McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Sep 1931, p. 11

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WUKfK .• 2Z>^ m ^ H ,Z#\ ' • ' ,fv)#;£» •/ . , SEPT. 24 RINGWOOD Ed. Thompson entertained the Bunco club at her home Thursday af- "ternoon. Prizes were awarded to Mrs. Viola L<yw, Mrs. George • Shepard, Mrs. Ed. Thompson and Mrs. George Young at «the close. Luncheon wa3 j«rve£. • , ,, , ' Mrs. Frank Dix and children spent "Thursday with relatives at Paddock's "'like. ^ Mr. and Mrs. George Harrison and • " daughter, Lora, and Charles Peet left Thursday morning for a two weeks' with relatives at Trenton, Mo- Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard were "Woodstock visitors Friday. ' Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hawley and Children spent Friday afternoon with Chicago relatives .Mrs. J. C. Ladd and Mrs. Howard J-hu-kiand were Woodstock visitors VvJ^riday. ••... - <•,. ...\ - Mrs. Roy Neal and -children spent ,;;/.'.;$Hday aftemooft at McHenry. . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stonebreaker W Mrs- Aj Hawley left Wednes^Ha™ly> Beatrice and 4fty morning for a vi3it with relatives Morristown, Ind. Mr. and Mrs- Stontbreaker will leave from there Florida, where tfcey will spenth the v'/winter. \ '"'"^.^Mesda'ines Edgar Thomas and Wm. MeCannon were McHenry callers Friday., :r ' ' Mrs. Catherine Young and daughter, Genevieve, and Bernard Schmidtz of Elgin, Mr. and Mrs. Stephen „ Schmidt and Clarence Young spent Friday evening in the George Young home. '-•••»' - *s *.»» -rf- - Mrs. Nick Adams and Mrs. Nick Young spent Friday afternoon at Mc- Henry. •' JMr- and Mrs. Alex Anderson and • family were Woodstock visitors Sat- Wday. "Mr. and Mrs. Nick Freund were • Woodstock visitors Saturday. » Mr. and Mrs. George Shepard and family spent Sunday afternoon at Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Weber and family spent Sunday in the Nick Young „h<?me. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Foss of McHenry spent Sunday afternoon in the J Wayne Foss home. - -'Charles Carr was a visitor at •Woodstock Saturday afternoon. t' Eugene Thomas and Mae Wiedrich "W*re gruests in the Warren Thomas home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Emil Johnson of McHenry spent Monday in the August Pearson home. • i! Mrs. Fred Wiedrich and son, .' Frank, and Mrs- Lester Carr were visitors at Woodstock Saturday afternoon. - Clay Rager of Chicago spent on - . day yith his family here. ^ , Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters "spent Sun- ' 4ay night and Monday with relatives *t Belvidere and Hunter Mr. and Mrs. Charles Frey and family of Deerfield, Mr. and Mrs. ~ -CSenn Jackson and family of Solon Mills and Mr. and Mrs- Elmer Olsen and son were Sunday guests in the «-H. Beatty home. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wilson of ' .Grant, Iowa, spent Sunday with Mrs. Jennie Bacon. Mr. and Mrs. Robert McLean of Woodstock spent Sunday with Mrs. ^ Stephenson. * Mrs. B. T. Butler and children are •V ffciting Chicago frieflfls. Mrs. S.- H. Beatty and Mrs. Viola Low were Wbodstock, visitors Wednesday. Mr. and Mrs- Leslie Olsen and family of McHenry spent Thursday evening in the Frank Wiedrich home. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and Roy Wiedrich spent Thursday evening at Crystal Lake. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Huson and daughter. Ruth, of Mundelein/and Mi. and Mrs. Thomas Nelson of Downers Grove tfatere callers in the C- J. Jep^on home Sunday afternoon. -<~~ Mrs. Ben Walkington -and son, Paul, and Mrs, C. J. Jepson attended the concert at the Greenwood M. E. church Sunday evening. ,. A party of friends he.ld a picnic gathering at the' home of Mr. and Mrs- E. E. Whiting Sunday. Mildred Jepson of Evanston spent Monday and Tuesday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepson. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Sunday in the W. Q. Fisher home. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ritter and William Merwiiri of Kenosha .spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fay. Henry Stepherson, Ben Walkington, Kenneth Grist-y and(Mr. and Mrs, Lewib Schroeder attended the ball game in Chicago Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Howard and family of .]£lgin spent Sunday in the Leon Dodge home. ; Mr. and Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Wednesday evening in the W, A. Dodge home. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens spent Sunday in Chicago and. attended the ball game at ^Cubs park. Lewis Hawley, Kirk Schroeder and Mr. and Mrs. S. W- Brown attended the ball game in Chicago Monday. Immunize All Pigs to Prevent Cholera Advisable, to Apply Treatment Before Weaning. fTreDvofe dA fegyr lctthftetu Uren.)it--edW SNt Uat^4Sae, rDveicpea. rtme\n t Swine growers in localities where, thew» Is nt hog rlmlora may prevent future losses In" their herds by immunizing the spring pijxs against the disease, says Dr. T. P. White, veterinarian of the Bureau of animal Industry, United States Department of Agriculture. Even If hog cholera has never occurred on the*imme<liate premises, there is always a possibility that infection may be introduced Into the herd through various channels when the disease exists anywhere in the neighborhood. , Pigs from immune sows have a degree of natural Immunity against cholera, but this protection lasts only while they dbtaln all their nourishment from the sow. It gradually dhriln- Ishes as the pigs grow and by the time they are weaned the immunity ha* entirely disappeared. It Is therefore advisable to apply the treatment before th<*»plgs are weaned in order to Insure protection against the disease. The pigs are more easily handled at that age and the cost of immunization la considerably, less than when they are older and larger. Widespread Metropolis Hie city of New York la incorporated aa five counties which are called boroughs municipally. These boroughs all have their own borough form of government, and the city hall in Manhattan borough is the headquarters for the city government as a whole, as well as for the borough of Manhattan. L»ap-Ywir Intervals X* 4ast eight-yrar iyierral whtj leap years was betweeii 1896 and 1904. This will occur the next time between 2096 ' and 2104. Years marking the close of centuries are not leap years unless divisible by 400. The year 2000 WiM be a leap year. Guard Against Injury g Pone by Common Worms Corn ear tPorms fire so common in this country that most farmers do not consider It worth while to make efforts to flght them, but tests conducted by Mr. and Mrs. Harold Kelley and \ "the United States Department of Agridaughter spent Sunday with relatives at Belvidere. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Byron Hitchens of Chicago spent Friday in the F. AHitchens home. Misses Lutie and Evelyn Romie of Paddock's Lake spent Friday afternoon in the Frank Dix home. Mr. and Mrs. George Graves of Woodstock spent Thursday evening in the F. A. Hitchens home. Mrs. S. W. Brown, Mrs. Lewis Schroeder, Lenard Brown and Harold Evans attended the ball game in Chicago Sunday. J. V. Buckland and Miss Flora Taylor enjayed a picnic dinner at the home of Mrs. Nellie Hodge at Twin Lakes Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. George Dixon of Eagle Lake spent from Friday night until Sunday in the J. V. Buckland home. Mesdames Frank Peet of Richmond, Lillian Stevens, Thomas Kane, F. A. Hitchens and H. M.'Stephenson attended Social Wheel at McHenry Thursday afternoon. The Ladies' Aid society will hold a dinner at the M. W. A. hall, Wednesday, Sept- 30. Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Harrison and son, Earl, were Sunday dinner guests in, the Charles Peet home. culture show that ears with long, tight husks suffer less than half as much injury as ears having short, loose husks. Ears with long, tight husks are characteristic in some varieties, the department says, but there Is enough variation in all varieties for a farmer to select for seed only ears with long, tight husks.- In this way he can build up a strain having better husk characteristics. Long, tight husks are also good protection from other insect pests of corn, such as the corn weevil, in sections where corn Is stored in the husks. This is an additional reason for farmers to select their corn in the field, where they can give proper consideration to the type of husk. lib Diifiiie for There is no disguise whigh can long ebneeal love where It dow exist, or feign it where It does not exist.--La Rochefoucauld. - - Israeli tuh Brlcltt f ^ 1 The Israelites while in Egypt probably made only the sun-dried variety of brick. They consisted of a mixture of ctair and chopped straw or roods, worked Into n stiff paste with water. The bricks were molded by hdnd. Play PUm and Grow Tltla Marathon piano pfaylng as a means of growing thin is being investigated by some European scientists following a report from Queensland that a man lost 13 pounds while pounding the keys for 36 hours 15 minutes. One commentator remarks that such use of ea»' ergv may cause one to lose,popularity as well is flesh. - ~~ -- Find Snake ReTTgion ." Traces of a forgotten snake religion evidently practiced by ancient Inhabitants of the Island of Crete in the Mediterranean sea and perhaps the beginning ^f the many myths of serpent wisdom, "snake mothers," etc., hare been discovered in excavations near tiie faneient Cretan city of £ao»- sos.; • ? David and Goliath ' To be a hero one doesn't have to be a hammer thrower.--American. Magazine.-. . : Cuir of Humor Desired A chair of humor is suggested for colleges. It seems the absent-minded professor* no longer provide fun.--Dayton Dally News. Geau of Wi»dooi • "Blessed is the famous man, for all his trite sayings shall be quoted at gems of profound wisdom. , Proapt Aaswer Desired Pray, do write to me; a few linca '. soon are better than a 3-deckar a month hence.--Edward Fitzgerald la a " Letter. ' 1 • t *>' ' Odds Agaiast Twist Odds quoted against twin babies by a London• insurance broke'rH i 1 a' re to 5. r-; Day Phone McHenry 256 Night Phone McHenry 137-W ; Peterson's Garage . „ - " TIRES--OIL--GAS , : ' " Expert Repair Service • Si; One Block East of Fox River Bridge, Route 20 Place,Your Order on DOLLAR DAYS j SATURDAY, SEPT. 26, AND MONDAY, SEPT. 28 French Roman Hyacinths, any color, 12 bullw _.$1.00 Early Double Tulips, any color, 12 bulbs t $1.00 Darwin Tulips, any color, 12 bulbs $1.00 May Flowering Cottage Tulips, 12 bulbs $ 1.00 Narcissus Paper White, 2 doz. bulbs -. $1.00 Phone 250 West MeiEBrjr Main Street rnmSM^SSSS* | J i S L B L '!^ !aa fe iiSEjjBiwi«iSK,^.sasuul!SE ' DOLLAR DAYS **A¥tmDAY, SEPT. 26, AND MONDAY, SEPT. 28 Potatoes RED and WHITE 89 c bu. Free Delivery on Monday - ART SMITH ' Soap*tone Production Virginia is the chief pro'ducer of soapstone. The purer mineral used/ for making powdered talc Is obtained mostly in St. Lawrence county, N. Y., but some is produced in Pennsylvania, North CarolinfPand California. ^ ••• ••• •<$> ••• *t* *•*•><! _ - • ' ' I ^ vi •> SATURDAY, SEPT. 26, AND MONDAY, SEPT. Our Fall line of Clothing, Hats and Shoes is completely assembled at this time and we shall be pleased to have you call and inspect the new fabrics, styles and colors. As a Special Dollar Day value we are offering 10% discount on all our new Fall Suits, Overcoats, Hats, Oxford! SATURDAY, SEPT. 26, AND MONDAY, SEPT. 2* llilll| l j »ll 1 lb. SLICED BACON : 1 lb. HOME MADE PORK SAUSAGE 2 lbs. PORK CHOPS 6 lbs. BONELESS CORNED BEEF $1 7 lbs. FRESH PORK SHOULDER -- $1 5 lbs. NATIVE POT ROAST $1 5 lbs. HOME MADE BOLOGNA $1 JO lbs. PURE LARD _ $1 8 lbs SPARC RTRB $1 5 lbs. OUR BEST FRANKFURTS $1 Men's Hosiery Fancy Fall patterns. ~ 4 pair for $1.0£ Men's Pullover Sweaters 7 lbs! FEESH SPAKE RIBS 1 LGE, CAN SADEE KRAUT MANY OTHER DOLLAR DAY VALUES-. Regner's and Light weight, special for Dollar Diiy -- : $3.85- ' • Men's Shakerknit Pullovers* All ^rool, heavy weight, Dollar Day specif $5.85 . Men's Blue Denim Overalls /.SK I 220 weight, «pe< for Rolter Day Men's Four-in-Hand Ties New Fail patterns and colors Dollar Day specials 69^ Men's Soft Collars Special tor Dollar Day ^ 6 collars for $1.00 One broken lot Boj's' Shoes and" Oxfords Dollar Day specials $1.89 Dress Shoes and Oxfords One lot Men's broken sizes in Bostonia^i that gold for $7.50 Special for Dollar Day $2.85 "" Men's Cotton Work Shirts* Special for Dollar Day 59 c4 One Lot of Boys' Suits All sixes, but broken patterns, some .. with, knickers and some" longies, special for Dollar Day ~ \ $3.85 Boys' Overcoats Fall patterns, ages 3 to 6 years Dollar Day specials $5.85 Boys' Overcoats Specially priced for Dollar Day, ages 16 to 18 years $7.85 Boys' Pullover Sweaters Light weight, new Fall colors, styles ami patterns Dollar Day specials $1.61 Grocery Pho^e3 < Market Green Street RAY McGEE r \, • -t'-v'.v -v.

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