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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Dec 1931, p. 7

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^*sr *^T •? *(kM> ft i £ THE M'HENRY PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, mm i •» ^ *- • « i j j j , , •• / *«•.;• .•/_, r % J!<L -* l'P • . ,*i #1 M! RINGWOOD Mr. and Mrs- Elmer Olsen entertained the five hundVed fclub at . their home Thursday evening. Prizes were awarded to Mx. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens, Mrs. George Shepard and George Young. At the close luncheon was served. Mir. and Mrs- Leon Dodge and family and Mrs. W. A. Dodge spent Friday afternoon in Woodstock. Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Butler and daughter, Helen Ruth,, were Elgin visitors Thursday. Mrs- Viola Low spent Thursday night with relatives at Hebron. Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard were Elgin visitors Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Stephenson and Mrs- Viola Low attended the Legion auxiliary meeting at Woodstock last Thursday evening. ^ Mi-, and Mrs. W. Thomas and family, Mrs. Lucy Thomas and Alice Mann of Woodstock were Sunday dinner guests in the Edgar Thomas home. Mrs. Ed Peet and daughters, Dorothy, Edna and Lucille, and Ralph Clay were visitors at Rocfefeni Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Judson, son, Howard, and daughter. Ruth Ami, and Mrs. .Martha Judson of Hebron and Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Claxton of - McHenry were Sunday dinner guests in the G. E. Shepard honje. > Mr. and Mrs. Ray Peters spent Sunday with relatives at Hunter, 111. Mjr. and Mrs. G. E. Shepard and family were Woodstock visitors Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Weber and family of McHenry were Sunday guests in the Nick Young home. Mrs. George Bacon of Antioch spent Sunday, with her parents, Mr. -and Mrs. W. A. Dodge. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wledrich and son, Roy, were visitors at Richmond Saturday evening. Mr- and Mrs. Charles Stevens and son, Richard, of Milwaukee spent Sun. day with Mrs. Lillian Stevens. Charles Coates of Genoa City spent Wednesday in the Fred Wiedrich home. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Carr and son, Lester, were Elgin '"Shoppers Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Young and daughter, Eleanor, of McHenry were Sunday visitors in the. Nick Young home. J. V. Buckland and. Miss Flora Taylor spent Sundiay. afternoon wif.h relatives and friends at Greenwood and Woodstock. Mrs. Lillian Stevens went t£ Richmond Monday morning to care for Mrs. Sarah Johonnott, who is ill. Thomas Dempsey of Chicago and Nellie McDonald spent Sunday afternoon in the Roy Neal home. : Roy and Mae Wiedrich were shopping in Woodstock Saturday. Mr- and Mrs. Harold Wiedrich and family spent Thursday afternoon in the W. O. Fisher home^ Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Jepsott Spent Thursday at Mundelien. Mrs. S. W. Brown spent Tuesday in Chicago. ( Mrs. Clark and daughter, Alice, of Ostend spent Thursday evening in the home of her father, T. A. Abbott. Mia. Paul Meyers and Mrs. George Worts of McHenry and Mr. and Mrs- Nick Freund were.callers in the Ed. Thompson home Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Clark Huson of Elgin spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Roland McCannon. Among those from here to attend the Home Bureau musical tournament at Wood&tock Fricfay evening, other than the orchestra and quartet, were: Mr. and Mrs. Chauncey Harrison, Mrs. Ed Whiting, Kenneth Cristy, Mrs. C. J. Jepson and Mrs. Roland McCannon. \ Mr. and Mrs- Roland McCannon and son were Woodstock visitors last Saturday, * Donald McCaffery df Spring Grove and Lenard Brown spent Saturday at Madison, Wis. '.'/'v. ^ Mr. and Mr* - S.. Sunday at ..Sycftnxore.> Mrs. F. A. Kitchens spent llonday in Chicago. 'v « : Mr. and Mrs. George Young and family spent Sunday evening' with McHenry friends. \ .Mr. and Mrs- F. A. Hitchens were guests in the home of their son, By ron, in Forest Park, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Hawley and family and Mr. and Mrs. E. C- Haw ley spent Sunday with relatives at Barrington. Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Hitchens spent Saturday evening in the Andrew Hawley home in Elgin. Mr. and Mrs. George Young spent Saturday evening with friends at Burton's Bridge. Frank Walkington, Fern Lester, Ed Morris and Miss Fredrickson of Libertyville spent Sunday afternoon in the Ben Walkington home. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wagner arid daughter, Marion, of McHenry were Sunday guests in the A. L Lawrence home. Mrs. Theodore Shandelmeier and son, Peter, of Belvidere spent Sunday in the Harold Kelley home. Miss Ruby Davis of Woodstock speht the week-end in the.Ben Walkington home- • . _ Mesdames Viola Low, Edgar Thomas and Wm. McCannon were Woodstock visitors Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Lewis Schroeder was an Elgin visitor Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. E. C. Hawley entertained her bridge club at her home Tuesday afternoon. Luncheon was served. WILLIAM KELLEY William Kelley, son of Mr- and Mrs.. R. J. Kelley, was born at Galesburg, 111., March 31, 1862, and died Dec. 11, 1931, at the Elgin hospital where he had been a patient since Oct. 6. He was united in marriage to Miss Cora Wright of Lawrenceville, Penn., at Genoa City, Wis., May 15, 1881. To this union four children were born, Mrs- Clara Beth who preceded him six years ago, Mrs. Leone Lawrence, Harold Kelley and Wynne Kelley. Nineteen grandchildren, one great grandchild, also one brother, Simon> of Battle Creek, Mich., one half sister, Mrs. Fred French, of Woodstock and three half .brothers, Ben, George and Mark of Woodstock. On May 15, 1931, Mr. and Mrs. Kelley celebrated their golden wedding. Funeral services were held at the home of Wm. Beth at 1 o'clock Monday and at the M. W. A. hall at 1:30. The services were conducted by Frank Block of KenOsha, Wis. Burial was in Ringwood cemetery. Those from a distance to attend the funeral were: Mr. and Mrs. Marl{ Hutson and family, George and Bon Hutson, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sherman, Fred French, Mrs. Lynn Hohenstein, Frank Sayler and Mr. and Mrs, David' .Stanley of Wo-txisto^k, Mr. and Mrs;- George Woods of Lake Geneva, Mr. and Mx3. Harry Rossman of Huntley, Mr. and Mrs- Frank Block of Kenosha, Ben Stevens &nd Lewis Bell of Spring Grove, Mrs. Clarence Wbitin'g, Mrs. Albert Krause, Mrs. Albert Purvey, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wattles, Joe May and John Malsch of McHenry, Mr. and Mrs. James Conway of Libertyville, Mr- and Mrs. Max Beth and son, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Beth, Jr., and Ralph Simpson of Chicago. • Card of Thanks We-wish to thank neighbors and friends for their kindness and sym pathy in our recent sorrow, also thosife who and for the florial tribut*. Mrs. Cor* Kelley and family Vogel _GENERAL AUCTIONEER FARM SALES A SPECIALTY P. O. Solon Mills. I1L Reference Past Sales SATISFACTION GUARANTEED Florence Ray, D. C.> Chiropractor and Masseurist Sa*iay by Appoiirtnqtt ' X-Ray Servfc® _ _ • • X;,; - . " Oce-kklf »fle froa^McHejw-yon .Route 24. ' y At H««ry Ketinebeck'g Reeidene« Insure--In Sure-iiisuraace • -WITH-*-* Wm.G. Schreiner Auctioneering QFFICE AT RESIDENC* PtMM 9S-R McHenry. Illinob HENRY V. SOMPEL General Teaming Sand, Gravel and Goal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road Work Done By Contract of Every Description or By Day Phone McHenry 649-R-J McHenry, 111. O. Address, Route 3 WM.JM. CABJtQU, Office with West McHenry State fiinl 0 Every Friday Afternoon Phone 4 McHenry, Illinois GONNEL M. McDERMOTT • ATTORNKY-AT-LAW --Every evening. 7 to 8:30 All day Saturdays /fcries BMg. Cor. Green and Elm Sts. Phooe RichRM»d 1C Dr. JOHN DUCET VETERINARIAN B TB and Blood Testing ILLINOIS WEST McHENRY - ILLINOSl Tel. McHfcnry 258 McHenry, QL McHENRY GRAVEL 4 EXCAVATING CO. A. P. Freund, Prop. ; Road Building and Excavating Estimates Furnished on Request High-grade Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small orders given prompt attention Phone 204-M McHenry $1 down i; c" New . . . and pJeasanffjfc practical for Christmaw AN EGG SERVICE • *ET Eggs can be cooked right at the table along with toast and coffee when one. of these elec^. trie egg coolers comes to with you. It boils four eggs once or poaches two fit a time--*" no fuss--not ^ven any watc^^ : Jng- The choker pictured, complete with tray and four egg cups in Smooth gre^n, blue Of? T ; yellow ^enatoel, is-;oiilv.S7J50 \^u% &id iOOoiher . gifts that "work k a living" oft "S* '-I lW PMic JmiK Sion ^ ;T-; •Jb MOW Open evenbtgt ^tore or your neighborhood until 9 e'cUdL electrical dealer's. Coxae in.. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS E. J. LARK IN, Dist. Mgr. 101 Williams St., Crystal Lake Crystal Lake Phone 280 mm' • r "; lowfirst and only priced car with Gifts in the modern spirit for the modern household -- gifts that make the housekeeping Gleaner, safer and easier! @im ELECTRICAL XMAS NORMA CHRISTMAS TREE ' " S SET with genuine Mazda lamps 89<fr Bring in your Christmas tree sets to be looked over and replacements made. We test Christmas tree bulbs free of charge if brought to this store. ELECTRIC CHRISTMAS TREE WREATH! with candle 75* ' ? ELECTRIC TRAIN, COMPLET* . ; ' ' $3/95 ; •; ' - ..•. :. . ;• .vy-V-V ^ MIDGET RADIOS , • $19.00 up ' ' WASHERS _ $79.50 NHW GENERAL ELECTRIC VACUUM SWEEPERS $24.50 tAME HAMMOND MANTLE ELECTRIC * $10.00 Everything packed in Christinas boxes free of charge CAREY ELECTRIC SHOP Green Street MeHenrjr, Illitiols -Mesh and kNE of the biggest driving thrills in modern motoring is now available at one of tilt lowest prices in the automobile mar- ' ket. Syncro-Mesh is combined with Free Wheeling in the new Chevrolet Si*t Thia is the first time that these twit . r*": , outstanding inventions have^ becfi brought together in a low-priced aute* mobile; Syncro-Mesh is the most a4fe' i ' vanced type of transmission ever ' ' developed. Free Wheeling is that neir ; BensatKm which adds so much to Best of driving. matchless combination! They briiig about an entirely new kind of driving . ease and car control, far beyond any- ' thing you have ever enjoyed. They give you -quick, quiet shifting complete mastery of the car under all driving conditions. They enable yo|| ; to do things in driving that are inji' f possible without both these feature*. If you prefer to drive in "standard* - gear, Syncro-Mesh enables you tt •hift back and forth with uncanny •peed, silence and precision. This is The two make a The new Chevrolet Six combines the advantages of two inventions . . , Syncro-Mesh and Free Wheeling ... to assure quick, quiet, easy gearshifting and positive control of the * car ander every driving condition PRICED AS LOW V . prtrrtf, a. b. Flint, MUkigm»• Omtnlm Umor Cwv»r. CMrwit, UUdtm Dwiiim VCiwI iimrt. "Lwr 4eiivered prieea. Emj G. M. v. ' particularly desirable when descend ing steep hills or.traveling slippeip ^streets. For it enables you to use tlgt engine as a brake, instantly, without slowing down the car. Then, suppose you want Free Wheel, ing. Simply press a button on tfcv dash. Thereafter, and until you pull the button out again, ydu Free Wheel. You coast along with a delightfd Riding sensation. And you sb«£t with never-to-be-forgotten ease. The Free Wheeling mechanism, of tlis new Chevrolet Six is a highly simplified type. Instead of a complicated mechanism with many moving partf* * it-is a simple, sturdy unit, with only three moving parts. Them along with Syncro-Mesh and Free Wheeling, Chevrolet pffers y 60-horsepower six-cylinder ance, higher speed, faster acceleration* greater smoothness, smarter Fishear bodies, matchless economy, and a first cost that is among the lowest im the market. Certainly it's the gnat American value for 1932. -v.' "v K-.;. ;f- "v - / T HE NEW CHEVROLET SIX E A T I k E R I C A N V A L U E F O R I 9 3 » SEE YOUft DEALER BELOW Cer. '. « j," 1 -- » ... ,-v.^ >. v *V;' 'va '•

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