Special for Dollar Day v -- ^' $7.85 ;<•;' 1 16.00 values at $4.W ' Bdys' &00 BolHff Day Special. '; ; V * . - Soft Collari: 7 tot 91.00 m Boys' Heavy tShstker-knit Pull-ovsrs, values. Dollar Day Special S4.9S Boys' Suits Boys' Suits, with two pair of knickers. Dollar Day Special $6.85 Boys' Suits, with two pair of longies. Dollar Day Special $12.85 Odd CowIkMtU* WmI Cnpovte was tlw fvet ts tlnught t» km •nabiuitise CUE SZW SPRING HEKCHAMDISB HAS STARTED TO ASXivS. nf MOI, W* HAVX A TBY GOOD ASSORTMENT TO SHOW RIGHT HOW AND IN OBDBR TO OIVS SOKE BXTKA SflOUL VALUES OK DOLLAR DAT, W» AWt GODTO *0 CHV* )b^ DISOOVHT oil ALL SPBliiO SOTTS, TOPCOATS, HATS AHD SB01S . _ '

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