'M<*{ '£ .Ar ' . wwafct-r • .v>- v* -a*- , "( •./ ' vfi.' \-T.{ ><T *&Ci: • V •- ~ M'HENET PLAINDEALER, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1991 Fix Tltiv ii Memory This is the verse which Coleridge iwote to illustrate the varieties of me- ""Weal feet: "Trochee trips from long to short; From long to long in solemn aort Slow spondee stalks; Strong foot, yet ill able Ever to come up with •dactyl tri syllable Iambics march from short to long; With a leap and a yie swift onapests •Ouro^' , ^ _ Builders' Great Fafct- •• 'To get girders to the roofs to bulltj €te tower that supports the Lindbergh tteacon on the Palmolive building, in Chicago, a small derrick was knocked . .down apd taken up In an elevator. It iras put together and vised to haul ' . tqp parts of a" larger derrick which ID torn raised a third. :? ;; "1 '" - • . .... Flax Growing ^ for the manufacture ofttnea - It grown In this country to some extent. but the climate is not very suitable. Flax is a fiber which requires tnore moisture than any other'for Its Iwcce^sful manlplatlon. : - " V.v1 to All;: / life. can be pure in its pwr^ose strife -and all not be "';^rPffTfPi stronger thereby.--Meredith Florence Ray, D. G» Chiropractor and Masteuriit by Appoint®##* X-Ray Service ; One-half nile from McHenry on I •' ' Route 20 At Henry Kennebeck's Residence. tia > Twice T o l d ITales •*:ji i7/ Ttems irf Interest Tali en From the Files of the Plaindealer •at. Tear*' As* FIFTY YEARS AGO We have had an obituary written i up all winter headed "drowned in the t^lill Pond", and came near having to j use it last week. A son of Casper | Wirfs and one of C. T. Eldridge, while ; skating, broke through. Young Eki- * ridjre succeeded in getting out, but the other was not so fortunate, Henry Smith aftd Clvas. Granger hearing th< cry from the School House raj* to hi--* assistance, -and succeeded, at the risk of their own lives, in getting; hint out when life yf&s almost extinct. It was. a brave act, for which the boys- are cje- •servinjr of the highest praise. It is hoped this may prove a lesson to reck less boys, who are fever ready to veto* ttfre on half-frozen ice. Another severe rain storm set in on Tuesday morning, and at the time of going to press still continues. In the slansr of the street this is "too utterly terrible. years on the place, E. S. Wheeler has sold his farm to Peter M. Freund. The original owner of the farm was the late ,Rev. Joel M. Wheeler, but for the past thirty-one years E. S. Wheeler has conducted the farm. Mr. Wheeler and family will move to town and become residents of McHenry, a fact which will be "hailed with delight by hundreds of friends of the family. The boiler at the electric VOLO H$tone Richmond 16 . JOHN DUCET VETERINARIAN TB and. Blood Testing ^CHMONIV ILLINOIS ilSNRY V. SOMPEL^ • ; General Teaming Sand, Qravel and Goal for Sale Grading, Graveling and Road ^ Work Done By Contract ; of Every Description ; «er Bjr Day Phone McHenry 649 tt-J McHenry, HI. P. O. Address, Route 3 WM. M. CARROLL - Lawyer with West McHenry State Bank Every Friday Afternoon 4 , McHenry, Illinois CONNEL M. McDERMOTT ATTORNEY-AT-LAW -*-jHe«r®--Every evening, 7 to 848-- All day Saturdays #rie« Bklg. Cor. Green and Elm Sta. 1H McHenry 258 McHenry,IlL ? f HcHENRY GRAVEL 4 ^ EXCAVATING CO. ! * • vi A. P. Freund, Prop. jfoad Building and Excavating Estimates Furnished oa Request ^ : 0iglrgra.de Gravel Delivered at any time--large or small Orders given prompt attention. Phone 204-M McHenry Holiday Goods " Jibn K. McGuinnas* w Life LETS drape the cotton snow about Our imitation Christinas tree. .. With flowing dip and cheery shout VC'e'll laud synthetic chemistry. presents tied with ribbons gay, ' From paper fashioned, let us op«.- Thus truly shall we keep the day Of what will be good will--we hops. Tin yule log leap* with lancelike flaflMt So bright it hardly seems like gal,. That Santa Claus is What's-HisNaSK In whiskers. Oh, well, let it pas& The evergreens were dipped in dye. Our holly in no wooa did grow. . But one real thing attracts the eye--• • hoPffrf flUStlfeCOC* • The Worlds Christmas Dinner iy Wm.L. t4 JVloth.erfB -- Letter Ta Sarita ; _ ^ ^ TTlary Gt-aKam bonm«i«» EAR SANTA OLA US: "Will you please bring tae. for Christmas a good supply of appreciation for all the cooking and mending -1 do throughout the year? "YVlll you please bring plenty4 of kind words for those days when I a in tired, but must keep on just the sameT "Will you please bring me plenty of patience so that on days when my Kwves seem "on edge" I will not take it out on my children? "Will you please bring me a pack of unselfishness so I'will not make too many demands on my children :m<l 80 -r ffelepfcoM N«. lOt-B Stoffel St Reihaniperger ||flarance iftnta for all claisea of property in the beat companies. V:'K <|EST McHENRT - ILLINOIS bsore-ln Swe-Iosotance Wm. G. Schreiner Auctioneering HTFICE AT RESIDENCE float 93-R ' McHenry, Illinois S. H. Freuod & Son CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS Phone 127^ McHenry Our experience ia at Your ^ ||ervice in building " / Your Wants £f! VacpI - GENERAL AUCTIONEER EARM SALES A SPECIALTY P. O. Solon Mills, m. Reference Past Sales SATKPACTION GUARANTEED 9T O ONE knows better than Santa Claus that the United States Is the only country that could gire a Christinas dinner to the worM. ^i'his is the only country that has food iiJQUi;k, and the ous spirit, to feed the dinnerless poor of every nation. Stretch a dozen tables across the continent, from ocean to ocean. Thirtysix thousand miles of tables. Slaughter the chickens and the turkeys. The English will want roast goose. We have the geese, and millions of ducks. Drive the fat porkers and the big fat beeves down to the slaughter pens. Place the big planters two feet apart We have roasts enough to pile them all full. Kansas can furnish the wheat for the rolls and Minnesota can grind it into flour. Idaho can furnisk the potatdes and California and Ore* gon have fruit enough for every body. Florida can Join with California and pile the golden oranges on the tables for the whole crowd. The South can send up the vegetables and when the food Is on the fables It will be the greatest dinner the world ever saw. Dinner Is ready! Let the people sit down or staBd up as suits them best But let them eat--» everybody est! Let the Chinese and the Russians eat; Bring the under*- fed of every country ! This old wor)<| needs a good dinner! A good dinner Is the best medicine that could be poured down, the o I d world's gullet! When the stomachs of the world are full there win be small disposition to fight and quarrel. Jealousies and hatreds never mix with a good dinner, j Men would rather eat than fight and a full Christinas table looks better than a battleship. Better dinners! More dinners! Mbre dinners will make a better lot of people and help more than anything else to gpread peace and goodwill over the earth! So bring the nations to the Christinas dinner and If they want to stay all bight we have ham and I v..i: iiui act as though their lime was entirely at my disposal?, ••But will you also bring me a «opply of tjllllngnesa on their parts to help me? "Will von please bring tlon of thoughtful deeds so that all of u$ may be thoughtful of each other, none of us expecting or demanding too much? Each one trying and wanting to do his share. Each one ready to praise the other? And give credit for what is done? "Will you please bring a collection of compliments so we mny he roailv to enough for breakfast! <® 1»J1. We»i«rn Newspaper Union, t eggs admire and say nice things to one another? "Please bring me what I have asked for if you possibly can, dear Santa Claus, as I try to be a good mother, and I want to make onr home as bappy as possible. "I am not a little girl, bat I jfcope you can overlook that. •Your affectionate friend. ' 'A MOTHER" ; . (A. lflL. Wtatfni N«w»P*Per raton.) 1931 CHIMNEY? OH, $AY! Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ettfllfc,' "#®r2 Waukegan shoppers Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bacon motored to Elgin Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs- Joe PassAeldf and son drove to Waukegan Tuesday. _ MSss Sarah McEmeel of Racine ,'ispent the week-end at the home of Mr. light j an<j Mrs. Joe Lenzen. . ; plant having been repaired our i M.r. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher were citizens are again enjoying first-class j waukegan shoppers Monday. services j * Mfs. Joe Passfield and son and Min. The eity stand-pipe is again in Charles Daivin were Elgin shoppers f irst class sanitary condition, it j Wednesday. having undergone a thorough clean- The five hundred club met at the 1 : | home of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert' Wald- 1111in11 -_L L. ' .... 1 i mann Tuesday evening. Four fables " T E A R S A G O " . y - ^ 0 f f i v e h u n d r e d * w a s p l a y e d . P f i z e s lllff* Sadie Hobart passed awsy -ftt wel^ awarded to Mrs. Frank Hironithe home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. | first. Mrs Joe Passfield, see- Henry Hobart, who reside west of this | ond; Mrs. Walchnann, third. Men's village, on Sunday evening of this ^ high, Howard Hironimus, secpnd, Joe week, following a lingering, illness. Fasgfield; and third. Mr Waldmann. The cross walks in the village bave | daintv lunch was sen-ed. certainly been a -fright during the re-j Reg-ma"anxl M«rtha Tecent soft speU that, we have Just ex-: jtampe 0f Fremonf, spent, Friday "at perienced. If McHenry has no one to home of their aunt and uncle, Mr. lt>ok after the crossings, why in the i and ^, Joe teiujen • world"/doesn't,- the village board get; njT> ^nd v Davfe "'and somfone to do it? The conditions of (fanj;ht,er of the Fl^ts 6j?>elit Ta^gday our walk? certainly V ^ invite afternoon at the h'olrne-of Mr. afid Mi s. strangers to. come toere imd do their..E,«se Fisher. . Christmas shopping. f Smithy •^-l^omasCJiimes. a«:J This is carp shipping itfeek for ^Ben Milton Doweli ttBtorea Fri- Stilling,. the.( local carp sieiner. fhis day_ s. ' - \ year about 15,000 pounds of carp are j Mr and Mrs; LloN-d Fishes Mr. and being shipped. The carp were taken Mrs< Albert Hofer' and Mrs. George from the waters of Pistakee bay, Fox.Schejd were Elpin choppers Tuesday. Lake, Slocuni's lake and Fox river. . j Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Ravin and John F. Freund, who, about a year family 0f Slocum Lake spent Thurs-, ago purchased the late Mrs. Barbara j ^y evening at the Dowell Bros. home. •A'.'.'vit. ' * 4: •••• WM FORTY YEARS -JM, We are still having mild, muiWy weather in this section. The roads are almost impassible and business in consequence slow. We would again remind the dancing public of the New Year's party at the Riverslide House, on Friday evening of next week. Of course all who ever attend dances will be sure to go. . The school election, a call for which Appeared in this paper recently, failed to materialize on Saturday last as advertised. Cause-- too much crankifim. What the next move will be we are unable to say. Master Charley Block, who has been very sick for the past six weeks, is still very low but apparently slowly improving.' • - proved at this Wvfting, her many friends will be glad to learn. r • C. J. Wightman of Grayslake. 1PM* a Volo caller Wednesday. C Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wright of Fremont was a Thursday caller at the home of Mrs. Ida Fisher. « »" Mrs Harry Passfielti will entertala. the-five hundred club Monday, Dec. 28. Mrs. Ida Fisher is on the sick list. Mr.' and Mrs- Frank Dowel! arid daughter of Elgin spent Sunday at the home of' S£r. and Mrs. Joe Pass* „ ^ * field. .'•',* •| / $• Mrs. Richard Dowell and family '* 5 ^ L called at the home o? Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Davis at Slocum Lake Sunday. . i *» Mr: and Mrs. Elmer Gottschalk of < Lake Zurich spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Lloy^J ' / Fisher. . - • •• "4--;. Mr. and Mrs. ClJrde Wright and „ ; Mrs. I<Ja Fisher were Libertyville "" caliers.Friday. • •... v; • ; EllwAod Do^eli and Lloyd FSsher " Fer^e. Waucanda caillers -o% Saturday evening. r J j' . « Frank Hirenimus was ah Ajitioch busine-K- caller Friday." / '• iMrtxand Mr,s. • George • Drager'. Vtl * family of Chicago spent t;hc* at ti'ie Matt Rp®*?due$tcb&r home * *'•'-,7" Mr- and Mrs. Herman Dunker arid ,' ^ *. family were McWenry calleo Toes- V-7"' <!•' 'day.':.' Mr. aAd' Mrs. •: Owries' itel$n2v!foA; farriijy of Watl'conda were -Sunday dinner giiests at the hoMe of Mt,. and Mrs. George Dowell. Mr. and Mrs. Her mart Dunker and family motored t6 Crystal Lake orf Wednesday on business. Mrs. Roy Passfield and Mrs. Ctaur- H: '••JSchreiner property off Maple avenue,! William Rossduestchef of Joliet 'es Daivin were Waukegari shoppers is having a barn constructed on 'he the week-end here with rela- Ty£?r'aypremises and expects to occupy th? tives -William Hironimus of Round Lake placa in4he near future.. taves. Mr. and Mrs. W. Converse of Liber, tyville- moved Monday to the home of their daughter, Mrs. Alvin Case. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fisher and TWENTY-FIVE YEARS AGO After a residence of fifty-four TEN YEARS AGO 'Their many friends through out ____ this community were 'very pleasantly Mrs. Esse Fisher motored to Wauke surprised' to learn of the marriage of gan Wednesday. - Miss Dorothy Buss and Mr. Fred Mr. and Mrs/Alvia Cm« motored to Nickels, both of this village, which Elgin Friday. occurred at Waukegan last Saturday.1, Bert Dowell of Slocum Lake was a Lydia E. Patterson Owen, a resident business caller in this locality Tbursof McHenry county for eighty-four day. years and of McHenry for forty-foUr, ^rs. Eddy Rossduestcher and Mrs. years passed away in. this village joe Wagfter were Chicago shoppers on Monday morning last, after an ill- the past week. ness of several months.'/ Mr. and Mrs. john Rossduestcher The votes of the McHenry coramun. and William Roesduestcher drove lo ity high school district No. 156 s.urely Racine Friday evening. did themselves proud at the polls last Archie Rosing of Round Lake was Saturday afternoon and as a.result of that election the proposition for a new school was carried by a vote of nearly two to one. Mignon, New Year's Eve Bill at Chicago Civic Opera, Suits Holiday Occasion a business caller in this locality Saturday. Mrs. Frank Hironimus- and family were in Chicago Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Fishefr ;ind family were McHenry callers Wijdjlesdittv. M iss Vinnie Bacon motoretr^fo McHenry Thursday. Mrs, Joe Lenzen is somewhat imwas a Sunday caller,at the Frank Hironimus home. . G. A. Vasey aftd son and'Herman Dunker attended the milk meeting at Crystal Lake Saturday and heard Don Geyer speak.* Mr. and Mrs. Herman Dunker and family were Sunday callers at the heme of Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Benwell in McHenry Arthur WackerOw spent Sunday afternoon at the home of Earl Davis at Wauconda. Joe Vasey of McHenry called - on, Mrs- Ida Fisher Saturday and Sunday. Healthful Humidity Humidity in houses should be trbm 80 to 50 per cent, but in most houses it Is probably 20 per cent or lower-- too dry for health. The dryer the air the more difficult it is to heat a house, as moisture In the air carries and retains heat. If frost forms freely oo the inside of the glass, there is prob- ; ably enough humidity. If there to a® sign of frost, the air is foo dry. •* it* Sal*i AS Philena IN Thomasr r1-; \yntm;. WILL iiE SUNO ; ^ AT Civic Opera New Year'i --'A Phalin's Garage Phone )24 Storage, Repairing, Oil Greasing Pearl Street, McHenry •> Photo Meistertinger to Be Given at Popular Prices on Saturday Evening, Jaifuary 2. * Visitor- iiuw did Santa Claua come down this Christmas, WHHe? Modern * Kid--Came down pretty handsome!?. T'M MV. More Tku 1' Holiday - ehilstmaa Is no longer a day; It la a season. And it seeius to extend • little each year.--Collier's Weekly. Last #1 Tk*tr Lira Chaucer's only son dl«w< ehlfcOww; the granddaughter of Vfllton was the last of his blood; Newton, Locke, Pope and Gibbon never married^ neither Addison. Johnson, nor B&rke, tnommltted their blood. fWin »if Heallfc A man's own observation on what he finds food of, snd what he finds hurt of, Is the best physic to preserve iMalth.--Bacetk • Point •! View Alnbat everybody is mora a# lap right about things when you stand in his shoe* and look at the unlverM through his eyes and with respect to his peculiar envlronqjent.--American Magazine. Ceater •! Trap loduitiy Making traps of all sizes, from oae big enough to catch a Hon, to the mouse variety. Is one of the main industries oT Wadaaaflati, SiffTofiishirs, ^ Tear's Eve will be gala night at the Chicago Civic Opera this season, and for the occasion Ambrolse Thomas' Mignon has been selected This delightful work, one of the outstanding successes of last season, wOen it was brought back to the re pertoire after an absence^ of many years, Is particularly suited to the holiday occasion. It is one of the few operas In the repertoire' with a happy ending, which will send the audience away to New fear's Eje suppfrrs. In a Jolly frame of mind. 0 One Important change has been made In the cast. This season Vannl- Marcoux; the great Franco-Italian singing actor, will have the role of Lothario. Mignon will be Coe Glade, who scored the greatest triumph of her career in the role last season. The I'hllena will be MRrgherita Salvl, whose beauty, grace and technical skill have won her many friends during her. four years with the Civic Opera. Tlfo Setups, one of the most popular operatic and concert tenors In the world, will have the role .of Wllhelm Melster, and.JHmll Cooper, internationally known itussian musician, will he at the conductor's stand. Another brilliant feature of the ninth week of opera will be the first performance at popular prices of-Richard Wagner's Die Meistersinger. The Civic Opera presentation bf this great opera has been called by many critics the finest to be found anywhere In the world. Owing to the fact that a huge augmented chorus and a c^ftple of hun- (jrpH jn addition to the ful! bs! let, are used in the production. Its cost is far greater than can possibly be brought In by a sold-out house at popular prices. But the host of music layers who wish to hear -the work ate being given the opportunity to purchase seats at 75 cents to $4. The cast Is the same as that which sang the work December 23, with Maria Radjl as Eva, Sonia Sharnova as Magdaleoa, Rene Malson as Walther, Hans ia Nlsaea as flans 8acha, Atas* under Kipnis as Pogner, Oscar Cot~ cafre as David and Robert RlngllnJ^j as Kothner. Egon I'ollak conducts. The complete schedule for thenintlt week Is: MONDAY, Dec. 28-«t 8--(Final performance this season), BORIS GODUNOFF (In Italian). Music drama in a prologue, three acts and seven' scenes by Motissorgsky. With Coe Glade, Antonio Cortis, Vjanni-Marcoux, Robert Rlngliug, Chase Raromfo and others Conductor, Emit Cooper. TUESDAY, Ot-c. 29--at 8--MADAME BUTTERFLY (In Italian). A Japanese tragedy, founded oil the book by John Luther Long and -the drama by David Belasco. Music by Glacomo Puccini. With Unsetta Pampaninl (debut), Helen' Ornsteln, Charles Hackett, and others. Conductor, Roberto Moranzonl. WEDNESDAY. Dec. 30--at 8--THE JEWESS (In Italian). Opera la four acts and five scenes by Halevy. With Rosa Ralsa, Charles Marshall, Chase Baromeo, Theodore Rltch and others. J Bullet. Conductor, Emll Cooper. , THURSDAY, Dec. 31--at 8--MIONON (In French). Opera In three acts and four scenes. With Margherlta Salvl, Coe Glade,_ Tito Schipa, Vanni- Marcoux~ and others. Ballet. Conductor, Emll Cooper. SATURDAY, Jan..2--at 2--CAVALLERIA RUSTICANA (In Italian). Opera In one act by Mascagni. With Rosa Ralsa. Coe Gfade, Maria Claessens, Antonio Cortis, Augusto Beuf, and others. Conductor, Isaaf Van vijV- p£.ii0,VCJ j,. j PAGLIA^CI 'In Italian). Drama in two acts by Leoncavallo. With Claudia Muzio. Charles Marshall, Vittorlo Damianl and others. Conductor, Frank St. Leger. SATURDAY, Jan. 2--at 7:45--OH MEISTERSINGER (In German). Opera In three acts by Richard Wagner. >Vlth Maria Rajdl, Sonia Sharnova, Rene Malson, Oscar Colcalre, Hans Hermann "Nissen, Eduard Hablch, Alexandar Kipnis, Rdbert Ring!in* and othera. Oootfactor, Kgm PoUak. o it tsmwuo RUNNING water for the farm home is just as necessary as good lighting--and just as inexpensive. A small electric motor on vocur water system will deliver all tlie water you need to your kitche% bathroom and luundry.Turn a fa»^. cet and there it is----day and ni£ ' ""l- The motor starts and stops automatically, runniqg nist long enough to keep a storage tank always full. It pumps a ton of water for about three cents* An electric motor will also pump water for dairy. Cattle, horses, hogs and poultry. You may use Aid automatic system^--or a pump jack on you? present pump. One of our meni ssppeecciia lly assigned to farm electri* fixation work will be glad to give you complet# Information on electric water pumping. He ca|| recommend the proper installation for your r^> quirements. Phone ojp" write your nearest Publie Service office. You wil| not be obligating yourself jjUjSiiy way. There are also pump dealers in}our viciuiiy who will be glad & «r- ' " i -.4 Running water for th* dairy bam. to help yOU, OF NORTHERN ILLINOIS E. J. LARK IN, Dist. Mgr. IA1 WllUaaa St, Crystal Lake CrysUl Lake 1*mm • . 4 - ; 4, J J3C- 1 'fM