McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Jul 1931, p. 2

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•iid Mrs. Mr. and M*. Alvin Case a Spent Sunday at Elgin with rel- ' H ae«tb*«m*Rlal aSveftWag lit 0#I11 PfpWW ', mUNtu* (lews with a b glow. By the aswmnt of mercioy, a talned. jOther colon lire obtained by combining with vaitoss gases or by using colored glass mmHfm the first la Oxford. Captiv* Birds Llw U«|Mt Ordinarily wild birds litre firoii* 10 to 15 years tt tt9 are not IfflM by in ca*temr 'ire twice as long as those which are wild «c * order only cdarta JUm all npafaa mmm :f£y lafxS' - wjj. & IS: ;"K' . .5%; ; . 4 -.*%> .•'• \ *• y A [\.J :x Mrs. Lloyd Mdy of Grsyslake called on her parstifts Wednesday. 'Ray Page, aad Lloyd Fidw^ accom panied Frank Wilson and sons to the ball (rame in Chisago Tuesday to see the Cubs play. Mr- and Mrs. Frank Boeing %nd family of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. Clark Nichols and son of Wanconda, Mrs. Eva Ames and children of Wankegan, Mr. and Mrs. Walter McGraw and daughter of Cuba and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Kaiser were Monday visitors at the Lloyd Fisher home. Mrs. Mott and family of Milwaukee, Wis., spent the past week at the F. E- Wilson home. Lillian Scheid of Wauconfda spent Thursday with Miss Ada Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Fasafield and family were Long Lake callcrs Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and family spent Monday afternoon at the- William Lohman home in Libertyville. Mr. and Mrs. Frank St- George entertained company over the week-end. Joe Wagner has remodeled his home by putting shingles on the outside. It look like red brick. Mrs. Robert Oaks and children spent the week here with' relatives and friends. Mrs. Leslie Davis and family of Slocum's Lake spent Saturday afternoon at the Esse Fisher home. Frank Meyers of McIJenry waa calling in this vicinity on business Wednesday. Mr- and Mrs. Earl Jacobson of Wauconda were Tuesday evening callers at the Lloyd Fisher home. Mrs. P. L. Stradfield was a Wauconda caller Wednesday. Herman Rossduetcher is driving a new Chyrsler sedan. Nick Hrynie of Waukegan spent the week-end at the Fisher home. Arthur Nicholas underwent an opoperation for appendicitis Saturday at the Lake County hospital, Waukegan. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hirombras entertained company over the week-end from Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Passfield and Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher attended the hall game at Wauconda Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Bacon and family and Miss Emma Bacon of Round Lake spent Sunday afternoon at the Bacon home. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dowell and daughter of Elgin spent Sunday at file George Dowell home. Milton Dowell spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Scheid, Jr., at Wauconda. Miss Frances Nicholas of Chicago spent the week-end at the home of Frank Bacon has piu^baaed Wilson's threshing iftadhine. Mr. and Mrs. WSUam Nicholas called on their son, Arthur, at the Lake county hospital ft Waukegan Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Cypher and son of Wauconda spent Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. apd Mrs. Vernon Baseley. Mr. and Kn. Lloyd Fisher and family spent Tuesday evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Gottschalk at Lake Zurich. Arthur Wackerow was a Barrington caller Saturday evening. Lloyd and Ellwood Dowell and Earl Hironimus spent Wednesday evening at the George Scheid home at Wauconda. Earl Hironimus spent the past week in Chicago with relative^ Alachua Vegetable* 11M growing of hardier vegetables has been demonstrated throughout most of Alaska south of the Arctic circle Jtsfltshee. mustard, turnips, kale and Jettnce can be grown anywhere. Carrots, parsnips, parsley, peas, cress, cabbage, cauliflower, bruseeis Sprouts, onions, spinach, beets, potatoes, rhubarb, and sn<;b herbs as caraway, mint, catnip, sage and thyme may be grown along the coast region and In the interior of Alasks if garden sites are selected with reference to shelter and exposure to the sun. Greciaa Wobu'i Dress The modern Grecian woman ef middle class wears a long, sleeveless coat, bound around the lower waistline with a cummerbund or a leather girdle, fastened with a silver gilt clasp of marked size, a blouse with decorated sleeves, long white skirt, or blue skirt, gayly banded at the bottom, and an apron suitably embroidered. She also wears a gay kerchief aad chains if great weight First Through Pump Ctdfj The first steamer to pass tnrdSgh the Panama canal was the Crane boat Alex La Valley on January 7, 1914. Commercial traffic was Inaugurated, with the passage of the steamer Anooa on August 15j,' 1914. There are 103.1 males to every 100 females in Illinois, according to 1930 census figures given out from Washington. Of a total population of 7,680,654, this is comprised of 3,873,- 457 males and 8^57,197 females. The state has 7,266p|&l white residents, 828,972 negroes/arid 35,321 persons of other races, Mexicans coming highest in this group, there being 28,906 of these. White, population increased 15.4 per cent during the decays and negro 80.5. A former night guard at the Stateville penitentiary, J. O. Cardin, of Lo. gan, has filed a claim with the state court of claims, declaring that working 13 or 14 hours a night in the sentry box on the wall with lights glaring in his face- from all directions, with other bad conditions, had ruined his health. V Breaking leeee'frem if elate highway department truck, a trailer on a steep hill near Hxllsboro crashed into a truck in which three young men were riding, killing two of them and breaking both legs and the jaw bone of the third. Asking an award of 115,000 damages for temporary and permanent injuries he claims to have received while keeper in charge of the furniture factory at Stateville prison at the time the Tiot occurred last March, James H. Book has presented his claim to the state court of claims. Imagination All imagination, properly so called, proclaims the activity of ths esthetic emotions.--March. BEAUTIFUL NEW VEOBDJ TOWN SEDAN LUXE SEDAN ^ CONVERTIBLE SEDAN 2>I LUXE TUDOR VICTORIA CABRIOLET TUB most striking fine car types evw offered at nA low'prices are now being presented by Ford dealers. These are the six newest de luxe creations of die Ford Motor Company. They are designed and built to meet every need of the automobile buyer whoso desire for motoring luxury and outstanding perform* •nee is tempered with sound economy. Get the facts about these fine cars. Compare thcb lithe, clean-cut style with any you have ever created In your own imagination. Learn about the de Imw :w*m cHgZi materials with which each car is trimmed and uphol* . •jtf'rt'f »ri Collection of delinquent taxes by a private collector on a commission basis is not authorized by law, according to an opinion given by Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom to State's Attorney Roy of Metropolis.'^ Shortly before the 57th general assembly adjourned sine die, Governor Louis L. Emmerson, on the grounds of economy, vetoed appropriations totaling $1,250,663, declaring that he wished to keep, expenses down to a minimum. This amount will be cut from appropriation bills of $313,247,- 868.19 passed by the legislature to be spent in the next two fiscaj years. Attorney General Oscar E. Carlstrom has issued announcements of his candidacy for the Republican nomination to the office of governor of the state of Illinois at the primary election to be held in April. 1932. In this he states that he will carry the contest through to a decision of the people irrespective of who enters or what conditions may arise- He declares that later, in formal statement and public address, he will make his position clear on matters of immediate public concern, and says: ¥I shall, if nominated and elected address myself to the problems affecting the State government and the interests and welfare of the people of this state, with the same energy and with like integrity as I have endeavored to address myself to the duties and problems which have presented themselves to me in the last six and onehalf years as attorney general." Funds in the amount of $2,731,- 539.98, made up chiefly of privilege taxes paid by foreign insurance companies doing business in Illinois, and also some oH and grain inspection fees, were paid in to the state treasury by Leo H. Lowe, director of trade and commerce, recently. ^ resolution offered by Represents, tive J.' W. Harris, of Chicago, directing that uertain committee rooms be left undisturbed until, the next session, was adopted by the house. If it becomes necessary to use the roon the secretary of state shall obtain written permission from the speaker. Crowded conditions in the statehouse heretofore have made necessary the use of these rooms for office purposes between sessions. New health legislation enacted by the recently adjourned legislature makes it the duty of the state department of public health to act in a supervisory instead of an advisory capacity concerning the public water supplies of the state, and charges the department with sanitary supervision over the construction aad operation of swimming pools. Gfptriai Menace fe r. / > . /-Wild dogs and wfti house oats'are pissmltsg n prol to game oSclals of the country, a bulletin of the America^ Game association discloses. Dogs and cats, reverting to wildaees in the woods and fields of settled sections, are reported to be a growing menace to beneficial bird and animal life, the bulletin states. Numerous complaints from conservation field men in Pennsylvania that families of wild dogs are hunting in packs in their districts have caused the game commission of that state to*order stricter control of roaming dogs and house cats during the nesting and breeding season. Several dens have been discovered where dogs supposedly gone wild after being abandoned by their owners, have raised wild families. The animals are said to be so elusive and trap-wise that dozens of traps have been set for them without success, although a number of allegedly wild dogs have been shot while pursuing game To simplify the control of wild and half-wild house cats in woods and fields a bill now before the Pennsylvania legislature would compel cat owners to license and tag their pets. It would also provide that even licensed cats may be killed when seen pursuing birds. In practically every state It Is Illegal to let dogs run at large during the spring and summer months when game birds are nesting, but the proposed act is believed to be the first attempt to curb the destructiveness of house cats by outlawing ownerless felines. Officials now hold that stray cats are the worst enemies of bird life in cities as well as rural areas. ,r GONNEL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNBY-AT-LAW Brtani Every evening, 7 to tstt All day Saturdays Pries BMg. Cor. Green and Elm Sts. Tel. McHenry 258 McHenry, I1L H Dr. JpHN DUCET VETERINARIAN * W. »w» ^ 1P»T7|f 'iy*«g RICHMOND, ILLINOIS KcHENRY GRAVEL * JEZOAVATINO CO. m 'i il. P. Errand, Fro* Road Building and Excavating Estimates Furnished on Bequest High-grade Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small eiders given prompt attention, Fhons 204-M V McHenry *, >.••/' "'f I atered, and how carefully these are tailored. Sit and j-'ku **J - vide is the wide, restful seats and yon will realist that just as no restrictions have been put on median* ^-Ical performsnoe, so iio l»wh» have been <*6 ^l^ fojnfort and beauty. There is much to bteyst careful buyer > choice of sparkling colors, a variety of rich uphot* trtery materials, Rustless Steel, safety glass, Houdaille double-acting shock absorbers, one-piece welded steel wheels, slanting windshields, and many other features Which make the Ford a happy investment, r ,t « . nU •' . ejfMlfcJ? frlfc i;V " •" j"- X-B* t«M|W WffW- "KmBfB5nku • i . H * h v . .ftt !c / fit*. „ x*->i V > ' u mm 1 Indians Still Employ e Sorcery in Tribe Hazelton, B. O.--Ancient tribal rites of sorcery and witchcraft still persist among the Indians of Kltwanga reservation and other sections of British Columbia, despite determined efforts by provincial and federal police to suppress them. This is borne out in two cases soon to be beard in District court here. In one Donald Gray and Alexe Tylee of Haguelgate. both Indians, are accused of practicing sorcery, and in the other, Samuel Douse, a member of the Kltwankool tribe, is charged with wounding two compatriots, Silas Brown and Charles Sampare. In a quarrel arising over the moving of a tribal totem pole Brown Is said to have accused Douse of Ifeing a witch doctor. The latter retaliated by firing a revolver at him. The bullet penetrated Brown's left forearm, and then, glancing off, lodged in Sampare's left leg. Other Indians charged that Douse bewitched his bullet, in order to cause it to wound two men* Gray and Tylee are accused of going through the ritual of the oldtime "medicine men" or "witch doctors" in an effort to restore Chief Davis of their tribe to health when he fell ill. • • Remains of Betrayer of Joan of Arc Exhumed Lisleux, France.--The remains of the bishop of Beauvals, Pierre Cauchon, charged by many French historians with having sold Joan of Arc to the English, have been exhumed and photographed. The exhumation was for the purpose of proving whether he was accorded full sacerdotal rights. The lead coffin in which the remains had been brought from Rouen to Ldsieux was opened in the presence of ecclesiastical authorities and a representative of the ministry of beaux arts. No trace* of sacerdotal relics were found within the coffin, which, however, was marked with an ivory cross on the lid. The bishop died suddenly in 1442 while shaving. §UENBY V* SOMFE& < General Teaming Sand, Gravel and Goal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract jpf Every Descriptiop or By Day Phone McHenry 649-B-J McHenry, HI. P. O.'AddrtM, Route 8 i&gl'vjp " "" ' 1 "J"g- WH M. OABEOLIf LtW7«r Mice/with West McHenry State Bask Every Friday Afternoon 4 McHenry, Prom the July 1 bulletin of the banking department of State Auditor Oscar Nelson, a big improvement in the downstate banking situation Is noted. Outside of Cook county, only four state banks closed during June and they were all in northern Illinois, one each in Henry, Lake, DuPage and Winnebago counties. Outside of general taxation, inheritance taxes are one of the chief sources of the state's revenue, and Illinois' treasury was benefited recently when State Treasurer Edward J. Barrett received $350,000 in inheritance taxes from Chicago. The automobile department of Secretary of State Stratton's office, ended the truck war between Illinois and Wisconsin recently when orders were given automobile investigators to cease arresting drivers of Wisconsin" trucks not carrying Illinois license plates. The trouble started when the Wisconsin legislature passed a bill to compel Illinois truck owners entering that state more than once a year to buy Wisconsin license plates, and Secretary of State Stratton retaliated by ordering the arrest of drivers of Wisconsin trucks not carrying Illinois plates. A new law passed recently by the Wisconsin legislature Is satisfactory to Illinois, hence the action of the secretary of state. Speaking officially for the coqxmittee appointed to examine the proposal that the state has the authority to Boy Travels Alone Fran|^v Czechoslovakia to U. S. Lake Geneva, Wis.--Vaclav Macuba, who traveled alone from Czechoslovakia to Lake Geneva, is only four years old, but has quickly .adapted himself to American conditions and is now just plain "Jimmy" to his playmates here. Jimmy could not speak English and very little of his native tongue when he Journeyed to Hamburg, Germany, by train, by liner across the Atlantic to New York and then by train to Chicago. His mother and foster father, Mr. and Mis. Jesspfe Macubs, met him in £hlcago. Phsas 12S-W & 8CHAEFJQR Drayktg MsHENBY s Vt>|l.\l8UNOI8 TsliiMss Na 1SS-B Staffel & Reihanspergsr sgents for sll classes ef property in the beat companies. WEST McHENRY - - ILLINOIS MEW DeVAUX SEDAN w7S .M " jir" TOUI nooa . - v:; '•?>- General automotive repair work, oiling, greasing, etc. We invite you to visit our WW^Jacg ajMl solicit your patronage ey & Schneider DeVanx Sales and Service Junction Route 20 and V. S. 12 McHenry • WEST 81 DE GARAGE :;^|l|i|Otte A daaM, Prep." I•. T«1186 •- <*; ilit if"? ^ Ml nuHM, SMM Purity PHONE McHENRY 59-M Our Pure Artificial Ice In your refrigerator keeps vegetables and meats moist and flavorable. We deliver regularly and promptly. A phone call is all that is necessary. Smith & Iaswe-In Sore-hsmin --with--- «» Wm. G. Schreiner | AnctiMieering omat at w 9S-K MeBsary, Day Phone McHenry 256 Night Phone McHenry 137-W Peterion,i Garage XT£RSS--OIL--OAS ; Ixpert Repair Servio*^^---'^v*^' One Block Kast of Fox River Bridge/Ronte 10 1 •eJ ^ , **->,•***'*- W±x-&<. Low Why Not Bay; a SET? <s£. i f ; Birth «f Light Opera 'Am opera first appeared In many as a result of the roTnatlc movement of Von Weber. It was called jtngspiel. NasMd f*r The word "Fletcher! zing" is derived from the name of Horace Fletcher, who advocated a continued or masticating of food. Oxygen for Hearts Several types of heart disease may be treated successfully by keeping the patients In air that contains 40 te 50 per cent oxygen. issue tax anticipation warrants to help Chicago's unpaid school teachers, State Auditor Oscar Nelson said he did not believe the state had the authority, and that it is up to the city of Chicago to collect its tax. The state department ot publie fare is making plans to start an $830,000 construction program at penal institutions as soon as possible, the sum of $400,000 for the women's prison at Joliet; $275,000 at Chester penitentiary; $155,000 for the Van dalia farm. Convicts will be used for the common labor while skilled men will be brought in foe wusfctfce oners cannot do. Everyone knows that one of the big thrills of getting a new carls riding on new tires all. around. ^ Today new Goodyears are so cheap that y6u can have the saime thrill on your present car. You can have the safety--the fresh new tread--the stout new vitality of Supertwist cord--the honest mileage of Goodyear Pathfinders at the lowest prices in history. - ; Your size is quoted herewith?" TIRES A50-3W " • 4.50-2132 4 7 R . l f t - : 4.75. ar 5.00-19 5.00-20; 5.00 • 21 5.25-18 5.25-19 5.25 - 20 5.25-21 5.50-18 5.50-19 5.50 - 20- 6.00-18 6.00 -19 6.00 - 2d 6.00 - 21 6.00-22 30x3'/2 OL Reg. ^ 30x3^2 01 O. S, 31x4 : 32x4 . v: • .5.95 175 ^ 6 . 0 5 ^r.05 115 : ' 7.40 1185 7.70 " * --11.30 '4 tt RR * ' J??:. $.75 -^•00 12.20 12.95 13.06 13.40 13.70 14450 14.90 15 JO 15.60 if * i ' ¥•>• x ~ - • ' '9^.' SI '*{$• z.' . 32x4% . 33x4% ^ 3^4% r 30x5 Heavy Dnty 33x5 Heavy Duty 32x6 Heavy Duty 12.20 12.60 -$4.65 T4.75 - 8.10 : 8.45 .12.15 .12.60 _1S.70 _19.95 _JKL.90 .33.00 J. FREUND Tire and Tnbe Vulcanising^ ^ ^ Charging and Repairing 894 Wdit OaarniiM West MoHenty ^' -t'jisi'^ "*• f" -£ ^ ^ T -

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